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Triceratopsoil View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 22:51
y'all should give Sweden a visit, see how they're doing
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 22:55
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


Originally posted by Franklin Delano Roosevelt Franklin Delano Roosevelt wrote:


The right to a useful and remunerative job in the industries or shops or farms or mines of the nation;A job isn't a right.  It's a thing you earn.

The right to earn enough to provide adequate food and clothing and recreation;

A wage isn't a right.  It's a thing you earn.  Neat though that recreation is included here.  All work and no play I guess.

The right of every farmer to raise and sell his products at a return which will give him and his family a decent living;

The government can't determine this.  Unless it can make me buy potatoes.

The right of every businessman, large and small, to trade in an atmosphere of freedom from unfair competition and domination by monopolies at home or abroad;

Based on the previous declaration, this would mean freedom from any competition.


The right of every family to a decent home;

A home isn't a right.  It must be secured.


The right to adequate medical care and the opportunity to achieve and enjoy good health;

<p align="left">I've discussed this elsewhere.

The right to adequate protection from the economic fears of old age, sickness, accident, and unemployment;

This is idealistic and silly.  Most of us will likely experience old age, sickness, accidents, and unemployment, and will have to cope.  Is the government's role really to offer "protection from the economic fears" of this sh*t?  By this rhetoric, long-time smokers and poor drivers should get government handouts!


The right to a good education.

Again, education isn't a right either, but sh*t, the government provides one, and mostly it sucks.  So meh.  Like health care, I've said my piece about this elsewhere.


All of these rights spell security.

All of these "rights" spell "politicians in my ass."  No thanks.


Also, this, from Wikipedia:
Originally posted by Wikipedia Wikipedia wrote:

Roosevelt's stated justification was that the "political rights"
guaranteed by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights had "proved
inadequate to assure us equality in the pursuit of happiness." Roosevelt's
remedy was to create an "economic bill of rights" which would
guarantee:
A government that can guarantee all that is a government strong enough to take away that which I hold dear.  Again, no thanks.


Exactly!

+ let me add that only government intervention can generate monopolies

It is very difficult to find people who think that way in Venezuela (here every single political party is socialist... socialist ideas are believed to be natural here )

Edited by ProgressiveAttic - June 23 2010 at 23:03
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 22:57
Originally posted by Captain Clutch Captain Clutch wrote:

y'all should give Sweden a visit, see how they're doing
I know, low employment rates, high overall quality of life, long life-spans, and an incredibly stable economy.  Truly the rights such as healthcare, education, jobs and houses mentioned in FDR's Second Bill of Rights can't be sustained.  I know that you may disagree with me considering these rights, but it is foolish to think that you can have the right to "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness" without a job, education, and healthcare.  Remember, the government is not the only oppressor we must be liberated from.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:00
Originally posted by UndercoverBoy UndercoverBoy wrote:

Originally posted by Captain Clutch Captain Clutch wrote:

y'all should give Sweden a visit, see how they're doing
I know, low employment rates, high overall quality of life, long life-spans, and an incredibly stable economy.  Truly the rights such as healthcare, education, jobs and houses mentioned in FDR's Second Bill of Rights can't be sustained.  I know that you may disagree with me considering these rights, but it is foolish to think that you can have the right to "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness" without a job, education, and healthcare.  Remember, the government is not the only oppressor we must be liberated from.


In case you missed this from earlier:

Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:



"Life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" aren't "inalienable rights" despite what numerous documents state.  We execute felons, imprison criminals, and...well, you are free to pursue happiness all you like.  No guarantees you shall find it.

I do not oppose any and all governmental restrictions on business, particularly when public safety is at risk.  But that comes with the territory of national security and public health, not making sure everybody has a job or money in his pocket.

Why is it liberals are content to demand strict governmental regulations on producers?  Why not control the economy by imposing strict regulations on consumers?  Think of it:  You get a list from the government telling you what brand of waffles you must buy.  What brand of razors.  What brand of beer.  What make of car.  What brand of tampons.  What brand of computer.  What websites you can visit and when.  Surely that would do it and keep people employed! 


I would love to hear a real answer from liberals on this last paragraph.


