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Posted by Dr Strangelove (Member # 8331) on :
 
I didn't listen to the full thing (I was listening to it on my way home from work), but as I respect the opinions of the people here on Hatrack, what did ya'll think?
 
Posted by Evie3217 (Member # 5426) on :
 
I was scared, frankly. He basically stated that we need to go to war against Iran and "social security doesn't work because, back when it was created, people didn't live as long." I won't go into long rants, but I'm worried, frankly.

On a lighter note, Tim Kaine's eyebrows are AMAZING!
 
Posted by Belle (Member # 2314) on :
 
I'm on an anti-politics kick right now. I didn't even watch it. Time was I wouldn't miss it, but I just don't have the stomach for it.
 
Posted by ricree101 (Member # 7749) on :
 
Aw shoot, I forgot about that. Does anyone have a link to a transcript?
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
Transcript
 
Posted by littlemissattitude (Member # 4514) on :
 
Didn't watch or listen. I'll find a transcript and read it later. I've gotten to the point where I just can't look at or listen to that man without getting upset and frightened.

Apparently lots of people didn't listen or watch, though. I took my mother out to dinner just at the time the speech was starting (6 p.m. out here on the west coast), and the restaurant was packed. It's never that busy on Tuesday night.
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
I just get too frustrated by his statements to listen to more than 5 seconds of him.
 
Posted by Zamphyr (Member # 6213) on :
 
My favorite part was when he called for a ban on animal-human hybrids.


Really. I just didn't see that one coming.
 
Posted by Reticulum (Member # 8776) on :
 
I, democrat, thought overall, it was pretty good. the science and technology appealed tp me.
 
Posted by ricree101 (Member # 7749) on :
 
Thanks for the link Lyrhawn.

I actually liked some of the domestic policy that he proposed. I'm glad to see that alternative energy research is still a stated priority, and I hope that there is some followthrough on that in the coming year.

I also liked to see him talk about increasing science education. I can't really see this becoming anything besides more important in the future. As many manufacturing and other similar jobs are lost, we as a nation will become increasingly dependant on invention and innovation . In my opinion, education is one of the most important factors in this process.
 
Posted by Evie3217 (Member # 5426) on :
 
quote:
I've gotten to the point where I just can't look at or listen to that man without getting upset and frightened.
I totally agree. There were parts that just upset me to no end and honestly scared me to no end. *sigh*
quote:
My favorite part was when he called for a ban on animal-human hybrids.


Really. I just didn't see that one coming.

I was transcribing for my friend in England, and when that came up I had to reread what I had just written to make sure that what I said made sense. Needless to say, it didn't, but I sent it anyway.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
I'm halfway through his speech...here's what's jumped out at me so far.

quote:
We have served America through one of the most consequential periods of our history -- and it has been my honor to serve with you.
I don't know, more consequential than the Civil War, World Wars, Vietnam, the Civil Rights Movement, the foundation of the country, the War of 1812....I suppose every president likes to say that, but compared to other problems we've faced, I'd say he's overstating. Besides, he if means consequential in the sense of consequences of our own actions...well, then he may be right.

quote:
Dictatorships shelter terrorists, feed resentment and radicalism, and seek weapons of mass destruction. Democracies replace resentment with hope, respect the rights of their citizens and their neighbors, and join the fight against terror.
Really? Always? You don't seem to agree with yourself whenever you bring up Palestine.

quote:
Yet there is a difference between responsible criticism that aims for success, and defeatism that refuses to acknowledge anything but failure. Hindsight alone is not wisdom. And second-guessing is not a strategy.
As soon as you recognize that difference, I'll be right there beside you with support.

quote:
We show compassion abroad because Americans believe in the God-given dignity and worth of a villager with HIV/AIDS, or an infant with malaria, or a refugee fleeing genocide...
Yes, we're all about helping refugees by throwing money at the problem. Stop the genocide? What, and get our hands dirty?! No, let's send them cash.

quote:
Keeping America competitive begins with keeping our economy growing. And our economy grows when Americans have more of their own money to spend, save, and invest. In the last five years, the tax relief you passed has left $880 billion in the hands of American workers, investors, small businesses, and families -- and they have used it to help produce more than four years of uninterrupted economic growth. Yet the tax relief is set to expire in the next few years. If we do nothing, American families will face a massive tax increase they do not expect and will not welcome.
Yes, and I wonder how much of that $880 billion actually goes to lower income families, and how much goes to the already wealthy. If you ask me, this is a vile misrepresentation of the tax cuts.

