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ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 19 2007
Location: Penal Colony
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Points: 11415
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 13:47 |
thellama73 wrote:
ExittheLemming wrote:
thellama73 wrote:
The T wrote:
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country. Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same.
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe she just can't do it.
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also obese because they're lazy and/or stupid? Shouldn't they have some kind of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live?
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...) |
They have access to education. There are libraries, are there not? Everyone keeps repeating that it's hard to pull yourself out of poverty. Of course it is. It's hard to be an architect too, but you're not advocating free architecture tutoring for anyone who wants it (are you?) Anything worth doing is going to be hard work. Henry criticizes me for saying that most poor people are poor by choice, but I have worked minimum wage jobs with very poor people before. Sure they complain a lot, but what are they doing to better their situation? For the ones I knew, not much. Instead of spending their free time learning a marketable skill they went to the movies, or played video games or , yes, bought lottery tickets. I realize this does not describe everyone who is poor. As I said before, some people's situations are beyond their control. But when I was earning minimum wage, I was constantly reading, studying, applying for better jobs. Rob has had a similar experience. And now we are both doing better. I'm sorry, but I have limited sympathy for people who have resigned themselves to a life of poverty and make no effort to escape from it.
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Assuming you're talking about what currently is re tertiary education, and not what many Libertarians think should be, this education would of course be funded predominantly by taxes yes? (Something they appear to be diametrically opposed to) The only snag with meritocracies is that you can't enter the race without a ticket. Bugger....wrong thread
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You assume wrong. I'm talking about books. There are libraries (which I don't believe would disappear without government funding, but that's another topic) and there are book stores that let you sit and read for hours without bothering you, and there is the internet, also available at libraries. There is no obstacle to learning if one is so inclined. You assume people must be forced to learn, but I don't. The information is available. All they have to do is avail themselves of it.
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Ok, I don't disagree with the autodidactic route at all and as you say there is a wealth of information out there at no cost. What I don't buy however (and this perhaps really belongs in the libertarian thread) is that without tax funded tertiary education there are many critters more than capable of fulfilling their potential who will never get the chance under your libertarian 'tax is theft' ideals. I never implied, inferred or assumed that people have to be forced to learn. Like yourself I have very little sympathy for those who are capable of alleviating their current situation but choose not to.
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: December 30 2007
Location: Raeford, NC
Status: Offline
Points: 32524
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 13:44 |
It's not the extremity of the situation. It's just that this summarizes my view, and so your examples are moot:
1. There will always be poor people (because creating and managing wealth is a skill that most don't have). Agreed. 2. It is fundamentally not the US government's place to make poor people not be poor. I think government should not do that, but should make sure everyone has equal opportunities at least to try to do it...
Government has no place to do that either. "Equal opportunities?" In context here, that means the richest people must be stripped of their money and influence to have an equal opportunity as the people in the middle, and the poor people must be given enough money and influence to have an equal opportunity as the people in the middle.
If it doesn't mean this (or any fraction of this), then what does it mean?
It is the government's place to: a) Protect the life of citizens (which is why we must have a robust military, maintained infrastructure)I see healthcare as a basic extension of this. You're happy spending on warfare but strict on spending on welfare.. I differ.
Again, you equate military spending with war spending, despite calling it a poorly chosen term?
The T wrote:
Epignosis wrote:
War spending...well, I guess that would depend on the war, wouldn't it? You can't paint military spending as "war" spending.
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Well, the use of terms was poorly chosen. Let's
agree on the need for "defense" spending. But is the 3 trillion (or
more, I don't remember the actual figure) dollar-war really making us
much safer?? | If there is no defense system in place to protect us, then see how well you enjoy your liberties under Muslim law, for example. You concede the need for defense spending.
In a nutshell, I support government spending that benefits all citizens at all times. Roads and military and court systems do that. Welfare does not.
You also forget what I said about health care in your health care thread, and that it isn't as simple as people keep making it out to be. Perhaps you could go back and review what I said. I'm tired of repeating myself.
b) Protect the property of citizens (which is why I am opposed to income taxes and wealth redistribution)Why
is property so important? Please, no "then give away your belongings to
the first one that comes" answer... Which principle guides you here?
Never mind. Property isn't important. I guess that means it's cool if poor people don't have much property and rich people keep getting more property. No big deal. Oh wait! Let me pick a smiley face to show I'm joking here.
There we go.
Property is important because you need it to live. My food is my property. If I earn food, then I am well. If I depend on the government to provide me with food, then the government can take away my food whenever it will.
What principle guides you to say I have to pay for other people's livelihoods? Welfare is taking from those who earned it and giving to those who did not, and doing so without permission.
Last time I checked, taking property from someone without permission and giving it to someone else is theft.
c) Protect the rights of citizens (which is why the government may run the court system)And I see the access to healthcare as a right.
