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Report Card for Donald Trump
#61
(12-19-2016, 10:00 PM)pbrower2a Wrote:
(12-19-2016, 08:30 PM)Mikebert Wrote:
(12-18-2016, 04:19 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: You're ignoring the effect of dividing the world economy on the dominance of existing elites.  As Turchin notes, expanding the economy has the effect of diluting the elites.  What passes for an elite in a smaller economy - for example with the market power to manipulate prices - may not have the power to act as an elite in a larger economy.

Dividing the world economy into pieces exacerbated the problem of elite dominance within each of those pieces.  In the context of the times, that was a big part of the disaster.

You are grasping for straws here and making it way more complicated than it is.  Hell you voted for Trump and do not seem to understand where he is coming from.

How often did Trump talk about the stupid people running America?  I look at America and our policies seem stupid to me from an engineering/analytical perspective. If I had Trump's ego I would assume this perception on my part arises because I really am smarter than everyone else and that they really were stupid.*   But they aren't stupid.  To understand these things you have to see things in such a way that what both sides did makes sense and would be what you too would do if you were them (i.e. if you faced the same incentive structure as they).


As Socrates told us about 2500 years ago, the true measure of wisdom is knowing that one is not all-knowing. Much knowledge takes highly-specialized learning, and some sets of learning (let us say at the extreme law and medicine) have such conflicting  demands for intellectual attention that practically nobody could master both. So don't go to an attorney for medical advice and don't go to a physician for legal counsel.

For good reason, many of our Presidents have been attorneys, and however much the study of law can hone the intellect, it also forces one to recognize one's limitations of knowledge. Can you imagine Barack Obama, truly a brilliant man, pretending to know more than the intelligence agencies or the senior military officers? Not in the least. He found them exactly the people to turn to for whacking.... well, you know who. I doubt that he would ever contradict an engineer or a physician on their areas of expertise. But Donald Trump, who has an exaggerated conception of his own brilliance, might do so.

Attorneys lose cases, and even judges get their decisions reversed.

Donald Trump has been shielded from failure and its consequences all his life, but the Presidency will not let him get away with much folly. So how does he deal with failure? I doubt that it will be pretty. There will be failures. The seven-year bull market will not last forever.  There will likely be some horrible terrorist attack -- all the more likely should he neglect the CIA briefings or shrug them off. We are talking about the CIA which has developed a cozy relationship with a President who has found it useful.

Our only hope for a return to sanity in the congress and the white house may be for Trump to screw up badly. There is a good chance he will do that. Then the Democrats can make gains in the House in 2018 and take power in 2020.

It may sound cruel to Taramarie to say so, but I'm hoping he screws up badly so this happens. Of course, 1) I will feel bad for the people who are hurt by his screw-ups and 2) the people may stick with Trump no matter how badly he screws up. After all, he can go out and shoot somebody and would not lose any voters.

It's possible that, because of his self-esteem and positive thinking, that he keeps landing on his feet, as he did in getting elected against the odds. If that happens, it will take 6 years before he may become a figurehead.

Another scenario is that he does badly, but survives in office although he loses the congress. Then he becomes "flexible" and bends toward the Democrats after 2020 and especially after 2022.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
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#62
(12-20-2016, 01:06 PM)Mikebert Wrote:
(12-19-2016, 09:17 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:
(12-19-2016, 07:59 PM)Mikebert Wrote:
(12-10-2016, 01:50 AM)Warren Dew Wrote: China could reduce tariffs on our products, and improve intellectual property law enforcement.

Mexico could impose worker and environmental protections similar to our own to help level costs.
Why would they do that? What leverage would Trump have besides tariffs--which you seem to be ruling out.

Tariffs as a bargaining tool make sense.  Tariffs as a policy tool are idiotic.

There is no such thing as a bargaining chip that you cannot use.  If Trump actually believes tariffs to be worse for America than the status quo then he can't use them as a chip because the other side will know he will not play it.  It's Obama's red line all over again.

No if I want them to take me seriously I have to believe that passing a big tariff on Chinese goods is a GOOD policy, maybe not the BEST policy, but perfectly acceptable to me.  Only then can Trump say, go ahead, make my day,  I will  take great joy in slapping a 35% tariff on you assholes (or more polite words to that effect). Thus, if the Chinese will not give me what I want (i.e. the BEST policy) then I will opt for what is simply GOOD. 

The Chinese are NOT initially going to give Trump what he wants, so he will have to opt for the tariffs, at least for a time.  The burned hand teaches best, and the Chinese need to know he is serious. They are going to need to see it play out to know he is serious.  Right now nobody knows for sure who is going to be hurt worse, us of or them.  Trump has to be willing to find out.  Otherwise he has no leverage.  He knows this as a master deal maker.

It is critically important that Trump's supporters (i.e. YOU) clearly see that they were voting FOR a tariff and have no problem with this.  This gives Trump the domestic support he needs to convince the Chinese that he CAN carry out his tariff  threat.
I think we already know the nation that he intends to impose tariffs on. You know, the one where Carrier had intended to move another one of its manufacturing plants to until an election result changed things. I have no problem with tariffs being used for an American cause. Do you, or do any true Democrats that are still left, have a problem with using tariffs for an American cause?

Who is more reliant upon who economically? I'd say that they're more reliant upon us than we are reliant upon them economically. What has the Communist Chinese economy been able to endure and survive up to this point as far as major challenges as far as its history goes? Communist China hasn't been around as long as we have. Anyone know? We know what the American economy has been able to endure and survive up to this point in our history.
Reply
#63
(12-20-2016, 01:40 PM)Eric the Green Wrote:
(12-19-2016, 10:00 PM)pbrower2a Wrote:
(12-19-2016, 08:30 PM)Mikebert Wrote:
(12-18-2016, 04:19 PM)Warren Dew Wrote: You're ignoring the effect of dividing the world economy on the dominance of existing elites.  As Turchin notes, expanding the economy has the effect of diluting the elites.  What passes for an elite in a smaller economy - for example with the market power to manipulate prices - may not have the power to act as an elite in a larger economy.

Dividing the world economy into pieces exacerbated the problem of elite dominance within each of those pieces.  In the context of the times, that was a big part of the disaster.

You are grasping for straws here and making it way more complicated than it is.  Hell you voted for Trump and do not seem to understand where he is coming from.

How often did Trump talk about the stupid people running America?  I look at America and our policies seem stupid to me from an engineering/analytical perspective. If I had Trump's ego I would assume this perception on my part arises because I really am smarter than everyone else and that they really were stupid.*   But they aren't stupid.  To understand these things you have to see things in such a way that what both sides did makes sense and would be what you too would do if you were them (i.e. if you faced the same incentive structure as they).


