Topic: U.S Presidential Primary Thread #2 (Read 14095 times)

  • Avatar of headphonics
  • sea of vodka
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Member
  • Joined: Dec 24, 2003
  • Posts: 6432
Religious conservatism is precisely why Grunthor and I describe ourselves as social liberals. Social liberals are in favor of civil rights and the separation of church and state. FISCAL liberals are in favor of social programs and taxation. A social conservative would be pro-life, anti-gay marriage etc., so describing myself simply as "a conservative" would be incorrect since I hold none of those opinions. I support the free market and competition, I believe that instead of the government taking x amount of dollars out of my paycheck to spend on things they think I need like uh Social Security, that they should just let me keep that money any invest it myself to save for my own retirement. Heaven forbid people have to think for themselves and plan out their own budgets. If people make bad decisions, tough, that is life. The government is responsible for making sure that the system itself is fair and that people are accountable for their actions but not forced into one thing or another. But it is pointless to even start discussing this with you, steel, since you are just going to go on and on about how conservatives of any brand are terrible people. So fine, you can have your opinion, I'll keep mine.
well what you are saying is pretty horrendous/selfish/unforgiving/completely devoid of compassion or concern for other human beings, so your argument that social liberals/fiscal conservatives aren't ethically reprehensible is kind of falling on its face!

DIDNT INVEST?  FUUUUCKK YOUUU yeah that's the exact opposite of terrible jeff, i agree!
  • Insane teacher
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 8, 2002
  • Posts: 10515
well what you are saying is pretty horrendous/selfish/unforgiving/completely devoid of compassion or concern for other human beings, so your argument that social liberals/fiscal conservatives aren't ethically reprehensible is kind of falling on its face!

DIDNT INVEST?  FUUUUCKK YOUUU yeah that's the exact opposite of terrible jeff, i agree!

You seem to think that his throwaway line of "social liberal" is indicative of having genuine compassion. There's a reason he hasn't come back to defend his views, even though he's clearly been back since he started crying to DS minutes later about how I called him retarded for not even reading what he linked (funny how he also forgot to post the link to the article in question, seeing as how it refuted him JUST A WEIRD COINCIDENCE THERE); it's because he doesn't actually CARE about social liberalism. The fiscal conservative, social liberal, is the walking contradiction. To them, civil rights requires no money to maintain; just SAY you have rights and they will come true. Separation of church and state for them is true to an extent (most tend to be strong atheists) but they want to neuter the state and view the church as a business entity, where they have the right to make their own schools and education systems. It is impossible to be a social liberal and a fiscal conservative; your average person who says this is in reality just another conservative, which is why they kowtow so firmly to the Republicans and so often ascribe to a thought process of "both parties are equally bad". The economic conservatism far outweighs the social liberalism because they misguidedly think that destroying government is a quicker way to create civil liberty than to work within the system, because the government is JUST. TOO. CORRUPT.

The idea that the government spends money on things "they think I need" sums this up well. Somehow, the modern neocon believes the government can slash everything and somehow no one will ask for any of those services again, that public administration and bureaucracy will never be called for again. They believe that if you slash taxes you can see a benefit in economy, that "rational actors" can choose to buy pensions and they will be just as successful without government, even that education and prisons should be privatized. When confronted by the evidence to the contrary, they pull a Communist saying; REAL conservatism just hasn't been implemented yet.

The problem here is that real conservatism CANNOT exist. They want to shrink the Federal Government. There's absolutely no real reason to do this; they don't want to shrink the Fed because of some real world problem it's causing. They want to shrink it because in their ideology, that's going to be the right thing to do.

Then the conservative is faced with a dilemma. What happens when you slash those services? People demand them back. Believe it or not, people do expect the government to serve more than a defense purpose, and they will ask for their libraries and their social security, and the modern conservative is in a dilemma. The result is that he still has to pay for services while slashing taxes. They cannot shrink government, but they are also wholely unwilling to improve it since they don't like the idea of government at all, so you get not only a bigger government, but a more ineffective one.

