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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:20 pm 
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Taskiss wrote:
There are so many people who don't contribute to society, so many companies that have no product but have people flocking to them and investing their retirement accounts, so many people claiming the end of the world from religious, ecological and economic perspectives, it's not even funny.

I recall talking to my kid once about his grades. A 100% is great, job well done, but a 0% takes a hole out of his GPA that can't be filled. We've got a bunch of 0's in our society - people running around amounting to nothing, companies without products (like, WTF is Twitter or Facebook?), folks wanting to take from the rich and give to the poor 'cause it'll get them elected, etc, and I'd not be surprised if the US doesn't ever recover and being the pinnacle of the world again. They're pulling our collective GPA down and taking us with them.

But, that's OK. People that work hard and keep their eye on the brass ring will still come out better than they came in. China will lead the world economy, but that's no biggie, no different than Europe and China having taken a back seat to the US for the last century or so. It'll give the US something to shot for, may be we won't be self-loathing losers next go-round.

'Course, there will be folks that fear change, getting themselves all worked up about **** they can't do anything about. I suggest seeing a pharmacologist. There's some good stuff that'll take care of that paranoia and put a smile on your face to boot.

Medicade will probably cover it. :D



This may be...one of the most reasonable, well thought-out things I've ever seen you post.

Speaking as someone who has never lived in a "world power," it's overrated. The USA and the rest of the world did just fine without the great American superpower before WW2, and honestly, even America will probably be better off without it in the future.

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:23 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Aizle wrote:
Your wealth (as I understand how you got it, i.e. the stock market) wouldn't have been possible without the society that you don't want to support.
That's a curious false dilemma: either I accept the existing tax code as-is, or I do not want to support society.


Well, one of the interesting things about living in a democracy is that you often have to live with things that you'd rather not. Not all of the laws of the land are the way I think they should be, and certainly I will complain about them and work to get them changed.

But all the rhetoric that we ever hear from you regarding taxes is that the government doesn't have a right to your wealth, not that I don't like the current tax laws, but recognize you have some obligation to support the society that is the US.


Last edited by Aizle on Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:27 pm 
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China leading the world economy is actually a pretty big problem because they have more than enough of their own people and it's one of the most racist countries in the world - people with ability can't just move there, they don't want you.


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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:32 pm 
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Khross wrote:
More to the point, I didn't sign up to live in a Democracy. Democracy's are societies where the poor punish the rich for being better are surviving than they are. I signed up for a Republic and got a socialist oligarchy instead.


So unless you are a naturalized citizen, you didn't sign up for ****. Your *** got born here, just like the rest of us and got what our country is today.

If you are a naturalized citizen, then you didn't do your homework, as the country really isn't fundamentally different today than it was 50 years ago.

Edit: and your comment immdiately brought this to mind...

