mpjh wrote:Beyond your pay grade?
Yes indeedy.
Moderator: Community Team
mpjh wrote:Beyond your pay grade?
Snorri1234 wrote:Inhuman14 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:And it worries me based on these sorts of comments that Americans get to choose who ends up in charge of the free world for the rest of us.
Hey, you can move to America. Nothing's stopping you. Or, if you're feeling contrary, go join China or Russia. Which would you rather have in charge of the free world?
He wants the french in power.
Inhuman14 wrote:I'm American, and I get pissed at people who think that we all think that we own the world. I think that the world needs a leader, though, and at the moment, the USA is that leader, whether you like it or not. Whether the USA is a good leader or not, well, that's not my department.
PLAYER57832 wrote:
Walmart stockholders do well, but employees do not.
The cry is always that those types of aid creates jobs. Well, welfare creates jobs, too, ironically. Food stamps help support a lot of grocery stores
Rental assistance aids many a landlord .. some big guys, but many pretty small. Folks who own a home they could not sell.. so they try renting. Etc. Furthermore, when those food stamps or rental assistance or childcare assistance go to someone who is working a 40 hour week and still cannot afford health care, food, housing for her 1 or 2 kids (not 10 kids by 7 fathers or any such thing.) .. it really means that we are helping to prop up that business. If that business is a "mom and pop" where the owners are barely able themselves to pay a small mortgage, etc. ... that's one thing, but far too often, it is Walmart, Kmart, McDonald, etc.. .hardly small time companies without the means to pay more. Those companies could pay employees more, if they were willing to cut executive pay a little or to drop stockholder dividends. And yes, I DO think that the person who clocks in to work at any job deserves to be paid enough to live. Getting rich comes AFTER you have paid all your expenses, including employee pay. Not before.
Bush & his cronies aided the big guys in ways that made absolutely no real sense. He allowed deregulation of the banks, which is part of why we are in this mess. He stonewalled support of alternative energy programs, while giving lip service to the opposite. ETC/
She could have been president. As an American citizen, I did find that thought disturbing.
Obama on the other hand seems to think that taxing imports won't have a symmetrical effect on exports, which is probably worse than creationism in terms of its sheer stupidity, and he is in fact going to translate his
We had a time of unbridled, unlimited capitalism already
There just aren't huge swatches of untapped resources laying relatively "unclaimed" (or, more to the point claimed by people who have not the slightest ability to keep them) ready to line the pockets of those who wish to take them.
I am not so egotistical as to think our country rules the world. U.S. companies do have a lot of sway. The U.S. government certainly impacts the world, but we hardly act alone and are hardly "in charge" of anything but this country (and sometimes maybe not even that).
Napoleon Ier wrote:PLAYER57832 wrote:
Walmart stockholders do well, but employees do not.
The two sets are not mutually exclusive. When you consider 50% of Americans own stocks, and the vast numbers whose pensions are tied up in the security markets, the whole "Wall Street vs. Main Street" myth is imploded, to understate the matter.
The cry is always that those types of aid creates jobs. Well, welfare creates jobs, too, ironically. Food stamps help support a lot of grocery stores
Bush & his cronies aided the big guys in ways that made absolutely no real sense. He allowed deregulation of the banks, which is part of why we are in this mess. He stonewalled support of alternative energy programs, while giving lip service to the opposite. ETC/
She could have been president. As an American citizen, I did find that thought disturbing.
To an extent, fair play, but it's almost like Clinton and his backstage hanky-panky whilst in office: not entirely relevant to their direction of the country.
We had a time of unbridled, unlimited capitalism already
Worked bloody well too. Or would you rather we never had an Industrial Revolution?
There just aren't huge swatches of untapped resources laying relatively "unclaimed" (or, more to the point claimed by people who have not the slightest ability to keep them) ready to line the pockets of those who wish to take them.
Well, there are if you let intelligent people go look for these new resources and make their own incentives, rather than make them fill out reams of risk-assessment forms and tax them every second dollar they make in the process of going about it.
PLAYER57832 wrote:ween a pensions, individual stock purchases & mutual funds, and the 401K, which is what most people now have.