Alan Wolfe goes into detail on this in one of the best pieces of political polemic I've read in a while:

Quote
If government is necessary, bad government, at least for conservatives, is inevitable, and conservatives have been exceptionally good at showing just how bad it can be. Hence the truth revealed by the Bush years: Bad government--indeed, bloated, inefficient, corrupt, and unfair government--is the only kind of conservative government there is. Conservatives cannot govern well for the same reason that vegetarians cannot prepare a world-class boeuf bourguignon: If you believe that what you are called upon to do is wrong, you are not likely to do it very well.

http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/features/2006/0607.wolfe.html

You cannot exist as an economic conservative and a social liberal. To be a social liberal is to demand that government take stances and stances require money, something the economic conservative cannot bear to live with.

They also have incredibly stunted understandings of economics, raised in vacuums and full of jargon that has no application to the real world. For instance, the private accounts plan that Jeff is outlining. President Bush first suggested the plan, claiming Social Security was in some crisis (one that does not exist) and that under the current system, today's generation will suffer under the old system. Patently false of course, since the old system gives MORE benefit than the private accounts system. Then there's the fact that private accounts overwhelmingly fuck the poor or anyone not pulling in six figures a year. Whoops! Anyone going for the private accounts will recover forfeited benefits through their accounts “if their investments realized a return equal to or greater than the 3 percent earned by Treasury bonds currently held by the Social Security system.” But CBO factors out stock market risks to assume a 3.3 percent rate of return. With 0.3 percent subtracted for expected administrative costs on the account, “the full amount in a worker’s account would be reduced dollar for dollar from his Social Security checks, for a net gain of zero." Hooray! Also the perception that the private account is safe from NASTY BIG GOBBMINT is a lie, you have to buy into government mandated stocks and with restriction comes less gains since you can't ever get that big pay day. I'll bet money Jeff will argue that HIS plan is much better, see, you can just funnel all your cash into any stocks you want. Whoops, there goes another salaryman out the window. The firefighters wanted to catch him but FUCK NO TO SAFETYNETS.

My favorite part though is the not so subtle implication that the government's social security is somehow this horrible idea and putting people in a roulette wheel (in Jeff's dichotomy, it seems that's the only option) that ends up refunneling money back to the rich is a much better scheme. Of course, anyone with even cursory research into the subject can tell you that SS is held by US Treasury securities, widely regarded as the best investment in the world.

You'll notice how there is no evidence of private accounts doing better. That's because, well, there really IS none. There are theories, all untested, and highly controversial to boot. The reason Jeff wants private accounts is because HE thinks it's a better idea. Somehow Jeff, king of the stock market, believes neutering social security and going to private accounts, despite being laughable at best and inhumane more likely, is a good idea because it's part of his ideology. And he likes his ideology because he thinks it's full of good ideas.

The exercise of economic conservatism and social liberalism at the same time is like farting in an elevator; it's a tale of sound and fury signifying nothing because it's going to get sucked away in a few seconds anyways. Slash the Social Security benefits and let people invest in horrible stock options instead! Destroy the prison system and sell it to Walmart! Castrate the government and let ME do it better! Affirmative action? Try hardwork, pal! Evidence? Please!

Is not a man entitled to the sweat on his brow?
Last Edit: April 06, 2008, 12:26:28 am by Magical Negro
brian chemicals
  • Insane teacher
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 8, 2002
  • Posts: 10515
if anyone wants to read a rather good description on why government bureaucracy is necessary that stays away from political issues, Charles T. Goodsell wrote a nice book called The Case for Bureaucracy. only for big poli nerds though since it doesn't have any neat little stories.

Quote
But it is pointless to even start discussing this with you, steel, since you are just going to go on and on about how conservatives of any brand are terrible people.

whoooooops.
Last Edit: April 06, 2008, 12:29:15 am by Magical Negro
brian chemicals
  • Avatar of dada
  • VILLAIN
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Administrator
  • Joined: Dec 27, 2002
  • Posts: 5538
Is not a man entitled to the sweat on his brow?
NO!

It belongs to everybody.

  • Avatar of Xeno|Soft
  • Chicken Hunter
  • PipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Jun 18, 2002
  • Posts: 564
you're not just paying to take care of yourself, you're helping to take care of those who don't have the option to take care of themselves. i know that having responsiblity for others goes against what all of you neo libertarian "i can take care of myself with a little bit of linux and a little bit of pocky" believe in, but yeah that essentially makes you horrible people if you think that those who are better off shouldn't at least be a little responsible for the people who have nothing

I really don't care about this, but one line here bothered me.