You have access to health care just the same as you have access to a house. Or a guitar. Or a computer. Or concert tickets. You just have to pay for these things.
You don't have a right to anything that forces someone else to forfeit their life or property. Not one moment or one cent of it.
Edited by Epignosis - September 24 2010 at 13:48
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The T
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 13:12 |
Epignosis wrote:
The T wrote:
Epignosis wrote:
It gets harder and harder to talk to you for five reasons, and all five are present in this one post:
The T wrote:
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country.
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1. You take what I say and make absolutes out of them.
My examples are just that- examples (or in this case, counterexamples). I don't claim to speak for all poor people, but you do. You expressed a positive association between being poor and being fat. I provided not one, but three counterexamples to this, and a scholarly article. That's three more examples and one more article than you've provided in this discussion backing up your assertion.
I already recognized that correlation is not absolute and is not equal to causation. If I make absolutes out of your examples is because you use YOUR situation to explain why this or that should or shouldn't happen. About your examples, I talked about them. You actually helped me see the error on using just my situation to explain things (remember when I opened the healthcare thread based on my mother's denial of insurance?)
The T wrote:
Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same. |
2. You don't listen to what I say.
I did take unemployment benefits, and I said I did. In fact, it was in response to a question you directly asked me. Here's the conversation, as you've clearly forgotten.
My bad then. I stand corrected.
The T wrote:
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your
beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving
late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But
for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time
that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe
she just can't do it.
|
3. You use hypothetical anecdotes instead of data.
How pitiful do you want the person to be, T? We can go further if you like. Maybe this woman has no arms or legs and is blind. Maybe she gets robbed everyday. Maybe her kids are hateful towards her. Maybe she is allergic to peanuts. Maybe maybe maybe maybe maybe. None of this changes my principles, sorry, and I think it's rather insulting that you reduce people to the sum of their worst circumstances.
Is my example really THAT extreme? A woman with two jobs and fatherless children? Wow...
It's not the extremity of the situation. It's just that this summarizes my view, and so your examples are moot:
1. There will always be poor people (because creating and managing wealth is a skill that most don't have). Agreed. 2. It is fundamentally not the US government's place to make poor people not be poor. I think government should not do that, but should make sure everyone has equal opportunities at least to try to do it... It is the government's place to: a) Protect the life of citizens (which is why we must have a robust military, maintained infrastructure)I see healthcare as a basic extension of this. You're happy spending on warfare but strict on spending on welfare.. I differ. b) Protect the property of citizens (which is why I am opposed to income taxes and wealth redistribution)Why is property so important? Please, no "then give away your belongings to the first one that comes" answer... Which principle guides you here? c) Protect the rights of citizens (which is why the government may run the court system)And I see the access to healthcare as a right.
The T wrote:
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They
fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese
or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food
problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned
to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also
obese because they're lazy and/or stupid?
| 4. You continue to assume more money fixes a problem (and that this money must come from the government, which is money taken from taxpayers).
Money doesn't cure stupid. If you are obese because you are stupid or lazy, then more money won't fix that. As I've said a hundred times, if you took all the money in the country and redistributed it evenly, we'd have socioeconomic disparity in ten years, maybe five, maybe even less. How do people win millions in the lottery and wind up broke and worse off than they were? Because creating and managing wealth is a skill that some people have and most of us don't.
When did I say that? Now you're drawing conclusions from my words. Healthcare for these people is just "more money"? I'm not saying "give the poor and obese a piece of the rich's pie!"... I'm asking for healthcare, tax-funded, universal healthcare. I totally agree with the rest of your statement.
You didn't say it explicitly. You said two or more things that implied it. Unless you're just talking to be talking, I am supposed to be drawing conclusions from your words. Nevertheless, this is basic liberal ideology: Money funneled through the government corrects societal ills. No. Money funneled through the government should make sure everyone has some opportunities. And lol at pie since I watched the Penn & Teller video this morning..."I'm not taking pie from you, I'm giving pie to me!" You should watch Glenn Beck's program when actually had pies and started splitting them to explain his points...
The T wrote:
Shouldn't they have some kind
of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education
that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live? | They have access to at least 13 years of government education. Thirteen! And lots of Americans are still poor and fat? Interesting that we have a robust welfare system (40% of the budget according to the chart in the other thread) and we also have government-run education where students go for at least thirteen years. We are practically already living the liberal dream.
You've said it yourself: public education is flawed. It has to be bettered to include education on healthy lifestyles.
The "liberal dream"... We're SO far from that... Of course "liberal" compared to your views is just a hint left from hard-right...
I think the government has no business in education. I used to think it at least could, but after being both a student and a teacher, I know better.
As far as liberal dream goes, you missed my qualifier- "practically."
We have 13 years of education, yet there are still poor and fat people. We have government regulated businesses (including moves to tell us what we can and can't eat), yet there are still poor and fat people. We have about 40% of our budget (taxpayer money) going to welfare programs run by the government, yet there are still poor and fat people. We have minimum wage that keeps increasing, yet there are still poor and fat people.
