thanatos144
Gold Member
Are you for the concentration of money to the extent that it destroys the American political system?
Why do you assume there is a limited amount of wealth?????
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature currently requires accessing the site using the built-in Safari browser.
Are you for the concentration of money to the extent that it destroys the American political system?
Why do you assume that I assume that?
Another goof ball with blinders, unable to see or hear another point of view, even if presented reasonably and without doctrinaire preconceptions.
The total misunderstanding and misinterpretation represented by the above post is too extensive and tiring to address.
If you think being here alone means you have won, feel good.
Another goof ball with blinders, unable to see or hear another point of view, even if presented reasonably and without doctrinaire preconceptions.
The total misunderstanding and misinterpretation represented by the above post is too extensive and tiring to address.
If you think being here alone means you have won, feel good.
Are you for the concentration of money to the extent that it destroys the American political system?
Are you for the concentration of money to the extent that it destroys the American political system?
YOU are the problem...FUCK the 'political system'. That's the problem Very FEW Statesmen.Are you for the concentration of money to the extent that it destroys the American political system?
what is ''the welfare state''? Social security? Medicare? Medicare pill bill?"The welfare state is the single biggest financial problem we face, annually consuming more than the combined cost of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars plus the TARP bailouts. Like The Blob, it grows by devouring everything in its path, requiring us to borrow $41,222 per second just to keep government running. At almost $16 trillion, the national debt exceeds the size of our economy and is growing so rapidly that the Congressional Budget Office predicted it could cause a permanent recession by 2025.
Like an overweight jockey riding an emaciated thoroughbred, our bloated government sector is not only crushing the private economy; it's handicapping our opportunity society. Americans are aspirational and self-reliant people, so it's heart-wrenching to note that after spending $15 trillion in the war on poverty, America's poverty rate has barely budged, food-stamp dependency is at a record high, and the percentage of Americans in the work force is at a record low.
As economist Herb Stein said, If something can't go on forever, it will stop. New York Times columnist Bill Keller called for that last week, writing, We should make a sensible reform of entitlements our generation's cause.
http://www.aspentimes.com/article/20120802/COLUMN/120809987/1021&parentprofile=1061
What a cabal of nincompoops!
You can't even deal with a simple question in simple English, yet attack someone else by making entirely inappropriate, baseless assumptions.
Because you feel your entirely partisan position is being attacked, you accuse the 'attacker' of being partisan.
Pathetic, really. You think you are participating in a discussion? You are only masturbating.
What a cabal of nincompoops!
You can't even deal with a simple question in simple English, yet attack someone else by making entirely inappropriate, baseless assumptions.
Because you feel your entirely partisan position is being attacked, you accuse the 'attacker' of being partisan.
Pathetic, really. You think you are participating in a discussion? You are only masturbating.
IF there is an unlimited amount of money and wealth to be had, then I suppose there must be an unlimited amount of money and wealth to support the welfare state..... and that just isn't the case, is it?
If there is an unlimited amount of money and wealth to be had, then why do we have so many unemployed?
IF there is an unlimited amount of money and wealth to be had, then I suppose there must be an unlimited amount of money and wealth to support the welfare state..... and that just isn't the case, is it?
If there is an unlimited amount of money and wealth to be had, then why do we have so many unemployed?
The answer is, there is no unlimited wealth and money to be had and we have a president who cannot get jobs going again. Maybe if he got off the campaign fundraising and golf course and had a Jobs Council meeting....
What a bunch of bunk Jackson, once every 2 weeks for a few hours...playing a game of golf is not excessive what so ever and that just shows your bias and partisanship on your coat sleeve and makes you someone who no one with a brain should ever listen to or pay attention to on real serious issues imho....and honestly, I didn't initially see you as one of "these kind of posters" but hey, I guess I was wrong.IF there is an unlimited amount of money and wealth to be had, then I suppose there must be an unlimited amount of money and wealth to support the welfare state..... and that just isn't the case, is it?
If there is an unlimited amount of money and wealth to be had, then why do we have so many unemployed?
The answer is, there is no unlimited wealth and money to be had and we have a president who cannot get jobs going again. Maybe if he got off the campaign fundraising and golf course and had a Jobs Council meeting....
"The welfare state is the single biggest financial problem we face, annually consuming more than the combined cost of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars plus the TARP bailouts. Like The Blob, it grows by devouring everything in its path, requiring us to borrow $41,222 per second just to keep government running. At almost $16 trillion, the national debt exceeds the size of our economy and is growing so rapidly that the Congressional Budget Office predicted it could cause a permanent recession by 2025.
Like an overweight jockey riding an emaciated thoroughbred, our bloated government sector is not only crushing the private economy; it's handicapping our opportunity society. Americans are aspirational and self-reliant people, so it's heart-wrenching to note that after spending $15 trillion in the war on poverty, America's poverty rate has barely budged, food-stamp dependency is at a record high, and the percentage of Americans in the work force is at a record low.
As economist Herb Stein said, If something can't go on forever, it will stop. New York Times columnist Bill Keller called for that last week, writing, We should make a sensible reform of entitlements our generation's cause.
http://www.aspentimes.com/article/20120802/COLUMN/120809987/1021&parentprofile=1061