No, people who are are better off are in no way RESPONSIBLE for those who have nothing, it is in no way an obligation in any way shape or form.  You do it because you WANT to, I do it because I WANT to.


  • Insane teacher
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 8, 2002
  • Posts: 10515
I really don't care about this, but one line here bothered me.


No, people who are are better off are in no way RESPONSIBLE for those who have nothing, it is in no way an obligation in any way shape or form.  You do it because you WANT to, I do it because I WANT to.

you state this as if it's fact, ignoring religious, social, and moral obligation; the fact that there's no legality attached doesn't make it any less a responsibility if you have a soul (something that was pretty implicit in what he said).

edit: actually it's explicit considering he just mentioned SOULLESS LIBERTARIANS so yeah.

here are a few non legal responsibilities I found lying around!

Quote
"Give the kinsman his due, and the needy, and the wayfarer, and squander not (your wealth) in wantonness. Lo! the squanderers were ever brothers of the devils, and the devil was ever an ingrate to his Lord" (Quran 17:26-27).

Quote from: John Winthrop
First to hold conformity with the rest of His world, being delighted to show forth the glory of his wisdom in the variety and difference of the creatures, and the glory of His power in ordering all these differences for the preservation and good of the whole, and the glory of His greatness, that as it is the glory of princes to have many officers, so this great king will have many stewards, counting himself more honored in dispensing his gifts to man by man, than if he did it by his own immediate hands.

Quote
   Charity means donation or giving away one's own properties to others. There are three kinds of charity: giving material offerings (Amisa dana), giving santuary and protection to animals (Abhaya dana) and giving doctrinal lectures (Dhamma dana). In dispensing the charity, volition (cetana)and the belief in kamma and its results (Saddha) play important roles.
Last Edit: April 06, 2008, 01:16:57 am by Magical Negro
brian chemicals
  • Avatar of Xeno|Soft
  • Chicken Hunter
  • PipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Jun 18, 2002
  • Posts: 564
you state this as if it's fact, ignoring religious, social, and moral obligation; the fact that there's no legality attached doesn't make it any less a responsibility if you have a soul (something that was pretty implicit in what he said).

edit: actually it's explicit considering he just mentioned SOULLESS LIBERTARIANS so yeah.

here are a few non legal responsibilities I found lying around!


First let me say sorry for presenting as if its fact, its not, its just my logical opinion.

Religion and moral obligation... these are opinionated to a degree where they have no physical consequence when you "break them" First of all Morals are personal and vary from social group to social group...topic to topic..person to person, its fluctuates too much to even consider in this equation. to say its is a "moral obligation to help the needy" is to imply you have the same set of moral values as me. (which we don't)

and for "if you have a soul" who are you to tell me what I should be responsible for if a I have a soul?

I'm sorry, but the concept of attaching religion, and morals to this is silly, I could understand if we both followed the same set of morals and religion, but we don't.

As for Social; yeah you can but duh, that has consequences. If everyone in your town gave to the poor, and you didn't, you're seen as a douche bag and people will treat you differently. It is still not an obligation what so ever, you just have a one sided choice to make.
  • Insane teacher
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 8, 2002
  • Posts: 10515
First let me say sorry for presenting as if its fact, its not, its just my logical opinion.

Religion and moral obligation... these are opinionated to a degree where they have no physical consequence when you "break them" First of all Morals are personal and vary from social group to social group...topic to topic..person to person, its fluctuates too much to even consider in this equation. to say its is a "moral obligation to help the needy" is to imply you have the same set of moral values as me. (which we don't)

and for "if you have a soul" who are you to tell me what I should be responsible for if a I have a soul?

I'm sorry, but the concept of attaching religion, and morals to this is silly, I could understand if we both followed the same set of morals and religion, but we don't.

As for Social; yeah you can but duh, that has consequences. If everyone in your town gave to the poor, and you didn't, you're seen as a douche bag and people will treat you differently. It is still not an obligation what so ever, you just have a one sided choice to make.

no one is arguing that morals are objective. we are arguing however that in the circumstances we all no doubt live in (not being homeless, having money to spend on VIDEOGAMES and useless shit, and we have some poverty in our country), we no doubt share some of the same morals, or at least our reasoning for morals. therefore, it behooves you to instead of chanting "I have DIFFERENT MORALS" to explain why your moral compass says charity and having a sense of obligation to the poor is unnecessary and more importantly why it isn't a moral outlook more people should have. morals come from somewhere after all; yours can be a special little flower but that doesn't change the fact that most moral compasses do include a real obligation to the less fortunate, and if anything you're under the burden to say why it doesn't!

