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dtguitarfan View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 18:09
Originally posted by Ambient Hurricanes Ambient Hurricanes wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by Finnforest Finnforest wrote:

Howard Dean has said that "going over the fiscal cliff" is the best thing progressives could do.  They would get huge tax increases plus large defense cuts, certainly a better deal than a compromise will yield.  I heard him advocate for Obama doing this. 

Curious if our Dem friends here  agree with the Governor. 

Well, I would prefer that we didn't "go over the cliff".  But if we do, I don't think it'll be the end of the world.  It'll be tough, for sure, but not the end of the world.  And it seems to me like Obama has tried very hard to compromise with the Republicans and they just are not budging, but are sticking to the various myths they believe instead.  So, if that's what it takes - I say go over the darn thing!


Or you could see it the other way, as the Republicans trying to compromise and Obama not budging!  Honestly, I think they'll probably get a deal done at the last minute; both sides are going to be stubborn in order to gain an advantage for final negotiations and to try and pressure the other side into giving in.  I don't have any great confidence in the intelligence of the members of congress (republican or democrat), but surely the Republicans aren't dense enough not to notice that the fiscal cliff would raise taxes much more than Obama's proposal would.  There are times when sticking to your guns is just counter-productive.



I really don't think so.  The Republican high priesthood is sticking to their sacred law of not taxing the rich, which is the one thing that Obama will not budge on.  So he gives them some spending cuts in his budget proposal, and Boehner says "is he serious?  He gave us NO spending cuts."  Yeah, who isn't negotiating?  The Republicans have painted themselves into a corner and all they can do now is rage incoherently.  Which is what they're best at these days anyways.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 18:20
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


Originally posted by Ambient Hurricanes Ambient Hurricanes wrote:


Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


Originally posted by Finnforest Finnforest wrote:

Howard Dean has said that "going over the fiscal cliff" is the best thing progressives could do.  They would get huge tax increases plus large defense cuts, certainly a better deal than a compromise will yield.  I heard him advocate for Obama doing this.  Curious if our Dem friends here  agree with the Governor. 
Well, I would prefer that we didn't "go over the cliff".  But if we do, I don't think it'll be the end of the world.  It'll be tough, for sure, but not the end of the world.  And it seems to me like Obama has tried very hard to compromise with the Republicans and they just are not budging, but are sticking to the various myths they believe instead.  So, if that's what it takes - I say go over the darn thing!
Or you could see it the other way, as the Republicans trying to compromise and Obama not budging!  Honestly, I think they'll probably get a deal done at the last minute; both sides are going to be stubborn in order to gain an advantage for final negotiations and to try and pressure the other side into giving in.  I don't have any great confidence in the intelligence of the members of congress (republican or democrat), but surely the Republicans aren't dense enough not to notice that the fiscal cliff would raise taxes much more than Obama's proposal would.  There are times when sticking to your guns is just counter-productive.
I really don't think so.  The Republican high priesthood is sticking to their sacred law of not taxing the rich, which is the one thing that Obama will not budge on.  So he gives them some spending cuts in his budget proposal, and Boehner says "is he serious?  He gave us NO spending cuts."  Yeah, who isn't negotiating?  The Republicans have painted themselves into a corner and all they can do now is rage incoherently.  Which is what they're best at these days anyways.

Well put.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 18:32
Well, I don't believe either side has made a good faith effort at reaching out, even the media has acknowledged this in between bouts of O-lovin. 
...that moment you realize you like "Mob Rules" better than "Heaven and Hell"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 19:08
I hope we go over the cliff. It's the only way we'll get spending cuts, and I don't think those cuts will hurt the economy as much as projected.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 19:12
First term Obama reached out. He gave away the store. Clinton did the same thing with his triangulation business. You're not supposed to "reach out" in a negotiation. If I can settle for 50/50 I don't propose 50/50. I propose 80/20 and let you strong arm me down to 50/50 if you can. He seems to have finally learned this.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 19:40
Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

I hope we go over the cliff. It's the only way we'll get spending cuts, and I don't think those cuts will hurt the economy as much as projected.


Don't really know, but you might be right. Are you troubled by the Defense cuts, or do we converge on that?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 19:49
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

I hope we go over the cliff. It's the only way we'll get spending cuts, and I don't think those cuts will hurt the economy as much as projected.


Don't really know, but you might be right. Are you troubled by the Defense cuts, or do we converge on that?


There is massive amounts of money that could be cut from defense without harming our national security. I'm not worried.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 19:55
Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:


Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

I hope we go over the cliff. It's the only way we'll get spending cuts, and I don't think those cuts will hurt the economy as much as projected.


Don't really know, but you might be right. Are you troubled by the Defense cuts, or do we converge on that?
There is massive amounts of money that could be cut from defense without harming our national security. I'm not worried.