So removing all of that is the answer? Or improving it?
Now do you seriously think that government-run health care is going to help alleviate poverty and obesity?
No. I ask for universal health care. Not for an ugly government official going to your house, taking your money, handing it to a fat and poor guy, and suddenly making him thin and rich in the process.
Giving individuals way too much credit? I think we've given our government way too much credit, and for far too long.
I'll give you for christmas a ticket to Cuba... THEN you'll see...
The T wrote:
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...) | 5. You don't get when I'm being sarcastic unless I use an emoticon.
I guess this could be my problem, so I will work on it. I'll practice now.
You annoy me.
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When you have to deal with sarcasm-machines Pat Shield and Mom, you tend to lose it...
Now you're using an emoticon, which means you are NOT being sarcastic... I got you now Mr Epignosis...
I'm not annoyed. |
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: December 30 2007
Location: Raeford, NC
Status: Offline
Points: 32524
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 12:53 |
The T wrote:
Epignosis wrote:
It gets harder and harder to talk to you for five reasons, and all five are present in this one post:
The T wrote:
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country.
|
1. You take what I say and make absolutes out of them.
My examples are just that- examples (or in this case, counterexamples). I don't claim to speak for all poor people, but you do. You expressed a positive association between being poor and being fat. I provided not one, but three counterexamples to this, and a scholarly article. That's three more examples and one more article than you've provided in this discussion backing up your assertion.
I already recognized that correlation is not absolute and is not equal to causation. If I make absolutes out of your examples is because you use YOUR situation to explain why this or that should or shouldn't happen. About your examples, I talked about them. You actually helped me see the error on using just my situation to explain things (remember when I opened the healthcare thread based on my mother's denial of insurance?)
The T wrote:
Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same. |
2. You don't listen to what I say.
I did take unemployment benefits, and I said I did. In fact, it was in response to a question you directly asked me. Here's the conversation, as you've clearly forgotten.
My bad then. I stand corrected.
The T wrote:
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your
beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving
late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But
for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time
that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe
she just can't do it.
|
3. You use hypothetical anecdotes instead of data.
How pitiful do you want the person to be, T? We can go further if you like. Maybe this woman has no arms or legs and is blind. Maybe she gets robbed everyday. Maybe her kids are hateful towards her. Maybe she is allergic to peanuts. Maybe maybe maybe maybe maybe. None of this changes my principles, sorry, and I think it's rather insulting that you reduce people to the sum of their worst circumstances.
Is my example really THAT extreme? A woman with two jobs and fatherless children? Wow...
It's not the extremity of the situation. It's just that this summarizes my view, and so your examples are moot:
1. There will always be poor people (because creating and managing wealth is a skill that most don't have). 2. It is fundamentally not the US government's place to make poor people not be poor. It is the government's place to: a) Protect the life of citizens (which is why we must have a robust military, maintained infrastructure) b) Protect the property of citizens (which is why I am opposed to income taxes and wealth redistribution) c) Protect the rights of citizens (which is why the government may run the court system)
The T wrote:
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They
fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese
or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food
problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned
to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also
obese because they're lazy and/or stupid?
| 4. You continue to assume more money fixes a problem (and that this money must come from the government, which is money taken from taxpayers).
Money doesn't cure stupid. If you are obese because you are stupid or lazy, then more money won't fix that. As I've said a hundred times, if you took all the money in the country and redistributed it evenly, we'd have socioeconomic disparity in ten years, maybe five, maybe even less. How do people win millions in the lottery and wind up broke and worse off than they were? Because creating and managing wealth is a skill that some people have and most of us don't.
When did I say that? Now you're drawing conclusions from my words. Healthcare for these people is just "more money"? I'm not saying "give the poor and obese a piece of the rich's pie!"... I'm asking for healthcare, tax-funded, universal healthcare. I totally agree with the rest of your statement.
You didn't say it explicitly. You said two or more things that implied it. Unless you're just talking to be talking, I am supposed to be drawing conclusions from your words. Nevertheless, this is basic liberal ideology: Money funneled through the government corrects societal ills.
And lol at pie since I watched the Penn & Teller video this morning..."I'm not taking pie from you, I'm giving pie to me!"
The T wrote:
Shouldn't they have some kind
of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education
that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live? | They have access to at least 13 years of government education. Thirteen! And lots of Americans are still poor and fat? Interesting that we have a robust welfare system (40% of the budget according to the chart in the other thread) and we also have government-run education where students go for at least thirteen years. We are practically already living the liberal dream.
You've said it yourself: public education is flawed. It has to be bettered to include education on healthy lifestyles.
The "liberal dream"... We're SO far from that... Of course "liberal" compared to your views is just a hint left from hard-right...