As Socrates told us about 2500 years ago, the true measure of wisdom is knowing that one is not all-knowing. Much knowledge takes highly-specialized learning, and some sets of learning (let us say at the extreme law and medicine) have such conflicting  demands for intellectual attention that practically nobody could master both. So don't go to an attorney for medical advice and don't go to a physician for legal counsel.

For good reason, many of our Presidents have been attorneys, and however much the study of law can hone the intellect, it also forces one to recognize one's limitations of knowledge. Can you imagine Barack Obama, truly a brilliant man, pretending to know more than the intelligence agencies or the senior military officers? Not in the least. He found them exactly the people to turn to for whacking.... well, you know who. I doubt that he would ever contradict an engineer or a physician on their areas of expertise. But Donald Trump, who has an exaggerated conception of his own brilliance, might do so.

Attorneys lose cases, and even judges get their decisions reversed.

Donald Trump has been shielded from failure and its consequences all his life, but the Presidency will not let him get away with much folly. So how does he deal with failure? I doubt that it will be pretty. There will be failures. The seven-year bull market will not last forever.  There will likely be some horrible terrorist attack -- all the more likely should he neglect the CIA briefings or shrug them off. We are talking about the CIA which has developed a cozy relationship with a President who has found it useful.

Our only hope for a return to sanity in the congress and the white house may be for Trump to screw up badly. There is a good chance he will do that. Then the Democrats can make gains in the House in 2018 and take power in 2020.

It may sound cruel to Taramarie to say so, but I'm hoping he screws up badly so this happens. Of course, 1) I will feel bad for the people who are hurt by his screw-ups and 2) the people may stick with Trump no matter how badly he screws up. After all, he can go out and shoot somebody and would not lose any voters.

It's possible that, because of his self-esteem and positive thinking, that he keeps landing on his feet, as he did in getting elected against the odds. If that happens, it will take 6 years before he may become a figurehead.

Another scenario is that he does badly, but survives in office although he loses the congress. Then he becomes "flexible" and bends toward the Democrats after 2020 and especially after 2022.
The Democrats are pretty much done nationally until the Democrats figure out who they are going to be politically.
Reply
#64
(12-20-2016, 11:01 PM)Classic-Xer Wrote:
(12-20-2016, 01:06 PM)Mikebert Wrote:
(12-19-2016, 09:17 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:
(12-19-2016, 07:59 PM)Mikebert Wrote:
(12-10-2016, 01:50 AM)Warren Dew Wrote: China could reduce tariffs on our products, and improve intellectual property law enforcement.

Mexico could impose worker and environmental protections similar to our own to help level costs.
Why would they do that? What leverage would Trump have besides tariffs--which you seem to be ruling out.

Tariffs as a bargaining tool make sense.  Tariffs as a policy tool are idiotic.

There is no such thing as a bargaining chip that you cannot use.  If Trump actually believes tariffs to be worse for America than the status quo then he can't use them as a chip because the other side will know he will not play it.  It's Obama's red line all over again.

No if I want them to take me seriously I have to believe that passing a big tariff on Chinese goods is a GOOD policy, maybe not the BEST policy, but perfectly acceptable to me.  Only then can Trump say, go ahead, make my day,  I will  take great joy in slapping a 35% tariff on you assholes (or more polite words to that effect). Thus, if the Chinese will not give me what I want (i.e. the BEST policy) then I will opt for what is simply GOOD. 

The Chinese are NOT initially going to give Trump what he wants, so he will have to opt for the tariffs, at least for a time.  The burned hand teaches best, and the Chinese need to know he is serious. They are going to need to see it play out to know he is serious.  Right now nobody knows for sure who is going to be hurt worse, us of or them.  Trump has to be willing to find out.  Otherwise he has no leverage.  He knows this as a master deal maker.

It is critically important that Trump's supporters (i.e. YOU) clearly see that they were voting FOR a tariff and have no problem with this.  This gives Trump the domestic support he needs to convince the Chinese that he CAN carry out his tariff  threat.
I think we already know the nation that he intends to impose tariffs on. You know, the one where Carrier had intended to move another one of its manufacturing plants to until an election result changed things. I have no problem with tariffs being used for an American cause. Do you, or do any true Democrats that are still left, have a problem with using tariffs for an American cause?

Who is more reliant upon who economically? I'd say that they're more reliant upon us than we are reliant upon them economically. What has the Communist Chinese economy been able to endure and survive up to this point as far as major challenges as far as its history goes? Communist China hasn't been around as long as we have. Anyone know? We know what the American economy has been able to endure and survive up to this point in our history.

You do realize that Carrier was going to move their plant to Mexico, not China, right?

China's communist economy was able to endure a lot, but their economy isn't communist any more.  Their current capitalist economy has only been around for a few decades, and is showing signs of strain as growth slows.
Reply
#65
(12-20-2016, 11:01 PM)Classic-Xer Wrote: I think we already know the nation that he intends to impose tariffs on. You know, the one where Carrier had intended to move another one of its manufacturing plants to until an election result changed things. I have no problem with tariffs being used for an American cause. Do you, or do any true Democrats that are still left, have a problem with using tariffs for an American cause?

Who is more reliant upon who economically? I'd say that they're more reliant upon us than we are reliant upon them economically. What has the Communist Chinese economy been able to endure and survive up to this point as far as major challenges as far as its history goes? Communist China hasn't been around as long as we have. Anyone know? We know what the American economy has been able to endure and survive up to this point in our history.

Pretty close

http://www.onenewspage.com Wrote:While the market, and various pundits and economists have been mostly focused on the still to be disclosed details of Trump's infrastructure spending aspects of his fiscal plan, "one of the least talked about but possibly most important tax shifts in the history of the United States" is, according to DB, House Speaker Paul Ryan’s and President-elect Trump’s “border tax adjustment” proposal.

This is part of the “Better Way” reform package and also figures prominently in the writings of senior Trump administration officials.

What is it?

