Adjust the dosage. Fuck man.
![[Image: confused.gif]](https://rooshvforum.network/images/smilies/confused.gif)
Quote: (10-04-2013 07:22 PM)Samseau Wrote:
Quote: (10-04-2013 06:55 PM)Easy E Wrote:
Quote: (10-04-2013 06:47 PM)Grit Wrote:
I could tell you my opinion, "Democrats want to be associated with Obamacare to please their voter base" which would be a logical assumption.
Now, what is a logical assumption for why Republicans want to block Obamacare? - Can my opponents even give a guess or theory without outright ad hominem personal attack?
I'll ask again, for what logical reason do Republicans want to block Obamacare?
Let me offer what I see:
The Republicans are tired of being conservative in lip service, and are taking a hardline stance to figure out a budget and a way to service federal debt instead of increasing federal debt and spending.
If the Republicans want to repeal Obamacare, then they need to start winning elections. They can't just throw a tantrum and resort to hostage taking. They deserve to lose on this issue, and they will lose on this stunt they are pulling.
Exactly. Republicans need to promise more free shit to poor people using other people's money so they can win more elections.
Quote: (10-04-2013 07:46 PM)Jaydublin Wrote:
Quote: (10-03-2013 10:16 PM)JayJuanGee Wrote:
Quote: (10-03-2013 10:00 PM)Jaydublin Wrote:
well my friend that is all a pretty new way of thinking... trust me, we aren't suddenly geniuses. It will backfire like it always has, don't worry.
Yes, the highway system would be an investment... How can that compare to where the money is going today? Giving out cell phones is not an investment. Just an example but the money we spend today isn't an infrastructure investment so don't try to compare it to the 50s.
Spending beyond WAY your income with no return is very bad... government or family, it is bad
OK JayDublin: the theme of this thread is govt shut down, and in the end, are you suggesting it is a good idea to shut down the govt b/c you and some others feel strongly that the govt is overspending?
If that is the case, then we can have that debate about how much should be spent and whether austerity is a good thing (I personally believe that austerity is a bad thing and it hurts the economy, but reasonable people may differ about these kinds of opinions), and in the meantime, while we are debating or not debating, we are going to shut down the govt and screw the whole house of cards of the american economic dominance (and favorable credit) into the tubes.
It is a loser for everyone to close the govt for a long time in order to make such a point about USA overspending. Maybe if the stock market begins to go into a freefall, that will cause some representatives to wake the fuck up. The last two days have been down trends in the market of almost 1% per day, but not on a major level, yet. if a freefall starts, may not be able to stop it.
That's the 2nd time you have put words in my mouth then debated the opinion that your created for me. Nowhere did I say the shutdown was good and I made this clear on another page when we quoted each other.
Quote: (10-04-2013 08:29 PM)iknowexactly Wrote:
Quote: (10-03-2013 11:19 PM)NY Digital Wrote:
http://socioecohistory.files.wordpress.c...ld_msm.jpg
Six Jews own almost all of the corporate media. Around 96%. If not more.
Just putting that out there.
To point out they're smarter than you and work a lot harder than you do?
If you can compete, why don't you?
Quote: (10-04-2013 07:34 PM)Easy E Wrote:
Quote: (10-04-2013 07:22 PM)Samseau Wrote:
Quote: (10-04-2013 06:55 PM)Easy E Wrote:
Quote: (10-04-2013 06:47 PM)Grit Wrote:
I could tell you my opinion, "Democrats want to be associated with Obamacare to please their voter base" which would be a logical assumption.
Now, what is a logical assumption for why Republicans want to block Obamacare? - Can my opponents even give a guess or theory without outright ad hominem personal attack?
I'll ask again, for what logical reason do Republicans want to block Obamacare?
Let me offer what I see:
The Republicans are tired of being conservative in lip service, and are taking a hardline stance to figure out a budget and a way to service federal debt instead of increasing federal debt and spending.
If the Republicans want to repeal Obamacare, then they need to start winning elections. They can't just throw a tantrum and resort to hostage taking. They deserve to lose on this issue, and they will lose on this stunt they are pulling.
Exactly. Republicans need to promise more free shit to poor people using other people's money so they can win more elections.
Makers and Takers???
Quote:Quote:
THE US government shutdown provides a timely juncture to consider one of the principal maladies afflicting modern democracies: the growth of "bullshit jobs".