I think the government has no business in education. I used to think it at least could, but after being both a student and a teacher, I know better.
As far as liberal dream goes, you missed my qualifier- "practically."
We have 13 years of education, yet there are still poor and fat people. We have government regulated businesses (including moves to tell us what we can and can't eat), yet there are still poor and fat people. We have about 40% of our budget (taxpayer money) going to welfare programs run by the government, yet there are still poor and fat people. We have minimum wage that keeps increasing, yet there are still poor and fat people.
Now do you seriously think that government-run health care is going to help alleviate poverty and obesity?
Giving individuals way too much credit? I think we've given our government way too much credit, and for far too long.
The T wrote:
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...) | 5. You don't get when I'm being sarcastic unless I use an emoticon.
I guess this could be my problem, so I will work on it. I'll practice now.
You annoy me.
|
When you have to deal with sarcasm-machines Pat Shield and Mom, you tend to lose it...
Now you're using an emoticon, which means you are NOT being sarcastic... I got you now Mr Epignosis...
I'm not annoyed. |
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The T
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 12:47 |
WalterDigsTunes wrote:
People are not slaves to their circumstances. If they want change, hey
have the power to affect it. I don't see why you're blaming "the system"
for their unwillingness to shake themselves out of their environment. |
And thus, the fundamental basis of all your ideas. You give the individual way too much credit. Absurd.
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Walter jumped ahead of me. Basically, this.
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WalterDigsTunes
Forum Senior Member
Joined: September 11 2007
Location: SanDiegoTijuana
Status: Offline
Points: 4373
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 12:41 |
People are not slaves to their circumstances. If they want change, hey
have the power to affect it. I don't see why you're blaming "the system"
for their unwillingness to shake themselves out of their environment. |
And thus, the fundamental basis of all your ideas. You give the individual way too much credit. Absurd.
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thellama73
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: May 29 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 8368
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 12:38 |
The T wrote:
thellama73 wrote:
ExittheLemming wrote:
thellama73 wrote:
The T wrote:
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country. Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same.
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe she just can't do it.
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also obese because they're lazy and/or stupid? Shouldn't they have some kind of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live?
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...) |
They have access to education. There are libraries, are there not? Everyone keeps repeating that it's hard to pull yourself out of poverty. Of course it is. It's hard to be an architect too, but you're not advocating free architecture tutoring for anyone who wants it (are you?) Anything worth doing is going to be hard work. Henry criticizes me for saying that most poor people are poor by choice, but I have worked minimum wage jobs with very poor people before. Sure they complain a lot, but what are they doing to better their situation? For the ones I knew, not much. Instead of spending their free time learning a marketable skill they went to the movies, or played video games or , yes, bought lottery tickets. I realize this does not describe everyone who is poor. As I said before, some people's situations are beyond their control. But when I was earning minimum wage, I was constantly reading, studying, applying for better jobs. Rob has had a similar experience. And now we are both doing better. I'm sorry, but I have limited sympathy for people who have resigned themselves to a life of poverty and make no effort to escape from it.
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Assuming you're talking about what currently is re tertiary education, and not what many Libertarians think should be, this education would of course be funded predominantly by taxes yes? (Something they appear to be diametrically opposed to) The only snag with meritocracies is that you can't enter the race without a ticket. Bugger....wrong thread
|
You assume wrong. I'm talking about books. There are libraries (which I don't believe would disappear without government funding, but that's another topic) and there are book stores that let you sit and read for hours without bothering you, and there is the internet, also available at libraries. There is no obstacle to learning if one is so inclined. You assume people must be forced to learn, but I don't. The information is available. All they have to do is avail themselves of it.
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People have to be at least encouraged to learn... Or be raised in a learning-friendly environment...
Children of those vide-game-movie parents you're talking about, at least a good percentage of them, will learn only that that's the way to live life... |
That's nonsense. Everyone is aware that there are more successful people than them. Everyone is aware that to become more successful, you need an education. I would think that living in dire poverty should be enough of an incentive to learn, wouldn't you? With a half hour's research you can find tons of ways to make money. You could write a book about how awful it is to be poor in America. I'm sure you could find a publisher for that, and it would cost you absolutely zero. YOu could teach yourself to draw and make t-shirts to sell on the internet, again the cost is zero. You could get a book from the library about accounting, study for a year, take the CPA test and walk into a high paying job with little difficulty. The cost is no more than the cost of the CPA exam. People are not slaves to their circumstances. If they want change, hey have the power to affect it. I don't see why you're blaming "the system" for their unwillingness to shake themselves out of their environment.
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The T
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 12:32 |
thellama73 wrote:
ExittheLemming wrote:
thellama73 wrote:
The T wrote:
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country. Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same.
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe she just can't do it.
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also obese because they're lazy and/or stupid? Shouldn't they have some kind of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live?
