by Mandalore » Tue Nov 20, 2012 3:39 pm
Well, at the very least this was fun to read.
As for responding to the claims that the Iraqi invasion was for oil....that would make sense if America actually just took the oil. Most of the auctions of Iraq's oil fields did not go to American firms and they were shown no preference in the beginning. Oil has increased in price over the past decade. And to say that invading Iraq was unjustified, I'm sure that you could find a few ethnic and religious groups there who are pretty happy he's gone. Saddam was a mass murderer who threatened the stability of the region overall, even if he did stabilize Iraq itself. And speaking of stability, this is the entire reason the US is deployed in the fashion that it is. Taking our troops home, while an ideal solution is just a very bad strategic move. Removing our guarantees of countries' independence, or our usual practical version of this (I.E. moving fleets near Taiwan) would create huge holes of instability across the world.
Having a plutocratic society has already been seen....asking whether or not they succeed or fail has already been demonstrated. The gilded age in America in particular showed entire towns run by companies and it was a [m'kay] mess. Pre-revolutionary France, where the wealth was amassed in the hands of less 3% of the population. But you know what, [m'kay] it, lets just do that and hope the rich guys really do care about us! Because they always have in the past, right?
And Crater was right about gold just being a fiat currency. True currency in an apocalyptic situation is power, so buy some AKs with your gold nuggets. Fun fact, Rome also dug a huge hole in itself by inflation (via the silver mines of Spain)
And let's throw out PBS which costs us less than a tenth of a percent of our federal budget, because [m'kay] education. That's why. Everyone knows that the countries' with the weakest middle class were always the ones that succeeded? Oh, what's that history? That's completely wrong? Well [m'kay] you too, I'm right because I said so!
As for government spending, I do believe that social security needs to be gradually privatized. For one it will increase domestic investment, secondly SS was never meant to really have turned out this way. It pretty much started out as a scam, seeing as most people wouldn't even really live to see the benefits of it when it was implemented (1935 I believe, right in there somewhere). We also currently outpace every country country in the world by military spending, I'm not quite sure I can make the claim that we outspend them all combined, so I won't outright claim that. But we're close. I'm also not sure how the money is spent, but I would guess that quite a significant amount is spend on research and development which could be cut or spread out to NATO allies in Western Europe (the only region of our massive military presence that doesn't truly need it)
I think there were some people talking about that golden boy of conservatism Ronald Reagan. I'm not sure why he's held in such high esteem by the far right, seeing as he was far more moderate than they are. Ever take a peek at his immigration reform? Plus during his reign he increased government spending, and ended up doubling the deficit he started with. The only economic successes he enjoyed were the reduction of inflation and the reduction of unemployment (which was a natural trend, seeing as the unemployment level hovered around 10% when he took office).
The problem with healthcare costs is twofold. For one, the costs of training doctors hovers around $300,000. This is in part due to the fact that the supply of money to the market is already assured by the government, thus allowing universities to jack up their prices with relative comfort. Reduce the amount of government assured loans and you'll see the price of universities start to fall just due to the fact that their market will start dissipating. Secondly are the regulations placed upon the health care industry, and I'll throw the malpractice insurance rates under that category too. Americans have begun to see the imperfection of humanity as a sign to sue, sue, sue!
[04:25] -SR-Mandalore: who pitches and who catches
[04:29] (SWGO)SWINE*FLU: We'll do it in turns.
[04:30] -SR-Mandalore: That sounds super fair
[04:30] -SR-Mandalore: Do you think other gay couples do that?
[04:30] (SWGO)SWINE*FLU: I reckon so.
COMMANDER OTTO:
and you come with the name Mandalore... really CREATIVE.
BY COMMANDER OTTO