- Joined
- Jun 10, 2007
- Messages
- 39,369
- Likes
- 3,390
- Points
- 113
Fuck yeah, Denny.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Fuck yeah, Denny.
So, to get this straight, the large majority of people in the US think that the government has a negative impact on most people's lives, but the vast majority of Democrats and Independents want other people (not themselves!) to pay more into that negative impact? Why not just pare down how much impact that the government can have?Sixty-four percent of Americans said they believe those making a million dollars or more in taxes should pay more. Thirty percent said taxes on such individuals should not be increased. Democrats were extremely likely to support such an increase (83 percent did so), and independents also supported it, 65 percent to 28 percent. On the other side, 54 percent of Republicans opposed such an increase, while 40 percent supported it.
...Republicans have the most critical view of government, with 81 percent saying it has a negative impact on most people's lives. But a majority of independents (61 percent) and Democrats (55 percent) felt the say way
I was asking this yesterday...is the OWS movement about income, or wealth? Even HuffPost bloggers don't seem to know.The debate over whether affluent Americans are insufficiently taxed comes during a moment when hundreds of thousands of people nationwide have taken to the streets under the banner of the Occupy movement, which is protesting, among other things, the vast income gap between the highest 1 percent of earners in the U.S. and the other 99 percent.
So if OWS got its way, it would add 1.3B a year to the coffers of the US over the next decade. Those 60,000 people would just have to suck it up.Approximately 60,000 people fall under the Buffet Rule, according to The New York Times, and raising their taxes would generate about $13 billion in revenue over the next decade.
America's still the Land of the People...unfortunately it's the Land of the Largely Uneducated, Narcissistic, Non-Accountable People.
What do you do when the majority of the citizenry is "Uneducated, Narcissistic, Non-Accountable"?
Re-education camps?
"cleanse" the population?
ship them all off to some newly discovered island continent?
Make 'em read HuffPost and watch MSNBC, of course.
HuffPo is insufferable. The comments are possibly worse than YouTube and half the articles posted on the site are flattering write-ups about Jennifer Aniston or Gwyneth Paltrow. During Jenny McCarthy's insane reign as leader of the anti-vaccine movement HuffPo backed her like nobody else and when she was exposed as a twit they kept supporting her. Even now there is still an anti-vaccine sentiment on the site despite the children that have become ill or passed away as a direct result of not being vaccinated. HuffPo seems to cater to self-righteous left-wing middle-aged women who just know better than everyone else. Probably as misogynistic a post as I've ever written.
As I've always seen it, the rich can have all the money they can amass as long as the rest of us do better over time. It sucks that I didn't productize MSDOS and make a fortune, but I'm satisfied there's always a chance for anyone to do so. Nobody was able to prevent a couple of college kids from making Google or Facebook.
If by "reeducation camps" you mean "don't let them pass 4th grade if they can't read, or pass 8th grade if they can't do enough math to balance a checkbook, or graduate if they don't know about civics" then yes, reeducation camps.What do you do when the majority of the citizenry is "Uneducated, Narcissistic, Non-Accountable"?
Re-education camps?
How do you propose cleansing someone of narcissism, Herr?"cleanse" the population?
How would that help? It "worked" when the alternative was execution or life in a no-shit, for-real leaky dungeon. Right now, what's the worst that can happen? Jail time, where you get free food and health services?ship them all off to some newly discovered island continent?
I think the majority of network cable news viewers are already watching MSNBC.
I think the majority of network cable news viewers are already watching MSNBC.
If by "reeducation camps" you mean "don't let them pass 4th grade if they can't read, or pass 8th grade if they can't do enough math to balance a checkbook, or graduate if they don't know about civics" then yes, reeducation camps.
How do you propose cleansing someone of narcissism, Herr?
How would that help? It "worked" when the alternative was execution or life in a no-shit, for-real leaky dungeon. Right now, what's the worst that can happen? Jail time, where you get free food and health services?
This made me want to see the ratings/viewerships. Here's a link.
http://tvbythenumbers.zap2it.com/20...-saturday-sunday-october-29-30-2011-2/109101/
Ed O.
Like it or not, Fox kills the competition head to head. Like O'Reilly's show #1 against Chris Matthews or Olbermann or Maddow. And by millions of viewers.
So you think if more people watched MSNBC it would actually help them be better educated, more thoughtful and accountable?