Put simply, *the proposal would tax US imports at the corporate income tax rate, *while exempting income earned from exports from any taxation. The reform would closely mirror tax border adjustments in economies with consumption-based VAT tax systems. If enacted, the plan will likely be extremely bullish for the US dollar. What’s more, it would have a transformational impact on the US trade relationship with the rest of the world. Consider the below:

· *A “border tax adjustment” would, roughly speaking, be equivalent to a 15% one-off devaluation of the dollar.* Imports would be 20% more expensive, because corporates would have to pay the new 20% corporate tax rate on their value. Exports would be roughly 12% “cheaper”, because for every $33 of earnings earned from $100 of exports (we use the 33% gross margin of the S&P), there would be a 12% tax cost ($33 earnings*35% current tax rate) that would no longer be imposed on corporates. *Taking the average impact on the prices of exports and imports is equivalent to a 15% drop in the dollar.*
· *A border tax adjustment would be very inflationary.* The price of exports doesn’t affect the US consumption basket so would have no impact on CPI. However, the cost of imports would go up by 20%, which based on a simple relationship between import PPI and US inflation would be equivalent to a 5% rise in the CPI. Corporates may of course choose to absorb part of the rise in import costs in their profit margins. But either way, the order of magnitude is large.
· *A border tax adjustment would be very positive for the US trade balance.* Similarly to the dollar calculations,* a border tax adjustment would be equivalent to an across the board import tariff of 20% and an export subsidy of 12%.* Keeping all else constant and applying standard trade elasticity impact parameters to an average of the two estimates *results in a more than 2% drop in the trade deficit equivalent to more than 400bn USD, or equivalently, an almost complete closing of the US trade deficit.*

In other words, should the "border tax proposal" pass, it would not only send inflation soaring, while eliminating the US trade deficit - a long-time pet peeve of Trump  - it would also be the trade-equivalent of a 15% USD devaluation, even as it leads to an offsetting surge in the actual value of the dollar.

To be sure, there are uncertainties related to all estimates above. First, there is a question mark on whether a border tax adjustment based on a territorial corporate tax system (as opposed to VAT) would be allowable under WTO rules. *The question is highly complex, but senior Trump advisers have stated they would be willing to take the issue to the WTO*.

It is also not clear what types of goods the new tax would cover – the broader the coverage the bigger the impact and vice versa.

Second, the impact on trade highlighted above should be considered an upper bound, as the post-crisis responsiveness of current account balances to relative price shifts has proven to be much lower.

Still, it is hard to argue that such a fundamental shift in tax treatment of US exports and imports would not have a material impact on trade relations and flows with the rest of the world. More importantly, Saravelos argues, the second-order impact of “re-shoring” may be more material given that US corporate activity has been disadvantaged due to the current unfavorable tax treatment of offshore profits.

* * *

Taking all of the above into account, *the academic literature is unambiguous in its conclusion that the dollar should rally strongly in the event a “border tax adjustment” is put in place*. An appreciating dollar would be a natural response to an improving US trade balance and the competitiveness gains achieved by the shift in the relative prices of exports over imports.* In extremis, the dollar would rally by 15% to fully offset the price changes caused by the tax. *This analysis is partial however, with the knock-on consequences on the Fed, US corporate off-shoring and global trade relations likely making the impact even more material.

Deutsche Bank concludes that combined with potential changes to the treatment of unrepatriated earnings, "the proposed changes to the US corporate tax code could be one of the most important shifts in US tax and international trade policy in a generation."

We wholeheartedly agree with DB's assessment in this particular case.

Now, I think this is an awesome turn of events away from globalization/neo-liberalism.   A border tax, which is pretty similar to the awesome VAT, that' I've always supported to fuck over outsourcing/H1-B scum bags is great. As for the inflation thingie,  that's mostly for Ishits and other con$umerist crap.  Besides if Apple wants to sell cheaper Ishits,  they can always make 'em here in the USA.
---Value Added Cool
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#66
I was just reading yesterday that the Smoot-Hartley tariff cut US exports by 40% right when the US economy was going into the ditch. We are due for another recession right now, if Trump wants to own-goal the US economy by starting a trade war with China he's going to be as reviled as Hoover.

I'm a bit of a "protectionist" myself, but for me "protectionism" means negotiating fairer trade agreements rather than the hamfisted nationalist idiocy Trump is promoting that is about as stupid as the Smoot-Hartley tariff.
#MakeTheDemocratsGreatAgain
Reply
#67
(12-21-2016, 07:54 AM)Odin Wrote: I was just reading yesterday that the Smoot-Hartley tariff cut US exports by 40% right when the US economy was going into the ditch. We are due for another recession right now, if Trump wants to own-goal the US economy by starting a trade war with China he's going to be as reviled as Hoover.

I'm a bit of a "protectionist" myself, but for me "protectionism" means negotiating fairer trade agreements rather than the hamfisted nationalist idiocy Trump is promoting that is about as stupid as the Smoot-Hartley tariff.

Uh, there's a whole shit pot of countries that have a VAT, which the "border tax" pretty close matches.

http://www.uscib.org/valueadded-taxes-vat-ud-1676/

Of course, I'd be more than happy if we joined the rest of the world with a VAT so the US doesn't conduct trade with one hand tied behind it's back.   The "border tax" is sorta like Obamacare.  It's not perfect, but I'll accept anything that half way gets to the goal.
---Value Added Cool
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#68
(12-20-2016, 11:42 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:
(12-20-2016, 11:01 PM)Classic-Xer Wrote:
(12-20-2016, 01:06 PM)Mikebert Wrote:
(12-19-2016, 09:17 PM)Warren Dew Wrote:
(12-19-2016, 07:59 PM)Mikebert Wrote: Why would they do that? What leverage would Trump have besides tariffs--which you seem to be ruling out.

Tariffs as a bargaining tool make sense.  Tariffs as a policy tool are idiotic.

There is no such thing as a bargaining chip that you cannot use.  If Trump actually believes tariffs to be worse for America than the status quo then he can't use them as a chip because the other side will know he will not play it.  It's Obama's red line all over again.

No if I want them to take me seriously I have to believe that passing a big tariff on Chinese goods is a GOOD policy, maybe not the BEST policy, but perfectly acceptable to me.  Only then can Trump say, go ahead, make my day,  I will  take great joy in slapping a 35% tariff on you assholes (or more polite words to that effect). Thus, if the Chinese will not give me what I want (i.e. the BEST policy) then I will opt for what is simply GOOD. 

The Chinese are NOT initially going to give Trump what he wants, so he will have to opt for the tariffs, at least for a time.  The burned hand teaches best, and the Chinese need to know he is serious. They are going to need to see it play out to know he is serious.  Right now nobody knows for sure who is going to be hurt worse, us of or them.  Trump has to be willing to find out.  Otherwise he has no leverage.  He knows this as a master deal maker.

It is critically important that Trump's supporters (i.e. YOU) clearly see that they were voting FOR a tariff and have no problem with this.  This gives Trump the domestic support he needs to convince the Chinese that he CAN carry out his tariff  threat.
I think we already know the nation that he intends to impose tariffs on. You know, the one where Carrier had intended to move another one of its manufacturing plants to until an election result changed things. I have no problem with tariffs being used for an American cause. Do you, or do any true Democrats that are still left, have a problem with using tariffs for an American cause?