Quote:
ARTHUR: Old woman!
DENNIS: Man!
ARTHUR: Old Man, sorry. What knight live in that castle over there?
DENNIS: I'm thirty seven.
ARTHUR: What?
DENNIS: I'm thirty seven -- I'm not old!
ARTHUR: Well, I can't just call you `Man'.
DENNIS: Well, you could say `Dennis'.
ARTHUR: Well, I didn't know you were called `Dennis.'
DENNIS: Well, you didn't bother to find out, did you?
ARTHUR: I did say sorry about the `old woman,' but from the behind
you looked--
DENNIS: What I object to is you automatically treat me like an inferior!
ARTHUR: Well, I AM king...
DENNIS: Oh king, eh, very nice. An' how'd you get that, eh? By
exploitin' the workers -- by 'angin' on to outdated imperialist dogma
which perpetuates the economic an' social differences in our society!
If there's ever going to be any progress--
WOMAN: Dennis, there's some lovely filth down here. Oh -- how d'you do?
ARTHUR: How do you do, good lady. I am Arthur, King of the Britons.
Who's castle is that?
WOMAN: King of the who?
ARTHUR: The Britons.
WOMAN: Who are the Britons?
ARTHUR: Well, we all are. we're all Britons and I am your king.
WOMAN: I didn't know we had a king. I thought we were an autonomous
collective.
DENNIS: You're fooling yourself. We're living in a dictatorship.
A self-perpetuating autocracy in which the working classes--
WOMAN: Oh there you go, bringing class into it again.
DENNIS: That's what it's all about if only people would--
ARTHUR: Please, please good people. I am in haste. Who lives
in that castle?
WOMAN: No one live there.
ARTHUR: Then who is your lord?
WOMAN: We don't have a lord.
ARTHUR: What?
DENNIS: I told you. We're an anarcho-syndicalist commune. We take
it in turns to act as a sort of executive officer for the week.
ARTHUR: Yes.
DENNIS: But all the decision of that officer have to be ratified
at a special biweekly meeting.
ARTHUR: Yes, I see.
DENNIS: By a simple majority in the case of purely internal affairs,--
ARTHUR: Be quiet!
DENNIS: --but by a two-thirds majority in the case of more--
ARTHUR: Be quiet! I order you to be quiet!
WOMAN: Order, eh -- who does he think he is?
ARTHUR: I am your king!
WOMAN: Well, I didn't vote for you.
ARTHUR: You don't vote for kings.
WOMAN: Well, 'ow did you become king then?
ARTHUR: The Lady of the Lake,
[angels sing]
her arm clad in the purest shimmering samite, held aloft Excalibur
from the bosom of the water signifying by Divine Providence that I,
Arthur, was to carry Excalibur.
[singing stops]
That is why I am your king!
DENNIS: Listen -- strange women lying in ponds distributing swords
is no basis for a system of government. Supreme executive power
derives from a mandate from the masses, not from some farcical
aquatic ceremony.
ARTHUR: Be quiet!
DENNIS: Well you can't expect to wield supreme executive power
just 'cause some watery tart threw a sword at you!
ARTHUR: Shut up!
DENNIS: I mean, if I went around sayin' I was an empereror just
because some moistened bint had lobbed a scimitar at me they'd
put me away!
ARTHUR: Shut up! Will you shut up!
DENNIS: Ah, now we see the violence inherent in the system.
ARTHUR: Shut up!
DENNIS: Oh! Come and see the violence inherent in the system!
HELP! HELP! I'm being repressed!
ARTHUR: Bloody peasant!
DENNIS: Oh, what a give away. Did you here that, did you here that,
eh? That's what I'm on about -- did you see him repressing me,
you saw it didn't you?


Last edited by Aizle on Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:37 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:35 pm 
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Aizle:

I don't live in a Democracy and neither do you. I really wish liberals on the Glade and elsewhere would stop misusing that word as if it somehow makes their arguments defensible; I really wish you guys would stop paraphrasing socialists and communists and statists like Antio Gramsci, while pretending you have the moral high ground.

Seriously, do you even know the thought origins of the policies and arguments you type in threads like these? Do you even understand why after a 100 or so years of such policies the United States is collapsing under the burden of its own serf class?

It's astonishing how you guys like to throw out the term "obligation to society" when you don't even bother to think about how things did and used to work (or even why they worked). You don't consider basic economics or simple applications of Supply and Demand ...

I mean, seriously, reading this forum you'd think the majority of you think the Law of Supply and Demand is some great myth or conspiracy theory by evil Conservatives.

We have RangerDave telling me I didn't earn my wealth because I live in America ...

We have you trying tell me I don't put anything back into society except by force of law ...

You guys are astounding. There's a whole lot of freedom and justice in your posts ...

A whole lot of freedom for you guys to tell me what I have to do and should do with my money and a whole lot of justice in the form of ...

"We have more votes than you, so **** off..."

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:35 pm 
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Aizle wrote:
So unless you are a naturalized citizen, you didn't sign up for ****. Your *** got born here, just like the rest of us and got what our country is today.

If you are a naturalized citizen, then you didn't do your homework, as the country really isn't fundamentally different today than it was 50 years ago.
Hahahahaha ...

You keep believing that. Seriously, keep believing that and pass whatever it is you're smoking.

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:40 pm 
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There really needs to be some clarification on how much in taxes the "rich" actually pay. I believe Khross when he says he has to pay 60%, but at the same time you have to take into account the statements of liberal rich people like Soros and Buffett who say they pay far less of their income in taxes than the middle class. I highly doubt members of Congress, politically connected rich people, and people on Wall Street pay anywhere close to that in taxes.


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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:44 pm 
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Khross wrote:
Aizle:

I don't live in a Democracy and neither do you. I really wish liberals on the Glade and elsewhere would stop misusing that word as if it somehow makes their arguments defensible; I really wish you guys would stop paraphrasing socialists and communists and statists like Antio Gramsci, while pretending you have the moral high ground.


