Where the GOP goes from here
That is the most ridiculous statement I've ever heard. If an old women can't open a door I help her open it. I don't try to bargain the highest price I can out of her before opening the door.
If a small town is threatened by flood waters everyone gets together and builds a sandbag levee to protect the entire town. If "the market" tried to solve the problem you'd have everybody building their own sandbag wall around their own house and the elderly widow who lives alone will have to pay someone to sandbag a wall around her house. Which is more efficient? Is it "the market" or actual community?
That is the most ridiculous statement I've ever heard. If an old women can't open a door I help her open it. I don't try to bargain the highest price I can out of her before opening the door.
You assume the only coin is money. What about cordiality, comradeship and good feeling? They are media of exchange also.
That is why most of the blood available for transfusion were given by the donors gratis and of their own free will.
You have a mistaken reductionist view of exchange and trade.
ruveyn
The mantra of the Baby Boomers. The Millenials are learning it quickly.
Gen X didn't bite that hook. Not surprising since we resented having to be latch key kids so that the Boomers could refuse to grow up or grow old and keep all the jobs and money for themselves, and then they salted the earth when they finally had to cede it to us.
We saw it coming, and people wondered why we always wore black....
Here are 5 Republican blasphemers
http://news.yahoo.com/5-republicans-thi ... 00566.html
"We've got to make sure that we are not the party of big business, big banks, big Wall Street bailouts, big corporate loopholes, big anything. We cannot be, we must not be, the party that simply protects the rich so they get to keep their toys."
2. Rep.-elect Ted Yoho (R-Fla.), on why he won't sign Norquist's pledge: "I don't want to sign a pledge that's going to tie my hands. I need free rein to do what I think is right for the people in my district and the country."
3. Weekly Standard editor Bill Kristol
"It won't kill the country if we raise taxes a little bit on millionaires. It really won't, I don't think. I don't really understand why Republicans don't take Obama's offer to freeze taxes for everyone below $250,000. Make it $500,000, make it a million..... Really? The Republican Party is going to fall on its sword to defend a bunch of millionaires, half of whom voted Democratic and half of whom live in Hollywood and are hostile?"
4. Matthew Dowd, a George W. Bush strategist, in response to Kristol
"Finally a little sanity and sense of need for shared sacrifice."
5. New York Times conservative columnist Ross Douthat
"What the party really needs, much more than a better identity-politics pitch, is an economic message that would appeal across demographic lines — reaching both downscale white voters turned off by Romney's Bain Capital background and upwardly mobile Latino voters who don't relate to the current G.O.P. fixation on upper-bracket tax cuts.... The bad news is that unlike a pander on immigration, a new economic agenda probably wouldn't be favorably received by the party's big donors, who tend to be quite happy with the Republican Party's current positioning. But after spending billions of those donors' dollars with nothing to show for it, perhaps Republicans should seek a different path: one in which they raise a little less money but win a few more votes."
The Repugnican Party is the party of big business, big banks, big Wall Street bailouts, big corporate loopholes, big anything. And, the Repugnican Party is most especially the party that simply protects the rich so they get to keep their toys. If the Repugnican Party starts to lose its identity, then it might as well just merge with the Democratic Party.
So is the Democrat party. They are just better at propoganda since they have the most of the news media behind them. Don't for a second believe that the Democrat politicians have the nation's best interest at heart any more than the Republicans.
GOP Has "Been Fleeced, Exploited, And Lied To By A Conservative Entertainment Complex"
http://mediamatters.org/video/2012/11/0 ... d-l/191294
The Republican Party is in mortal danger of going down the drain if they do not wake up to reality. The current bunch has completely shut their eyes to the needs and conditions under which ordinary folk live and work. This leaves the Democrat liberals free to sell their lie, that prosperity can be had just by printing money. The liberal program at full speed will drive the productive business people out of this country.
ruveyn
ruveyn
Good riddance.
ruveyn
Good riddance.
The productive business people are the ones footing the bill for all those government services you support.
ruveyn
Good riddance.
The productive business people are the ones footing the bill for all those government services you support.
If bearers of technological expertise depart our shores (and they very well might) the U.S. would become an agricultural nation once more inside of a generation. To Mr. "good riddance" just remember which class of people made your computer and the internet possible. It was not political numbskulls like Al Gore.
The U.S. either survives through technological excellence or it perishes for lack of it.
ruveyn
ruveyn
Good riddance.
The productive business people are the ones footing the bill for all those government services you support.
If bearers of technological expertise depart our shores (and they very well might) the U.S. would become an agricultural nation once more inside of a generation. To Mr. "good riddance" just remember which class of people made your computer and the internet possible. It was not political numbskulls like Al Gore.
The U.S. either survives through technological excellence or it perishes for lack of it.
ruveyn
No. Kick out the greed-driven narcissists with an overblown sense of entitlement and more enlightened people will take over. Our scientists and engineers do not need to be slaves to the dumb-as-a-doorknob corporate suits and wall street shysters. You have to remember these people had to be at least borderline retards to seriously believe that housing prices would rise forever. What the current owners of the corporate world have is what I would call "street smarts", i.e. they are good at finding ways to abuse the system and swindle people in their favor. Such knuckle-daggers don't have a curious bone in their body.
somewhat relevant to the direction that this thread has taken:
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/25/magaz ... wanted=all
No. Kick out the greed-driven narcissists with an overblown sense of entitlement and more enlightened people will take over. Our scientists and engineers do not need to be slaves to the dumb-as-a-doorknob corporate suits and wall street shysters. You have to remember these people had to be at least borderline retards to seriously believe that housing prices would rise forever. What the current owners of the corporate world have is what I would call "street smarts", i.e. they are good at finding ways to abuse the system and swindle people in their favor. Such knuckle-daggers don't have a curious bone in their body.
If you are proposing to rid ourselves of Crony Capitalism, I gladly concur.
ruveyn
No. Kick out the greed-driven narcissists with an overblown sense of entitlement and more enlightened people will take over. Our scientists and engineers do not need to be slaves to the dumb-as-a-doorknob corporate suits and wall street shysters. You have to remember these people had to be at least borderline retards to seriously believe that housing prices would rise forever. What the current owners of the corporate world have is what I would call "street smarts", i.e. they are good at finding ways to abuse the system and swindle people in their favor. Such knuckle-daggers don't have a curious bone in their body.
If you are proposing to rid ourselves of Crony Capitalism, I gladly concur.
ruveyn
Crony Capitalism and Pure Capitalism are one in the same. If you think otherwise you've either lying or have never won a game of monopoly. In the real life version of Monopoly you start out by wheeling and dealing with teams of patent lawyers in order to steal someone else's idea for profit. You team up with people when you can and then dump them when they try to get their fair slice of the pie. Then when you get big enough you come up with more ingenious rent-seeking methods and wheel and deal to crush your way to crushing the competition.