David Graeber, a professor of anthropology at the London School of Economics, belled the cat on the phenomenon in August, bemoaning the growing share of work that was pointless and even damaging.
"Huge swathes of people in the Western world spend their entire working lives performing tasks they secretly believe do not really need to be performed," Graeber writes, dismissing jobs in corporate law, academic and health administration, human resources and public relations as "bullshit".
"The moral and spiritual damage that comes from this situation is profound," he says.
So is the economic.
This week's partial US government shutdown illustrates just how pervasive bullshit jobs have become. That the Obama government has stood down around 800,000 public service jobs with close to zero impact on the ordinary business of life is remarkable.
The world's press has ferreted around for days trying to find in the shutdown something genuinely disruptive. It appears closure of National Parks, public monuments and cessation of a live "panda cam" at the National Zoo are the most damaging repercussions. To be sure, tourists and panda-lovers across the US are understandably miffed. But surely the deeper question here is what on earth were the other 750,000-plus, "non-essential" public servants doing?
If these jobs weren't "essential" -- government "shutdowns" in the US do not affect air traffic controllers or soldiers, for instance -- then the US government should explain why it is taxing people and businesses to pay for them. Public servants' wages are someone else's property, which should not be taken lightly. Far from damaging the US economy, the shutdown has temporarily relieved US taxpayers of the burden of paying an army of people to do things that were self-evidently unnecessary.
Concentration of bullshit jobs in the federal public service is not unique to the US. Canberra, as much as Washington DC, houses departments teeming with highly-paid people who seek to regulate health, education, agriculture and commerce, for instance, but whose staff could go on strike for a year without causing a ripple of concern among the wider populace. In the US, as in Australia, most useful services -- police, courts, teachers, hospitals and bus drivers, for example -- are employed by state governments.
This is why federal public servants, unlike their state counterparts, rarely if ever go on strike: sheer embarrassment.
Nor does the public sector have a monopoly on bullshit. As Graeber rightly points out: "While corporations may engage in ruthless downsizing, the lay-offs and speed-ups invariably fall on that class of people who are actually making, moving, fixing and maintaining things."
Corporations, especially among the ranks of middle and senior management, are chock full of overpaid people whose real contributions to the firm's output are negligible at best. Smaller businesses don't have the revenue to maintain bullshit jobs.
Indeed, bullshit jobs are typically well-paid, with a notably strong correlation in finance. They tend to flourish in parts of the economy where people are spending other people's money, which occurs most often in government and at large limited liability companies, where shareholders are typically powerless to restrain management from wasting money on themselves, their underlings, and services of dubious value.
But as with drawing a line between art and pornography, identifying bullshit jobs is difficult. For all his overarching perspicacity, Graeber's definition is arbitrary and even elitist. He includes pizza delivery boys and dog shampooers in the bullshit category, despite the fact individuals are willing to part with their own money to pay for these services.
Graeber rails against the growth of services in particular -- by far the largest part of advanced economies -- revealing a yearning for a simpler economy, where farming, mining and manufacturing dominate. The problem is not services but, as for all jobs, whether they matter and who pays for them. Workers wondering if theirs is a bullshit job might ask themselves two questions. First, am I being directly paid by an individual or owner-run business? If Australia's tradesmen went on strike it would be catastrophic; not so much for lobbyists. But this would rule out all government and corporate workers.
Hence the need for a second test: does it matter to others if I don't turn up to work? Government and private industry are teeming with people who could stay home for weeks without impairing the quality or volume of goods or services produced by their organisation -- and without requiring another worker to fill in for them -- as the US shutdown has amply demonstrated. Such jobs typically lack verifiable output and often relate to services, such as management consultants and corporate lawyers, bought by organisations that spend other people's money.
Alas, these are necessary but not sufficient conditions for bullshit; eminent academics would fall through the cracks, for instance. Nevertheless, as productivity wanes in advanced countries it is becoming more incumbent on governments and companies alike to identify, limit, and ideally cull, the share of the workforce engaged in bullshit.
Quote: (10-03-2013 12:02 PM)K Galt Wrote:I thought that my style was just to try my best to engage in a meaningful and substantive dialogue about a topic that was initially supposed to be about the govt. shutdown but was more or less derailed into these broader questions about budget issues and AHCA, just like the nationwide conversation- then we were getting into further derailed debates about many more things revolved around the meaning and size of govt.
I'd just like to point out the typical left wing style of debate has been perfectly demonstrated in this thread by JayJuanGee.