I'm with you.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 20:40
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by Ambient Hurricanes Ambient Hurricanes wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by Finnforest Finnforest wrote:

Howard Dean has said that "going over the fiscal cliff" is the best thing progressives could do.  They would get huge tax increases plus large defense cuts, certainly a better deal than a compromise will yield.  I heard him advocate for Obama doing this. 

Curious if our Dem friends here  agree with the Governor. 

Well, I would prefer that we didn't "go over the cliff".  But if we do, I don't think it'll be the end of the world.  It'll be tough, for sure, but not the end of the world.  And it seems to me like Obama has tried very hard to compromise with the Republicans and they just are not budging, but are sticking to the various myths they believe instead.  So, if that's what it takes - I say go over the darn thing!


Or you could see it the other way, as the Republicans trying to compromise and Obama not budging!  Honestly, I think they'll probably get a deal done at the last minute; both sides are going to be stubborn in order to gain an advantage for final negotiations and to try and pressure the other side into giving in.  I don't have any great confidence in the intelligence of the members of congress (republican or democrat), but surely the Republicans aren't dense enough not to notice that the fiscal cliff would raise taxes much more than Obama's proposal would.  There are times when sticking to your guns is just counter-productive.



I really don't think so.  The Republican high priesthood is sticking to their sacred law of not taxing the rich, which is the one thing that Obama will not budge on.  So he gives them some spending cuts in his budget proposal, and Boehner says "is he serious?  He gave us NO spending cuts."  Yeah, who isn't negotiating?  The Republicans have painted themselves into a corner and all they can do now is rage incoherently.  Which is what they're best at these days anyways.


None of this will matter anyway.  Know why?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 20:47
Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


I really don't think so.  The Republican high priesthood is sticking to their sacred law of not taxing the rich, which is the one thing that Obama will not budge on.  So he gives them some spending cuts in his budget proposal, and Boehner says "is he serious?  He gave us NO spending cuts."  Yeah, who isn't negotiating?  The Republicans have painted themselves into a corner and all they can do now is rage incoherently.  Which is what they're best at these days anyways.

Well put.

Thanks.  What can I say - I'm an angry former Republican.  It started with an uneasy feeling - somewhere in the back of my head I knew something was wrong.  Then, for Obama's 1st election, I didn't like how McCain was trying to sell me all the Bush policies and pretending it was something new, and I REALLY didn't like Palin - but I just thought that was because she was an idiot.  Over the next four years, as I heard some of the things my friends were saying about Obama that were so fearful, the uneasiness grew - I knew these things couldn't be true.  Finally, I read some things - at first it was just so I could have ammo for these types of discussions.  But then, when I read a couple books about the history of the Conservative movement and its roots in paranoid racism...the history of the greatest lie ever - the "Conservative Christian" - well...now I'm just mad.  I try to give little bits of the truth to people I'm friends with every now and again, hoping it will lead them to want to discover the rest, but it's like I'm dealing with brainwashing - nothing the Liberals say could possibly be true, and nothing the Conservatives say could possibly be a lie!  It's so disgusting, really.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 20:54
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


I really don't think so.  The Republican high priesthood is sticking to their sacred law of not taxing the rich, which is the one thing that Obama will not budge on.  So he gives them some spending cuts in his budget proposal, and Boehner says "is he serious?  He gave us NO spending cuts."  Yeah, who isn't negotiating?  The Republicans have painted themselves into a corner and all they can do now is rage incoherently.  Which is what they're best at these days anyways.

Well put.

Thanks.  What can I say - I'm an angry former Republican.  It started with an uneasy feeling - somewhere in the back of my head I knew something was wrong.  Then, for Obama's 1st election, I didn't like how McCain was trying to sell me all the Bush policies and pretending it was something new,


You do realize Obama is Bush Jr, right?  He has advanced the Bush policies.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 21:10
Yup. Good ol wubya term #4.
Who's already the expected runners in 2016? Hillary? Oi...
Shame potential future democratic stars had to ruin their careers (Elliot Spitzer, Weiner). Not that  I really support them like I used to.
Hopefully Gary Johnson runs again.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 21:14
What really blew my mind is when Bill Kristol said "yeah ill be real with ya, taxing the wealthy more wont destroy us, lets stop helping a bunch of millionaires" and some moderate Republicans were ok with it. Not that I advocate the position, just think it was good to see some people not being total stubborn asses.
Then again Kristol is a neocon and they really don't care about the economic realm here...long as they can run the US with an iron fist and invade all those sweet other lands that are evil and not merka

What was I saying? Eh IDK...the GOP is a joke until they support some real limited gov folk
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 21:18
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


I really don't think so.  The Republican high priesthood is sticking to their sacred law of not taxing the rich, which is the one thing that Obama will not budge on.  So he gives them some spending cuts in his budget proposal, and Boehner says "is he serious?  He gave us NO spending cuts."  Yeah, who isn't negotiating?  The Republicans have painted themselves into a corner and all they can do now is rage incoherently.  Which is what they're best at these days anyways.

