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Solomon

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Posts posted by Solomon

  1. What does smaller government mean in practical terms? For example, the US federal government mandates publicly-funded primary/secondary education and the military but not public health-care. How do libertarians decide where to draw the lines on public spending?

     

    "Freedom" is a word that is much bandied around but it's clear that freedom means different things to people depending on their circumstances. How do libertarians rationalize the concepts of freedom in a society that is highly divided socially and economically?

  2. ...

    Overall the system is geared towards corruption. However every government has its corruption. Its the nature of the beast.

    It's exactly because there is a tendency for political systems to become corrupt that we should work to keep that corruption to a minimum. Corporate lobbying is a blatant form of corruption.

    • Upvote 1
  3. Did you even click on the link? America could be a memory of the past without that. 

    Why do you think JP Morgan et al did that? Patriotism? Altruism?

     

    Or could it be that they were the ones who had the resources to be able to see out the collapse and come out of it smiling?

  4. If everyone followed that logic we'd still be a feudal system. As with all change I've never seen the wisdom in the con game of gradual change, if something is correct then it should be done no need to wait 100+ years for it ....

    It's a judgment call, isn't it? A handful of people with a premonition of the future isn't convincing enough to act, but neither is waiting until every stick-in-the-mud dies a good reason to wait. The common sense approach is to be sceptical of fads but also try not to be a silly Cnut!

  5. Well such things always start with little support, doesn't mean it can't change and regardless it is simply inevitable as like with intermarriage and homosexuality it's something between consenting adults private lives. Logically I'd say supporters of intermarriage and homosexuality should throw their support behind it... but people are hypocrites at the end of the day.

    Yes, it may change but I don't see the point in spending time on it until it does. I'm surprised you think it is simply inevitable when there is currently so little interest in it but if you feel strongly about it, and especially if you want to rise above hypocrisy,  you should certainly make people aware of the possibility.

  6. ...

    People said that about Intermarriage, they lost. People said that about Homosexuality, they lost. You're smart enough to know that ultimately it being legal is inevitable so why keep fighting the future and keep people oppressed?

    You're correct that acceptance of intermarriage and homosexuality were inevitable, but at the moment there's nowhere near enough groundswell for polygamy to become legal.

  7. ... I do agree with America now being big government, and comparing them to Nazis and Isis, if the government wants to rid themselves of that comparison the should smart up and shrink their government

    It seems we need an Islamic State addendum to Godwin's Law.

    • Upvote 2
  8. How is lowering operating costs bad for companies, such as when we see cost savings from gas that costs 2 dollars a gallon vs 4 dollars a gallon?

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    Lowering costs generally benefits both the producer and the consumer but the global petrochemical industry is a special case as it has managed to avoid the cartel restrictions that apply to most sectors. In the name of "energy self-sufficiency", previous US governments were persuaded to support high-cost-low-margin energy extraction projects despite warnings that the price of energy was volatile and easily manipulable. Those predictions have come true and now many US energy producers - especially the smaller and more highly-leveraged ones - are going to fail. That's why gas prices have become a political football.

     

    I don't think the post was aimed at you, Lannan13.

  9. A president doesn't deserve all the credit/blame for what happens while he/she is in office, but as team leader they certainly deserve some of it. Obama deserves praise for what he helped achieve with the US economy, Cuba, Iran, gay marriage, climate policy, and health-care, but his greatest legacy will be how he pushed the core of the Republican party further to the right.

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