Too Radical to be President?

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BLAZER PROPHET

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One thing I will say for him. He's willing to make a new mistake rather than the same old ones.

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB100...6164293594303936.html?mod=igoogle_wsj_gadgv1&

His efforts to trim government ended up boosting his image. He sold thousands of state-owned cars and cut the state work force to levels not seen since the 1970s. In a region awash in government red ink, he turned an inherited $600 million deficit into a $370 million surplus the next year. He has rebuilt the state's reserve funds, which now top $800 million.

Nor does Mr. Daniels hesitate to lavish praise, when he feels like it, on the Democratic administration. "What I want in education is almost completely aligned with what President Obama wants," Mr. Daniels says, noting the administration's support for charter schools and merit-based pay for teachers.

He talks more often with Obama Education Secretary Arne Duncan, he says, "than with any cabinet secretary during my entire time in the Bush White House."
 
I like Gov. Daniels. He wants to put social issues away and focus on fiscal issues. I hope he runs, because then the GOP will have a substantive debate about the scope and size of government.
 
He looks too much like puti-poot.
vladimir_putin_01.jpg


mitch+daniels.jpg


joking aside, I agree with maxie. If GOP has a chance of moving into the 21st century, they must drop the social issues for now. I don't agree with "lowest public employee rate" stuff, but killing debt might be more important right now.
 
They could do worse.
 
Honestly (and again, I'm a bit biased), but the "social issues" aren't generally about the social side, but the financial side.

For instance, though I disagree with abortion I recognize it's a law and wouldn't begrudge someone who wanted to get one. However, I don't want my tax dollars funding clinics or paying for that woman to have one. IMO that's a private issue, not a state-sponsored one. Heck, you can even impose a law if you'd like that the father's responsible for paying half of it (like alimony or child support) if you're worried about women not getting care.

For DOMA, it's about wondering why people who choose to live an alternative lifestyle want the rights that come with marriage. No one is saying that a woman can't live with a woman, or a man with a man, and certainly no one is legislating what goes on in those bedrooms. It seems that the problem comes from people living the alternative lifestyle wanting some of the "1100 rights and protections conferred on marriage, including Social Security benefits, veterans' benefits, health insurance, Medicaid, hospital visitation, estate taxes, retirement savings, pensions, family leave, and immigration law." Again, this is a financial issue, not a social one. If you'd like to "even the playing field", remove or reduce some of those protections and rights. But I don't think 51% of the country (or their legislative representation) would go for that.
 
Daniels was W's budget director. Ran up some nice deficits.

On one hand, he certainly knows the budget. On the other... the deficits.
 
Honestly (and again, I'm a bit biased), but the "social issues" aren't generally about the social side, but the financial side.

For instance, though I disagree with abortion I recognize it's a law and wouldn't begrudge someone who wanted to get one. However, I don't want my tax dollars funding clinics or paying for that woman to have one. IMO that's a private issue, not a state-sponsored one. Heck, you can even impose a law if you'd like that the father's responsible for paying half of it (like alimony or child support) if you're worried about women not getting care.

For DOMA, it's about wondering why people who choose to live an alternative lifestyle want the rights that come with marriage. No one is saying that a woman can't live with a woman, or a man with a man, and certainly no one is legislating what goes on in those bedrooms. It seems that the problem comes from people living the alternative lifestyle wanting some of the "1100 rights and protections conferred on marriage, including Social Security benefits, veterans' benefits, health insurance, Medicaid, hospital visitation, estate taxes, retirement savings, pensions, family leave, and immigration law." Again, this is a financial issue, not a social one. If you'd like to "even the playing field", remove or reduce some of those protections and rights. But I don't think 51% of the country (or their legislative representation) would go for that.

I think you might be kidding yourself here, Brian. Ask how much money abortions really cost, and then consider the effort expended by the anti-abortion crowd. Is it proportionate?

barfo
 
No one chooses to be gay, can you please take your heads out of your asses on this topic. Thank you, cheers.
 