Well put.
Thanks.  What can I say - I'm an angry former Republican.  It started with an uneasy feeling - somewhere in the back of my head I knew something was wrong.  Then, for Obama's 1st election, I didn't like how McCain was trying to sell me all the Bush policies and pretending it was something new,
You do realize Obama is Bush Jr, right?  He has advanced the Bush policies.

I think you may have bought some propaganda too, my friend. Ever heard of Frank Schaeffer? Francis Schaeffer's son? The "How Should We Then Live" Francis Schaeffer? In one book I was reading (called Republican Gammorah), I read about him. I stopped reading that book because it was depressing me too much, but wanted some Christian perspective on the whole thing, hoping it would give me...well...hope. So I started reading Frank's auto-biography, "Crazy For God" - he is kinda becoming a hero of mine. I went looking for some other things he's written and found this today - this gave me perspective and hope:
http://frank-schaeffer.blogspot.com/2009/12/obama-will-triumph-so-will-america.html

Edited by dtguitarfan - December 15 2012 at 21:20
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 21:21
There are differences between the parties, some of them big, but in the overall picture...they occupy the same space.
They may punch each other to death with one hand, but each have their other down the same pair of pants ; )

Note when the parties do agree: it's always the worst...
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 21:27
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


I really don't think so.  The Republican high priesthood is sticking to their sacred law of not taxing the rich, which is the one thing that Obama will not budge on.  So he gives them some spending cuts in his budget proposal, and Boehner says "is he serious?  He gave us NO spending cuts."  Yeah, who isn't negotiating?  The Republicans have painted themselves into a corner and all they can do now is rage incoherently.  Which is what they're best at these days anyways.

Well put.
Thanks.  What can I say - I'm an angry former Republican.  It started with an uneasy feeling - somewhere in the back of my head I knew something was wrong.  Then, for Obama's 1st election, I didn't like how McCain was trying to sell me all the Bush policies and pretending it was something new,
You do realize Obama is Bush Jr, right?  He has advanced the Bush policies.

I think you may have bought some propaganda too, my friend. Ever heard of Frank Schaeffer? Francis Schaeffer's son? The "How Should We Then Live" Francis Schaeffer? In one book I was reading (called Republican Gammorah), I read about him. I stopped reading that book because it was depressing me too much, but wanted some Christian perspective on the whole thing, hoping it would give me...well...hope. So I started reading Frank's auto-biography, "Crazy For God" - he is kinda becoming a hero of mine. I went looking for some other things he's written and found this today - this gave me perspective and hope:
http://frank-schaeffer.blogspot.com/2009/12/obama-will-triumph-so-will-america.html


Okay, save me some time.

Do you want me to say "Yay you!"

Or do you want me to tell why that's foolish?
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 15 2012 at 21:33
Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:

Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


I really don't think so.  The Republican high priesthood is sticking to their sacred law of not taxing the rich, which is the one thing that Obama will not budge on.  So he gives them some spending cuts in his budget proposal, and Boehner says "is he serious?  He gave us NO spending cuts."  Yeah, who isn't negotiating?  The Republicans have painted themselves into a corner and all they can do now is rage incoherently.  Which is what they're best at these days anyways.

Well put.

Thanks.  What can I say - I'm an angry former Republican.  It started with an uneasy feeling - somewhere in the back of my head I knew something was wrong.  Then, for Obama's 1st election, I didn't like how McCain was trying to sell me all the Bush policies and pretending it was something new, and I REALLY didn't like Palin - but I just thought that was because she was an idiot.  Over the next four years, as I heard some of the things my friends were saying about Obama that were so fearful, the uneasiness grew - I knew these things couldn't be true.  Finally, I read some things - at first it was just so I could have ammo for these types of discussions.  But then, when I read a couple books about the history of the Conservative movement and its roots in paranoid racism...the history of the greatest lie ever - the "Conservative Christian" - well...now I'm just mad.  I try to give little bits of the truth to people I'm friends with every now and again, hoping it will lead them to want to discover the rest, but it's like I'm dealing with brainwashing - nothing the Liberals say could possibly be true, and nothing the Conservatives say could possibly be a lie!  It's so disgusting, really.


The problem is that Obama won't cut the programs the Republicans want him to cut.  Medicare, entitlements, social security, etc.  In their eyes, those are the programs that are really hurting the economy.  The solution is simple enough; the Republicans will eventually agree to raise taxes on the rich, and the democrats will cut some of the entitlements.  But it won't get done until the eleventh hour, because that's how these negotiations always work.  And the "solution" will really just involve kicking the can down the road once again.