From Maris' top link:
So, to get this straight, the large majority of people in the US think that the government has a negative impact on most people's lives, but the vast majority of Democrats and Independents want other people (not themselves!) to pay more into that negative impact? Why not just pare down how much impact that the government can have?
America's still the Land of the People...unfortunately it's the Land of the Largely Uneducated, Narcissistic, Non-Accountable People.
America's still the Land of the People...unfortunately it's the Land of the Largely Uneducated, Narcissistic, Non-Accountable People.
If by "reeducation camps" you mean "don't let them pass 4th grade if they can't read, or pass 8th grade if they can't do enough math to balance a checkbook, or graduate if they don't know about civics" then yes, reeducation camps.
OWS is at it's base protesting the fact that the top 1% wealthiest (not highest paid) people in America (some not even American citizens) have secured complete control of the Government of The United States of America and are using it for their own purposes.
Link?
Ed O.
Since it keeps being brought up by anti OWS posters trying to confuse the issue...
OWS is at it's base protesting the fact that the top 1% wealthiest (not highest paid) people in America (some not even American citizens) have secured complete control of the Government of The United States of America and are using it for their own purposes.
It's not a protest about income disparity or tax disparity, it's about re-installing an honest government of, by and for the people.
This is not something a new tax plan will fix. Americans want their government back and the enemy created DHS specifically to protect them from this inevitable revolution. When this thing refuses to die out quietly, martial law, curfews and mass internment of American citizens will commence.
Nope, nothing about DHS. Speaking of them, though, which component of those jackbooted thugs are the ones that are draining the Portland gov't of $200k in overtime? Or shooting Oakland protesters? Or arresting people in Atlanta? Is it the coast guard? TSA? FBI? CIA? Or is it policemen of the town that the protesters are being allowed to illegally squat in?About 500 people have been camping in Chapman and Lownsdale squares in downtown since Oct. 6 as part of a global movement to protest the loss of jobs in the United States, corporate money in politics and unfair banking practices.
While camping in city parks is illegal, Portland's government has permitted Occupy Portland to stay put.
That would completely decimate our military.
BTW, the US average graduation rate is 70.1%.In summary, the additional years of recruit data (2004-2005) support the previous finding that U.S. military recruits are more similar than dissimilar to the American youth population. The slight differences are that wartime U.S. military enlistees are better educated, wealthier, and more rural on average than their civilian peers.
Recruits have a higher percentage of high school graduates and representation from Southern and rural areas. No evidence indicates exploitation of racial minorities (either by race or by race-weighted ZIP code areas). Finally, the distribution of household income of recruits is noticeably higher than that of the entire youth population.
Demographic evidence discredits the argument that a draft is necessary to enforce representation from racial and socioeconomic groups. Additionally, three of the four branches of the armed forces met their recruiting goals in fiscal year 2005, and Army reenlistments are the highest in the past five years. A draft is not necessary to increase the size of the active-duty forces.
http://www.firstthings.com/article/2011/11/a-generation-detachedA few years ago, an intern came to me with what he no doubt thought was an exciting new idea for a piece about “the youth vote.” After having read a few too many press releases from MTV, he wanted to “get out the message” that young people should go to the polls “so their voices can be heard.” As editors go, I don’t think I have a reputation for being curmudgeonly, but on this particular occasion I could hardly contain myself.
“Frankly, I don’t want the youth to vote,” I told him. “They don’t own property, they don’t pay taxes, they don’t have kids to send to school. They have no financial stake and little moral stake in society and, until they do, I’d prefer they stay the heck away from the polls.” OK, maybe I was a little harsh. But this demographic—the unmarried, childless, economically dependent types—is a growing segment of society.
They’re now called emerging adults. And, much as I think that they don’t understand enough to make informed decisions about the long-term future of the country, what worries me more is that they may never know and may never even care.
In addition to being detached from their romantic (or simply sexual) partners, most of these young adults are also detached from their churches, their local communities, and their country. According to the authors,
they are not only not engaged in politics, they are also not big on volunteering and voluntary financial giving. . . . They are so focused on their own personal lives, especially on trying to stand on their own two feet, that they seem incapable of thinking more broadly about community involvement, good citizenship, or even very modest levels of charitable giving.
When asked about volunteering, one typical respondent explained, “I actually don’t have time for it. I feel like if I’m going to do something good for the community I might as well do something good that I get paid for too.”