to say that religious obligation is opinionated is missing the point entirely. to be Muslim you MUST use charity. the nation of America was founded on the concept of Christian charity that the Puritans practiced. Buddhists, Hindus, all of them tend to have something regarding a real obligation of charity. there's no fluctuation there.

the argument that people who don't give to charity are soulless is far from an arrogant one, when you consider the history of philanthropy. outside of the Ayn Rands and fascists of the world, most people do believe they have an obligation to do what's right, especially for the less fortunate. to insist otherwise is far from a difference in morals and more a difference in fundamental character. a real belief in this would entail you not ever paying your taxes and running off to the wilderness to never have to help anyone again. if you genuinely believe no one should feel a sense of obligation to the poor, by every religious measure (and religion must be accounted for when discussing the soul) and every moral code accepted by every major society, there's something fundamentally flawed about you. we're talking about the basic definition of decency; to feel bad for someone and then do something about it. I can't imagine a person who genuinely doesn't; most of them tend to divert it into libertarian arguments about teaching someone to fish, but they actually do feel bad.

if your definition of the soul requires just a basic level of decency (don't even have to get more complex), then someone who says FUCK THE POOR definitely falls below that level. considering that this is what the overwhelming majority of society believes, it's not me or Truth passing the judgment, but all of human civilization.

and lastly if your only defense against a social obligation is a thought experiment which will never exist (after all, we all don't donate to charity all the time, and sometimes even when we can), it's not much of an argument.
brian chemicals
  • Avatar of Xeno|Soft
  • Chicken Hunter
  • PipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Jun 18, 2002
  • Posts: 564
you are implying something I didn't say... I never said or implied "fuck the poor" I give to charity all the time. I even said this in my first post.

"I do it because I WANT to."

my point is it is NOT a responsibility, you should not be looked down on because you don't give the poor. I rather receive SHIT than ever receive something from someone because they "felt" they had to or obligated too, I have a strong sense of pride. My morality is very pride centric. As in you have to do things for the right reasons, or else don't do it. You don't give the poor because "aw, man I HAVE too." your suppose to do it out of the goodness of your heart, not out of pitty or obligation

I don't like help, especially when pitty is attached to it, it HURTS me when people do that to me. That is why I say, if you do it for a half-assed reason such as "I have too" then don't do it, it doesn't make you a better person, it just makes you feel good. It's the same feeling you get when you do your home-work and go "phew, thats out of the way!" its a bull-shit fake ass feeling that disrespects my exsistance as a independent human being and sometimes the poor have to live in that state, sadly.

The people who give out of "obligation" are the same people who give you empty words, fake smiles---who's exsistance  is based off " I have too" They hide behind these reasons to do "whats right" these are people I can't stand.

and to sum it up, the way I want to be treated is the way I treat people. I don't give help unless I want to, I don't do things out of guilt or "peer pressure" or any of those bullshit reasons people use to motivate themselves.

That's my point, my point was never was never "fuck the poor" as you imply, where the hell did you get that?
Last Edit: April 06, 2008, 02:49:15 am by Xeno|Soft
  • Insane teacher
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 8, 2002
  • Posts: 10515
I didn't mean to imply it was you (although now I see I did at times), but Jeff, who said that people who "made mistakes" deserved to suffer. you also seem to think the "pride" you feel is different from a social obligation or responsibility. it isn't! most people who do support charity and caring about the poor do it because of a real reason. this is what Truth's point was; most people FEEL a responsibility/obligation. I think you took issue with the fact that he said it was a responsibility, but I think it's clear he meant it's a FEELING of responsibility, and one that most everyone decent shares.

