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1/04/2011 10:04 am  #1


Thank God for Democracy

So, now that we've played the balance the budget game, let's put it to a vote.  Someone is a step ahead of us:

"Sixty-one percent of Americans polled would rather see taxes for the wealthy increased as a first step to tackling the deficit, the poll showed.  The next most popular way -- chosen by 20 percent -- was to cut defense spending."

Also notice a very AP-like solution to foreign policy: "Asked which part of the world they would fix first, the largest proportion of respondents -- 36 percent -- chose Washington."

I defer to Alan Grayson: v"many Democrats have not been acting Democratic enough"

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110103/pl_nm/us_usa_taxes_poll;_ylt=Anz4xP.Q7xfzIsKJEPqAy8iyFz4D;_ylu=X3oDMTJlZmw4cTZyBGFzc2V0A25tLzIwMTEwMTAzL3VzX3VzYV90YXhlc19wb2xsBHBvcwM2BHNlYwN5bl9tb3N0X3BvcHVsYXIEc2xrA21vc3RhbWVyaWNhbg--

 

1/04/2011 10:32 am  #2


Re: Thank God for Democracy

It isnt suprising that most Americans want to raise taxes on people that dont include them. 

It is also interesting that most people didnt want to mess with Medicare or SS.  I think that goes to show how much support those systems have. 

On a different note we had a write up in the paper about Illinois interent sales tax.  It said we are supposed to report our spending on non state sales taxed items bought over the internet and estimate the amount we own, putting it on line 22 of our tax form.  Our local state rep who must see how retarded this is said it was purely voluntary and that we could not be held accountable to report anything.  Putting a zero on line 22 was perfectly fine.  So basiclly the ink it took to write the bill cost more then the money it will generate.

 

1/04/2011 11:19 am  #3


Re: Thank God for Democracy

APRTW wrote:

It isnt suprising that most Americans want to raise taxes on people that dont include them. 

It is also interesting that most people didnt want to mess with Medicare or SS.  I think that goes to show how much support those systems have.

Agreed.

And cynical, but probably accurate, political scientists have been commenting for decades now that the GOP has been well aware that the Democrats enacted some of the most popular, populist legislation of the 20th century, and that's why they controlled congress almost without break for half a century.  Furthermore, aware that SS and Medicare are virtually unrepealable, they began this whole business about low taxes and trickle down economics during Reagan's first term, that was never truly meant to bring about economic prosperity, but rather, budget deficits that would force a showdown between Americans' desire for a social safety net for themselves and their neighbors, and their desire for low taxes.  It makes a lot of sense when viewed with 20/20 hindsight. 

At least as interesting is the quote from one of the big GOP strategists (I think it was Rove) to the effect of: if we let them pass universal health care we will lose control of congress for another 40 years.  The implication is to avoid allowing the Democrats to pass legislation that is popular, no matter how good it might be for the country.

     Thread Starter
 

1/04/2011 11:42 am  #4


Re: Thank God for Democracy

As far as health insurance goes my opinion is that it is a dangerous road to go down.  One of my cowork says that he wishes we would get what our empolyers pays to our helath insurance in wages so we can go get our own.  My opinion of that is that it is a slippery sloop to go down.  What happens when he becomes unhealthy and cant get his own insurance.  Medicare is the same way.  Even though Fors doesnt like either system I have to believe that his life would be alot worst off without them.  I think if congress could have passed a government health plan it would have been just as popular as Medicare and SS.  Some may agree with me but say it would have broke the bank that has already been shattered.  I dont think that is true.  Were there is a will there is a way.  It might have ment that other programs suffered.  In the end you make the people happy.  That is what democracy is about.  Not the free market and small government.  Those things have never existed.

 

1/04/2011 11:55 am  #5


Re: Thank God for Democracy

We are of a mind on this one.  And in this case, there are some people pretty close to me who do have a great deal of expertise.  The accepted facts within the public health community as I understand them are that Medicare and Medicaid drive costs down, in the way that Walmart can set the prices that its suppliers charge, and are among the principle forces restraining exploding medical costs.