Who is more reliant upon who economically? I'd say that they're more reliant upon us than we are reliant upon them economically. What has the Communist Chinese economy been able to endure and survive up to this point as far as major challenges as far as its history goes? Communist China hasn't been around as long as we have. Anyone know? We know what the American economy has been able to endure and survive up to this point in our history.

You do realize that Carrier was going to move their plant to Mexico, not China, right?

China's communist economy was able to endure a lot, but their economy isn't communist any more.  Their current capitalist economy has only been around for a few decades, and is showing signs of strain as growth slows.
Mike has got it right as far as what Trump will need to do to eventually make a new deal with China. He's going to do it with Mexico with Republican and Democratic support. Eric and Bob didn't seem to get the message but I think every borderline Democrat located in between them got the fricken message loud and clear.
Reply
#69
(12-21-2016, 07:54 AM)Odin Wrote: I was just reading yesterday that the Smoot-Hartley tariff cut US exports by 40% right when the US economy was going into the ditch. We are due for another recession right now, if Trump wants to own-goal the US economy by starting a trade war with China he's going to be as reviled as Hoover.

I'm a bit of a "protectionist" myself, but for me "protectionism" means negotiating fairer trade agreements rather than the hamfisted nationalist idiocy Trump is promoting that is about as stupid as the Smoot-Hartley tariff.

Tariffs are established to protect American based industries/businesses and the jobs associated with them. What happens to locally based American business that can't compete within the American market or industry that's flooded by cheap foreign competitors that manufacture cheaper goods? The business shuts down and never comes back again like what happened in the small town that my parents grew up in. The exports were down because American industries/business who are unable to compete here aren't going to be able to compete else where.
Reply
#70
(12-21-2016, 01:08 PM)Ragnarök_62 Wrote:
(12-21-2016, 07:54 AM)Odin Wrote: I was just reading yesterday that the Smoot-Hartley tariff cut US exports by 40% right when the US economy was going into the ditch. We are due for another recession right now, if Trump wants to own-goal the US economy by starting a trade war with China he's going to be as reviled as Hoover.

I'm a bit of a "protectionist" myself, but for me "protectionism" means negotiating fairer trade agreements rather than the hamfisted nationalist idiocy Trump is promoting that is about as stupid as the Smoot-Hartley tariff.

Uh, there's a whole shit pot of countries that have a VAT, which the "border tax" pretty close matches.

http://www.uscib.org/valueadded-taxes-vat-ud-1676/

Of course, I'd be more than happy if we joined the rest of the world with a VAT so the US doesn't conduct trade with one hand tied behind it's back.   The "border tax" is sorta like Obamacare.  It's not perfect, but I'll accept anything that half way gets to the goal.

I have no problem with VATs, I have a problem with counterproductive stupidity.
#MakeTheDemocratsGreatAgain
Reply
#71
(12-22-2016, 02:43 AM)Classic-Xer Wrote:
(12-21-2016, 07:54 AM)Odin Wrote: I was just reading yesterday that the Smoot-Hartley tariff cut US exports by 40% right when the US economy was going into the ditch. We are due for another recession right now, if Trump wants to own-goal the US economy by starting a trade war with China he's going to be as reviled as Hoover.

I'm a bit of a "protectionist" myself, but for me "protectionism" means negotiating fairer trade agreements rather than the hamfisted nationalist idiocy Trump is promoting that is about as stupid as the Smoot-Hartley tariff.

Tariffs are established to protect American based industries/businesses and the jobs associated with them. What happens to locally based American business that can't compete within the American market or industry that's flooded by cheap foreign competitors that manufacture cheaper goods? The business shuts down and never comes back again like what happened in the small town that my parents grew up in. The exports were down because American industries/business who are unable to compete here aren't going to be able to compete else where.

This is economically ignorant nonsense. The US has the 2nd largest manufacturing output after China, this whole notion that "we no longer make things" is pure ignorance whipped up by rabble-rousing politicians. The jobs are never coming back because they have been automated away.
#MakeTheDemocratsGreatAgain
Reply
#72
Getting back to the original premise for a minute, here's a wishlist from another actual Trump voter, in order of precedence.

1. Avoid War with Russia - Avoiding WWIII is pretty much at the top of my list.  The moral panic and inflammatory rhetoric concerning Putin's Russia was getting to the point where even my friends and family who don't follow current events much were shaking their heads in disbelief.  We had the former NATO second in command writing a book on the coming war with Russia, supposed moderates like John Kasich demanding we "punch Russia in the nose", numerous other candidates (including the erstwhile presumptive nominee) talking about setting up potential confrontations with Russia in Syria and arming its foes in the Ukraine, going so far as to compare it to Nazi Germany.  The Russians, in turn, were responding with talk of de-escalatory nuclear strikes.  It was a recipe for disaster on a scale that would dwarf WWI, previously the gold standard for blundering political posturing leading to mass destruction.  Look, Ukraine is not a treaty ally of the West, NATO is obsolete, the Crimea is majority Russian and shows little evidence of the sort of insurgency that has traditionally accompanied territorial occupation (and if you think those evil Russkies have found a way to suppress insurgencies without a huge occupying force, it might be worthwhile to buddy up with them just to learn how they do it, since we clearly haven't figured it out).  How are Russia's interventions in Syria, Georgia, or the Ukraine qualitatively different from our invasion of Iraq, bombing of Libya, or worldwide drone program?  How much worse are they than our supposed allies the Saudis, who behead people, support terrorism abroad, and invaded Bahrain and are presently attacking Yemen, bombing them from the air and blockading their ports, leading to famine?  Don't think that has anything to do with us?  It isn't like the Saudis have a domestic arms industry to speak of, nor the logistic capability to sustain an extended bombing campaign without extensive US support.  Thus far, with the exception of John Bolton, whose name has not been excluded from a Trump administration yet, he's getting high marks from me so far.

2.  Infrastructure - There is a critical need for a massive and sustained infrastructure push in this country.  Broadband, highways, water systems, power lines, the list goes on and on.  There is an opportunity to yield significant dividends in terms of not just improved capital, but mass employment for at least a generation.  While there are questions as to what a Trump infrastructure program would look like, there have been numerous indications (Mnuchin discussing an infrastructure bank, Kushner stating that Trump's desires are closer to Schumer's than McConnell's) that it may in fact be a legitimate Keynesian stimulus package and not just a corporate give-away.

