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Well-Known Member
^ that deuce GOLD ^
If the answer is so obvious, and the democrats had complete control for two years, why was nothing done?
Either your wrong, or your party is pathetic.
I disagree. I'm tired of people with a good job, a good home, and a 3% mortgage complaining about money because the tuition for their kids private schools or whatever went up. Government has spent 10 years subsidizing their mortgages, purchases, tax bill, investments , and retirement portfolio. You say when someone is already at the bottom there is not much more to fall, but that is not true in reality. Poor people suffer more. The middle class just complain out of habit. They are actually doing very well.
I'm saying that in general if someone has a decent job and a decent home and decent health and a decent social life, then things aren't that bad, relatively speaking. Individual circumstances will vary.
[size/HUGE] fixed [/size];638478 said:I'm a little surprised to see certain posters using the notion of a "free market" as some sort of measuring rod against the status quo. Can't we ditch that notion for good? Capitalist States have ALWAYS been serious meddlers, and the "free market" idea has always been a sort of heaven -- a distraction for the weak from the conflictual and highly differential conditions in which value is actually created and CERTAIN methods of value creation sustained.
It's hard to see how the interests of the middle and poorer classes have been anything but placated to. To talk in heavy puffs about who suffers more is sort of embarrassing when the tippy-top of the elite have been making out soooo well.
You must separate out being “pro free-enterprise” from being “pro-business.” The two greatest enemies of the free enterprise system in my opinion have been on one hand my fellow intellectuals, and on the other hand, the big businessmen – for opposite reasons.
Almost every businessman is in favor of free enterprise for everybody else, but special privilege and special government protection for himself. As a result, they have been a major force in undermining the free enterprise system. Stop kidding yourself into thinking you can use the business community as a way to promote free enterprise. Unfortunately, most of them are not our friends in that respect.
Sorry for splitting hairs, but I still disagree on "comparative degree". If you go from poor to losing everything, that is worse than going from middle class to middle class in a downturn.
I'm saying that in general if someone has a decent job and a decent home and decent health and a decent social life, then things aren't that bad, relatively speaking. Individual circumstances will vary.
If someone loses one or more of the above 4 things, than that is suffering.
I would think that poor people have lost more of those 4 things on average than middle class people for a sustained period over the last 10 years.