pennypicker wrote:Political analyists say that this team will take the opposite road and cut way back on government spending and entitelments. Quantitative easing will stop as they will focus on shrinking the national debt.
OneBiteAtATime wrote:Mitt Romney is a puppet of no man.
OneBiteAtATime wrote:Paul Ryan is a great choice. It frames the debate around the budget.
OneBiteAtATime wrote:Ryan had A budget, which should be separation enough to show there's a difference.
OneBiteAtATime wrote:Nate, we all know where you're coming from. I have a lot in common with the Paul camp. I wonder though if you can find me a cute little cartoon with someone pointing and screaming, "You're an unelectable distraction! A skinny little distraction!"
you cannot see my tongue firmly planted in my cheek, but It's there.
Paul Ryan on Bailouts and Government Stimuli
-Voted YES on TARP (2008)
-Voted YES on Economic Stimulus HR 5140 (2008)
-Voted YES on $15B bailout for GM and Chrysler. (Dec 2008)
-Voted YES on $192B additional anti-recession stimulus spending. (Jul 2009)
Paul Ryan on Entitlement Programs
-Voted YES on limited prescription drug benefit for Medicare recipients. (Nov 2003)
-Voted YES on providing $70 million for Section 8 Housing vouchers. (Jun 2006)
-Voted YES on extending unemployment benefits from 39 weeks to 59 weeks. (Oct 2008)
-Voted YES on Head Start Act (2007)
Paul Ryan on Education
Rep. Ryan went along with the Bush Administration in supporting more federal involvement in education. This is contrary to the traditional Republican position, which included support for abolition of the Department of Education and decreasing federal involvement in education.
-Voted YES on No Child Left Behind Act (2001)
Paul Ryan on Civil Liberties
-Voted YES on federalizing rules for driver licenses to hinder terrorists. (Feb 2005)
-Voted YES on making the PATRIOT Act permanent. (Dec 2005)
-Voted YES on allowing electronic surveillance without a warrant. (Sep 2006)
Paul Ryan on War and Intervention Abroad
-Voted YES on authorizing military force in Iraq. (Oct 2002)
-Voted YES on emergency $78B for war in Iraq & Afghanistan. (Apr 2003)
-Voted YES on declaring Iraq part of War on Terror with no exit date. (Jun 2006)
-Voted NO on redeploying US troops out of Iraq starting in 90 days. (May 2007)
Congressman Ryan supports the United Nations, the World Trade Organization, federal bailouts, increased federal involvement in education, unconstitutional and undeclared wars, Medicare Part D (a multi trillion dollar unfunded liability), stimulus spending, and foreign aid.
OneBiteAtATime wrote:When you play chess do you always go for mate in 4 moves? You try, but it doesn't really work that way. You have.to take the board one piece at a time. The revolutionary left is better at chess than we are.
natsb88 wrote:OneBiteAtATime wrote:When you play chess do you always go for mate in 4 moves? You try, but it doesn't really work that way. You have.to take the board one piece at a time. The revolutionary left is better at chess than we are.
Chess is particularly difficult when your opponent keeps changing the rules mid-game. Or like they are now doing in Maine, they just get frustrated and knock the board to the ground
barrytrot wrote:So your solution is to make sure that no one wants the job?
Do you think that would yield more good candidates or less?
What we really need to do is make the job of Congress and the president like that of a successful company. Give them incentives for making things better, etc.
Reducing their incentive to zilch certainly won't work. And will yield even more corruption (assuming more corruption is possible).
shinnosuke wrote:natsb88 wrote:OneBiteAtATime wrote:When you play chess do you always go for mate in 4 moves? You try, but it doesn't really work that way. You have.to take the board one piece at a time. The revolutionary left is better at chess than we are.
Chess is particularly difficult when your opponent keeps changing the rules mid-game. Or like they are now doing in Maine, they just get frustrated and knock the board to the ground
Not enough people will understand what you're talking about. You should provide a link.
OneBiteAtATime wrote:More importantly, from my perspective is whether R&R can pull us back at all. If they have a willing Congress, that have a chance to regain some semblance of order to the federal mechanism. If they do, it will mean austerity, which will mean street riots. Street riots mean good things for PM, but not good things for a bruised and battered country. Can the American rule himself again as we did years ago? I sincerely hope so. The slide into a dependant society is horrible. Don't we have any pride anymore as a people? Are we really so willing to accept a handout that we'll trade our liberty for it?
Romney/Ryan cannot heal the underlying problem that we've become drunk and lazy. It has to be a change in the mind and heart of the American people. R&R with a willing Congress CAN make conditions easier for a wholesale change of heart.
Not an exact quote, but Ben Franklin said, "Make the poor uncomfortable in their poverty, and they will lift themselves out of it." Since the 1930s we've made the poor more and more comfortable, to the point that It's easier to be poor and comfortable than it is to work hard to get ahead.
PMs. I don't think it matters who's in the figurehead seat. The underlying problem is Fiat currency in general. That said, we can be a great nation, we can be a shining beacon on the hill, we can be the hope of freedom loving people all over the world, if we can make a decision to stand on our own two feet again.
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