quote:
me and President Bill Clinton.
Silly man, it's "President Clinton and I."

quote:
Keeping America competitive requires affordable health care. Our government has a responsibility to help provide health care for the poor and the elderly, and we are meeting that responsibility. For all Americans, we must confront the rising cost of care ... strengthen the doctor-patient relationship ... and help people afford the insurance coverage they need. We will make wider use of electronic records and other health information technology, to help control costs and reduce dangerous medical errors. We will strengthen health savings accounts -- by making sure individuals and small business employees can buy insurance with the same advantages that people working for big businesses now get. We will do more to make this coverage portable, so workers can switch jobs without having to worry about losing their health insurance. And because lawsuits are driving many good doctors out of practice -- leaving women in nearly 1,500 American counties without a single OB-GYN -- I ask the Congress to pass medical liability reform this year.
Well said.
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
quote:
quote:
me and President Bill Clinton.
Silly man, it's "President Clinton and I."
Actually, "me" is correct in this situation, and "I" would be incorrect.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
quote:
The best way to break this addiction is through technology. Since 2001, we have spent nearly $10 billion to develop cleaner, cheaper, more reliable alternative energy sources -- and we are on the threshold of incredible advances. So tonight, I announce the Advanced Energy Initiative -- a 22 percent increase in clean-energy research at the Department of Energy, to push for breakthroughs in two vital areas. To change how we power our homes and offices, we will invest more in zero-emission coal-fired plants; revolutionary solar and wind technologies; and clean, safe nuclear energy.
Did he seriously just say that? I think I just had a tiny orgasm. An energy plan from BUSH that is based on alternative energy and innovation and NOT based on drilling in Alaska!? It's a miracle! He must have been channeling Al Gore and John Kerry.

quote:
Breakthroughs on this and other new technologies will help us reach another great goal: to replace more than 75 percent of our oil imports from the Middle East by 2025. By applying the talent and technology of America, this country can dramatically improve our environment ... move beyond a petroleum-based economy ... and make our dependence on Middle Eastern oil a thing of the past.
Yes!! YAY!!! YAY!!!!!!

quote:
Third: We need to encourage children to take more math and science, and make sure those courses are rigorous enough to compete with other nations. We have made a good start in the early grades with the No Child Left Behind Act, which is raising standards and lifting test scores across our country. Tonight I propose to train 70,000 high school teachers, to lead advanced-placement courses in math and science ... bring 30,000 math and science professionals to teach in classrooms ... and give early help to students who struggle with math, so they have a better chance at good, high-wage jobs. If we ensure that America's children succeed in life, they will ensure that America succeeds in the world.
Holy crap, it's like he took his liberal pills this morning! And I think maybe I took some crazy pills, 'cause I am LOVING the things this man is saying. Would have been nice if he mentioned tuition assistance and pay raises for these new teachers, otherwise I don't see how he plans to lure that many people into teaching. This doesn't really affect me, as I'm going to be a history teacher, but I'm all for anything that improved education in the US.


quote:
Tonight I ask you to pass legislation to prohibit the most egregious abuses of medical research -- human cloning in all its forms ... creating or implanting embryos for experiments ... creating human-animal hybrids ... and buying, selling, or patenting human embryos. Human life is a gift from our creator
If he means using stem cells to create new organs for people who need them, I'm against him 100%. Otherwise, I agree. Though, come on, cat people would be cool!

I would have liked to see something about trade relations with China, and how he plans to fix it. But I don't think he directly made reference to a possible war with Iran. If anything, it sounded like he was insinuating that we'd support a popular uprising in Iran. But all in all, the second half of that speech could have come right out of the mouth of Hillary Clinton, or any other of the "radical liberal" in the democratic party. I don't care though, I don't care who says it, and who gets it done, just so long as somebody does!
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
mph -

Why is that? I thought the "so and so and I" rule was absolute.
 
Posted by mr_porteiro_head (Member # 4644) on :
 
That rule is absolutely wrong. Use "I" when it's correct, and use "me" when it's correct.