What I don't get is why we simply didn't do away with the part that says "65 and older", or "below (such-and-such) an income level", and make these two popular, effective programs available for all Americans?  Ideally there would be something like "basic health" available to all, and then more elite (and taxable) programs would be available to those who want to buy them.  And a key thing for everyone to remember is that neither of these are anything like the British government run health program.  They are a government-run health insurance program, where the doctors and hospitals remain private.  So everyone would still be able to use the old fashioned fee-for-service and pay a private doctor out of their own pocket, and pay out of pocket for supplemental insurance, just as they do now. 

Would there be 'rationing' under this "basic health"?  Of course there would.  But there is rationing under current HMO's, anyway.  Long waits?  Of course.  Have you tried scheduling an appointment with a specialist for a non-acute condition lately?  Last year I had a six-month wait to see an allergist.

     Thread Starter
 

1/04/2011 12:28 pm  #6


Re: Thank God for Democracy

What's disturbing about the health care debate is it has thus far focused around accounting for the current costs, rather than reducing the costs from the provider.
That's a euphemistic way of saying there's no reason why my doctor ought to be charging my insurance company $50 for a friggin' Band-Aid, and there's no reason why my insurance company ought to accept a $50 charge for a friggin' Band-Aid.

 

1/04/2011 12:30 pm  #7


Re: Thank God for Democracy

"Last year I had a six-month wait to see an allergist."

Try getting a timely appointment with a dermotologist sometime.

 

1/04/2011 2:37 pm  #8


Re: Thank God for Democracy

One thing with the health care that amazes me is that the American government pays just as much per person in health care as countries that have government funded health care.

 

1/04/2011 3:19 pm  #9


Re: Thank God for Democracy

APRTW wrote:

Even though Fors doesnt like either system I have to believe that his life would be alot worst off without them.

I assume you're talking about Medicare and Social Security, two programs which I've never used, but have paid plenty of money into against my will.   

I'll explain exactly why I know social security is a detriment for me.  I assume you receive the same annual social security statement I receive at the end of each year.  Through last year, I had personally contributed about $80K to SS, the bulk of which has been since 1999.

Over the last 10 years, my personal retirement investments have an average rate of return of about 6% (despite the collapse after 9/11 and the housing market collapse).  I max out my SS contribution annually, so I pay about $7K into SS each year.  By my calculations, if I could personally invest that $7K, and received the exact same 6% annual return on my SS contribution, when I reach full SS retirement age I would have about $979,000 just from those contributions alone.

Based on my current earnings, SS estimates I will receive a monthly benefit of about $2,500 or $30,000 per year.  On the other hand, if I had been able to personally invest my forced SS contributions and lived simply off of the interest, I could retire with about 60,000 per year in interest income and have about a million dollars in principal to play with.

And none of this even considers the fact that my employer is forced to contribute a matching amount.  If any of that contribution was passed my way, the figures would be even higher.

The idea that SS provides a benefit is a myth.  It is simply a safety net for those people who choose not to plan appropriately.  And spare me the lecture about people not being able to figure out how to invest their money.  Our company's 401(k) has options as simple as Estimated Retirement Year 2030.  If you're smart enough to figure out when you'll turn 65, you can pick an appropriate plan.

But please, explain how you think my life is better off by being forced to pay into these horribly inefficient social programs.

 

1/04/2011 3:22 pm  #10


Re: Thank God for Democracy

artie_fufkin wrote:

"Last year I had a six-month wait to see an allergist."

Try getting a timely appointment with a dermotologist sometime.

You need a better allergist.  The last time I needed to see the allergist, I was in within the same week. 

The last specialist I saw was when I messed up my shoulder last year.  I saw an orthopedist the next day and was starting physical therapy within 3 days of the injury.

 

1/04/2011 3:44 pm  #11


Re: Thank God for Democracy

forsberg_us wrote:

But please, explain how you think my life is better off by being forced to pay into these horribly inefficient social programs.

Because abject poverty among the elderly has essentially been eradicated by them.  Your argument about these taxes against your will is as undemocratic as they come.  Why should those of us who opposed the Iraq War, or any of the other wars we've been fighting, be forced to pay for those against our will?  Because all of those things are governmental policies of a democratically elected government.  The minority does not have the right to opt out.  If it did, it wouldn't be democracy.