And, when companies care more about making stockholders and CEOs rich than in pleasing customers and supporting employees, you have GM instead of Toyota. And the results speak for themselves. (in case you were not aware, GM has been paying several million to its executives in bonuses, cutting worker benefits and numbers of employees. Toyota paid its CEO 1 million and even when it shut down, kept its employees working on public service projects at full company pay)
but if you read what I wrote, I did explain. If you need more specifics -- Food stamps pay for food in grocery stores which contribute toward the pofit of that grocery store, which helps support the owner and workers of that store. Most of those people pay taxes on those earnings.
Further, there are secondary benefits. If someone is starving, especially if their kids are starving, they don't tend to look down on things like stealing as much as if they have a relatively full belly.
The motor of our economy is entrepreneurs getting initial capital injections to allow them to fulfill projects. Regulate that, and you throttle the ingenuity and pioneer spirit that is a keystone of Western civilization once especially resplendent in your own land. Ultimately, the banker and entrepreneur know best how to ensure they minimize the risk behind their credit transactions, not government.
What did happen to cause this credit crunch wasn't entirely Bush's fault, he's too easy a scapegoat. Yes, he spent money like a drunk sailor with Iraq etc, which is by no means a small contributing factor, but the expansion of the inflationary cut-taxes and-still-spend-obscene-amounts state is nothing new and particular to the US, and is the real cause of this crisis. Deregulations? Pshaw! It's letting bankers (of whom don't worry, I have my moments of Jacksonian suspicion of) get away with thinking they can lend more than they realistically would otherwise by promises of bailouts and cheap credit that caused the "mess".
No the cause of the crisis is that banks were allowed to bundle high risk mortgages into securities which were rated by agencies paid by the banks. Everything from other banks to schools to folks overseas invested in these supposedly safe securities. Only it turned out they were really just insurance for bad mortgages and when folks started having trouble with mortgage ... it all began to go bust.
Add in bank CEOs who get bonuses beginning at just over 20 million, up to around 35 million, regardless of whether the bank was doing well or not ... and you have folks who took too much risk too quickly because they thought they knew better and were so much smarter than the rest of the world. Now we, the American taxpayers, are having to pay for their arrogance
She could have been president. As an American citizen, I did find that thought disturbing.
To an extent, fair play, but it's almost like Clinton and his backstage hanky-panky whilst in office: not entirely relevant to their direction of the country.
A president who disbelieves 90% of modern science is most certainly relevant.
We had a time of unbridled, unlimited capitalism already
Worked bloody well too. Or would you rather we never had an Industrial Revolution?
Except it just is not so. First, they are not hamstrung as you seem to imply. Not in the U.S. Sure, the oil companies, etc. will push forward those claims ... all the while they are heavily investing and developing. However, there just are not vast untapped reserves of oil any more. Most timber is in Russia. Many fish stocks are depleted to the point of no return. That may not seem too significant to you .. until you realize just what it truly means about the entire ocean AND our well being.
Yes, there is certainly such a thing as too many taxes, improper taxes, too much regulation. BUT, we are most definitely not there yet in the U.S. Right now in the U.S., mining laws are such that my neighbor, who DOES own the mineral rights to my land and that of most of my community can mine those minerals without any regard to my house, the health and only minimally to the welfare of this community. A huge landfill was begun not too far from here. It now gets trash from New York City, etc. including some very hazardous waste. All of the local landowners, who used to drink well water now are required to BUY city water. Sure, the landfill corporation had to pay for the lines, but not the water the peopel use. It was a rural area, farms. They are not shut down. That meat and produce is sold. Supposedly it is "safe", but no testing is required. (and yes, I am QUITE aware of US agricultural regulations, but for one thing most of the stuff is sold locally to neighbors, similar small sources). The drainage area includes 3 streams that have only recently been restored. Locals spent years of work, money to restore them. One big landfill pretty much negated all that work.
Love Canal is located just north of here. Just down the road is what's left of a plant. None of the 40 or so employees of that plant are still living. They all died of cancer and related illnesses.
Sure, taxes must be within reason. BUT, they must also be constructed to truly compensate for damage a company does and the resources it uses. When mere compensation is not enough, as is often very much the case when it comes to natural resources, then regulation is necessary to see that MY rights and the rights of my neighbors are protected. This attitude that its OK for companies to do as they wish because they are creating jobs just is not reasonable. Profits come AFTER they pay expenses and only when they are not taking profit off the backs of their neighbor's health, livelihoods and general well being.
