Fixed that for you.
Why? Because I believe risk and failure are integral parts of capitalism?
Fixed that for you.
anti-vegan
I'm the only person that has so far responded that I'm a registered member of either party. Riiiiiiiiight. I'm sure that reflects reality.
Let me decode some of these.
I actually think you and I are in virtual lockstep on this issue, so I'm not certain why you called me out by name here.
This would make you an Eisenhower Republican. Congratulations, you are currently represented by nobody.
This is highly disturbing.
Let me guess: Good is your way of thinking and Evil is against your way of thinking.
You're a liberal. Don't run from it. Embrace it. No one is fooled.
Fixed that for you.
Barely above an anarchist.
Thomas Jefferson and Benjamin Franklin and a lot of other signers of the Declaration of Independence were more courageous than I in taking my stand. I know Canadians might sorta question why the colonies revolted from their queen, but it was the Americans who picked up the line of advancement in human rights and took it to the next level.
Overall, their idea of government was that it should be restricted to the narrowest definition of essential things to keep the United States strong enough to remain free and free enough to prosper.
That's why I signed on with the Constitution Party a few years ago, but I have to admit I like Ralph Nader too, and some of the Libertarian leaders.
I know a fair number of people who would be ashamed if anyone knew they once voted for Carter, Bush, or Clinton. . . . because they were all disappointments. . . . I was confessing that I sometimes feel ashamed to be a citizen of a country that goes around the world strutin' our military hardware and imposing our corporate interests on people who never got to vote on what we're doing. In the short run it's "useless foreign wars", in the long run it will backfire on us and hurt us all.Our founders had a revolutionary ideal of human liberty but they did not seek to go out and impose it on other nations. Their foreign policy was "Alliance with none, Commerce with all."
We don't need to have American-owned oil cartels pumping the arab oil. We just need a desireable stable currency and a lot of stuff we can exchange at a fair price for what we need.
SirKicky, like a lot of fairly smart liberals, is inverting the American value system and thinking in terms of governance needs, convenience for the managerial class, over what would happen if people were making their own decisions. A lot of folks have the librarian mentality. Sure they've read a lot of books and have a lot of good ideas of how things can be improved in the world, and somehow they have inserted themselves into the equation as somehow wiser than others and fit to make the decisions for others. While individuals might check books out from the same library, they are free to subsequently think things over and maybe do something better than the books say. It's not for a few very smart people to guide mankind and assume control of governance, it's for people to choose to take responsibility for themselves and act in their own chosen way, and direct their government.
That's why there was an American Revolution.
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I actually think you and I are in virtual lockstep on this issue, so I'm not certain why you called me out by name here.
Registered Independent, vote Dem more often than not. I won't register with a party until we get rid of the electoral college and go with some form of popular vote. Obama supporter, although I have always contended that he was the best of two bad options. I loved Jon Huntsman Jr when he was Governor, and he'd be the only guy that I'd even consider voting for over Obama.
Nah. You wrote you were "moderate, leaning left." I see that and think "blue dog Dem." That's not you.
I'm a registered Dem. For the most part I can't stand the republican agenda, and the fools that spew it as if it's THE only way to go.
Just curious, what do you think about the fools that spew the democratic agenda as if it's THE only way to go? That door swings both ways.
Good call, I should've been more clear.
I can't stand both sides. Hannity, Rush, Beck, Savage, Olberman, Colbert, Stewart, etc. I wouldn't piss on them to put out a fire. We have versions of them here, The Thriller, MillHopper, KOC BEGONE, etc. I am very interested in hearing both sides, as long as they're delivered in a non-dumbass sort of way. For example, The Pearl, Duck (sometimes), Tink, Franklin, and OneBrow are people that I will listen to what they have to say with an open mind. I probably won't chime in on any of their conversations (because I'm a moron), but I do ponder a lot of the crap they talk about.
I probably won't chime in on any of their conversations (because I'm a moron)
This is highly disturbing.
Let me guess: Good is your way of thinking and Evil is against your way of thinking.
Only for a little contrast. I'm sure I'm somewhere to the right of you on the transfer payments issue.
I can't stand both sides. Hannity, Rush, Beck, Savage, Olberman, Colbert, Stewart, etc. I wouldn't piss on them to put out a fire.
Or because you're a smart salesman. Guys like you should get a special exemption to the one account rule. One for your regular activity and one for sensitive topics that might push business away.
There is a British-Anglo satanic empire
Probably. I recognize the problems with transfer payments, I just don't think we're in the nightmare moral hazard scenarios that the right asserts. And frankly, I think they'll assert the extreme moral hazard for as long as New Deal-style programs exist.