The easiest way to test is to get rid of whatever goes along with "me" or "I" and see which one fits.

The original phrase is "two of my dad's favorite people -- me and President Bill Clinton".

The two test phrases are "one of my dad's favorite people -- me." and "one of my dad's favorite people -- I."

The first one is obviously correct, and the second one incorrect.

If you can't use the word "I" by itself in that situation, you shouldn't use it with "and".
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Evie3217:
"social security doesn't work because, back when it was created, people didn't live as long."

Er...could you tell me where you're getting this from? I just read the transcript and I didn't see him saying that anywhere.

--Mel
 
Posted by JennaDean (Member # 8816) on :
 
Lyrhawn, take out the other person's name and see how you'd finish the sentence - would you use "me" or "I"?

Example:

"President Clinton and I are going to make a TV commercial together." (Take out his name and you'd still start the sentence with "I".)

"Do you want to come on a double date with President Clinton and me?" (Take out his name and you'd end the sentence with "me," not "I".)

Oops ... MPH beat me. Back to politics...
 
Posted by Evie3217 (Member # 5426) on :
 
That wasn't an exact quote. I was typing an IM to my friend at the time, and that was my friend's paraphrase. I should have stated that. Sorry.
 
Posted by theCrowsWife (Member # 8302) on :
 
Even so, I couldn't find anything that could be paraphrased that way.
 
Posted by Bob_Scopatz (Member # 1227) on :
 
The bit about human/animal hybrids could prove to be a serious blow to some very promising research. I wonder if he's talking about all gene splicing research (e.g., putting human genes for insulin into a bacterium)? There's a horizon of custom-tailored medications that is going to be completely squelched if we can't do gene splicing unless it's human-to-human.
 
Posted by Evie3217 (Member # 5426) on :
 
quote:
The retirement of the baby-boom generation will put unprecedented strains on the federal government. By 2030, spending for Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid alone will be almost 60 percent of the entire federal budget.
That's how my friend interpreted it. Looking back on it now, though, I think that's the wrong interpretation, and I shouldn't have written that. But I can see where she was coming from.

Aka, discard all of my previous statements. [Razz]
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
quote:
Dictatorships shelter terrorists, feed resentment and radicalism, and seek weapons of mass destruction. Democracies replace resentment with hope, respect the rights of their citizens and their neighbors, and join the fight against terror.
I wanted to expand on this in particular more than what I said earlier. I think this, more than anything else in his speech, was a gross misrepresentation of the truth.

He's making the claim that we should support the war in Iraq because it will leave a democracy in our wake, and democracies always choose freedom and are the natural enemies of terror, but he flagrantly glosses over Palestine/Hamas in the second half of his speech. Clearly in the Middle East, democracy isn't automatically the same thing it is here, and it seems he's trying to hide that fact to pass his agenda and win support. I think that's dangerous for the American people. And I hope someone calls him out on it.
 
Posted by blacwolve (Member # 2972) on :
 
I actually really agreed with most of it. Granted, my friends and I only paid close attention towards the domestic policy parts. During most of the international stuff we were joking about how it should have been labeled "State of the World" and about the title "War on Terror".

I think I agreed with all of the domestic policies except the domestic wiretapping. I'm also on the fence as regards to the line item veto, although I'm the first to say I don't have enough information to make a decision.

Still, overall a pleasant surprise. I also thought the Democratic response was surprisingly nonpartisan. I did think it was a perfect example of why Democrats aren't winning elections. Did anyone catch what the "better way" he kept mentioning actually was?
 
Posted by Carrie (Member # 394) on :
 
While I cannot deny the obvious importance of getting children better math and science educations, I would like to see them semi-literate and able to enjoy reading books - you know, the silly things that belong in English departments. I certainly did not hear the speech this evening, and so I can't speak to the entirety of the President's speech, but taken out of context, I'm personally saddened by this lack of emphasis on that which makes culture and not just science.

Oh well. I'm just a hard-core Humanities person. I'll spread my love where I can and run from there, because people choosing to follow it instead of having it shoved down their throats for years in school is pretty nice to see.