I think you might be kidding yourself here, Brian. Ask how much money abortions really cost, and then consider the effort expended by the anti-abortion crowd. Is it proportionate?

barfo

That would depend on one's moral point of view. I think abortion is murder. Therefore, I don't consider the cost to save human lives. Human life, to me, is too precious. To others, it's not.
 
He looks too much like puti-poot.
vladimir_putin_01.jpg


mitch+daniels.jpg


joking aside, I agree with maxie. If GOP has a chance of moving into the 21st century, they must drop the social issues for now. I don't agree with "lowest public employee rate" stuff, but killing debt might be more important right now.

Gads, maybe they were separated at birth.
 
However, I don't want my tax dollars funding clinics or paying for that woman to have one.

That is a shame... because I think they have shown that unwanted pregnancies generate a lot higher rate of kids that end up prison... and the cost of housing them for years in prison is a lot less than if would have been to help fund the abortion. Strickly speaking dollars and cents.
 
"Strickly speaking dollars and sense", so would state-mandated sterilization. But that's not really someplace I want the government to go.
 
Unfortunately, lefties don't want their dollars spent on X things, and righties don't want their dollars spent on Y things.

I'd be happy to spend on neither.
 
I think you might be kidding yourself here, Brian. Ask how much money abortions really cost, and then consider the effort expended by the anti-abortion crowd. Is it proportionate?

barfo

Whether someone wants to spend their dollars funding an abortion clinic or protesting one isn't my concern. As I said in another thread, I don't think the gov't should be spending on "abstinence campaigns" either, and that's something I actually believe in.
 
Unfortunately, lefties don't want their dollars spent on X things, and righties don't want their dollars spent on Y things.

I'd be happy to spend on neither.

That's where I'm going with this. There are some things that the government is chartered to do that the people can't. Everything else is luxury. When there's money to spend, I don't necessarily care that the, government is giving to charity in multiple forms. When there isn't money to spend, those luxuries shouldn't be expended.
 
That would depend on one's moral point of view. I think abortion is murder. Therefore, I don't consider the cost to save human lives. Human life, to me, is too precious. To others, it's not.

Sure. If you think it is murder, then naturally, a vigorous campaign against it makes sense, if you have nothing better to do with your time.
Brian, however, implied that the opposition stemmed from financial considerations rather than moral, and that was the point I was addressing.

barfo
 
Whether someone wants to spend their dollars funding an abortion clinic or protesting one isn't my concern. As I said in another thread, I don't think the gov't should be spending on "abstinence campaigns" either, and that's something I actually believe in.

I thought you were taking the position that people oppose abortion for financial reasons.

Honestly (and again, I'm a bit biased), but the "social issues" aren't generally about the social side, but the financial side.

Your opposition to abortion may well be financial, but I don't think that's true of most people who are anti-abortion.

barfo
 
That's where I'm going with this. There are some things that the government is chartered to do that the people can't. Everything else is luxury. When there's money to spend, I don't necessarily care that the, government is giving to charity in multiple forms. When there isn't money to spend, those luxuries shouldn't be expended.

So, what percentage of the budget goes for abortions?

I don't know but I think it must be pretty damn tiny. So why not talk about farm subsidies? Or those new warplanes? Or something that would actually make a difference you could observe without a microscope?

barfo
 
For DOMA, it's about wondering why people who choose to live an alternative lifestyle want the rights that come with marriage.

You wonder why people want benefits that other people have? That really doesn't seem like a hard problem to solve.

It seems that the problem comes from people living the alternative lifestyle wanting some of the "1100 rights and protections conferred on marriage, including Social Security benefits, veterans' benefits, health insurance, Medicaid, hospital visitation, estate taxes, retirement savings, pensions, family leave, and immigration law." Again, this is a financial issue, not a social one.

Pretty sure hospital visitation is not a financial issue. The others arguably all have both financial and social elements.

