B
BErt
It's called foreplay...oh, you were only arguing.
It's called foreplay...oh, you were only arguing.
Dammit Keltsy.[DOUBLEPOST=1469120144,1469119853][/DOUBLEPOST]
...oh, you were only arguing.
I bet I can beat you at Gay Chicken, though.He's not my type.
He's in Texas.
Right now Tesla cannot sell their cars in certain states. This is due to automotive industry regulation:Complete deregulation of all businesses. Because we know that when we deregulate the businesses act in the public's behalf. And the employees are treated so well in deregulated industries. But hey, no government intervention is good, right?
I'm not going to debate this very much. I'm indifferent on income taxes, as long as the government is very careful on spending and isn't pouring money into pork barrel projects that have little real value but cost too much.Elimination of the IRS and all social security and income taxes. But that's okay because there won't need to be any money coming in because we're...
While I don't agree with libertarians on this point, strictly speaking, I can at least understand the idea that people should be responsible for their own upkeep, and the government shouldn't be forcing others to support them.Eliminate all social safety nets. Rely on private donors to fund anything the poor need from charities. And give a 1-to-1 tax credit for people who give to charity. Wait, what? So if someone makes a shitload of money, pays no income tax, etc. suddenly gets a break from OTHER taxes as well? And who is going to figure out what they really owe or give them this benefit? The IRS has been abolished, if you remember.
I disagree with the libertarian party on this one. A basic education, freely offered to all children is a very sound investment in our society, and pays more dividends than it will ever cost.Privatize schooling. Yeah, this is a good idea. Make sure only the wealthy get educated.
I don't think you're representing the platform correctly. It merely says we should maintain a military capable of protecting us from aggression, and avoiding foreign entanglements. It doesn't say no treaties with other countries - in fact one of the ways to avoid aggression is making such treaties, and one of the ways to avoid high cost military is making treaties of mutual protection with others. We would be going to war with other countries when necessary if it protects us better.International Trade and the Military. This one boggles my mind. Strict isolationism for the military yet international trade agreements.
I suspect if everything on the platform was implemented absolutely 100%, then you are right, that is the likely outcome.You see where this is all going? Yup. The rich make out like fucking BANDITS while the workers get absolutely shit on and the poor are going to starve to death.
While you're using negative words to describe it, you aren't wrong. Libertarianism is about giving each citizen maximum liberty. Other political platforms are more interested in taking some liberty from people in order to advance causes they think our society should support. There's always a trade off.Anyone who professes to follow the libertarian platform needs to have their heads examined and go to the doctor to get a shot of empathy because it's the most self-absorbed and selfish platform I've ever seen. And that includes the terrible republican platform.
Now I finally understand @Dave's comment in the D thread.Man, who pissed in all of your coffees today? Jeeze.
Any successful system will have some form of forced sharing built into it, because otherwise those who have, won't, since there would be no incentive to do so. I've spoken about this before, so my position is no secret. I don't follow political ideologies all that closely, so I don't really know exactly where I fall except that it is left of center.every economic theory agrees that if business is left alone, it develops into cartels and monopolies. And this is bad for EVERYBODY except the businesses themselves in it.
The Koch brothers would prefer Hillary to Trump.I'm surprised the Koch brothers didn't show up... but I suppose Trump is the only possible person they can't afford to buy off. Or they already know he's in their corner.
Hmm, at second thought, this isn't really what I meant. And by that, I mean that the article appears to have been styled to give it a very business-oriented, corporate slant.
That seems extreme. That would suggest that left-of-center means you wish the government to control/regulate/tax fully half of my life and liberty.Hmm, at second thought, this isn't really what I meant. And by that, I mean that the article appears to have been styled to give it a very business-oriented, corporate slant.
No, I was referring to where pure Left = Government has 100% power, People have 0%, and where pure Right = Government has 0% power, People have 100%.
I feel like I'm close to the middle (balanced) position, but I want the Government to have a smidge more influence, because People are lazy and sometimes require that occasional pitchfork to the rear before they get moving on stuff they're supposed to be doing. I just haven't committed to how to structure that smidge.
--Patrick
That's not how this chart works. It's not a representation of how much of each is controlled by the other (otherwise you'd also be saying the People control/regulate/tax fully half of the Government's stuff), it's a representation of how much influence is held by each, a sort of "voting power."That seems extreme. That would suggest that left-of-center means you wish the government to control/regulate/tax fully half of my life and liberty.
I know, I know, and there's also the problem that any axis you draw can only show absolutes. Ideally, rather than 60/40 or 50/50, I'd really like to see the proportion of power be divided 55/55*...which you can't represent because that adds up to more than 100%.I also find it a very strange definition of left and right, in the sense that both the left and the right, as considered in Europe, want control to be with the government, just for different reasons. Fascism wasn't left, and it certainly wasn't liberal.
Conservative/progressive, liberal/socialist, anarchist/big government, etc, they're different, and not necessarily aligned, axis's. That there's practically only two choices in the USA while the political landscape has more shades is one of the biggest problems the world faces.
Why not? A Koosh ball also more accurately depicts how much sense most people can make of politics, anywayI know, I know, and there's also the problem that any axis you draw can only show absolutes. Ideally, rather than 60/40 or 50/50, I'd really like to see the proportion of power be divided 55/55*...which you can't represent because that adds up to more than 100%.
But if we accurately represented all the relevant axes, we'd be talking about the Koosh Ball of politics.
--Patrick
*Translation: "We are practically equals BUT there are things I get to have my way and things you get to have your way."
And how much they bend and stretch it to fit their own interpretation.Why not? A Koosh ball also more accurately depicts how much sense most people can make of politics, anyway
"debunk"?What, no one is going to debunk the RNC Godwining themselves this week?
There hasn't even been a "but... but... HILLARY!" rebuttal."debunk"?
I mean, it's right there on video.
--Patrick
The West Wing skewered Dr. Laura enough to last for decades. I'm talking about the Nuremberg vibe the convention as a whole gave off, especially last night. Comparisons to 1933 Germany are all over the place. Have been ever since Trump started to gain momentum last fall.Well, if you mean the SIEG HEIL, somebody takes a still of a republican waving at the critical "straight elbow" moment every single time so they can make that reference. I'm sure you've already seen pictures of Hillary in the same pose all over facebook today. Ingraham is a shrill, insufferable harpy, though, so I didn't feel a powerful need to stick up for her awkwardness.
Only comment I have is I think you're confusing Laura Ingraham with Dr. Laura Schlessinger.The West Wing skewered Dr. Laura enough to last for decades. I'm talking about the Nuremberg vibe the convention as a whole gave off, especially last night. Comparisons to 1933 Germany are all over the place. Have been ever since Trump started to gain momentum last fall.
Oops. Not that I pay any attention to anything either one says.Only comment I have is I think you're confusing Laura Ingraham with Dr. Laura Schlessinger.