3. Trade - Look, deindustrialization has been a disaster for the working class (black, white, or what-have-you), the costs from Free Trade have been far more widely spread than the benefits, and one overwhelmingly concentrated in the Anglo countries that went full Thatcher/Reagan back around 1980.  Want to talk about automation?  Here's a list of countries by number of industrial robots per 10,000 manufacturing workers.  The United States is number 7 on the list, and the top three countries all have manufacturing work forces that make up over 20% of their labor force, roughly double the United States' 12%.  What's more, the United States has a consumer base greater than all three put together, coupled with a vast resource base that obviates the need to trade finished goods in exchange for raw materials the way all three have to.  Besides, the removal of tariffs and trade barriers occurred in the fairly recent past, and it isn't like no goods traveled across international borders before then.

4. Immigration - Look, none of the countries that people claimed they were moving to (Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Israel, etc.) in response to Trump's election (or whatever the latest cause of aggravation is) are easy places to move to, nor do they tolerate people just showing up and saying they have a right to be there whether the host country likes it or not.  There are enormous pressures on low-wage, "unskilled" workers and there is no reason to continue dumping more people in to compete with them.  There is a reason people from Samuel Gompers to Bernie Sanders, noted labor advocates all, never supported unlimited, no-questions asked immigration.  It's bad for labor, which is to say, bad for normal people.  The way people on the left have lauded tech companies for their stance on immigration despite the investigation of those same companies by the federal government for wage fixing is deplorable.  Hell, even the Labor Department has been shown to use H1B visa workers in violation of federal guidelines.  This, in spite of numerous studies showing that there is no shortage of American tech workers available to take those jobs.  A tightening of the cheap labor spigot, from farm workers to programmers is long overdue.  

5. Wars of Choice - The years since the end of the Cold War have been chock full of interventions from the Balkans to Africa to the Middle East, for little reason other than that politicians have been able to get away with it.  I put this last because, at the end of the day, it's not existential the way, say, not getting into a nuclear exchange over Syria is.  I also put it last because it is the one I have the most doubts of seeing happen, particularly given the noted hawkishness towards Iran I'm seeing in a lot of Trump's Cabinet picks (Matthis, Flynn, etc.).  I will admit, I cheered when Trump called out Bush and the War in Iraq in SC, then won its primary shortly thereafter, but I also cringed on numerous occasions with his calls for torture, murdering family members of terrorists, and general boorishness.  So, I'll put this as a nice-to-have, but I am not holding my breath.  In the absence of real peer competitors on the global stage, and a professional military drawn in large part from a small section of the population, there is simply too little pushback to this sort of adventurism abroad.

So there you have it, that's what I voted for.  We'll see how it turns out.
Reply
#73
(12-22-2016, 08:45 AM)SomeGuy Wrote: Getting back to the original premise for a minute, here's a wishlist from another actual Trump voter, in order of precedence.
This is a thoughtful post and I'll try to reply to it thoughtfully.
Quote:1. Avoid War with Russia - Avoiding WWIII is pretty much at the top of my list.  The moral panic and inflammatory rhetoric concerning Putin's Russia was getting to the point where even my friends and family who don't follow current events much were shaking their heads in disbelief.  We had the former NATO second in command writing a book on the coming war with Russia, supposed moderates like John Kasich demanding we "punch Russia in the nose", numerous other candidates (including the erstwhile presumptive nominee) talking about setting up potential confrontations with Russia in Syria and arming its foes in the Ukraine, going so far as to compare it to Nazi Germany.  The Russians, in turn, were responding with talk of de-escalatory nuclear strikes.  It was a recipe for disaster on a scale that would dwarf WWI, previously the gold standard for blundering political posturing leading to mass destruction.  Look, Ukraine is not a treaty ally of the West, NATO is obsolete, the Crimea is majority Russian and shows little evidence of the sort of insurgency that has traditionally accompanied territorial occupation (and if you think those evil Russkies have found a way to suppress insurgencies without a huge occupying force, it might be worthwhile to buddy up with them just to learn how they do it, since we clearly haven't figured it out).  How are Russia's interventions in Syria, Georgia, or the Ukraine qualitatively different from our invasion of Iraq, bombing of Libya, or worldwide drone program?  How much worse are they than our supposed allies the Saudis, who behead people, support terrorism abroad, and invaded Bahrain and are presently attacking Yemen, bombing them from the air and blockading their ports, leading to famine?  Don't think that has anything to do with us?  It isn't like the Saudis have a domestic arms industry to speak of, or the logistic capability to sustain an extended bombing campaign without extensive US support.  Thus far, with the exception of John Bolton, whose name has not been excluded from a Trump administration yet, he's getting high marks from me so far.
What do you think about Trump's pick for ambassador of Israel?  I am Jewish and strongly support the right of Israel to exist (side-by-side with a Palestinian state); I say this because David Friedman's stance on Israel frightens me to death.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Friedman_(lawyer)
Quote:2.  Infrastructure - There is a critical need for a massive and sustained infrastructure push in this country.  Broadband, highways, water systems, power lines, the list goes on and on.  There is an opportunity to yield significant dividends in terms of not just improved capital, but mass employment for at least a generation.  While there are questions as to what a Trump infrastructure program would look like, there have been numerous indications (Mnuchin discussing an infrastructure bank, Kushner stating that Trump's desires are closer to Schumer's than McConnell's) that it may in fact be a legitimate Keynesian stimulus package and not just a corporate give-away.
I hope you are correct.  What I've read indicates that it is nothing more than a bunch of tax incentives for corporations to build toll roads.  However, I hope you are correct.  Regardless of who we voted for, I think we all agree that we need to do a massive infrastructure push.
Quote:So there you have it, that's what I voted for.  We'll see how it turns out.
Yes, we will certainly do that.
Reply
#74
Quote:This is a thoughtful post and I'll try to reply to it thoughtfully.


Thanks, I appreciate that.  It's nice to get beyond political caricatures occasionally.

Quote:What do you think about Trump's pick for ambassador of Israel?  I am Jewish and strongly support the right of Israel to exist (side-by-side with a Palestinian state); I say this because David Friedman's stance on Israel frightens me to death

Didn't you rule out ever making aliyah (not sure I got the helping verb right, let's just say ascending)?  My honest opinion: I really don't care.  I am neither Jewish, nor Christian, nor Arab, nor any combination of the 3.  I simply don't find it to be relevant to me as an American, and to be quite frank deeply resent the extent to which *some* Jewish organizations and public figures, and their evangelical counterparts, have embedded a knee-jerk support for Israel into our foreign policy.  I even have a fairly low opinion of the practice of American citizens going and serving their time in the IDF and then coming back and getting involved in public life as a journalist or what have you.  Especially when they then make an opposition to nationalism elsewhere a centerpiece of their public platform.