If you'd like to "even the playing field", remove or reduce some of those protections and rights. But I don't think 51% of the country (or their legislative representation) would go for that.

I will :)

barfo
 
No one is saying that a woman can't live with a woman, or a man with a man, and certainly no one is legislating what goes on in those bedrooms.

Actually, in many places there are/were "anti co-habitation laws" that prevented even a man & a woman from living together unless they were married. In many places there are anti-sodomy laws or laws against sex toys(why they're called "marital aids" sometimes). Also the fact that something is not illegal, doesn't mean that people accept it. It may have been legal once the civil rights movement took place for a white man to live with a black woman(or visa versa) but that doesn't mean there wasn't closeted discrimination against them. It isn't illegal to be a Muslim in the US, but that doesn't mean you won't get flack for it.

If something is legal(abortion), why balk at the government spending money on it? That is unless you think it's illegal and don't want the government spending money on it, which sounds more like the case? You recognize it's law, suggesting that the law should not be questioned, yet you then suggest we should add a law that changes the current construct of the existing law. Laws can be morphed & changed, we're not still living with all the laws from 1776 on the books. Vote or demonstrate against abortion all you want, most laws come from social pressures. It sounds like you want the law changed, then just be outright with it.

Marriage is indeed a sector of law that needs to be changed. You make it sounds like you're trying to divorce your moral/religious thoughts from the decision making, but it still seems as though those thoughts are front & center. If you want to look at marriage objectively it should merely be a contract between two people(or more?) who want the benefits of marriage. Marriage is no longer about possession of a woman or procreation, it provides both social & financial protection for the parties involved. Our society also views it as an "ultimate act of love" showing your deep commitment to your partner(partners). As far as the .gov is concerned, though, it should merely be a business contract between the parties involved. If you want to segregate it, then there better be a good reason why, but there really isn't an objective reason to prevent gay marriage other than religious/moral reasons.

Ultimately let's strip the .gov clean of corruption & wasteful spending, I am all for that. But your choice topics around gay marriage & abstinence only education make it sound like you'd prefer to force your moral/religious viewpoints on others, while trying to mask it as some sort of fiscal concern.
 
For Barfo and Klinky,

I chose those topics b/c they were ones that many would say are "social" conservative issues, and I was trying to point out that they have financial aspects to them. Of course things like farm subsidies and warplanes and Medicare overruns and welfare are "on the table", but to my knowledge no one's saying that farm subsidies or warplanes are a "social issue to be put away" that Denny's talking about. (Though I wonder where the "fascist banning of the unions" crowd was when this guy did it 5 years ago)

Honestly (and again, I'm a bit biased), but the "social issues" aren't generally about the social side, but the financial side.
Of course you're going to have a vocal minority who want to stand outside clinics or hold up posters outside city hall or go on the radio and bash people not like them, but we both know that that doesn't represent social conservatives, rabid evangelicals, "whacky" Christians or whatever at-large.

Most of the people I know and go to church with and work with in the community are those who many of you would call whacky. We go to church every week, give a chunk of our pay to the church, volunteer for social work b/c we believe that it's mandatory, etc. We don't believe that abortion is right and if it came to a vote we would vote against it. But there's a difference that comes b/w acceptance that that's what the world we live in believes and has legislated vs. supporting it with our money. In religious terms, (and speaking only for myself and my opinion now) that difference is the difference b/w living and ministering in a broken world versus a sin of commission of using my God-given resources to help pay for something that He says is wrong.

It sounds like you want the law changed, then just be outright with it.
Because for me (and again, this is personal opinion), having one-issue voting is stupid. There's no one (probably not even my wife :) ) who would legislate and execute our government exactly the way I'd do it or like someone to do it. And I DO think abortion is wrong. I believe that many things are wrong. And I believe in many things that we don't do as a country that I think would be good things.