     Thread Starter
 

1/04/2011 4:21 pm  #12


Re: Thank God for Democracy

Max wrote:

forsberg_us wrote:

But please, explain how you think my life is better off by being forced to pay into these horribly inefficient social programs.

Because abject poverty among the elderly has essentially been eradicated by them.

Sorry Max, but this doesn't improve my life one bit.

Max wrote:

Your argument about these taxes against your will is as undemocratic as they come.  Why should those of us who opposed the Iraq War, or any of the other wars we've been fighting, be forced to pay for those against our will?  Because all of those things are governmental policies of a democratically elected government.  The minority does not have the right to opt out.  If it did, it wouldn't be democracy.

I understand the rationale behind why I have to pay them.  AP's assertion was that they improved my life, and I'm explaining why, in fact they don't.  And the reality is that anyone contributing to SS could make the exact same contribution into a personal retirement account and be better off.

Roosevelt's passage of social security is like the scene in "It's a Wonderful Life" where Mr. Potter was paying 50 cents on the dollar for shares in the failing banks.  Potter preyed on the scared and so did Roosevelt to pull off the biggest power grab by the federal government in the history of this country.  And in the 70+ years since it's passage, the government has done a wonderful job of convincing people that they couldn't live with SS or Medicare.  The simple fact is that's a complete lie.

You keep saying that the purpose of social security is to provide for others (the elderly, impoverished).  Funny, I've never heard a politician refer to it that way.  It's always that I'm saving for my own retirement, and that's simply not true.  It's a simple redistribution of wealth.  Call it that and see how many people would support it.

 

1/04/2011 6:19 pm  #13


Re: Thank God for Democracy

forsberg_us wrote:

Max wrote:

forsberg_us wrote:

But please, explain how you think my life is better off by being forced to pay into these horribly inefficient social programs.

Because abject poverty among the elderly has essentially been eradicated by them.

Sorry Max, but this doesn't improve my life one bit.

That's a bold pronouncement, and I am assume it is one made in ignorance of the alternative.  Have you ever lived anywhere that abject poverty is all around you?

Even if you remain adamant that it does not improve your life one bit to eradicate poverty around you, this is the policy of the government of your country.  So, like it or not, you are taxed for it.

     Thread Starter
 

1/04/2011 6:24 pm  #14


Re: Thank God for Democracy

forsberg_us wrote:

You keep saying that the purpose of social security is to provide for others (the elderly, impoverished).  Funny, I've never heard a politician refer to it that way.  It's always that I'm saving for my own retirement, and that's simply not true.  It's a simple redistribution of wealth.  Call it that and see how many people would support it.

I have no idea how this was sold to the American public when it was passed more than 70 years ago.  Regardless, you are taxed this year and your money is spent on retired people this year, more or less.  When you retire, none of your money will be used, per se, it will be other people's money.  Those are facts; describe them how you will.

It is not at all uncommon for politicians to find a sales tactic for a given policy agenda, that might not quite encapsulate the policy's effects in the views of all people.  For example the Bush tax cut for the rich could have been called the, "Financial Handout for the Rich People Who Fund Our Political Campaigns Act".  Call it that and see how many people would support it.

     Thread Starter
 

1/04/2011 6:36 pm  #15


Re: Thank God for Democracy

Max wrote:

forsberg_us wrote:

You keep saying that the purpose of social security is to provide for others (the elderly, impoverished).  Funny, I've never heard a politician refer to it that way.  It's always that I'm saving for my own retirement, and that's simply not true.  It's a simple redistribution of wealth.  Call it that and see how many people would support it.

I have no idea how this was sold to the American public when it was passed more than 70 years ago.  Regardless, you are taxed this year and your money is spent on retired people this year, more or less.  When you retire, none of your money will be used, per se, it will be other people's money.  Those are facts; describe them how you will.