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...) |
They have access to education. There are libraries, are there not? Everyone keeps repeating that it's hard to pull yourself out of poverty. Of course it is. It's hard to be an architect too, but you're not advocating free architecture tutoring for anyone who wants it (are you?) Anything worth doing is going to be hard work. Henry criticizes me for saying that most poor people are poor by choice, but I have worked minimum wage jobs with very poor people before. Sure they complain a lot, but what are they doing to better their situation? For the ones I knew, not much. Instead of spending their free time learning a marketable skill they went to the movies, or played video games or , yes, bought lottery tickets. I realize this does not describe everyone who is poor. As I said before, some people's situations are beyond their control. But when I was earning minimum wage, I was constantly reading, studying, applying for better jobs. Rob has had a similar experience. And now we are both doing better. I'm sorry, but I have limited sympathy for people who have resigned themselves to a life of poverty and make no effort to escape from it.
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Assuming you're talking about what currently is re tertiary education, and not what many Libertarians think should be, this education would of course be funded predominantly by taxes yes? (Something they appear to be diametrically opposed to) The only snag with meritocracies is that you can't enter the race without a ticket. Bugger....wrong thread
|
You assume wrong. I'm talking about books. There are libraries (which I don't believe would disappear without government funding, but that's another topic) and there are book stores that let you sit and read for hours without bothering you, and there is the internet, also available at libraries. There is no obstacle to learning if one is so inclined. You assume people must be forced to learn, but I don't. The information is available. All they have to do is avail themselves of it.
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People have to be at least encouraged to learn... Or be raised in a learning-friendly environment...
Children of those vide-game-movie parents you're talking about, at least a good percentage of them, will learn only that that's the way to live life...
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The T
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 12:29 |
Epignosis wrote:
It gets harder and harder to talk to you for five reasons, and all five are present in this one post:
The T wrote:
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country.
|
1. You take what I say and make absolutes out of them.
My examples are just that- examples (or in this case, counterexamples). I don't claim to speak for all poor people, but you do. You expressed a positive association between being poor and being fat. I provided not one, but three counterexamples to this, and a scholarly article. That's three more examples and one more article than you've provided in this discussion backing up your assertion.
I already recognized that correlation is not absolute and is not equal to causation. If I make absolutes out of your examples is because you use YOUR situation to explain why this or that should or shouldn't happen. About your examples, I talked about them. You actually helped me see the error on using just my situation to explain things (remember when I opened the healthcare thread based on my mother's denial of insurance?)
The T wrote:
Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same. |
2. You don't listen to what I say.
I did take unemployment benefits, and I said I did. In fact, it was in response to a question you directly asked me. Here's the conversation, as you've clearly forgotten.
My bad then. I stand corrected.
The T wrote:
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your
beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving
late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But
for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time
that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe
she just can't do it.
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3. You use hypothetical anecdotes instead of data.
How pitiful do you want the person to be, T? We can go further if you like. Maybe this woman has no arms or legs and is blind. Maybe she gets robbed everyday. Maybe her kids are hateful towards her. Maybe she is allergic to peanuts. Maybe maybe maybe maybe maybe. None of this changes my principles, sorry, and I think it's rather insulting that you reduce people to the sum of their worst circumstances.
Is my example really THAT extreme? A woman with two jobs and fatherless children? Wow...
The T wrote:
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They
fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese
or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food
problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned
to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also
obese because they're lazy and/or stupid?
| 4. You continue to assume more money fixes a problem (and that this money must come from the government, which is money taken from taxpayers).
Money doesn't cure stupid. If you are obese because you are stupid or lazy, then more money won't fix that. As I've said a hundred times, if you took all the money in the country and redistributed it evenly, we'd have socioeconomic disparity in ten years, maybe five, maybe even less. How do people win millions in the lottery and wind up broke and worse off than they were? Because creating and managing wealth is a skill that some people have and most of us don't.
When did I say that? Now you're drawing conclusions from my words. Healthcare for these people is just "more money"? I'm not saying "give the poor and obese a piece of the rich's pie!"... I'm asking for healthcare, tax-funded, universal healthcare. I totally agree with the rest of your statement.
The T wrote:
Shouldn't they have some kind
of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education
that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live? | They have access to at least 13 years of government education. Thirteen! And lots of Americans are still poor and fat? Interesting that we have a robust welfare system (40% of the budget according to the chart in the other thread) and we also have government-run education where students go for at least thirteen years. We are practically already living the liberal dream.
You've said it yourself: public education is flawed. It has to be bettered to include education on healthy lifestyles.
The "liberal dream"... We're SO far from that... Of course "liberal" compared to your views is just a hint left from hard-right...
The T wrote:
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...) | 5. You don't get when I'm being sarcastic unless I use an emoticon.
I guess this could be my problem, so I will work on it. I'll practice now.
You annoy me.