[/personal sad reflection]
 
Posted by Lalo (Member # 3772) on :
 
My favorite part was the standing ovations. The Republicans gave them after every punctuation mark or breath, whichever came first, and the Democrats started cheering whenever Bush fouled up.

Say what you want about the future of the country, but at least there's entertainment value in it.
 
Posted by Vadon (Member # 4561) on :
 
Overall, I kind of liked this speech. I think that he has some good plans he's trying to put through.

Some of the things I disagree with, such as the human cloning/genetic engineering, but... overall, not bad.
 
Posted by fugu13 (Member # 2859) on :
 
I'll have to peruse it myself, but keep in mind Bush's track record tends towards not following through on the best-sounding parts of SOTU speeches.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
A few more years and we'll be like a session of the British House of Commons.

I look forward to that day.
 
Posted by Epictetus (Member # 6235) on :
 
I agree with Carrie. Math and Science are not the most important things in life. Sure we're behind, but to focus only on math and science and not anything else can lead to more deficiency in education.

Secondly, I'd like to hear how he intends to lure these "math and science professionals" to teach. Teachers aren't exactly paid that much, it's going to be hard to convince someone making, say, $40,000 year, to teach and get $25,000 a year (that's about the current the starting wage in Utah for teachers). If you decide to pay these Math and Science professionals more than the other teachers, what sort of message does that send? That math and science are more important than English, or history? And if we do offer highter wages for these professionals to teach, it will be a State's taxpayers footing the bill; quite frankly, there's enough debate already about the ethics of taxpayers paying for public education.

Thinking about it, I suppose you could set up some sort of "guest teacher" program, but why focus only on Math and Science? If you're going to have guest teachers, why not bring in professionals from all walks of life?
 
Posted by Tarrsk (Member # 332) on :
 
We played "State of the Union Bingo" (basically, mark a square when the President says the word listed within) and were scoring Bingos within the first five minutes. Talk about your buzzphrase-happy speeches. I think the most egregious offenders this time around were "freedom," "democracy," and "terrorists"- i.e. business as usual. [Wink]

Epictetus: As a science major who is attending a liberal arts college, I definitely agree that the humanities are critical to an informed and intelligent culture. However, I think that Bush was emphasizing the economic benefits of education, which mostly come from the steady stream of math and science professionals that universities pump out. It wasn't so much a denigration of the humanities and social sciences as much as it was a bone thrown to quiet those durned uppity scientists. As one of said scientists (or scientists-in-training, at least), let me just say that I wasn't impressed.

Don't forget that, in all likelihood, that entire section of his speech was nothing more than doublespeak designed to appeal to a demographic that almost universally despises him. I don't expect any real educational reform to come out of this Administration any time soon, any more than I expect them to actually fund real science. They've made it quite clear than, unless scientists follow the party line, they won't get necessary support, even if it's for desperately critical medical research. Just this week, the New York Times broke a frightening story about what amounts to direct censorship of scientists by the federal government: in effect, scientists that receive federal money have to go through public relations officers before they're allowed to speak with the press these days.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
More teachers are needed, period. They should make sure schools are fully staffed, not just load the nation up with math and science teachers.

Plus I'd like to think I'll be making a bit more than 25K a year when I start. My English teacher from high school makes more than 70K a year and he's in his early 40's.
 
Posted by Celaeno (Member # 8562) on :
 
A friend of mine explained the human-animal hybrid thing, so I figure I'd just quote her. She said it better than I could.

quote:
i believe there are some people who are studying genetic human diseases by inserting the gene for the disease into mouse chromosomes. this allows them to do experiments which they couldn't do with humans. not exactly the picture he will have given most people.

and note that he said _all_ forms of human cloning - so theraputic as well as the whole duplicating yourself thing.

his limiting research to the few lines that existed in 2001 have failed to stop stem cell research, so i guess this is his way of killing it off entirely. twit. of course, he is oblivious to the fact that this is not in accord with his claim that he will keep americans in the forefront of innovations and stuff.

i was momentarily encouraged by him saying that they would kill any programs that had failed to show results or were not cost effective, because i figured we would be saving billions when he killed missile defense...but it seems that wasn't what he meant.


 
Posted by sweetbaboo (Member # 8845) on :
 
Lyrhawn, Epi said *in Utah* teachers are paid $25,000 which is, from my experience, true.