It is not at all uncommon for politicians to find a sales tactic for a given policy agenda, that might not quite encapsulate the policy's effects in the views of all people.  For example the Bush tax cut for the rich could have been called the, "Financial Handout for the Rich People Who Fund Our Political Campaigns Act".  Call it that and see how many people would support it.

The Bush tax cut applied to everyone which is exactly why the current President extended it.

 

1/04/2011 7:48 pm  #16


Re: Thank God for Democracy

Max wrote:

forsberg_us wrote:

Max wrote:


Because abject poverty among the elderly has essentially been eradicated by them.

Sorry Max, but this doesn't improve my life one bit.

That's a bold pronouncement, and I am assume it is one made in ignorance of the alternative.  Have you ever lived anywhere that abject poverty is all around you?

Even if you remain adamant that it does not improve your life one bit to eradicate poverty around you, this is the policy of the government of your country.  So, like it or not, you are taxed for it.

I suppose that depends on how you define "abject poverty."

But I also believe that the spectre of "abject poverty" is among the fear tactics used to maintain support for forced redistribution of wealth.  Why do we believe that the elderly would live in "abject poverty" if they invested 6.2% of their salary for their working lives?

For that matter, why do we believe that families would allow their ancestors to live in "abject poverty?"  Have you ever taken in an ancestor Max.  I have.  My grandmother lived with our family for a couple of years before she died.  When she reached the point that she could no longer walk on her own, we sold our house and built our current house to have a home that was more handicap accessible.

How did this country survive the early part of the 20th century without SS?

 

1/04/2011 8:25 pm  #17


Re: Thank God for Democracy

forsberg_us wrote:

APRTW wrote:

Even though Fors doesnt like either system I have to believe that his life would be alot worst off without them.

I assume you're talking about Medicare and Social Security, two programs which I've never used, but have paid plenty of money into against my will.   

I'll explain exactly why I know social security is a detriment for me.  I assume you receive the same annual social security statement I receive at the end of each year.  Through last year, I had personally contributed about $80K to SS, the bulk of which has been since 1999.

Over the last 10 years, my personal retirement investments have an average rate of return of about 6% (despite the collapse after 9/11 and the housing market collapse).  I max out my SS contribution annually, so I pay about $7K into SS each year.  By my calculations, if I could personally invest that $7K, and received the exact same 6% annual return on my SS contribution, when I reach full SS retirement age I would have about $979,000 just from those contributions alone.

Based on my current earnings, SS estimates I will receive a monthly benefit of about $2,500 or $30,000 per year.  On the other hand, if I had been able to personally invest my forced SS contributions and lived simply off of the interest, I could retire with about 60,000 per year in interest income and have about a million dollars in principal to play with.

And none of this even considers the fact that my employer is forced to contribute a matching amount.  If any of that contribution was passed my way, the figures would be even higher.

The idea that SS provides a benefit is a myth.  It is simply a safety net for those people who choose not to plan appropriately.  And spare me the lecture about people not being able to figure out how to invest their money.  Our company's 401(k) has options as simple as Estimated Retirement Year 2030.  If you're smart enough to figure out when you'll turn 65, you can pick an appropriate plan.

But please, explain how you think my life is better off by being forced to pay into these horribly inefficient social programs.

I understand all that.  Hell I agree with it.  I just elected to get out of a retirement that forced my employer to contribute, be it a small amount.  Now tell me what kind of system would be in place for those who wony plan like you.   Because America wouldnt be willing to let milions of aging people suffer.  Also would you be happy paying for that group and not getting any benifits yourself.  Not pay into SS and not providing a saftey net for those who dont prepare for retirement isnt an option even if that would benifit you most.

 

1/04/2011 8:33 pm  #18


Re: Thank God for Democracy

forsberg_us wrote:

Max wrote:

forsberg_us wrote:


Sorry Max, but this doesn't improve my life one bit.

That's a bold pronouncement, and I am assume it is one made in ignorance of the alternative.  Have you ever lived anywhere that abject poverty is all around you?

Even if you remain adamant that it does not improve your life one bit to eradicate poverty around you, this is the policy of the government of your country.  So, like it or not, you are taxed for it.