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When you have to deal with sarcasm-machines Pat Shield and Mom, you tend to lose it...
Now you're using an emoticon, which means you are NOT being sarcastic... I got you now Mr Epignosis...
I'm not annoyed.
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thellama73
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: May 29 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 8368
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 12:28 |
ExittheLemming wrote:
thellama73 wrote:
The T wrote:
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country. Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same.
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe she just can't do it.
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also obese because they're lazy and/or stupid? Shouldn't they have some kind of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live?
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...) |
They have access to education. There are libraries, are there not? Everyone keeps repeating that it's hard to pull yourself out of poverty. Of course it is. It's hard to be an architect too, but you're not advocating free architecture tutoring for anyone who wants it (are you?) Anything worth doing is going to be hard work. Henry criticizes me for saying that most poor people are poor by choice, but I have worked minimum wage jobs with very poor people before. Sure they complain a lot, but what are they doing to better their situation? For the ones I knew, not much. Instead of spending their free time learning a marketable skill they went to the movies, or played video games or , yes, bought lottery tickets. I realize this does not describe everyone who is poor. As I said before, some people's situations are beyond their control. But when I was earning minimum wage, I was constantly reading, studying, applying for better jobs. Rob has had a similar experience. And now we are both doing better. I'm sorry, but I have limited sympathy for people who have resigned themselves to a life of poverty and make no effort to escape from it.
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Assuming you're talking about what currently is re tertiary education, and not what many Libertarians think should be, this education would of course be funded predominantly by taxes yes? (Something they appear to be diametrically opposed to) The only snag with meritocracies is that you can't enter the race without a ticket. Bugger....wrong thread
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You assume wrong. I'm talking about books. There are libraries (which I don't believe would disappear without government funding, but that's another topic) and there are book stores that let you sit and read for hours without bothering you, and there is the internet, also available at libraries. There is no obstacle to learning if one is so inclined. You assume people must be forced to learn, but I don't. The information is available. All they have to do is avail themselves of it.
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: December 30 2007
Location: Raeford, NC
Status: Offline
Points: 32524
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 12:01 |
It gets harder and harder to talk to you for five reasons, and all five are present in this one post:
The T wrote:
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country.
|
1. You take what I say and make absolutes out of them.
My examples are just that- examples (or in this case, counterexamples). I don't claim to speak for all poor people, but you do. You expressed a positive association between being poor and being fat. I provided not one, but three counterexamples to this, and a scholarly article. That's three more examples and one more article than you've provided in this discussion backing up your assertion.
The T wrote:
Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same. |
2. You don't listen to what I say.
I did take unemployment benefits, and I said I did. In fact, it was in response to a question you directly asked me. Here's the conversation, as you've clearly forgotten.
The T wrote:
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your
beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving
late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But
for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time
that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe
she just can't do it.
|
3. You use hypothetical anecdotes instead of data.
How pitiful do you want the person to be, T? We can go further if you like. Maybe this woman has no arms or legs and is blind. Maybe she gets robbed everyday. Maybe her kids are hateful towards her. Maybe she is allergic to peanuts. Maybe maybe maybe maybe maybe. None of this changes my principles, sorry, and I think it's rather insulting that you reduce people to the sum of their worst circumstances.
The T wrote:
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They
fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese
or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food
problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned
to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also
obese because they're lazy and/or stupid?
| 4. You continue to assume more money fixes a problem (and that this money must come from the government, which is money taken from taxpayers).
Money doesn't cure stupid. If you are obese because you are stupid or lazy, then more money won't fix that. As I've said a hundred times, if you took all the money in the country and redistributed it evenly, we'd have socioeconomic disparity in ten years, maybe five, maybe even less. How do people win millions in the lottery and wind up broke and worse off than they were? Because creating and managing wealth is a skill that some people have and most of us don't.
The T wrote:
Shouldn't they have some kind
of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education
that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live? | They have access to at least 13 years of government education. Thirteen! And lots of Americans are still poor and fat? Interesting that we have a robust welfare system (40% of the budget according to the chart in the other thread) and we also have government-run education where students go for at least thirteen years. We are practically already living the liberal dream.
The T wrote:
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...) | 5. You don't get when I'm being sarcastic unless I use an emoticon.
I guess this could be my problem, so I will work on it. I'll practice now.
You annoy me.
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The T
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 12:01 |
ExittheLemming wrote:
The only snag with meritocracies is that you can't enter the race without a ticket. Bugger....wrong thread
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Please, it's their fault that they don't have a ticket!
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The T
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 11:59 |
Slartibartfast wrote:
What I support is a basic minimum floor of health care provisions. It
should be available to everyone regardless of income or even bad
habits. Those who need health care due to bad habits should be heavily
coerced into reforming in exchange. I guess that's basic socialized
medicine, and I don't give a damn. If some dorkheads think it's
stealing from them, I really don't give a damn.
