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Well, now...
That was below the belt, Kulindahr.
And here I thought we were making some progress...
Did you even read the post I was describing?
I was being nice.
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Well, now...
That was below the belt, Kulindahr.
And here I thought we were making some progress...
Reagan carried out, full scale war against poor people, and people facing temporary setbacks.
We can thank Reagan and his massive tax increases on social programs and hidden taxes on the middle class, while he sliced and diced a number of them. He slashed taxes on the rich. But 3 of his most horrific decisions regarding taxes are:
The Alternative Minimum Tax! This originally was only supposed to hit 155 individuals. Under Reagan's two large changes in 1982 and 1986 it put it on its tragectory that its now on where it will hit about 50% of middle class filers this year, and expands every year here on out.
In 1982 Reagan had the IRS start taxing unemployment benefits along with other social benefits! It's effectively a 20% to 25% cut across the board on these programs! It's disgusting! Obama was the first President to try to help this awful tax "gotcha" many people don't know about until they get their tax bill, by making the first $ 2,400 of each year's unemployment benefits "non-taxable". Additionally, he screwed renters over by removing tax breaks for investors building rental properties, which was a large reason for the S&L disaster shortly thereafter. He also, instituted the start of phaseouts for Schedule A deductions, which have hammered many an upper-middle / middle class taxpayer.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_Equity_and_Fiscal_Responsibility_Act_of_1982
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alternative_Minimum_Tax
http://www.econlib.org/library/Enc1/UnemploymentInsurance.html
Getting back on-topic, the reason Reagan was brought into this discussion was his excitement, positive attitude, and excitement for America. None of which I see in Obama.
I watched Obama the other day talking to a group -- don't know which one it was -- he was talking like he was giving a lecture. Very boring.
Again, the point was that Obama could learn from Reagan's attitude -- the point had nothing to do with his policies.
So in your world..... it's not WHAT he says, it's HOW he says it. Oh I see now, it's all about style. He must have worn the "correct" tie because you didn't describe that in a disparaging fashion.
However Mrs. Obama and her sleeveless dresses are incorrect. First Ladies are supposed to wear Laura Bush pant suits and look up adoringly at their husbands and bat their eyes.
Yet another Republican sore loser.
But I would have agreed with stopping subsidize people building apartments; those folks went ahead and charged all they could get away with anyway.
I understand what you're saying. I just find it tragic Jack, that America is so damn dumb that they'd rather be titillated by a snake oils salesman like Beck or Reagan, all the while they are getting screwed, but hey! At least they feel good about it! Whoo hooo!
It's why Gore had such a problem connecting. People found him too professor like. People like slogans and sound bytes. Again, I'm in the advertising business so I know this very well. However, big, fundamental problems and challenges facing America can't be summed up in a pithy phrase or sound byte on how to fix America. And when an Obama or Gore try to explain it to people of what it will take, they are turned off because they're "bored", or "don't want to be talked down to", or similar. Instead, these people rally around (typically Republicans) a pithy phrase that does nothing, fixes nothing, and changes nothing. It just sounds really nice.
Think about it, how do you sum up fixing the nation's energy problem, transportation problem, healthcare, and other large issues in 10 seconds or less? Or even 30 seconds or less? I do this for a living, and I can't. It can't be done. But if Americans aren't interested in learning about anything then the country deserves the fucking its getting, and will continue to get until things change fundamentally. *shrug* I wish it was easier Jack, but it ain't.
It's not just one sound byte or phrase -- we listen to many before we make decision on who we want to put our trust in.
My take is that we have too much communication -- too much thoughtless communication. We talk too quickly without thinking. When people had to write letters they put more care into what they wanted to say. Now we just talk.
We blog. We tweet. We chat. We text. We use cell phones.
During elections all we hear are negative ads from both sides. Most people, including me don't know what to believe anymore.
Oh no, I get your point. It's Obama bashing. What's the next problem going to be?
Your omelette at IHOP okay this morning or was is slightly undercooked?
Read again. You STILL don't get it.
I honestly think with the advent of technology and various SCOTUS rulings over the past 20 years, there is only one solution left. Elections public financed. Until you get the onslaught of corporate and special interest monies out of the electoral process nothing is going to change. Nothing! Having Congress tweak a law here and there, ain't going to work. I am almost positive this has to come from a group of states getting together and enforcing their mandates that candidates must abide by their rules in order to be considered. Remember, the Constitution give states wide leeway in deciding how their Senators and House members are chosen.
It was more of a community lending / tax credit issue, not just a broad build apartments anywhere kind of thing. It tipped nominal projects over the line into being profitable. It would have been fine if they had unwound it slowly, but instead it was cut virtually overnight. Suddenly, the tax policy did a 180 degree, turnabout. This massive, overnight change, was a big portion and reason the S&L debacle happened. Remember the S&Ls were only able to loan money for housing projects, at most. They weren't allowed most of the diversification avenues commercial banks had.
Interesting -- you tip back and forth between actually speaking to the issue and misrepresenting it.
As for those large issues, Reagan could have handled energy and transportation in under thirty seconds -- probably together. If I recall his voice in my head, I can hear it happening quite easily.
Health care... give him a whole minute.
There's another solution than public financing: a constitutional amendment defining "person" for the sake of rights protected by the Constitution, at least as regards involvement in the political process. Define a person as a living human who is, or will be, eligible to vote, i.e. citizens.
The only role I can see for public financing would be to make the playing field broader -- but with a 'two-party system', that's a bit on the impossible side. But if anything's burnt out in D.C. I'd say it's the two-party system.
And it will never come up, nor pass to be circulated to the states.
The federal politicians will never handicap themselves (according to the way they think). It will have to come from the states. An amendment even if it could or would pass, would take 7 or more years to circulate to get its approval, which won't happen any day soon. Think about it, it requires a 2/3rds approval in the House (which maybe, maybe might pass with enough arm twisting), a 2/3rds vote in the Senate (LMAO! This will never happen), and then circulate to be passed by 2/3rds of the states (I think I just saw a pig fly just now.)








