NAOS
Well-Known Member
You sure you are not Jesus
unintended compliment.
You sure you are not Jesus
Honestly I think it is a mixture of both.
The Left is too uneducated and focused on government as the answer to everything to make good change.
In short we are hosed.
Please spread that fear as wide and deep as you can for me. I can't wait to buy up more stock at depressed prices on a 2% HELOC. I'm being fully serious too.
Both sides are overly wed to (a) trust in the naturalness of the market, (a) trust that private interests can and should deliver what the State "certainly can't", and (c) the individual's responsibility for his/her station in life.
I guess I might call this lack of education since there are plenty of long-standing social theories that illustrate how inadequate these platforms are.
EDIT TO ADD: The republican tendencies I mentioned above just really really get under my skin. I can't see how it is good for public discourse. Democrats can be too idealistically egalitarian and relativistic, but I find this easier to work with. Does this answer your question?
Thanks for the sincere answer. I find it difficult, if not impossible, to believe that any of these candidates are not more versed in historical economics than any of us here. So, assuming that's correct, for a moment, why don't they see things the same way? Is it because they're smarter and know more than us .. Or because they have each succumbed to the pressures of their party, lobbyists, campaign contributors, etc?
Thanks for the sincere answer. I find it difficult, if not impossible, to believe that any of these candidates are not more versed in historical economics than any of us here.
So, assuming that's correct, for a moment, why don't they see things the same way? Is it because they're smarter and know more than us .. Or because they have each succumbed to the pressures of their party, lobbyists, campaign contributors, etc?
Do you have faith not in the system but the people running that system? I don't. I base this of the crap they are doing.
True, then change what can be bought like they do with WIC and start there... reevaluate after.
The question:... suppose the government "doesn't spend money it doesn't have" ,... what would you suppose would be the 3 major consequences to society ? ... to employment numbers?...
Obviously this thread addresses the right-leaning crowd, so I'd appreciate it if the rest of everybody else would give them the space to answer.
Obviously if the gov never spent money it didn't have, there's a definite possibility the budget could once again be balanced....
What this thread is not addressing is the over-spending and/or needless spending. I am not opposed to taxes, duh, but I am opposed to discussing how much needs to be charged void of addressing the spending problem.
I am not for the stoppage of helping those in need, I am for a better system that assures we're spending tax dollars wisely.
Maybe I take the OP in the wrong context, but I feel it's too cute to say, "what if we just fold our arms and don't pay for things?" The issue, for me, is more about taking a much better business-like approach to taxation/spending.
This is where the thread derailed....PKM, you turned the world upside down.
Obviously, the point of telling the government not to spend money is does not have would seem to be to curtail wasteful spending, exactly waht you are looking for. I am at a loss as to why you could not make this connection.
No one could just try to answer the damn question. Oh someone is asking a question, it must be a trick, so I'd better start calling names, or changing the discussion to something else.
Don't you think that limiting debt financed government spending would force the government to make choices about spending, and try to reduce waste, instead of just buying everything anybody wants and financing the purchase. Are things really so great that we shouldn't think about whether improvements can be made?
True, then change what can be bought like they do with WIC and start there... reevaluate after.
Too much frozen pizza gets bought, so disallow all frozen pizza? The motivation is to get people to spend more? I don't disagree with the idea, but the politics ...
Are you familiar with the WIC program? It lays out very specifically what can and can't be purchased using funds through the WIC program. I guarantee you that frozen pizza is not allowable. It is so specific that you can buy frozen orange juice but you cannot buy frozen orange/mango juice. You can buy Cheerios but not apple cinnamon Cheerios. You can buy whole milk but you cannot buy 1%. With food stamps you can pretty much buy whatever you want.