:roll: Do we have to have this symantic argument again?

Everyone on these forums knows that the U.S. is a Representative Republic. I think it's also fair to say that everyone understands that a Representative Republic is a form of Democratic government. Calling it a Democracy is a term of convenience, nothing more.


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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:53 pm 
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Khross wrote:
RangerDave wrote:
Your ability to accumulate that wealth was dependent on an intricate web of factors, both past and present, that have nothing whatsoever to do with your personal efforts. You can't stand on the shoulders of giants, as it were, and claim the view is your own achievement. Consequently, a portion of your wealth is owed in payment for the benefits derived from the society in which you live. The exact percentage is impossible to quantify, of course, and the method of collection can be debated, but that's the basic principle in my view.
In other words, you strongly agree with the statement: "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs." How much of your salary, beyond current taxation, do you redistribute willingly and actively to those less fortunate than yourself? Since you obviously are incapable of earning anything with your own labor, it seems to me that you should own nothing and save nothing. That is, in point of fact, the logical conclusion of the argument you're making.


Holy strawman, batman!

1) He said repay a debt. That does not mean "to each according to his needs". Unless you feel repaying any debt is communism?

2) Where do you come up with the idea that he's incapable of earning anything with his own labor? He merely said he would not have gotten as far with his own labor. He never suggested he is entirely indebted because of his success. In fact, he pretty much says the opposite.


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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 2:57 pm 
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Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Khross wrote:
RangerDave wrote:
Your ability to accumulate that wealth was dependent on an intricate web of factors, both past and present, that have nothing whatsoever to do with your personal efforts. You can't stand on the shoulders of giants, as it were, and claim the view is your own achievement. Consequently, a portion of your wealth is owed in payment for the benefits derived from the society in which you live. The exact percentage is impossible to quantify, of course, and the method of collection can be debated, but that's the basic principle in my view.
In other words, you strongly agree with the statement: "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs." How much of your salary, beyond current taxation, do you redistribute willingly and actively to those less fortunate than yourself? Since you obviously are incapable of earning anything with your own labor, it seems to me that you should own nothing and save nothing. That is, in point of fact, the logical conclusion of the argument you're making.


Holy strawman, batman!

1) He said repay a debt. That does not mean "to each according to his needs". Unless you feel repaying any debt is communism?

2) Where do you come up with the idea that he's incapable of earning anything with his own labor? He merely said he would not have gotten as far with his own labor. He never suggested he is entirely indebted because of his success. In fact, he pretty much says the opposite.
There's no strawman ....
RangerDave wrote:
RangerDave wrote:
Your ability to accumulate that wealth was dependent on an intricate web of factors, both past and present, that have nothing whatsoever to do with your personal efforts.
Read what he wrote ...

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 3:17 pm 
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Khross wrote:
In other words, you strongly agree with the statement: "From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs." How much of your salary, beyond current taxation, do you redistribute willingly and actively to those less fortunate than yourself? Since you obviously are incapable of earning anything with your own labor, it seems to me that you should own nothing and save nothing. That is, in point of fact, the logical conclusion of the argument you're making.

No, I partially agree with it, as does everyone, frankly, who agrees with a percentage-based tax system (as opposed to everyone paying the same absolute dollar amount) or who thinks we should have any safety net at all. There are very, very few people who actually disagree completely with that statement, and most of them are 19-year old college students who just read Atlas Shrugged for the first time. At any rate, I'm not a communist, nor even a strong socialist; I'm a person who believes virtue is usually found in the mean, and thus I'm a fan of the modern mixed-economy approach.

Khross wrote:
You cannot easily "opt out" of being a U.S. Citizen and expatriating anymore. I'd love to do so, but all sorts of Federal regulations make that horrendously difficult and impractical.

This I definitely disagree with. It should be as quick and easy as possible.

Khross wrote:
yes, death by repeated failure is a key aspect of freedom. People must be free to **** up as much as they are free to succeed.

Why? What does that approach have to recommend it, particularly since history has shown that freedom to succeed and freedom to fail are not linked by a 1:1 trade-off. Rather, a small reduction in the freedom to succeed at the top produces a huge amount of protection from failure at the bottom. We have all but eliminated true deprivation in the US and, indeed, have given even our poorest a pretty cushy lifestyle by world-historical standards, while at the same time preserving sufficient freedom for the successful to achieve undreamt of wealth and choice.