Edited by Epignosis - June 23 2010 at 23:01
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:08
Originally posted by Captain Clutch Captain Clutch wrote:

y'all should give Sweden a visit, see how they're doing


LOL Social Democracy for the win!

Tired of arguing....reduced to trolling



Edited by JJLehto - June 23 2010 at 23:09
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:08
Hey I'm a social liberal. I'm content to be with the rabble and talk sh*t about the economy without actually knowing what's up. :)
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:09
I like oligarchies
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:24
Interesting that I'm lower middle class (and probably always will be) and I support conservative libertarianism.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:26
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:


Interesting that I'm lower middle class (and probably always will be) and I support libertarianism.




Edited by ProgressiveAttic - June 23 2010 at 23:42
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:29
f**k libertarianism, f**k democrats, f**k american politics. I don't give a crap anymore. I'll live in this country that I've learned to love for its good things for a few more years and then we've decided with my girl to go back to my country. USA is no paradise, not at all. No country is. But I don't have to be living in a country whose values and customs are so different from mine. 


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:30
Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:

Interesting that I'm lower middle class (and probably always will be) and I support conservative libertarianism.


Don't you realize that you've just been brainwashed by the corporations into conservative philosophy so that they can keep you down and hoard all the money for themselves?

Oh wait, I meant to say "You're right!"
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:31
Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

Originally posted by Captain Clutch Captain Clutch wrote:

y'all should give Sweden a visit, see how they're doing


LOL Social Democracy for the win!

Tired of arguing....reduced to trolling

Also, there's this:
What's the difference between Anarchists and Libertarians??
Libertarians are anarchists with money.
 
Anarchists believe property is theft. Libertarians believe everything is property.
 
Libertarians are bosses; anarchists work for them when they run out of other options.
 
Libertarians buy more guns, but anarchists use more ammo.
 
Libertarians ride in stretch limos; anarchists throw bricks through their windshields.
 
Libertarians go shopping; anarchists go shoplifting.
 
Libertarians go to the police after they've been mugged; anarchists get mugged by the police.
 
A libertarian wants to marry another libertarian, but only after sleeping with enough anarchists.
 
Anarchists ignore the IRS; Libertarians hire accountants and attorneys to fight them.
 
Libertarians think the government is trying steal the property they rightfully own; anarchists think the government is trying to defend property that nobody rightfully owns.
 
Libertarians are organized in a political party; anarchists aren't organized in anything.
 
Anarchists ignore elections; Libertarians run for office, vote and lose.
 
Libertarians think anarchists are naive and unrealistic; anarchists don't care what libertarians think.
 
Oh, and Social Democracy FTW indeed.  Although I took a political poll once, and came out as a Social Republican.Geek


Edited by UndercoverBoy - June 23 2010 at 23:33
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:32
Originally posted by Captain Clutch Captain Clutch wrote:

this whole thread is just Americans proving the "paranoid conservative" American stereotype


Thank You.
 I may not have satisfied people's questions to their liking, and I'll admit that. But  no one here owned up to what I said either...Earlier I said this stems from paranoia, and it was either missed or ignored. I know it's rooted in us Americans to fear the government, but the closest anyone came to just admitting it was Rob. And Rob's debating about freedom and its limitations was nice compared to every answer I always get, "JUST KEEP THE EVIL GOVERNMENT HANDS OUT OF IT! AH!"

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Ermm Maybe I'm callous, but I seriously care for the well-being of my family more than others. My emotions can not afford to be spread so thin over hypothetical suffering in places around the world. Excuse my lack of a bleeding heart, but if my family was put in a hard place because of outsourcing, you bet your ass I wouldn't write it off because someone some where else got a job. Family matters more than others--maybe not in an objective sense, but in a "me-giving-a-sh*t-about-the-issue" sense.


Thank you as well Stoney.
 When I was asked about "Is my father better than one in China" and how outsourcing helps thousands around the world... I didnt want to sound cold, but no, I dont' care about them. I mean, it is good that someone more needy will get a way to help their family, but hey, it was taken from mine...


Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:



Economies tend to be cyclic.  The irony is that people start to demand governmental intervention, and that serves to make things worse, not better.  That's all.