basically this requires you to know Truth and how carried away he gets trying to sound like Keith Olbermann, but yeah I'm sure he didn't mean some kind of legal responsibility or some overarching moralistic argument that applies to all of human nature but the fact that everyone decent in a society sticks to a moral code that doesn't actively hate the less fortunate and thus feels a sense of obligation to care about them.
brian chemicals
  • Avatar of Xeno|Soft
  • Chicken Hunter
  • PipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Jun 18, 2002
  • Posts: 564
oh okay, then we agree then, just an issue of a  misunderstanding  :)​  nice little exchange.
  • Avatar of The Truth
  • SB is unaware that Dimmu sucks
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: May 15, 2003
  • Posts: 1204
I didn't mean to imply it was you (although now I see I did at times), but Jeff, who said that people who "made mistakes" deserved to suffer. you also seem to think the "pride" you feel is different from a social obligation or responsibility. it isn't! most people who do support charity and caring about the poor do it because of a real reason. this is what Truth's point was; most people FEEL a responsibility/obligation. I think you took issue with the fact that he said it was a responsibility, but I think it's clear he meant it's a FEELING of responsibility, and one that most everyone decent shares.

basically this requires you to know Truth and how carried away he gets trying to sound like Keith Olbermann, but yeah I'm sure he didn't mean some kind of legal responsibility or some overarching moralistic argument that applies to all of human nature but the fact that everyone decent in a society sticks to a moral code that doesn't actively hate the less fortunate and thus feels a sense of obligation to care about them.

and here is where you are wrong friend, I feel it should be the legal responsibility of the wealthy to take care of the poor, through taxation.

This is not to say I am for REDISTRIBUTION OF WEALTH (although... in a perfect world...) but I am definately for raising the tax burden on the rich and super rich to a point that is higher than what it is now. So you can afford healthcare? Great! You can also afford to pitch in for healthcare for the 40+ million americans who if their fucking foot falls off, they can have it put back on without going into debt for the rest of your life. Consider yourself blessed that you have the things you do, honestly many people are less fortunate, and if you are wealthy you are even more blessed, you are lucky and it is the government's responsibility in a just society to make you contribute to the welfare of others.

sorry but don't use that stupid MY MORALS ARE DIFFERENT ARGUMENT ok

maybe... i think rape is ok... it's my morals asshole...

some morals are inherantly a part of civilized society. in EVERY OTHER DEVELOPED NATION ON THE FACE OF THE EARTH the rich are forced by the government to contribute to programs such as uhc.
--- Back when we were young and loved the internet....
  • Insane teacher
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 8, 2002
  • Posts: 10515
the issue I think was guilt vs responsibility and he thought you conflated the second into meaning the first.
Last Edit: April 06, 2008, 08:20:14 pm by Magical Negro
brian chemicals
  • Firbolg Warrior
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Dec 9, 2002
  • Posts: 1201
Mark Penn Steps Down

Hell fucking yeah.  It's more bad news for Hillary.  :fogetbackflip: :woop:
Gaming World Mini City: Population, Industry, Transportation, Security Current rank 3950.
Click a different link each day.
  • Avatar of Ryan
  • thx ds k?
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 22, 2003
  • Posts: 4460
Mark Penn Steps Down

Hell fucking yeah.  It's more bad news for Hillary.  :fogetbackflip: :woop:

oh my god yes. he is on a KARL ROVE level of sliminess
  • Avatar of The Truth
  • SB is unaware that Dimmu sucks
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: May 15, 2003
  • Posts: 1204
the issue I think was guilt vs responsibility and he thought you conflated the second into meaning the first.

well, honestly i think the two are analogous but it's kind of a stupid argument anyway
Last Edit: April 07, 2008, 12:25:29 am by The Truth
--- Back when we were young and loved the internet....
  • Avatar of Ryan
  • thx ds k?
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 22, 2003
  • Posts: 4460


http://nymag.com/news/politics/45786/

this is fucking great. it's a fan fiction of a brokered democratic convention.
  • Avatar of Lyndon
  • Captalist pig :|
  • PipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 29, 2002
  • Posts: 711
HAHAHA have you guys seen this?

http://entertainment.aol.co.uk/cleese-wants-obama-speechwriter-job/article/20080408060409990002

John Cleese wants to be the speech writer for Obama. Man, this is brilliant

Last Edit: April 08, 2008, 01:25:20 pm by Lyndon
  • Avatar of tuxedo marx
  • Fuckin' A.
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 21, 2005
  • Posts: 4143
That is absolutely brilliant, not least because Cleese is a great writer!
Quote
TV presenter Mark Speight 'missing'
:(
  • Insane teacher
  • PipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPipPip
  • Group: Premium Member
  • Joined: Oct 8, 2002
  • Posts: 10515
http://www.nybooks.com/articles/21063 interesting article you might like???
brian chemicals
Locked