I suppose that depends on how you define "abject poverty."

But I also believe that the spectre of "abject poverty" is among the fear tactics used to maintain support for forced redistribution of wealth.  Why do we believe that the elderly would live in "abject poverty" if they invested 6.2% of their salary for their working lives?

For that matter, why do we believe that families would allow their ancestors to live in "abject poverty?"  Have you ever taken in an ancestor Max.  I have.  My grandmother lived with our family for a couple of years before she died.  When she reached the point that she could no longer walk on her own, we sold our house and built our current house to have a home that was more handicap accessible.

How did this country survive the early part of the 20th century without SS?

My little venture into the insurance job during my layoff show me something and that is that alot, a whole lot of people havnt planned for retirement other then SS.  I believe they would be to stupid to save the money if SS was non existant.

 

1/04/2011 9:09 pm  #19


Re: Thank God for Democracy

APRTW wrote:

I understand all that.  Hell I agree with it.  I just elected to get out of a retirement that forced my employer to contribute, be it a small amount.  Now tell me what kind of system would be in place for those who wony plan like you.   Because America wouldnt be willing to let milions of aging people suffer.  Also would you be happy paying for that group and not getting any benifits yourself.  Not pay into SS and not providing a saftey net for those who dont prepare for retirement isnt an option even if that would benifit you most.

As long as this country is wealthy enough, we will not allow the elderly (and children, for that matter) to live in poverty without a meaningful commitment from ourselves, in the form of our government, to ameliorate that situation.  Whereas you and I seem to agree on that completely, AP, it sounds like Fors's point is that he is willing to say, "you made your bed (or in the case of children, 'your parents made a bed for you'), now lie in it."  My hunch is twofold: (1) that he would not be so cold in practice if he actually confronted poverty on the level we could be headed for, and (2) that he somewhat believes the propaganda of the right that we will bankrupt the country with what some call nanny state socialism.

The answers are simple:

1. Are Germany and the Scandanavian countries bankrupted by their systems, which are far more comprehensive and have been operative longer than ours?

And as for the 'wealth redistribution' needed to fund these:

1. List the countries that do NOT have a progressive tax structure. 

Regarding hardship before the development of the modern social safety net:

1. Read the history of our nation's struggle, from the Pilgrims to the present, and ask if it is not reasonable that our leaders, and ourselves as a society, believed we learned lessons from these, and determined to do things better in the future?

Last edited by Max (1/04/2011 9:10 pm)

     Thread Starter
 

1/04/2011 9:11 pm  #20


Re: Thank God for Democracy

Let's assume all that is true.  I'm not naïve enough to think the entire system is going to repealed, at least not with an adequate substitute. Instead of the current system,  how about this:

As it stands now, the gov't taxes you 6.2% (this year excepted). Your employer is required to match it. Instead of social security, why no mandate private accounts. The money is yours, not the government's. You decide how to invest it. If need be, we can have gov't employed specialists to provide advice to people.

Most people work 40-50 years of their lives. Think of the money you'd have saved for retirement if every year you saved 12.4% of your annual pre-tax salary.

Why is that a bad idea?  Because it doesn't provide for those who never work?  Why should I provide for someone who never works?

 

1/04/2011 9:29 pm  #21


Re: Thank God for Democracy

Max, as far as children lying in the bed their parents made for them, those children have an opportunity to get an education if they choose. Being the product of a terrible school district--one from which nearly every family that could afford to send its kids to private school did so--I have little tolerance for that excuse.

I couldn't afford to go to private school and couldn't afford college when I graduated. I took a job in a bowling alley and another one in a video rental store to afford community college. When I turned 21, I got my job at the police department and finished my associates degree and bachelors degree while working full time and secondary jobs to pay my tuition to the distinguished University of Missouri- St. Louis. I saved money for 2 years to be able to afford to leave the police department an go to law school. Law school was the only time I received any tuition assistance (I scored very high on the LSAT and earned some scholarship money). I worked my ass off in law school and finished 2nd in a class of about 220. I was the first person in my family to attend more than a year of college.