Quote: (10-03-2013 12:02 PM)K Galt Wrote:
Really Jay? Here's what you responded with when I made a similar comparison:
Quote: (10-03-2013 12:02 PM)K Galt Wrote:
Um, no I did not make your points at all. I completely refuted your points.
Quote: (10-03-2013 12:02 PM)K Galt Wrote:
Instead, you avoided directly addressing my counter points that 1) whether it's Obamacare or War in the Afghan hinterlands, we are borrowing and spending more than we are collecting in taxes, and that 2) this borrowing to pay for all these things is driving up the national debt at an exponential rate, and that 3) the Feds creation of more money drives inflation - which in turn raises the costs of goods and services for everyone. Oh we're going to be paying for this "free healthcare" alright.
Quote: (10-03-2013 12:02 PM)K Galt Wrote:
None of those points I raised "makes yours."
Quote: (10-03-2013 12:02 PM)K Galt Wrote:
Instead, you resorted to an analogy that is far more irrelevant and baseless ("...or a large govt like the US to live within what it takes in, and to require us to live within taxes will be like putting us in a boxing ring with one or maybe even two hands tied behind our back") than the one used comparing a debt laden household budget to a debt laden Government budget.
Quote: (10-03-2013 12:02 PM)K Galt Wrote:
But hey, I can roll with your analogy anyways...
You see, borrowing even more money to pay for Obama care will in effect be like putting a boxer in the ring with both hands tied behind his back, but also tying his shoelaces together, too.
Quote: (10-03-2013 12:02 PM)K Galt Wrote:
Oh, and by the way...I haven't watched FOXNews in well over a decade.
Accusing someone of regurgitating FOXNews talking points IS a talking point used by those who watch CNN/MSNBC, listen to NPR, and read Huffington Post, the NYT, Slate, Salon, Jezebel, Feministe.com, and forum regulars over at the Democratic Underground.
Quote: (10-07-2013 02:40 AM)TexasMade Wrote:
My Dad is a Federal worker and is going to work today. I am a contractor and still have the day off. Enjoying it while it last.
Quote: (10-05-2013 11:39 AM)Hencredible Casanova Wrote:
This now looks like the beginning of the end in a sense and a victory for the Democrats.
Quote: (10-07-2013 03:08 AM)iknowexactly Wrote:ACA was passed under a Democratic controlled House, Senate & President.
I'm a biased pinko, but it seemed like a triumph for Dems when the Rethugs refused to fund the exact programs they previously voted in favor of ( Affordable Care Act, all the other good stuff like missiles and food stamps) .
Quote: (10-07-2013 02:55 AM)Easy E Wrote:
Quote: (10-07-2013 02:40 AM)TexasMade Wrote:
My Dad is a Federal worker and is going to work today. I am a contractor and still have the day off. Enjoying it while it last.
Are federal workers that are not furloughed getting paid? Does anyone know? I read online that only the military will get paid during the shutdown, and that everyone else will have to wait until the shutdown is over to get paid. That sucks. What if this shutdown lasts a month or longer? You will have to work and not receive pay for a long time.
Quote: (10-05-2013 11:39 AM)Hencredible Casanova Wrote:
Revealingly, the House approved a measure today for furloughed federal workers to receive back pay during the shutdown. The bill passed by a 407 to zero margin, with 25 members (Tea Partiers) abstaining/not voting. The bill is expected to pass swiftly through the Senate and will be approved by the President.
Quote: (10-06-2013 05:06 PM)Easy E Wrote:
House Speaker John Boehner demands cuts for debt limit increase:
http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/06/politics/c...?hpt=hp_t1
Quote: (10-05-2013 11:39 AM)Hencredible Casanova Wrote:
Revealingly, the House approved a measure today for furloughed federal workers to receive back pay during the shutdown. The bill passed by a 407 to zero margin, with 25 members (Tea Partiers) abstaining/not voting. The bill is expected to pass swiftly through the Senate and will be approved by the President.
As you can imagine, the idea of "lazy, overpaid, underworked" federal workers essentially getting a free and fully funded vacation from work at the expense of YOU (the taxpayer) is infuriating to Tea Party supporters. That is why this measure can be seen as a defeat for the Tea Party caucus in Congress that created the shutdown in the first place. There will likely be momentum now to get the government open again since workers will be getting paid either way, yet the public won't receive any services if the government remains closed (quite the image).
This now looks like the beginning of the end in a sense and a victory for the Democrats.