Study science a bit more, actually LISTEN to experts in various resources (and not the so-called "experts" willing to come on every talk show for a price, but the ones who quietly do their work unless absolutely pressed).
Napoleon Ier wrote:These are all tragic anecdotes, but quite apart from the fact that using personal stories in debate doesn't substitute hard empirical data,
what you're essentially complaining about is a violation of propoerty rights: the property rights of you and your family, or of your community. In a free country, we are lucky enough to be able to take people who violate our rights to a court of law. I entirely agree that negative externalities, which is economists' jargon for the bad things that directly result to other people's property because of profit-seeking, need to be taxed.
I don't think a blanket 35% business tax on the other hand, is moral or sensible.
But let's just think: right now it's private individuals and their companies violating your rights. I'm in total agreement with you that you should have every right to get them off your property, or your community's property, or at least make them pay a restitutive price if you and the citizens of your municipality are prepared to accept it. However, that's thanks to the Common Law that preserves our liberties and makes case-by-case judgements to resolve individual problems.
If, as you want, we have State-owned corporations doing whatever they damn please with the land,
and you as an individual have no rights, being only a part of society for whom we are trying to "achieve a greater good", where is the rule of law to protect you then?
Sacrificied on the altar of Marxist totalitarianism Player, that's where it is. The nightmare scenario is when the State takes over these companies, because then, you have nor rights, and ther's no judge, no court, no-one in fact, to protect you from the whims of mob-rule, or the rule of despotic oligarchs pretending to work in the name of the Proletariat.
Study science a bit more, actually LISTEN to experts in various resources (and not the so-called "experts" willing to come on every talk show for a price, but the ones who quietly do their work unless absolutely pressed).
Is that meant to be a subtle jibe at Friedman? Believe me, that's not a road you want to go down with me.
Napoleon Ier wrote:I think your anti-capitalist outrage is fundamentally misplaced and that you're misunderstanding some of my posts, and as am I some of yours (apparently). I'll try and type up a brief outline of my position, but as a bare sine of the argument, understand that a broadly libertarian constitution in the US guarantees you the right to your own property, and to avail yourself of a justice system independent of any legislature or executive to enforce that right, against the will of the majority if requisite, in direct contrast to utilitario-communalo-neo-socialist ideas you think you might be affiliated with.
The comment "Friedman? Never heard of the guy." says it all really, though.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:I think your anti-capitalist outrage is fundamentally misplaced and that you're misunderstanding some of my posts, and as am I some of yours (apparently). I'll try and type up a brief outline of my position, but as a bare sine of the argument, understand that a broadly libertarian constitution in the US guarantees you the right to your own property, and to avail yourself of a justice system independent of any legislature or executive to enforce that right, against the will of the majority if requisite, in direct contrast to utilitario-communalo-neo-socialist ideas you think you might be affiliated with.
The comment "Friedman? Never heard of the guy." says it all really, though.
You have tossed out a lot of labels you have apparently learned insufficiently.
PLAYER57832 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:I think your anti-capitalist outrage is fundamentally misplaced and that you're misunderstanding some of my posts, and as am I some of yours (apparently). I'll try and type up a brief outline of my position, but as a bare sine of the argument, understand that a broadly libertarian constitution in the US guarantees you the right to your own property, and to avail yourself of a justice system independent of any legislature or executive to enforce that right, against the will of the majority if requisite, in direct contrast to utilitario-communalo-neo-socialist ideas you think you might be affiliated with.
The comment "Friedman? Never heard of the guy." says it all really, though.
You have tossed out a lot of labels you have apparently learned insufficiently. I am not anti-capitalism. I am opposed to unbridled capitalism.
We do not habe a Liberaterian Constitution, we have a constitional democracy and a republic. And, yes the judiciary enforces rules, BUT the legislator and occasionally the executive branch have to first create the laws. The constitution is a guide to other laws, not a full list of the laws necessary to run a country.
As for the name-calling. Cute, but how about saying something real?