However, given that all of these things are, you know, things, the fact of the matter is that the US simply doesn't have that much influence over Israel's internal politics, and that Israel's politics are so right-wing because that's who the Israelis have been voting for.  The Israeli Labor Party's star has long been in eclipse, secular (Non-Russian) Ashkenazim are a waning segment of the population, and nothing has emerged to the left of center to counterbalance Likud and the various parties to its right (Israel Beiteinu, Shas, the Haredi parties).  Given the tumult in the Middle East right now, and the shifting balance of power within and among Western countries, all of the trends are going in what I'm sure you view as the wrong direction.  Sorry.

Quote:I hope you are correct.  What I've read indicates that it is nothing more than a bunch of tax incentives for corporations to build toll roads.  However, I hope you are correct.  Regardless of who we voted for, I think we all agree that we need to do a massive infrastructure push.
I've seen nothing but trial balloons and gossip to date.  So, in the absence of real data, all we can do is hope.  My only words of encouragement here are that Donald Trump is 70 years old, and is not likely to change significantly as a person.  He's built his life on borrowing money to have things built and slapping his name on them, and sleeping with a steady succession of pretty bimbos.  So, running up the deficit to build infrastructure, inflation be damned, seems like it would be right up his alley.  If the net result of his presidency is a construction boom, burgeoning inflation (with a corresponding national debt), and the news that he's been sleeping with, say, Hope Hicks or Kellyanne Conway or <insert woman here>... *shrugs* I would be content. 

Thank you for your time, and you're right; He's the president(elect) now, and all we can do right now is wait and see.  Any comments on the other items for the road?
Reply
#75
(12-22-2016, 02:43 AM)Classic-Xer Wrote:
(12-21-2016, 07:54 AM)Odin Wrote: I was just reading yesterday that the Smoot-Hartley tariff cut US exports by 40% right when the US economy was going into the ditch. We are due for another recession right now, if Trump wants to own-goal the US economy by starting a trade war with China he's going to be as reviled as Hoover.

I'm a bit of a "protectionist" myself, but for me "protectionism" means negotiating fairer trade agreements rather than the hamfisted nationalist idiocy Trump is promoting that is about as stupid as the Smoot-Hartley tariff.

Tariffs are established to protect American based industries/businesses and the jobs associated with them. What happens to locally based American business that can't compete within the American market or industry that's flooded by cheap foreign competitors that manufacture cheaper goods? The business shuts down and never comes back again like what happened in the small town that my parents grew up in. The exports were down because American industries/business who are unable to compete here aren't going to be able to compete else where.

I'm not sure what you think I didn't get, but I and most Democrats including Sanders agree with you on this. Odin's point is also correct; a lot of job loss today is due to computer automation and robotics.

Which however also makes the Republican meme about self-reliance, work, anti-welfare and lower taxes out of date.

I don't trust Trump to do it right, given the people he has appointed. A good tariff policy would impose "border taxes" on those countries to which corporations outsource for cheap and unrestricted labor and try to sell their products back to us at prices that undercut American business and keep our wages and prices too low. On the other hand, those countries that have similar regulatory schemes and wage scales to ours, like Europe, could be free trade candidates. Tariffs that are either too high or too low are counter-productive.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
#76
(12-22-2016, 08:45 AM)SomeGuy Wrote: Getting back to the original premise for a minute, here's a wishlist from another actual Trump voter, in order of precedence.

Thoughtful post, yes. But given Trump's appointments, I see zero chance of you getting what you thought you voted for.

Quote:1. Avoid War with Russia - Avoiding WWIII is pretty much at the top of my list.  The moral panic and inflammatory rhetoric concerning Putin's Russia was getting to the point where even my friends and family who don't follow current events much were shaking their heads in disbelief.  We had the former NATO second in command writing a book on the coming war with Russia, supposed moderates like John Kasich demanding we "punch Russia in the nose", numerous other candidates (including the erstwhile presumptive nominee) talking about setting up potential confrontations with Russia in Syria and arming its foes in the Ukraine, going so far as to compare it to Nazi Germany.  The Russians, in turn, were responding with talk of de-escalatory nuclear strikes.  It was a recipe for disaster on a scale that would dwarf WWI, previously the gold standard for blundering political posturing leading to mass destruction.  Look, Ukraine is not a treaty ally of the West, NATO is obsolete, the Crimea is majority Russian and shows little evidence of the sort of insurgency that has traditionally accompanied territorial occupation (and if you think those evil Russkies have found a way to suppress insurgencies without a huge occupying force, it might be worthwhile to buddy up with them just to learn how they do it, since we clearly haven't figured it out).  How are Russia's interventions in Syria, Georgia, or the Ukraine qualitatively different from our invasion of Iraq, bombing of Libya, or worldwide drone program?  How much worse are they than our supposed allies the Saudis, who behead people, support terrorism abroad, and invaded Bahrain and are presently attacking Yemen, bombing them from the air and blockading their ports, leading to famine?  Don't think that has anything to do with us?  It isn't like the Saudis have a domestic arms industry to speak of, nor the logistic capability to sustain an extended bombing campaign without extensive US support.  Thus far, with the exception of John Bolton, whose name has not been excluded from a Trump administration yet, he's getting high marks from me so far.

Unfortunately, Hillary had it right. War with Russia can also happen if we let its expansionary, authoritarian approach under Putin continue to threaten other countries. I think appeasement is still a danger, just as intervention in wars of choice is a danger. It's true America has erred more often in the latter direction since Pearl Harbor. But allowing a dictator and war-monger like Putin to go unchallenged, is also dangerous. What if he decides Trump is anti-NATO and won't resist an invasion of Estonia? The Syria mess is affecting us, and helped elect Trump due to hysteria over Muslim refugees. It is encouraging racist right-wing movements here and even more in Europe. We should have done more in Syria to help the rebels defeat Assad. Hillary had the right program. Trump simply wants to abandon Syria to Assad, and at the same time allow Iran and North Korea to build nuclear weapons. He is extremely shallow in his analysis of world affairs; ignorant, complacent, easily-offended, temperamental and unwilling to learn. Trump is a great danger to world peace.