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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 3:18 pm 
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And this is fundamentally what socialists and libertarians and anyone across the spectrum will disagree about. I believe there is no debt to society. Society should be set up as free as possible and taxes should be paid for the basic necessary services to ensure that freedom. This includes enough money for a common defense and the very basics government needs to exist. Outside of that, a government has no scope. It certainly shouldn't be trying to "give back" to others. That's the choice of the individual people. And it shouldn't ensure "fairness." It should just protect liberties for all involved. In some cases, it's not black and white and that's why we have courts. But there is no debt. Taxes aren't a debt to society. They're just the foundation for a free society so that some entity can exist to protect freedom. And everyone should pay them, regardless of their circumstances, as everyone benefits from more freedom, whether you use that freedom for better or worse. And that's entirely subjective, which is why it should be up to the individual to decide that.


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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 3:31 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
Why? What does that approach have to recommend it, particularly since history has shown that freedom to succeed and freedom to fail are not linked by a 1:1 trade-off. Rather, a small reduction in the freedom to succeed at the top produces a huge amount of protection from failure at the bottom. We have all but eliminated true deprivation in the US and, indeed, have given even our poorest a pretty cushy lifestyle by world-historical standards, while at the same time preserving sufficient freedom for the successful to achieve undreamt of wealth and choice.

I entirely disagree with this part. What do you mean it's not a 1:1 trade-off RD? I believe success and failure (which is defined differently by everyone in terms of their own lives) is absolutely a 1:1 trade-off. Both can be achieved with enough hardwork (or lack thereof) and there's a lot of middle ground. People tend to learn from both success and failure equally. If I learn a hot stove hurts, I won't do that again. If I open a business and find a niche, and it succeeds, I now have a business model that may very well work again.

Unfortunately, that pay-off for that lack of deprivation is that the bottom wants more and wants us to give up more freedom in order to ensure that. If they just learn their lesson by touching the hot stove, they may wise up and learn and become more successful (in their own way). So it's not working. That's why we can pushing the boundaries of what's a right. Now people think healthcare is a right, when 50 years ago everyone didn't even have access to healthcare. There is no happy medium because the bottom will eventually take away as much as they can from the top.


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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 3:36 pm 
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RangerDave wrote:
No, I partially agree with it, as does everyone, frankly, who agrees with a percentage-based tax system (as opposed to everyone paying the same absolute dollar amount) or who thinks we should have any safety net at all. There are very, very few people who actually disagree completely with that statement, and most of them are 19-year old college students who just read Atlas Shrugged for the first time. At any rate, I'm not a communist, nor even a strong socialist; I'm a person who believes virtue is usually found in the mean, and thus I'm a fan of the modern mixed-economy approach.
...
You realize that you're contradicting yourself repeatedly, right? You say you partially agree with the statement but indicate that "virtue is usually found in the mean" and admit you're a "fan of the modern mixed-economy approach". Yet, you fail to accept or even acknowledge that the moder mixed-economy is a vested redistribution system that punishes and disincentives wealth accumulation in the United States and Europe. More to the point, not only is the system actually prohibitive when it comes to economic mobility, but it establishes a protected class of extremely wealthy individuals that function as oligarchs at the head of our nation and others. Barack Obama spent a $1,000,000,000 dollars getting elected President. He's spent TRILLIONS of dollars being President, and he's beholden none of us or our Congress or our Courts. Whether you agree with his stated political positions or not; his policies or not; one cannot deny that he's an advocate of national fiscal irresponsibility on a grand scale and leading by example in that regard. Yet, you talk about "virtue being in the mean" while you advocate an economic system that simultaneously punishes you for attempting to succeed while protecting the wealth engine of the people running this country.
RangerDave wrote:
Khross wrote:
yes, death by repeated failure is a key aspect of freedom. People must be free to **** up as much as they are free to succeed.
Why? What does that approach have to recommend it, particularly since history has shown that freedom to succeed and freedom to fail are not linked by a 1:1 trade-off. Rather, a small reduction in the freedom to succeed at the top produces a huge amount of protection from failure at the bottom. We have all but eliminated true deprivation in the US and, indeed, have given even our poorest a pretty cushy lifestyle by world-historical standards, while at the same time preserving sufficient freedom for the successful to achieve undreamt of wealth and choice.
It has the general history of human behavior behind it. Human beings learn from pain and failure: if you remove the consequences of failure from the equation, you end up with Mike Judge's Idiocracy. As for the second part of your contingent, the United States doesn't preserve the freedom to achieve wealth and choice to that measure. In fact, you continually advocate the biggest system of marginalization possible: progressive, front-end taxation. I've explained, at length, how payroll and income taxes hurt the economy, hurt savings, hurt economic mobility and ... yet, you keep coming back and defending them despite know that the current system makes serfs out of 90% of the population. But, then, you also contradicted yourself against; after all ...
RangerDave wrote:
Your ability to accumulate that wealth was dependent on an intricate web of factors, both past and present, that have nothing whatsoever to do with your personal efforts.
You don't know what you're arguing anymore, RangerDave. You've lost your ability to be critical of your own beliefs. You're just another demagogue trying to sell me a party line without actually considering the arguments you're making.