Napoleon Ier wrote:
Labels I've learned insufficiently? What, like the word "fallasy"? Do please explain what you're wittering about. The Constitution of the United States is a libertarian one in that it enumerates and specifies the rights of government, clearly distinguishing them from those of citizens, and that the rights of government are confined within guaranteeing an environment apt for the mutual exercise of liberties. You do have a Republican system of government, or a Constitutional Democracy, but that doesn't not exclude it from being libertarian, or classically liberal. So please, don't lecture me about labels until you read up past the level of political philosophy you learnt in Backwater High School or wherever it was.
As best I can tell, you're whining because you don't like companies mining in your backyard.
The scenario seems highly improbable to me,
but my point is, that in the US of A, the judiciary can "make" law in the sense that it can set the case precedent for preventing companies from arbitrarily seizing private property when you bring the case to court. A judge exists, who regardless of the opinion of the majority, as he would be unable to do in a 'direct' Democracy, can enforce your property rights.
That's libertarian capitalism in action. I don't believe I called you any names, I merely pointed out you had misplaced outrage at "unbridled capitalism"
, when really you should have recognized that the only scenario in which a company could violate your private property would be under anarchy, where no authority enforces your rights, or under socialism, where the government 'abolishes' your right to that property for the 'greater good'.
That's all perfectly real.
Rather than pretending I'm calling you names,
I suggest you find a response, or be quiet.
Napoleon Ier wrote:Alright, fine. Let's say that a particular company is in fact mining under your backyard. Either this affects you, in which case, we have either a negative externality, which most streams of pure capitalism, libertarianism and classical liberalism as ideologies entirely support taxing,
or we have a situation in which they don't affect you by mining, and you have no right to complain. If some law exists saying they have a right to be using your property without due compensation, then a judicial review must establish that said law is void. That's a basic feature of US style libertarian checks-and-balances democracy. Now, Obama is going to be able to do bugger all in this respect since the founding fathers of your country established a judiciary branch of government separate from the executive and legislative, so frankly, I don't see the relevance.
Nonetheless, please, understand that the judiciary exists, and that there is such a thing as case law that exists next to statute law, if only for my own sanity, and that the principle that underlies government as outlined in the US Constitution is that a judge can override a legislature violating your rights.
Frigidus wrote:Geez, are these short story length posts about why you voted for Obama? Didn't we realize it was because he's black back at page 2?
PLAYER57832 wrote:Napoleon Ier wrote:Alright, fine. Let's say that a particular company is in fact mining under your backyard. Either this affects you, in which case, we have either a negative externality, which most streams of pure capitalism, libertarianism and classical liberalism as ideologies entirely support taxing,
No. check your definitions. PURE capitalism says that he who makes the most money "wins", that no limits are acceptable, that the market will correct all. We had pretty close to this in the 1900's here in the U.S. and not cooincidentally, afterward came the Depression (this is, by-the-way, what I mean when I said your dates were off ... in the 1600's and 1700's most of the world was hardly capitalistic. You were referring to the beginnings and stirrings of capitalism and the rise of the middle class. I was referring to the end result, which had to be reigned in because it did NOT work without limits. We are in a similar paradigm shift right now, but you will have to look outside of your famous quotes and textbooks to see that).
or we have a situation in which they don't affect you by mining, and you have no right to complain. If some law exists saying they have a right to be using your property without due compensation, then a judicial review must establish that said law is void. That's a basic feature of US style libertarian checks-and-balances democracy. Now, Obama is going to be able to do bugger all in this respect since the founding fathers of your country established a judiciary branch of government separate from the executive and legislative, so frankly, I don't see the relevance.
Nonetheless, please, understand that the judiciary exists, and that there is such a thing as case law that exists next to statute law, if only for my own sanity, and that the principle that underlies government as outlined in the US Constitution is that a judge can override a legislature violating your rights.
One more time.
No, they are not (currently) mining under my house. They ARE mining under the houses of my friends and nearby individuals. I don't know the extend of the Marsallas natural gas deposits, I have been told by the guy who happens to own the mining rights to my land (a friend of my husband's, in fact.. though irrelevant in all regards .... he would do as he wishes, regardless of friendship) that there is no coal here. 2 nearby coal mines DO go under various people's property.