For me, that was the only silver lining of the Obama presidency. It became a lot tougher for the African-American population to complain about a glass ceiling with an African-American sitting in the White House.

If you want to do it, you do it. If you don't want to do it, you make excuses and blame others for the problems life dealt you. There's no excuse for a physically/mentally healthy person in this country to have to depend on the gov't for their livelihood--period.

Last edited by forsberg_us (1/04/2011 10:26 pm)

 

1/05/2011 12:22 am  #22


Re: Thank God for Democracy

forsberg_us wrote:

Let's assume all that is true.  I'm not naïve enough to think the entire system is going to repealed, at least not with an adequate substitute. Instead of the current system,  how about this:

As it stands now, the gov't taxes you 6.2% (this year excepted). Your employer is required to match it. Instead of social security, why no mandate private accounts. The money is yours, not the government's. You decide how to invest it. If need be, we can have gov't employed specialists to provide advice to people.

Most people work 40-50 years of their lives. Think of the money you'd have saved for retirement if every year you saved 12.4% of your annual pre-tax salary.

Why is that a bad idea?  Because it doesn't provide for those who never work?  Why should I provide for someone who never works?

We are not in total disagreement here.  I like what you have said and wish my money was more in my control.

The funny thing is that the person that has come the closest and pushed the hardest for something close to what you have said was Gore and his "lock box" idea.  Though it has been to long for me to remember without looking it up if his idea ment a decrease in SS contributions.  The man who snowballed the idea was Bush.  One of the things that made me think badly of Bush from the start was the way I felt he bought his way to the office using tax payers money.  If I remember right he wanted and did do was everyone a $600 tax rebate.  Gore wanted to use that money to install his "lockbox" idea.  Like I said my memory is foggy on the issue so feel free to correct me. 

I also agree that people like you and me who have work from the moment we were able do not want to pay for others who dont, wont and refuse to work.  However we provide for those now both by SS and other government funded systems like welfar.  We will always do that because the American way (IMO) is to look out for those less fortunate.  Even if their reason for being so is their own lack of motivation.  I said it before but at least with SS I will see a return (unless the system fails).  I also like that you cant outlive SS and there is a death benifit for the wife who might have not been the breadwinner or was a homemaker.  In your system there would have to be a way that the wife gets a share or has a say. 

I also agree that those who dont work who are able should have it alot worst then they do.  I just dont see Washington ever reducing there free ride.  Overall I dont think our opinions are that different.  I just look at what you say as impossible to actually get accomplished.

 

1/05/2011 12:30 am  #23


Re: Thank God for Democracy

Max wrote:

APRTW wrote:

I understand all that.  Hell I agree with it.  I just elected to get out of a retirement that forced my employer to contribute, be it a small amount.  Now tell me what kind of system would be in place for those who wony plan like you.   Because America wouldnt be willing to let milions of aging people suffer.  Also would you be happy paying for that group and not getting any benifits yourself.  Not pay into SS and not providing a saftey net for those who dont prepare for retirement isnt an option even if that would benifit you most.

As long as this country is wealthy enough, we will not allow the elderly (and children, for that matter) to live in poverty without a meaningful commitment from ourselves, in the form of our government, to ameliorate that situation.  Whereas you and I seem to agree on that completely, AP, it sounds like Fors's point is that he is willing to say, "you made your bed (or in the case of children, 'your parents made a bed for you'), now lie in it."  My hunch is twofold: (1) that he would not be so cold in practice if he actually confronted poverty on the level we could be headed for, and (2) that he somewhat believes the propaganda of the right that we will bankrupt the country with what some call nanny state socialism.

I dont agree about the children.  Everyone is able to rise above there parents failures.  I cant say that from a personal standpoint because my parents provided a good home but I believe it to be true.  I will agree that I am unsure if it would benifit me and the country as a whole to throw the bums out on there asses and let them suffer the poor decisions they made in life.  Sure I dont want to pay for them to eat, sleep and fuck but I dont want them crawing around my doorstep either.  If some of may tax money goes to keeping them from littering the streets more then they already do it might be the best thing.  Then there are those who dont actually abuse the system and just need alittle help.  I am fine with helping those.