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Exactly. Everyone should have access to. Even the idiots who cause it to themselves. They should be encouraged to reform of course. But Yes, I don't have a problem with a percentage of my pay going to that issue. I don't think none's stealing me. I think is fair.
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ExittheLemming
Forum Senior Member
Joined: October 19 2007
Location: Penal Colony
Status: Offline
Points: 11415
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 11:54 |
thellama73 wrote:
The T wrote:
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country. Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same.
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe she just can't do it.
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also obese because they're lazy and/or stupid? Shouldn't they have some kind of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live?
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...) |
They have access to education. There are libraries, are there not? Everyone keeps repeating that it's hard to pull yourself out of poverty. Of course it is. It's hard to be an architect too, but you're not advocating free architecture tutoring for anyone who wants it (are you?) Anything worth doing is going to be hard work. Henry criticizes me for saying that most poor people are poor by choice, but I have worked minimum wage jobs with very poor people before. Sure they complain a lot, but what are they doing to better their situation? For the ones I knew, not much. Instead of spending their free time learning a marketable skill they went to the movies, or played video games or , yes, bought lottery tickets. I realize this does not describe everyone who is poor. As I said before, some people's situations are beyond their control. But when I was earning minimum wage, I was constantly reading, studying, applying for better jobs. Rob has had a similar experience. And now we are both doing better. I'm sorry, but I have limited sympathy for people who have resigned themselves to a life of poverty and make no effort to escape from it.
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Assuming you're talking about what currently is re tertiary education, and not what many Libertarians think should be, this education would of course be funded predominantly by taxes yes? (Something they appear to be diametrically opposed to) The only snag with meritocracies is that you can't enter the race without a ticket. Bugger....wrong thread
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Slartibartfast
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator / In Memoriam
Joined: April 29 2006
Location: Atlantais
Status: Offline
Points: 29630
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 11:43 |
What I support is a basic minimum floor of health care provisions. It
should be available to everyone regardless of income or even bad
habits. Those who need health care due to bad habits should be heavily
coerced into reforming in exchange. I guess that's basic socialized
medicine, and I don't give a damn. If some dorkheads think it's
stealing from them, I really don't give a damn.
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Released date are often when it it impacted you but recorded dates are when it really happened...
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thellama73
Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: May 29 2006
Location: United States
Status: Offline
Points: 8368
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 11:37 |
The T wrote:
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country. Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same.
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe she just can't do it.
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also obese because they're lazy and/or stupid? Shouldn't they have some kind of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live?
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...) |
They have access to education. There are libraries, are there not? Everyone keeps repeating that it's hard to pull yourself out of poverty. Of course it is. It's hard to be an architect too, but you're not advocating free architecture tutoring for anyone who wants it (are you?) Anything worth doing is going to be hard work. Henry criticizes me for saying that most poor people are poor by choice, but I have worked minimum wage jobs with very poor people before. Sure they complain a lot, but what are they doing to better their situation? For the ones I knew, not much. Instead of spending their free time learning a marketable skill they went to the movies, or played video games or , yes, bought lottery tickets. I realize this does not describe everyone who is poor. As I said before, some people's situations are beyond their control. But when I was earning minimum wage, I was constantly reading, studying, applying for better jobs. Rob has had a similar experience. And now we are both doing better. I'm sorry, but I have limited sympathy for people who have resigned themselves to a life of poverty and make no effort to escape from it.
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The T
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: October 16 2006
Location: FL, USA
Status: Offline
Points: 17493
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 11:24 |
^As always Robert, your example is supposed to explain every damn poor (or not that poor) family in this country. Just like when we were talking about unemployment benefits, the fact that you didn't take them was supposed to mean everyone could do the same.
You had a mom and a dad. Let's just imagine only one. Working at your beloved Walmart 40 hours a week and then in some restaurant. Arriving late at home. Dead tired. Yes, she should cook a proper meal. But for that she has to have gone and bought it too. All of this is time that this person maybe doesn't entirely have. Maybe it's laziness. Maybe she just can't do it.
And let's assume the parents that do this are stupid and/or lazy. They fed their children fast food all the time. Their children grow up obese or almost so. This children have learned that the best answer for food problems is fast food (besides the fact that they have already learned to please their stomachs with high sugar and fat foods...) Are they also obese because they're lazy and/or stupid? Shouldn't they have some kind of access to care? Should they at least have access to some education that re-teaches them how to live a healthy live?
Or Having a heart attack and dying is pretty cheap, I hear?
(again, no emoticon...)
Edited by The T - September 24 2010 at 11:24
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Epignosis
Special Collaborator
Honorary Collaborator
Joined: December 30 2007
Location: Raeford, NC
Status: Offline
Points: 32524
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 07:14 |
I've been poor (and none of this, "well, you're richer than most people in the world." I get that. I'm talking about relative to the US, like everyone else is). I've had to pawn musical instruments to pay the rent and buy groceries. We ate off about $30 some weeks. We have been below the poverty line more than once. We had our car repossessed. We've sold our furniture to get by. We've sold furniture people have thrown out.