Do I want people to starve to death? Absolutely not, but you and Aizle can't seem to separate desire from reality. People already start to death. More people would starve to death for a while in my system. And the people who survived would work or find themselves suffering the consequences of their choices. Someone who loses everything in some fluke disaster or because they were stupid enough to get scammed once can put things back together ...

When losing everything becomes a pattern, then I've no obligation to help someone who's demonstrated no desire to grow or avoid their past mistakes. You guys think I'm heartless; I know enabling the dysfunctional is a far greater crime than letting them suffering the consequences of their actions.

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 3:50 pm 
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And this is why I welcome it, the can do's will do and learn that what they do is theirs, the can nots will die or beseech, crawl, then claw and stab those who have told them they deserve something for nothing - and then die off.

Either minds will be changed or their bodies will suffer or die.

And RD this is inevitable within our lifetime. Its going to happen, me now not trying to fight it doesn't matter just as much as me fighting it didn't matter -its too late to stop it. Policies such as the ones Aizle support, and you do to you just try to mince words around it brought it on. Don't think me evil for showing you the results of what you've sown. It could have been avoided by allowing some people having harder lives all these years, maybe a very very few would have died - now its going to be hell one way or another for all of us - chaos, police state, invasion...one of those three. But I can take an ugly joy from the suffering of fools that I tried to warn even as I suffer myself because I know the end is going to be the diminishing of foolishness.

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It's going to be very interesting to come back to this thread in 10-20 years. Hopefully it's still around.


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I really can't wait. I love it when people who delusionally believe in crazy things are proven wrong.


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Aizle wrote:
It's going to be very interesting to come back to this thread in 10-20 years. Hopefully it's still around.
Even the libertarians among us ignore Elmo ...

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Ok Khross step through the first two weeks after OPEC unlinks the dollar.

Tell me what you see as the likely result.

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Someone should make a Mad Max film about the fall-out from unlinking the dollar.


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Hmmms ...

You really don't want an answer to that question, Elmo, as it won't be quite as immediately disastrous or cataclysmic as you think. In fact, OPEC unlinking oil from the dollar would drive oil prices down in the majority of the developed world, just not the United States.

As for what's going to happen to the United States ... I've explained that in detail before, so go read past threads.

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There's at least a dozen currencies that aren't linked to OPEC but I think those countries are surviving without mass pandemonium.


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Elm, it's unfortunate you feel the near future is so bleak. I think the schadenfreude is morally wrong, but after all these years of conversing with you, I still hope you wouldn't really embrace it if the worst did come to pass. You strike me as too decent a person to genuinely take pleasure in someone else's suffering. At any rate, just promise you won't go all Timothy McVeigh on us in the meantime, ok? ;)


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This thread reminds me of a thesis I had a while back. Michael Savage didn't quite get it right. Liberalism is not a mental disease. It's actually a form of cancer that affects entire societies rather than individual human beings. Now, before anyone takes that the wrong way, so is modern "conservativism." The problem so many of you are having is that you are treating this discussion as if everyone involved has a misinformed opinion on the subject. That is not the case. Just like you can have heart cancer, lung cancer, skin cancer, breast cancer, colon cancer, brain cancer, and so on, nations can develop social cancer and cultural cancer.

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 21, 2011 4:11 pm 
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Joined: Thu Sep 03, 2009 10:03 am
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Isn't it social cancer if people are starving to death while others are too snobby to pay for their food?


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