Quote:2.  Infrastructure - There is a critical need for a massive and sustained infrastructure push in this country.  Broadband, highways, water systems, power lines, the list goes on and on.  There is an opportunity to yield significant dividends in terms of not just improved capital, but mass employment for at least a generation.  While there are questions as to what a Trump infrastructure program would look like, there have been numerous indications (Mnuchin discussing an infrastructure bank, Kushner stating that Trump's desires are closer to Schumer's than McConnell's) that it may in fact be a legitimate Keynesian stimulus package and not just a corporate give-away.
The Trumpster has appointed the most hard-line laissez-faire billionaire corporate capitalists to his cabinet that he can find. Given that he has no skills to govern by himself, he will rely a lot on these greedy fools for his decisions. It seems highly unlikely therefore that he will embrace any genuine Keynesian schemes any time soon. He is going the route of more tax breaks and toll roads. Putting any hope in corporate thugs like Mnuchin will disappoint you.

Quote:3. Trade - Look, deindustrialization has been a disaster for the working class (black, white, or what-have-you), the costs from Free Trade have been far more widely spread than the benefits, and one overwhelmingly concentrated in the Anglo countries that went full Thatcher/Reagan back around 1980.  Want to talk about automation?  Here's a list of countries by number of industrial robots per 10,000 manufacturing workers.  The United States is number 7 on the list, and the top three countries all have manufacturing work forces that make up over 20% of their labor force, roughly double the United States' 12%.  What's more, the United States has a consumer base greater than all three put together, coupled with a vast resource base that obviates the need to trade finished goods in exchange for raw materials the way all three have to.  Besides, the removal of tariffs and trade barriers occurred in the fairly recent past, and it isn't like no goods traveled across international borders before then.
Trump's rhetoric was right on this issue, even though it was wrong on most others. The error is to think that better trade deals alone will fix the problems of the working class, especially in the Rust Belt that voted for him. Trump has embraced an extreme Reagan/Thatcher laissez-faire approach to the economy, and has fully rejected the new energy industries that would create a new booming economy and many more jobs. His lower tax, lower government investment approach is exactly the opposite of what made America great, and would make it great again.

If Trump were really interested in making America great again, he would embrace higher taxes on the wealthy, government investment, and involving the diverse younger generations. Instead he says that the people protesting his racism "are not the people who made our country great" and tells them to "go home to Mommy and get a job." No, the younger, diverse people; not the xenophobic, racist-dog-whistle-responding, older angry white dudes; are the people he would need if he really wanted to make our country great again. He would have to ditch the Reagan meme that has caused our decline, not embrace it and install it into his cabinet as he has done.

Quote:4. Immigration - Look, none of the countries that people claimed they were moving to (Canada, Australia, New Zealand, Israel, etc.) in response to Trump's election (or whatever the latest cause of aggravation is) are easy places to move to, nor do they tolerate people just showing up and saying they have a right to be there whether the host country likes it or not.  There are enormous pressures on low-wage, "unskilled" workers and there is no reason to continue dumping more people in to compete with them.  There is a reason people from Samuel Gompers to Bernie Sanders, noted labor advocates all, never supported unlimited, no-questions asked immigration.  It's bad for labor, which is to say, bad for normal people.  The way people on the left have lauded tech companies for their stance on immigration despite the investigation of those same companies by the federal government for wage fixing is deplorable.  Hell, even the Labor Department has been shown to use H1B visa workers in violation of federal guidelines.  This, in spite of numerous studies showing that there is no shortage of American tech workers available to take those jobs.  A tightening of the cheap labor spigot, from farm workers to programmers is long overdue.  

The problem with this attitude, is that Obama was already tough on illegal immigration, as tough as necessary. Trump has no problem with legal immigration, apparently. Immigration overall has slowed to a crawl; it's not even a current problem. And low-wage workers do not keep down the wages of higher-wage workers. Farm workers do not bring down the wages of tech workers. And I hear nothing from Trump about any curb on legal immigration that would hurt the profit margins of tech companies. Trump wants to boost company profits, and believes in the trickle-down theory that says this is what makes America great. He is all-in on the trickle-down theory.

The way immigration is reduced, is if conditions improve in other countries. American support needs to go for improving human rights, reducing gun violence and death squads, supporting land reform and democracy, and not hero/cult worship of oligarchy (as in Hugo Chavez and Putin) in these countries. Immigration itself helps grow the economy and adds jobs. But if companies are allowed to hire foreigners because our education system is poor, that doesn't help. I see zero evidence that Trump wants to improve education; he wants to destroy it. That's why he appointed an education destroyer to head the education department. I see zero evidence that Trump wants to interfere in the profit margins of tech companies. That's why he appoints corporate raiders who prey on their workers to his cabinet.

Quote:5. Wars of Choice - The years since the end of the Cold War have been chock full of interventions from the Balkans to Africa to the Middle East, for little reason other than that politicians have been able to get away with it.  I put this last because, at the end of the day, it's not existential the way, say, not getting into a nuclear exchange over Syria is.  I also put it last because it is the one I have the most doubts of seeing happen, particularly given the noted hawkishness towards Iran I'm seeing in a lot of Trump's Cabinet picks (Matthis, Flynn, etc.).  I will admit, I cheered when Trump called out Bush and the War in Iraq in SC, then won its primary shortly thereafter, but I also cringed on numerous occasions with his calls for torture, murdering family members of terrorists, and general boorishness.  So, I'll put this as a nice-to-have, but I am not holding my breath.  In the absence of real peer competitors on the global stage, and a professional military drawn in large part from a small section of the population, there is simply too little pushback to this sort of adventurism abroad.

Indeed, it's not only grounds for not holding your breath, but for sounding alarm bells. Only the Republican interventions have been harmful, or costly, in American or foreign lives and money, since the Cold War ended. The Republicans have seen this as a green light to create "the new American Century" in the "New World Order." Democratic presidents on the other hand have intervened to stop or prevent genocidal massacres by foreign tyrants, and the results have been mixed, but usually good. The Balkan intervention by Bill Clinton was the most successful, and has restored peace there. Syrian support for the Free Syrian Army was too little, too late; and gave us no bargaining position with Putin and Iran to make any diplomacy possible with the tyrannical, genocidal monster.

Multi-lateral action by America in concert with NATO and the UN is essential to preserve international law and peace and meet humanitarian needs, which benefits peace and prosperity in the long run for all. America going it alone or with a coalition of the willing in preventive wars of choice, invading other countries without cause, and with imperialist aims, was the Bush policy, and is very destructive and has largely failed. Trump's stand on this is not what he said it was, and his approach to Iran is indeed dangerous and conflicts with his cozying up to his financial partner, Mr. Putin, who is Iran's principal ally.

Quote:So there you have it, that's what I voted for.  We'll see how it turns out.

We already see how it turns out. His appointments make that clear. He is a liar and a greedy corporate oligarch, concerned only with the fortunes of his upper class, of which he's the most famous member.

Some people were fooled. Trump will disappoint them. Hillary was the only proper choice in the general election. She was the one who could have made America great again for all its citizens, not just for white oligarchs.