 

1/05/2011 12:57 am  #24


Re: Thank God for Democracy

forsberg_us wrote:

Let's assume all that is true.  I'm not naïve enough to think the entire system is going to repealed, at least not with an adequate substitute. Instead of the current system,  how about this:

As it stands now, the gov't taxes you 6.2% (this year excepted). Your employer is required to match it. Instead of social security, why no mandate private accounts. The money is yours, not the government's. You decide how to invest it. If need be, we can have gov't employed specialists to provide advice to people.

Most people work 40-50 years of their lives. Think of the money you'd have saved for retirement if every year you saved 12.4% of your annual pre-tax salary.

Why is that a bad idea?  Because it doesn't provide for those who never work?  Why should I provide for someone who never works?

"Why is that a bad idea?"  Because is does not provide for those in need, regardless of the reason.

Why are you so hung up on 'those who never work'?  What percentage of the population is that, anyway, keeping in mind that 10 years ago the unemployment rate was 4% (under Clinton)?  Are the 96% who work when there is work to be had supposed to set overall government policy as a means to teach a lesson to the 4% of the population who, for one reason or another, is unemployable, lazy, or whatever?

Last edited by Max (1/05/2011 12:58 am)

     Thread Starter
 

1/05/2011 1:10 am  #25


Re: Thank God for Democracy

forsberg_us wrote:

Max, as far as children lying in the bed their parents made for them, those children have an opportunity to get an education if they choose. Being the product of a terrible school district--one from which nearly every family that could afford to send its kids to private school did so--I have little tolerance for that excuse.

I couldn't afford to go to private school and couldn't afford college when I graduated. I took a job in a bowling alley and another one in a video rental store to afford community college. When I turned 21, I got my job at the police department and finished my associates degree and bachelors degree while working full time and secondary jobs to pay my tuition to the distinguished University of Missouri- St. Louis. I saved money for 2 years to be able to afford to leave the police department an go to law school. Law school was the only time I received any tuition assistance (I scored very high on the LSAT and earned some scholarship money). I worked my ass off in law school and finished 2nd in a class of about 220. I was the first person in my family to attend more than a year of college.

For me, that was the only silver lining of the Obama presidency. It became a lot tougher for the African-American population to complain about a glass ceiling with an African-American sitting in the White House.

If you want to do it, you do it. If you don't want to do it, you make excuses and blame others for the problems life dealt you. There's no excuse for a physically/mentally healthy person in this country to have to depend on the gov't for their livelihood--period.

Now we are heading into areas where I have a bit of expertise, and there is a lot of evidence that indicates that to the extent that environment plays a role in the 'genes by environment interaction' (i.e, 'nature versus nurture'), conception to the age of five are critical, and everything up until puberty provides opportunities that no longer exist after puberty (the classic examples of this involve learning a new language: learn it before puberty and you can speak it with no accent, learn it after and you are stuck with a lifelong accent, generally speaking.  MRI studies have shown the effect is exhibited in the brain itself: learn a second language before puberty and you use the same region of the brain for the second language as you use for the first, learn it after puberty and an entirely different area of the brain fires up when using the second language).  Likewise there are mountains of data on the acquisition of our personality and character, and the kind of free will that you imply when you say that they can go out and get an education is not acquired, for the most part, until after the formative years are over.  This is part of what is meant by the web of cultural significance: we acquire our morals and values to a large extent during a period of life when we have very little control over our lives and our environment.  The evidence that exists screams out for massive intervention to provide for prenatal and postnatal care up to the age of five-ish.  Instead, the basic structure of our "socialized" child care doesn't even begin until age 6, when children are required to be in first grade or to have an exemption for home schooling, except in areas that have kindergartens, in which case the ball gets rolling at 5.  That's too late, and we know it.

As for your story, it's a wonderful story that illustrates how America works and works well.  Now that America worked for you, you want to change it all by restructuring the tax code so that wealthy people pay less, and so that poor people have less of a social safety net, than when you were a child???  Where's the gratitude to your country and the system that allowed hard work to be rewarded?

Last edited by Max (1/05/2011 1:13 am)

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