I hope your father finds suitable and profitable employment soon, and that your mother maintains hers.


And thank you as well.
I do apologize for being a little more hot headed than I usually am, but I really am frustrated.
I know theory and all, but you have to admit it's tough to hear "it better for the country/for the business" or "the free market does its things" when I see a man I admire greatly sitting around all day doing things to occupy himself/going on unemployment, and my brothers education being postponed when he finally gets to do what he's been wanting to do.  And I don't want to be a selfish b*****d, MANY families are in my place and worse off, and that's why I get riled up.

As for the cyclical markets, what worries me Rob is that what jobs will their be? Our manufacturing days our long behind us. Some of that has been made up by tech jobs/white collar/science all those. But alot of that is being outsourced. I know jobs will alays be created but it seems to me more are being lost than made. Will 4% average unemployment be a thing of that past? Will we have no choice but to become engineers in the future and work to build robots that will be doing our physical jobs? It's just frightening man. I see an economic recovery with 10% unemployment still and just think, is this the norm now?



Edited by JJLehto - June 23 2010 at 23:34
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:42
Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

Originally posted by Captain Clutch Captain Clutch wrote:

this whole thread is just Americans proving the "paranoid conservative" American stereotype


Thank You.
 I may not have satisfied people's questions to their liking, and I'll admit that. But  no one here owned up to what I said either...Earlier I said this stems from paranoia, and it was either missed or ignored. I know it's rooted in us Americans to fear the government, but the closest anyone came to just admitting it was Rob. And Rob's debating about freedom and its limitations was nice compared to every answer I always get, "JUST KEEP THE EVIL GOVERNMENT HANDS OUT OF IT! AH!"

I don't deny that I fear the government. I think you'd be a fool not to fear the government in the same way that you'd be a fool not to fear a grizzly bear. They are both incredibly powerful and can easily do you great harm if you're not careful. This is not paranoia, but prudence.

As for the cyclical markets, what worries me Rob is that what jobs will their be? Our manufacturing days our long behind us. Some of that has been made up by tech jobs/white collar/science all those. But alot of that is being outsourced. I know jobs will alays be created but it seems to me more are being lost than made. Will 4% average unemployment be a thing of that past? Will we have no choice but to become engineers in the future and work to build robots that will be doing our physical jobs? It's just frightening man. I see an economic recovery with 10% unemployment still and just think, is this the norm now?

I understand your concerns, but history has shown that new technologies create more jobs than they cost. When the automobile was invented, people in the horse and buggy industry fought it tooth and nail, but more jobs were created than were lost. Same thing with computers, mass production and just about any other technology you can name. I think your fears for the future are misplaced. What you should really be worried about is the government's smothering of our economy which has resulted in a very slow recovery from this recession.


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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:44
^"The government is a grizzly bear"?  I think this only proves Brian's point.LOL
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:49
^Like I said, I don't deny it.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 23 2010 at 23:51
Originally posted by thellama73 thellama73 wrote:

Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

Originally posted by Captain Clutch Captain Clutch wrote:

this whole thread is just Americans proving the "paranoid conservative" American stereotype


Thank You.
 I may not have satisfied people's questions to their liking, and I'll admit that. But  no one here owned up to what I said either...Earlier I said this stems from paranoia, and it was either missed or ignored. I know it's rooted in us Americans to fear the government, but the closest anyone came to just admitting it was Rob. And Rob's debating about freedom and its limitations was nice compared to every answer I always get, "JUST KEEP THE EVIL GOVERNMENT HANDS OUT OF IT! AH!"

I don't deny that I fear the government. I think you'd be a fool not to fear the government in the same way that you'd be a fool not to fear a grizzly bear. They are both incredibly powerful and can easily do you great harm if you're not careful. This is not paranoia, but prudence.

As for the cyclical markets, what worries me Rob is that what jobs will their be? Our manufacturing days our long behind us. Some of that has been made up by tech jobs/white collar/science all those. But alot of that is being outsourced. I know jobs will alays be created but it seems to me more are being lost than made. Will 4% average unemployment be a thing of that past? Will we have no choice but to become engineers in the future and work to build robots that will be doing our physical jobs? It's just frightening man. I see an economic recovery with 10% unemployment still and just think, is this the norm now?