His ignorance and those of his appointees on climate change will undercut any advantage from "building" that may occur. His appointees are the most greedy, ruthless, ignorant climate and environment destroyers that he could find. This alone makes his presidency a disaster.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
#77
(12-22-2016, 01:14 PM)SomeGuy Wrote: .....I am neither Jewish, nor Christian, nor Arab, nor any combination of the 3.  I simply don't find it to be relevant to me as an American, and to be quite frank deeply resent the extent to which *some* Jewish organizations and public figures, and their evangelical counterparts, have embedded a knee-jerk support for Israel into our foreign policy.  I even have a fairly low opinion of the practice of American citizens going and serving their time in the IDF and then coming back and getting involved in public life as a journalist or what have you.  Especially when they then make an opposition to nationalism elsewhere a centerpiece of their public platform.

However, given that all of these things are, you know, things, the fact of the matter is that the US simply doesn't have that much influence over Israel's internal politics, and that Israel's politics are so right-wing because that's who the Israelis have been voting for.  The Israeli Labor Party's star has long been in eclipse, secular (Non-Russian) Ashkenazim are a waning segment of the population, and nothing has emerged to the left of center to counterbalance Likud and the various parties to its right (Israel Beiteinu, Shas, the Haredi parties).  Given the tumult in the Middle East right now, and the shifting balance of power within and among Western countries, all of the trends are going in what I'm sure you view as the wrong direction.  Sorry.
Unfortunately, Trump has appointed the most militant pro-Israeli people possible to his administration. It is more likely than not that Trump will give a green light to full support of Israel no matter what they do to the Palestinians. And this includes a dangerously-militant approach to Iran.

Quote:I've seen nothing but trial balloons and gossip to date.  So, in the absence of real data, all we can do is hope.  My only words of encouragement here are that Donald Trump is 70 years old, and is not likely to change significantly as a person.  He's built his life on borrowing money to have things built and slapping his name on them, and sleeping with a steady succession of pretty bimbos.  So, running up the deficit to build infrastructure, inflation be damned, seems like it would be right up his alley.  If the net result of his presidency is a construction boom, burgeoning inflation (with a corresponding national debt), and the news that he's been sleeping with, say, Hope Hicks or Kellyanne Conway or <insert woman here>... *shrugs* I would be content. 

Running up the national debt in the long run is the strategy of the Republican Party. The aim is to make it impossible for government to operate in the public interest or help the poor and middle class, so that oligarchs can have a free hand and don't have to pay taxes. This result will be attained when interest rates go up, so that all the tax revenue goes to pay off interest on the debt, and nothing is left over for social or educational programs or investment in new industries that would compete with the old ones that the ruling oligarchs defend. They want to keep the rest of us poor, hungry and ignorant, and running up the debt is an excellent means for them to accomplish this.





"There's a reason education SUCKS, and it's the same reason that it will never, ever, ever be fixed. It's never going to get any better, don't look for it, be happy with what you've got. Because the owners of this country don't want that. I'm talking about the REAL owners, now. The REAL owners, the BIG WEALTHY business interests that control things and make all the important decisions -- forget the politicians. The politicians are put there to give you the idea that you have freedom of choice. YOU DON'T. You have no choice. You have OWNERS. They OWN YOU. They own EVERYTHING. They own all the important land, they own and control the corporations; they've long since bought and paid for the Senate, the Congress, the State houses, the City Halls; they've got the judges in their back pockets, and they own all the big media companies so they control just about all the news and information you get to hear. They gotcha by the BALLS. They spend billions of dollars every year lobbying -- lobbying to get what they want. Well, we know what they want -- they want MORE for themselves and less for everybody else. But I'll tell you what they don't want. They DON'T want a population of citizens capable of critical thinking. They don't want well-informed, well-educated people capable of critical thinking. They're not interested in that, that doesn't help them. That's against their interests. That's right. They don't want people who are smart enough to sit around the kitchen table and figure out how badly they're getting FUCKED by system that threw them overboard 30 fuckin' years ago. They don't want that. You know what they want? They want OBEDIENT WORKERS. OBEDIENT WORKERS. People who are just smart enough to run the machines and do the paperwork, and just dumb enough to passably accept all these increasingly shittier jobs with the lower pay, the longer hours, the reduced benefits, the end of overtime, and the vanishing pension that disappears the minute you go to collect it. And now they're comin' for your SOCIAL SECURITY MONEY. They want your fuckin' retirement money. They want it BACK. So they can give it to their criminal friends on Wall Street. And you know something? They'll get it. They'll get it ALL from you sooner or later -- 'cuz they OWN this fuckin' place. It's a big CLUB. And YOU AIN'T IN IT. You and I are NOT IN the big club. By the way, it's the same big club they use to beat you over the head with all day long when they tell you what to believe. All day long, beating you over the in their media telling you what to believe -- what to think -- and what to buy. The table is tilted, folks. The game is rigged. And nobody seems to notice. Nobody seems to care. Good honest hard-workin people -- white collar, blue collar -- doesn't matter what color shirt you have on. Good honest hard-workin people CONTINUE -- these are people of modest means -- continue to elect these RICH COCKSUCKERS who don't GIVE a fuck about them. They don't give a fuck about you, they don't GIVE A FUCK ABOUT YOU. T HEY DON'T CARE ABOUT YOU -- AT ALL. AT ALL. AT ALL. You know? And nobody seems to notice, nobody seems to care ... that's what the owners count on, the fact that Americans will probably remain willfully ignorant of the big red, white and blue dick that's being jammed up their assholes every day. Because the owners of this country know the truth -- it's called the American Dream ... 'cuz you have to be asleep to believe it."
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
#78
Eric, I wouldn't hold your breath expecting a response.  Life is short, too short to waste with you again.
Reply
#79
(12-22-2016, 05:32 PM)SomeGuy Wrote: Eric, I wouldn't hold your breath expecting a response.  Life is short, too short to waste with you again.

I just laid out the truth; did the best I could.

You sound so reasonable on the thread about the western saeculum, and then you support Trump and respond to my critique in the way you did? Puzzling.

"again"? Is "Someguy" your new name for someone who "wasted time" with me before? I can't tell. You certainly have not "wasted" any time writing responses to me here on the new forum. Curious.
"I close my eyes, and I can see a better day" -- Justin Bieber

Keep the spirit alive;
Eric M
Reply
#80
You laid out an opinion, the fact that you rarely distinguish between the two is why I no longer wish to debate with you.  It's quite alright, I've long since stopped believing that there's any real malice behind it.  I wish you the best of luck.
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