If something is legal(abortion), why balk at the government spending money on it?
For one reason, because I don't think gov't should spend money or insert itself in every realm it thinks it "legal". It's legal to home-school your kids, for instance, but I don't think the gov't should be paying parents to keep their kids out of school and only teach them what they want to. It's legal to consume alcohol, but I don't think WA state should be publicly paying overhead for liquor distribution. It's legal (if misinformed) to say that the Holocaust never happened (mixing threads here), but that doesn't mean the gov't should spend money to distribute textbooks that say that to every child in America. Driving is legal, but the government doesn't buy everyone a car.

Democracy in action! :)
 
What doesn't the government regulate or tax?
 
I'm talking about funding. If they want to tax abortions or defense contractor profits I think there's precedent for them to do so. But that's not necessarily in the scope of "limiting" government...fiscally or socially.
 
Everyone has their ox they don't want gored.

You object on moral grounds to money being spent on abortions. There are plenty of people who object to money being spent on anything military, especially using force outside our borders. If you're in favor of one, you basically have to live with the other.

You've already posted that you have your own vision of how govt. should be enacted. I suspect barfo does, too, but it'd be like the old USSR with govt. bread and cheese lines and everyone living in govt. housing.

It's probably a good thing we don't have barfo's world, nor yours, nor any one person's.
 
Everyone has their ox they don't want gored.
What's mine?

You object on moral grounds to money being spent on abortions.
So what about my non-moral grounds for it being spent on abstinence training? It's a cop-out to say it's all moral-based and therefore not worth talking about.
There are plenty of people who object to money being spent on anything military, especially using force outside our borders. If you're in favor of one, you basically have to live with the other.
Completely disagree. One is defined by the constitution, one is not.

You've already posted that you have your own vision of how govt. should be enacted. I suspect barfo does, too, but it'd be like the old USSR with govt. bread and cheese lines and everyone living in govt. housing.
It's probably a good thing we don't have barfo's world, nor yours, nor any one person's.
But you advocate paying for those things that aren't common?
 
What's mine?

So what about my non-moral grounds for it being spent on abstinence training? It's a cop-out to say it's all moral-based and therefore not worth talking about.
Completely disagree. One is defined by the constitution, one is not.

But you advocate paying for those things that aren't common?

I advocate govt. paying for as little as possible. The govt. that governs best governs the least.

The reality is that govt. spends near $4T and some of it you're going to be satisfied with and some not. Same for me, and same for barfo.

At the same time, I don't see why your anti-abortion morality should be forced on anyone else, nor should someone's social agenda be forced on others as well.
 
I don't see why your anti-abortion morality should be forced on anyone else, nor should someone's social agenda be forced on others as well.
not at all. My views for or against it don't factor in anyone's life. As vociferous (or not) as I am in my "moral" view, no one pays a dollar or a shred of attention. That NOT the case, though, for those using my tax dollars FOR the abortions (or any other aspect of the "social agenda" you'd like). If they want to have them, go for it. Just pay for it yourself or get someone else (a charity, maybe?) to do so.

And again, that's not a moral argument. It's a fiscal one. That's why I keep bringing up abstinence training. Do you want your children only taught abstinence with your tax dollars? Doesn't matter, b/c it's a "luxury" the government can't afford.

The "reality" that the gov't spends nearly $4T is the one we're talking about. Fiscal conservatism, whether or not social goes along with it. And as soon as we start divorcing the emotional stuff from the argument, the sooner we'll be back on track.
 
$393 million from tax payers covers 800 Planned Parenthood clinics for a full year...



$393 million dollars covers 24 hours of military services in Iraq and Afghanistan.
 
$393 million from tax payers covers 800 Planned Parenthood clinics for a full year...



$393 million dollars covers 24 hours of military services in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Exactly.

At $300 per abortion, it'd cost $450M to pay for every abortion during the peak abortion years. The number of abortions are actually significantly on the decline since 1996.

I don't at all suggest govt. pay for abortions, or much of anything else. I hope that's clear.

But if govt. is going to pay for all sorts of things, abortions aren't particularly different than anything else it spends on.

For the record, the federal govt. doesn't pay for any abortions.
 

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