Epictetus, your last statement:

"If you're going to have guest teachers, why not bring in professionals from all walks of life?"

struck me as funny. Current teachers *are* professionals. I will watch what happens with this closely, I thought it was interesting.

As a Canadian, living in the States, I watched my first SOTU last night and overall I was impressed. The only thing that really stood out negatively for me was when he was talking about Iran and I wondered how he was going to get Iran to do what "we" want...!?!?

I really enjoyed this statement:

"Hindsight alone is not wisdom. And second-guessing is not a strategy."
 
Posted by The Pixiest (Member # 1863) on :
 
Belle: I'm with you. Politics just makes me sick these days. The Republicans don't seem to care about shrinking the size of government which is why I voted for them and last night's State of the Dole Queue address just emphasized that...

Syn, dear, if you can't look at the president without getting angry you've lost your ability to listen to him objectively =(

Pix
 
Posted by DarkKnight (Member # 7536) on :
 
I thought Utah or Utah's teachers union and school boards set the teacher's pay? I don't see how that is Bush's fault or has anything to do with him?
Doesn't Utah have a low cost of living as well? I mean $25K in Utah might be like making $50K somewhere else
 
Posted by twinky (Member # 693) on :
 
I listened to the part I was most interested in -- what he had to say about the Palestinian elections and Iran. While I wasn't too surprised, I did expect him to be a bit more belligerent. I was busy, though, so I didn't listen to the rest.
 
Posted by blacwolve (Member # 2972) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by DarkKnight:
I thought Utah or Utah's teachers union and school boards set the teacher's pay? I don't see how that is Bush's fault or has anything to do with him?
Doesn't Utah have a low cost of living as well? I mean $25K in Utah might be like making $50K somewhere else

I don't recall anyone saying it was Bush's fault. People were saying that they hoped the money Bush wants to spend will go not only to math and science, but to increasing teacher's pay overall.

People insult Bush all the time, you really don't need to go looking for insults to get upset about.
 
Posted by BaoQingTian (Member # 8775) on :
 
I usually get excited about state of the union addresses. I was like, yes, finally after listening to endless posturing by both sides this last year about everything from the Florida feeding tube case to Supreme Court nominations some things that I am really concerned about are really coming up.

But then I got sad after I read the last 10 years of SOTU addresses and compared the promises contained in those with reality. Seems like nothing will get done domestically.

Some people made some unfair jabs in this thread. Evie already printed a retract of hers. Maybe Bush's speech scared you, but what your friend said reveals about her mindset of scares me. What she said not IMO is not a misinterpretation, but an outright lie.

Lyrhawn,
"Did he seriously just say that? I think I just had a tiny orgasm. An energy plan from BUSH that is based on alternative energy and innovation and NOT based on drilling in Alaska!?" If you've paid attention, he's been saying that for years. Now where the rubber meets the road is another story. However, I know that last year the company I work for got something like a 1 billion dollar contract for researching/developing alternative energy sources.

Like fugu, I have strong doubts about things getting done though.
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
quote:
As we make progress on the ground, and Iraqi forces increasingly take the lead, we should be able to further decrease our troop levels -- but those decisions will be made by our military commanders, not by politicians in Washington, D.C.
I assume by this he means that the recommendation will only be taken when the military advises it, not that the command of the army rests soley in military hands.

I think that was a little ambiguous.

quote:
Our offensive against terror
It's not a war, I swear. Hee hee. OKay, I let them off for this one, there's only so many times you can say war in a speech. I just think it's funny.

Hee hee, I should so be a speech writer. I think it would be fun. It's like writing an essay, only without footnotes:

quote:
Yet many Americans, especially parents, still have deep concerns about the direction of our culture, and the health of our most basic institutions. They are concerned about unethical conduct by public officials, and discouraged by activist courts that try to redefine marriage.

And they worry about children in our society who need direction and love and about fellow citizens still displaced by natural disaster and about suffering caused by treatable disease.

Okay, note this section. It has the controversal bit there, but then it goes on to cover its tracks by saying things that aren't disputable immediately after. It keeps the shock level down.

I could so write speeches.