I understand your concerns, but history has shown that new technologies create more jobs than they cost. When the automobile was invented, people in the horse and buggy industry fought it tooth and nail, but more jobs were created than were lost. Same thing with computers, mass production and just about any other technology you can name. I think your fears for the future are misplaced. What you should really be worried about is the government's smothering of our economy which has resulted in a very slow recovery from this recession.




I like your candor, but the government and a bear? I mean, I do understand your fear... I do, maybe I'm just blissfully naive and optimistic but I just don't have this fear of the government becoming an authoritarian beast. Look at Europe, and look at the Nordic countries. Social Democracy....as in Socialist aspects in a Democratic, Capitalist system.

If you really want I'll fetch numbers, but the Nordic countries are always ranked high in terms of freedom, personal AND economic, business does well, yet income inequality is much lower than most countries. Not saying what Sweden does is exactly right for the US, something unique would have to be figured out, but do you at least see that the government will not become an intrusive monster? And look at the US government from 1789 to now. Probably the founding fathers would be horrified, but we've not become an authoritarian regime, much as we'd like to think so....

As for technology I do hope you're right. I guess it's MY irrational fear, but I just feel like we're at the point were technology is replacing jobs, not creating. And whatever is created can be shipped elsewhere, ad when THEY start saying what I am....it'll be shipped elsewhere...

That's another point. Want me to be less self focused and more concerned about ALL, how about this? The real big cats can simply shift to anywhere. We lose jobs to China? When they get to big, it can all be shifted to Indonesia, then to Vietnam etc etc etc. Those on top get richer while ALL workers, in the world, are pushed down.
These MNC owners are their own entity. They live and operate outside all boundaries. THAT scares the hell out of me!



Edited by JJLehto - June 24 2010 at 00:03
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 24 2010 at 00:03
Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

Originally posted by Captain Clutch Captain Clutch wrote:

this whole thread is just Americans proving the "paranoid conservative" American stereotype


Thank You.
 I may not have satisfied people's questions to their liking, and I'll admit that. But  no one here owned up to what I said either...Earlier I said this stems from paranoia, and it was either missed or ignored. I know it's rooted in us Americans to fear the government, but the closest anyone came to just admitting it was Rob. And Rob's debating about freedom and its limitations was nice compared to every answer I always get, "JUST KEEP THE EVIL GOVERNMENT HANDS OUT OF IT! AH!"

Originally posted by stonebeard stonebeard wrote:

Ermm Maybe I'm callous, but I seriously care for the well-being of my family more than others. My emotions can not afford to be spread so thin over hypothetical suffering in places around the world. Excuse my lack of a bleeding heart, but if my family was put in a hard place because of outsourcing, you bet your ass I wouldn't write it off because someone some where else got a job. Family matters more than others--maybe not in an objective sense, but in a "me-giving-a-sh*t-about-the-issue" sense.


Thank you as well Stoney.
 When I was asked about "Is my father better than one in China" and how outsourcing helps thousands around the world... I didnt want to sound cold, but no, I dont' care about them. I mean, it is good that someone more needy will get a way to help their family, but hey, it was taken from mine...


Originally posted by Epignosis Epignosis wrote:



Economies tend to be cyclic.  The irony is that people start to demand governmental intervention, and that serves to make things worse, not better.  That's all.

I hope your father finds suitable and profitable employment soon, and that your mother maintains hers.


And thank you as well.
I do apologize for being a little more hot headed than I usually am, but I really am frustrated.
I know theory and all, but you have to admit it's tough to hear "it better for the country/for the business" or "the free market does its things" when I see a man I admire greatly sitting around all day doing things to occupy himself/going on unemployment, and my brothers education being postponed when he finally gets to do what he's been wanting to do.  And I don't want to be a selfish b*****d, MANY families are in my place and worse off, and that's why I get riled up.

As for the cyclical markets, what worries me Rob is that what jobs will their be? Our manufacturing days our long behind us. Some of that has been made up by tech jobs/white collar/science all those. But alot of that is being outsourced. I know jobs will alays be created but it seems to me more are being lost than made. Will 4% average unemployment be a thing of that past? Will we have no choice but to become engineers in the future and work to build robots that will be doing our physical jobs? It's just frightening man. I see an economic recovery with 10% unemployment still and just think, is this the norm now?