And we ate fast food maybe- maybe once every two months. Even now, we don't eat fast food often (again, maybe once every two months). If we do so more, it is only because we are traveling to visit my family.
My father worked up to 4 jobs at a time when I was growing up (he now works 2 full time jobs). My mom worked also at various points (and still does). In spite of all that, my mom still cooked or made sure we had something else to eat besides friggin fast food. When I lost my job two years, we didn't turn to fast food. When I couldn't get another job almost a year later, we still didn't turn to fast food.
My maternal grandmother has never had money. She worked a tobacco farm when she was young, and I know she worked as a crossing guard. Her son supported them both for a while, and now she works at a thrift store- after retirement age (before anyone pities her, let me say she's very happy and loves her job). She got overweight a long time ago because she quit smoking (when I was a toddler, she was a rail, then she quit smoking and got bigger). I know she did not eat poorly because I spent a lot of time with grandma (she lived within walking distance of my home). The only time she ever ate fast food was when she had a coupon, so maybe twice a month.
Cooking a decent meal is neither expensive and it doesn't take long. I can feed a family of four a nice, healthy meal for under $3 and in 20 minutes. And as I said, exercising is free. You can also make soups and things of that nature that can be saved for later meals.
There is only an association between being poor and being fat. There has been no causation shown (apart from weak speculation), and this article would suggest that there isn't any.
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Henry Plainview
Forum Senior Member
Joined: May 26 2008
Location: Declined
Status: Offline
Points: 16715
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Posted: September 24 2010 at 01:34 |
I was bored the other day and I decided that I had never won anything in my life gambling, so I was going to blow some money on the dollar scratch offs. I wasn't winning anything (the game I was initially playing was rigged) and I got pissed and went a little crazy, even though I knew it was stupid. I finally stopped after losing like $20 because I was passing the point into getting really stupid, although I did win $7 back. Let me tell you, those things are evil. That it was a machine instead of behind the counter enabled impulse irrationality because you didn't have to consider what someone else thought of you, and they print them so there are multiple instances where the numbers or symbols were close to winning. Even though you really didn't almost win, that's what it feels like emotionally. Now, I live with my parents who are very nice, so burning on a $20 on nothing isn't that big a deal to me, even if it represents 3 hours of my labor, but I can see how it would be a problem if I were a real adult and I got caught in the $20 cards. I would be very happy to see the state lotteries eliminated. It's amazing that people will generally recognize that gambling is a drain on society that preys on people's emotions and poor math skills and get all NIMBY if somebody tries to open a casino, but trying to kill the lottery would probably destroy you.
thellama73 wrote:
Even the poorest Americans are not starving to death. If they want more, opportunities exist.
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I'm sure the 14% of Americans living below the poverty line are just thrilled to be there, they'd leave but it's just too much effort.
Epignosis wrote:
I wasn't making any causal correlation between being poor and being fat. You were. You tell me how being poor makes people fat. Aside from the absurd notion that poor people are forced to eat fast food because it's cheaper. I've already debunked that. |
Poor people are fat because they eat fast food and soda because it's cheap, that is incredibly obvious and well documented. Of course it's not actually cheaper than making spaghetti and hamburger yourself (but I've only ever seen Food, Inc. make that claim), but it's a hell of a lot easier (the poor tend to be quite busy and stressed) and doesn't require the initial investment in pans and whatnot. I think it's hard to claim that produce is more expensive than meat, but it's certainly disproportionately priced because of US government subsidies, the same goes for the bane of modern civilization, HFCS. And if you have few joys in life, soda is helpful, I guess.
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if you own a sodastream i hate you
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JJLehto
Prog Reviewer
Joined: April 05 2006
Location: Tallahassee, FL
Status: Offline
Points: 34550
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Posted: September 23 2010 at 23:29 |
Spending on Healthcare as % of GDP US: 13 2nd is Switzerland: 10.7 OECD Average: 8 While the US spends more on healthcare then other industrial countries we use our system less than the OECD average. Doesn't make much sense to me... So why keep this system? Quality of healthcare is tough to determine and of course varies greatly between people. So I really don't know how I feel about this number: US health system ranked 37th out of 191 by the WHO. Figured I'd throw it out there anyway... Universal healthcare may not be perfect but I think it would be better then our current one. Also, in 2007 62% of bankruptcies were medical related. This does not happen nearly as often in other countries and I find it sickening that: Someone can lose their job (and thus health plan) due to...lets say the recession... A family member falls very ill/suffers a serious accident whatever. How can they pay? A family should go bankrupt due to a needed medical cost? In the wealthiest country on Earth?
Edited by JJLehto - September 23 2010 at 23:30
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