Here's my general approach rambled together: Governments have always been corrupt and people have always fought vehemently over policy. This era is no different. People have worried that the world would soon come to an end since the beginning of recorded history yet it never has. Worrying incessantly about impending doom dampens our investing outlook and hurts our prospects. It also is self feeding and self defeating. Most people are well intentioned and want the world to be better tomorrow than it is today regardless of which side of the fence they live on. The US has the most deep, dynamic, & adaptable market the world has ever seen. We're becoming more civil & extending equal freedoms to new groups. The undeveloped world has watched the developed & is following suit. Mass economic liberations are happening in China, India, Brazil, Russia, & even Africa. Economies are becoming stronger & more dynamic on a world wide scale. Hundreds of millions are being lifted from poverty. We've been through the Great Depression, Civil War, a revolution, two world wars, & Jimmy Carter (j/k). All of these dwarf the problems of today that are petty in comparison. We defeated Hitler and Imperial Japan but we can't handle our trade gap or healthcare that's keeping us alive & healthy for longer than we're used to paying for? Please.
These powers will be harnessed by the optimistic, who will have the best chance of profiting from them. Successful business people have proven this to be true many times over. When people are screaming that California is going bankrupt I am looking for nice yielding municipal bonds. When people are screaming that China will dump our debt I am searching for products they will buy with all those dollars. When people are screaming about a collapse in Europe I'll be grabbing a travel magazine for deals in Rome & Paris.
So yeah, the world allegedly sucks & I don't give a damn. Carpe Diem...lemonade.
Are you familiar with the WIC program? It lays out very specifically what can and can't be purchased using funds through the WIC program. I guarantee you that frozen pizza is not allowable. It is so specific that you can buy frozen orange juice but you cannot buy frozen orange/mango juice. You can buy Cheerios but not apple cinnamon Cheerios. You can buy whole milk but you cannot buy 1%. With food stamps you can pretty much buy whatever you want.
1) WIC is a program geared to meeting the specific nutritional guidelines. It is not intended to be the totality of a diet. For example, you can't buy ground turkey on WIC. Is that because ground turkey is bad?
2) The food you can buy with WIC is not more expensive that the alternatives. In terms of dollars-for-calorie, sugarless applesauce costs more than applesauce with added surgars. Saying that former has to be bought is demanding that people spend more money on foodstamps.
My point was that I agreed with the nutritional value, but that the political baggage would be difficult to overcome. Do you think we should require people to spend more on foodstamps? Do you think that's going to be easy to accomplish, politically?
This is twice in two threads you've jumped in with to disagree, in a way that's below your typical level of rhetoric. Is it "Disagree with One Brow Day"?
Are you kidding me? Democrats do not have a plan in place to deal with the escalating debt and bad economy. Most Republicans don't either. The most comprehensive bipartisan plan was from the Simpson-Bowles commission and Obama trashcanned that as soon as it was finished. He didn't even give it lip service. I have met John McCain on several occasions and spoke to him about this issue. He wouldn't have spent as much as Obama, but he didn't have a clue as to what is needed to fix the problem.
The only politician currently serious about fixing this problem is Paul Ryan. He has a plan, a really detailed one. And I will guarantee that all of the people who are going to badmouth Paul Ryan have not read the plan. It's hard medicine, and it isn't enough, but its a start. It does address some of the original posters concerns while actually tackling the problems we face. There will always be reasons to not reform. But we are actually running out of time. Medicare goes bust in less than 8 years. Social Security has less than 20, and those are the conservative CBO estimates.
If Romney nominates Ryan for the veep slot, I'll believe he is serious about the issue. Until Democrats can actually get around to passing a budget in the Senate, I will treat their "economic policies" as the bad jokes they continue to be.
I posted this question in the Mitt Romney taxes thread and the fiscally responsible crowd went silent. Since this isn't exactly about Mitt and his taxes, I thought it deserved it own thread.
The question is basic: suppose the government "doesn't spend money it doesn't have" (which is what many have been calling for in their parsimonious fix-all solutions), what would you suppose would be the 3 major consequences to society if this were true? (Robust answers may want to include a theory about what "money" is.... but I leave that to you).
EDIT TO ADD: Since "unemployment" is also a big topic these days, perhaps you can focus your answer on what this would do to employment numbers?
Obviously this thread addresses the right-leaning crowd, so I'd appreciate it if the rest of everybody else would give them the space to answer.