Quote: (10-07-2013 05:56 AM)JayMillz Wrote:
Quote: (10-05-2013 11:39 AM)Hencredible Casanova Wrote:
Revealingly, the House approved a measure today for furloughed federal workers to receive back pay during the shutdown. The bill passed by a 407 to zero margin, with 25 members (Tea Partiers) abstaining/not voting. The bill is expected to pass swiftly through the Senate and will be approved by the President.
As you can imagine, the idea of "lazy, overpaid, underworked" federal workers essentially getting a free and fully funded vacation from work at the expense of YOU (the taxpayer) is infuriating to Tea Party supporters. That is why this measure can be seen as a defeat for the Tea Party caucus in Congress that created the shutdown in the first place. There will likely be momentum now to get the government open again since workers will be getting paid either way, yet the public won't receive any services if the government remains closed (quite the image).
This now looks like the beginning of the end in a sense and a victory for the Democrats.
If this happens, it will not only be Tea Party members that will be pissed off.
Quote: (10-07-2013 06:00 AM)JayJuanGee Wrote:
What do you mean by "this"?
Quote: (10-07-2013 05:29 AM)Pacesetter20 Wrote:
Quote: (10-06-2013 05:06 PM)Easy E Wrote:
House Speaker John Boehner demands cuts for debt limit increase:
http://www.cnn.com/2013/10/06/politics/c...?hpt=hp_t1
If Boehner really wanted cuts, he would do nothing and let the Nation Debt hit the ceiling. Contrary to popular belief this would NOT result in a default.
Why would this not lead to a default? It is simple, the U.S. collects about 10x as much money as it has interest on debt (on a monthly basis), so all the Treasury needs to do to prevent a default is make sure that the interest on the debt is paid first (Here is a breakdown from the WSJ from 2011 that expands on this point)
However, not raising the "Debt Ceiling" would force significant cuts in the Government. Considering that roughly 80% of the government is still operating during the shutdown and the world hasn't ended and we haven't been invaded by terrorists or China or Russia. Shows that a lot of the government really isn't that necessary.
For the record I think everything should be on the table for cuts (Defense, Entitlements, Regulatory).
Quote: (10-07-2013 03:50 AM)Pacesetter20 Wrote:
Quote: (10-07-2013 03:08 AM)iknowexactly Wrote:ACA was passed under a Democratic controlled House, Senate & President.
I'm a biased pinko, but it seemed like a triumph for Dems when the Rethugs refused to fund the exact programs they previously voted in favor of ( Affordable Care Act, all the other good stuff like missiles and food stamps) .
But even, is it impossible to have a change of heart when you realize a mistake and are trying to fix/prevent it from getting worse?
Quote: (10-07-2013 07:58 AM)Easy E Wrote:We need a huge cut.
This argument is a little disingenuous. First, we didn't have a real government shutdown (only "non-essential workers" were furloughed, about 40% of total fed workers). Second, tax receipts cover about 68% of government spending, so if there was no raise of the debt ceiling, then yeah we could pay the bond holders...but we would immediately have to enact a 32% cut in government spending. That is about a third. That is a huge cut. No, let me rephrase that: That is a fucking HUUUUUUGE cut in government spending. The stock market would tank on this news because it would mean an instant, massive decrease in spending.
Thus, the debt ceiling is getting raised...it is just a matter of whether it is raised prior to Oct. 17 or a few days after when the stock market crashes. Either way, it is getting raised.
Quote: (10-07-2013 08:18 AM)It_is_my_time Wrote:
Quote: (10-07-2013 03:50 AM)Pacesetter20 Wrote:
Quote: (10-07-2013 03:08 AM)iknowexactly Wrote:ACA was passed under a Democratic controlled House, Senate & President.
I'm a biased pinko, but it seemed like a triumph for Dems when the Rethugs refused to fund the exact programs they previously voted in favor of ( Affordable Care Act, all the other good stuff like missiles and food stamps) .
But even, is it impossible to have a change of heart when you realize a mistake and are trying to fix/prevent it from getting worse?
If I remember correctly, only a couple of Republicans voted for it, and all them were in their last term (planning retirement) and they had to be bought off by the Democrats (huge kickbacks to their districts).
One was from Maine (Snow I believe was her name) and another was from Nebraska.
Not only is Obamacare VERY bad for men and VERY bad for our economy, it was passed under some of the most partisan politics imaginable.