You probably saw a glimpse of this a couple of years ago when they rescued those guys from the Que Creek. The rescue shaft was sunk into a dairy farmer's property. The dairy farmer did not know the mine was even there.
Generally, when the mine is actively maintained it is not a direct issue (exceptions abound!), but once the mine is abandoned, things fail and you end up with sink holes. The thing is realtors, etc. don't have to tell you. In fact, its often hard to even determine accurately where exactly a mine is. In the Que Creek incident, it is thought those miners ran into an old abandoned mine shaft and that is why it flooded. Apparently, the maps of that old mine were off. In Wyoming, many cattle ranchers have found their farms crossed by temporary roads to access oil wells. They can come within a few feet of someone's previously peaceful home, can run their trucks at full tilt (Wyoming does not have tight speed laws, besides this is private land, not a public road), kick up toxis debris, etc.
The mining act of 1877, which has not been repealed or even much amended, says, essentially that you can obtain a mining claim and have the right to establish a mine to obtain those minerals. This is why Allegheny National Forest wilderness (such as it is) has Natural Gas Wells. The government, we, do not own the mining rights.
As for your ideas of private property .. water, air are not actually private in the U.S. (some exceptions, but generally true). A lot of people think they are, but they are wrong. There is good reason. The most obvious is freedom of passage ... as assured by the navigable waterways act, which basically says that you cannot dam or inhibit passage through a navigable stream of any size. Also, water rarely stays put, even groundwater moves. So, if you sink a dump over the hill (this is my reality, by-the-way), the water under that dump is likely to wind up in my drinking water. (depending on rock formations, gradients, etc.) Even if it does not wind up in my specific water, it WILL wind up in some neighbors.. in many neighbor's water. So, the government has the duty and obligation to ensure that said dump (any other entity) does not unduly pollute the water. It took a LONG time for folks to realize this was happening, how serious the issue was, and that it could be prevented. Ergo, the Clean Water Act (U.S. law). However .. in comes Bush and tells EPA (the primary, though not only, agency responsible for enforcing this law) to ignore many portions since he did not happen to consider them valid. THAT issue is still mired in court. It will be solved when Obama comes into office, but the court case will likely take more time. (the court case is whether the executive branch, i.e. the president of the US has the right to ignore and interpret certain rules).
That said, the landfill company is not stupid. And, some basic rules do apply. Water law is too complex for even many skilled lawyers to understand, so I am not going to get into all the details. But, the landfill is lined with plastic, which will keep seepage out for an estimated 200 years. They were required to give all their neighbors new water systems (but not to pay for the water these people would then have to buy, or in the case of a stubborn friend of mine, simply the $19 dollar monthly fee with NO useage at all ... she had to let them install the tap, but shut if off and simply filters her well water ... still she has to pay that monthly fee AND has never gotten her water tested to see if her filters are doing a good enough job, etc. Still, while 200 years seems like a long time .. it is likely within my grandchildren's life times. If not my grandchildren, then great grandchildren.
BUT.. and this is a pretty big "but". Here is the thing. If you are going to criticize with any sort of credibility, you really ought to make a stab at verifying stuff before declaring it wrong.
AND, as far as the law goes ... sorry, you are just plain wrong.
jonesthecurl wrote:I prefer Napoleon IIIeme anyhow.
Napoleon Ier wrote:Yes, me too. Everyone knows that George W. wanted to finsh off the work done in none other than Napoleon Ier's famous 1991 winter "March through Pennsylvania" campaign which was his inspiration to personally order the 2nd Marine Division into PLAYER's backyard, topple the statue made in her likeness that was set up therein after gagging her with a copy of Article 6 put on a piece of duct-tape, give a victory dance on a beached aircraft carrier round the block, then allow Dick Cheney to use a pneumatic drill and a Newcomen Engine (that was designed by Oliver Cromwell's NMA Engineers, not an aspiring Cornish capitalist, obv.)t o pump obscene amounts of oil from the topsoil of her vegetable garden that she put there to prove males and females are exactly alike, which he then put on gigantic polluting tankers in the stream next to wherever she lives and shipped them to the Pope, who wanted the oil to pour down the throats of gays like in that scene from Three Kings, and also to rev up Sancta Militia Petri panzers (because he's a Nazi, obv.) to kill protestants.
mpjh wrote:looking