I don't think you can really say that the conservative movement has its roots in racism; you'd be closer if you said that social conservatism was rooted in racism, but even that would be a generalization.  What really happened was that Lyndon Johnson's "great society" programs provoked a backlash from libertarian-leaning fiscal conservatives (predominantly located in the Western United States), and at the same time, many southern democrats were feeling alienated by their party's embracing of civil rights (with Kennedy coming out to support it and all that).  The republican party saw an opportunity to pick up some new members, so they courted these disgruntled racist southern democrats.  So you had fiscal conservatism on the rise in response to Johnson's policies, and at the same time you had many socially conservative southern democrats moving into the party, and that's how the modern republican party originated.  So does racism tie in there?  Yeah, but it definitely doesn't define the republican party and it's not even really associated with the fiscal conservative movement.  Before the influx of ex-southern democrats, the republican party was the party of civil rights, actually.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 16 2012 at 00:43
Originally posted by Ambient Hurricanes Ambient Hurricanes wrote:


Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


Originally posted by HackettFan HackettFan wrote:

Originally posted by dtguitarfan dtguitarfan wrote:


I really don't think so.  The Republican high priesthood is sticking to their sacred law of not taxing the rich, which is the one thing that Obama will not budge on.  So he gives them some spending cuts in his budget proposal, and Boehner says "is he serious?  He gave us NO spending cuts."  Yeah, who isn't negotiating?  The Republicans have painted themselves into a corner and all they can do now is rage incoherently.  Which is what they're best at these days anyways.

Well put.
Thanks.  What can I say - I'm an angry former Republican.  It started with an uneasy feeling - somewhere in the back of my head I knew something was wrong.  Then, for Obama's 1st election, I didn't like how McCain was trying to sell me all the Bush policies and pretending it was something new, and I REALLY didn't like Palin - but I just thought that was because she was an idiot.  Over the next four years, as I heard some of the things my friends were saying about Obama that were so fearful, the uneasiness grew - I knew these things couldn't be true.  Finally, I read some things - at first it was just so I could have ammo for these types of discussions.  But then, when I read a couple books about the history of the Conservative movement and its roots in paranoid racism...the history of the greatest lie ever - the "Conservative Christian" - well...now I'm just mad.  I try to give little bits of the truth to people I'm friends with every now and again, hoping it will lead them to want to discover the rest, but it's like I'm dealing with brainwashing - nothing the Liberals say could possibly be true, and nothing the Conservatives say could possibly be a lie!  It's so disgusting, really.
The problem is that Obama won't cut the programs the Republicans want him to cut.  Medicare, entitlements, social security, etc.  In their eyes, those are the programs that are really hurting the economy.  The solution is simple enough; the Republicans will eventually agree to raise taxes on the rich, and the democrats will cut some of the entitlements.  But it won't get done until the eleventh hour, because that's how these negotiations always work.  And the "solution" will really just involve kicking the can down the road once again.I don't think you can really say that the conservative movement has its roots in racism; you'd be closer if you said that social conservatism was rooted in racism, but even that would be a generalization.  What really happened was that Lyndon Johnson's "great society" programs provoked a backlash from libertarian-leaning fiscal conservatives (predominantly located in the Western United States), and at the same time, many southern democrats were feeling alienated by their party's embracing of civil rights (with Kennedy coming out to support it and all that).  The republican party saw an opportunity to pick up some new members, so they courted these disgruntled racist southern democrats.  So you had fiscal conservatism on the rise in response to Johnson's policies, and at the same time you had many socially conservative southern democrats moving into the party, and that's how the modern republican party originated.  So does racism tie in there?  Yeah, but it definitely doesn't define the republican party and it's not even really associated with the fiscal conservative movement.  Before the influx of ex-southern democrats, the republican party was the party of civil rights, actually.

True, but I don't think they did anything for civil rights, though, unless you go all the way back to Grant. Real movement on civil rights in the 20th century started with the democratic President, Truman. I take your point though that there's no logical reason Republicans should have drug their feet on civil rights except for the influx of disaffected southern Democrats. But there was a reason they were disaffected.

If we go back to the nineteenth century the Republican party wasn't fiscally conservative either. The Democrat, Grover Cleveland, on the other hand, definitely was.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 16 2012 at 13:00
Actually, Republicans have always voted for Civil Rights legislation in far greater numbers than Democrats. The first Civil Rights bill to enjoy widespread Democratic support was the one passed under Lyndon Johnson, although still more Republicans voted for it than Democrats, and there were many other such bills sponsored by Republicans prior to that.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: December 16 2012 at 14:11
Yeah, times change, the populace changes, can't really compare the parties over all these various time periods.
To think there was a time when parties had variation...southern Dems, Northeast Dems, northeast Reps, midwesterners, moderates. Now the two parties have just become monolithic, and with it increasingly they've become the same.
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