You are very intelligent.  I know that.  I've seen your other posts.  Wink

My mentioning of a father in China was to see where your ideology stood.  My dad?  f**k yes
he's better than some dude in China (and not just because he's my dad).  I'd wager your old man kicks major ass too. 

But I wanted to know where you stood.  This post here tells me that you really don't think the government should take control of business. 

I'll tell you why sh*t will get better.

1.  I can't repair sh*t.  Nothing.  I am practically not a man in that regard.  A person in China cannot repair my car/sink/guitar/etc.

2. I love to eat.  I won't fly to China to get some BBQ though.

3. Beer.  Nuff said about that.

4. Sports.

5. Apartment complexes.  I live in one and might do so for the rest of my life.  Also, hotels.

6. THE INTERNET.  This is huge.  So many businesses are growing on the net that what is this I don't even

Anyway, I'm a pretty poor mutha.  My family was poor too.  We chopped up wood to keep warm in the winter and my brothers and I crushed beer cans from our neighbor to afford some things.  My dad worked three jobs at the time.  Now I'm an adult with two children and a wife.  No, sh*t hasn't been easy, but we make do, even now.  It took me a year and a half before I found work after losing my job as a teacher.

Bottom line is this: Business in America will continue.

As for my family and me, we want the government to allow us to make our way, not to make our way for us.


Edited by Epignosis - June 24 2010 at 00:04
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 24 2010 at 00:19
It's funny, in my own econ class the book was actually talking about the Puritan work ethic, and us Americans are stubborn in our "by the boot straps" and "Do it yourself" Mentality.
You truly espouse it man.

And for the record...as for my old man. A liberal, (or at least socially libertarian LOL) guy, always democratic down the line voting, (voted for Obama) and wanna know how he feels about filing for unemployment? Wanna know how he feels about being home all day during the week...I can tell you, he's not taking it easy.


Maybe it's fear Rob. I'm 21, about to graduate from college with no idea what to do, and I have no skill. Really, what the f*ck can I do? Nothing. What is out there for a career?
Maybe some friends and I can get in on the internet business world. We were just dreaming of opening a music store LOL. I just hope you are right man. It just pains me to think that this country of ours will live with 10% unemployment, and all our top technology and minds being used to shipping jobs outside the country. I sure do hope you are right Rob

 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: June 24 2010 at 02:15
Originally posted by UndercoverBoy UndercoverBoy wrote:

Originally posted by Captain Clutch Captain Clutch wrote:

y'all should give Sweden a visit, see how they're doing
I know, low employment rates, high overall quality of life, long life-spans, and an incredibly stable economy.  Truly the rights such as healthcare, education, jobs and houses mentioned in FDR's Second Bill of Rights can't be sustained.  I know that you may disagree with me considering these rights, but it is foolish to think that you can have the right to "Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness" without a job, education, and healthcare.  Remember, the government is not the only oppressor we must be liberated from.
 
 
 
Not that you'll watch it, continue hurling your little stereotype insults. 
 
Originally posted by JJLehto JJLehto wrote:

And Anton, that is an interesting article, and like I said I've heard it before in classes...but how do we get to that true free market state you like to mention?
By keeping hands completely off? Or will that simply lead to the abuse we've seen? I mean, how can we get to that true capitalist society?
 
It would be as simple as to elect a group of politicians who understand the Constitution and have restoring liberty as their sole special interest LOL.  I hate to say it can't be done but currently we have one party that wishes to heavily control your social life and one party that wishes to control your fiscal decisions, so neither has an interest in anything other than digging their claws into you.  It would be a long a tough challenge to try and get to a true free market from where we are today, and it may require electing a few Libertarians (since appearence is everything: we'll work our hardest at finding a younger, sexier version of Ron Paul LOL).  I'll have to pick up on this later on, it's 3 am here and I'm feeling it Smile
 
Did the article at least explain the reason why outsourcing is currently taking place?  It addressed the issue from the free market (Libertarian) perspective as you requested.


Time always wins.
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