[ February 01, 2006, 02:56 PM: Message edited by: Teshi ]
 
Posted by Irregardless (Member # 8529) on :
 
In his reaction on the Today Show this morning, John Kerry asserted that 53% of kids don't graduate high school. What has he been smoking?
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
I try to listen to him objectively, but it is just...so...
difficult...
The frustrating hypocrasy of it all...
 
Posted by Tresopax (Member # 1063) on :
 
quote:
Still, overall a pleasant surprise. I also thought the Democratic response was surprisingly nonpartisan. I did think it was a perfect example of why Democrats aren't winning elections. Did anyone catch what the "better way" he kept mentioning actually was?
Virginia!
 
Posted by erosomniac (Member # 6834) on :
 
quote:
At the start of 2006, more than half the people of our world live in democratic nations. And we do not forget the other half -- in places like Syria, Burma, Zimbabwe, North Korea, and Iran -- because the demands of justice, and the peace of this world, require their freedom as well.
At least now we know which nations need killin'! Mahalo plenny, Bushybush.
 
Posted by Teshi (Member # 5024) on :
 
quote:
The frustrating hypocrasy of it all...
It's not hypocrisy, it's speech writing. All political speeches are like this. I, too, find many of them unbearable to listen to, regardless of whether I agree because they are simply so schemey.
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Teshi:
quote:
The frustrating hypocrasy of it all...
It's not hypocrisy, it's speech writing. All political speeches are like this. I, too, find many of them unbearable to listen to, regardless of whether I agree because they are simply so schemey.
It's not just the speech writing. It's his actions.
It's things like cutting taxes for the upper precentile during a war when the soldiers don't have proper body armor or protection for their vehicles.
It's cutting beneficial programs.
It's the way he always, always, ALWAYS insists that everything is going just fine, when you know it really isn't. Especially with the economy and so many other things.......
 
Posted by ClaudiaTherese (Member # 923) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Irregardless:
In his reaction on the Today Show this morning, John Kerry asserted that 53% of kids don't graduate high school. What has he been smoking?

Any link? That's indeed odd on the surface. I wonder what the referenced denominator was.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by BaoQingTian:
Lyrhawn,
"Did he seriously just say that? I think I just had a tiny orgasm. An energy plan from BUSH that is based on alternative energy and innovation and NOT based on drilling in Alaska!?" If you've paid attention, he's been saying that for years. Now where the rubber meets the road is another story. However, I know that last year the company I work for got something like a 1 billion dollar contract for researching/developing alternative energy sources.

Like fugu, I have strong doubts about things getting done though.

Not entirely, he's never suggested something that extensive, and he's always made MORE OIL the focus of his plan, now he's focusing elsewhere.

And if he isn't serious, it's the stupidest political decision he's ever made. He just put an issue championed by the Democratic party on the front page, and the Dems can run with it. If he tries to shut them down, they get to call him a big fat liar, and he's hardpressed to really defend himself there. Either way, Dems win from that.
 
Posted by JonnyNotSoBravo (Member # 5715) on :
 
I just watched the video part where John Kerry said that 53% of "our children" do not graduate from high school...

I got to it by MSN video, which unfortunately made me use IE instead of Firefox. Yuck! Here's the link: http://video.msn.com/v/us/v.htm?
Search for Today show in the MSN video search box, and it should be on the second page.

Edit: Just to be clear - have Macromedia Flash Player 7 installed, open up IE6 or higher, put the above link in the address bar, Search for Today show in the MSN video search box, and the John Kerry blurb should be on the second page. Katie Couric kinda grilled him a bit.

[ February 01, 2006, 08:16 PM: Message edited by: JonnyNotSoBravo ]
 
Posted by Puppy (Member # 6721) on :
 
quote:
In his reaction on the Today Show this morning, John Kerry asserted that 53% of kids don't graduate high school. What has he been smoking?
I tried a Google search, and found a statistic that said 43% of Mexican immigrant kids in California don't graduate high school ... and even that seems high. Could that be what Kerry was referring to?
 
Posted by Reticulum (Member # 8776) on :
 
I got post 50!
 
Posted by fugu13 (Member # 2859) on :
 
Lyrhawn: no, he'll just fail to put political support behind it, let it flounder in Congress, then assert that Congress never gave him a bill to sign whenever someone tries to call him on it. Same thing his administration has done before, repeatedly.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
I got post 50!
Technically you got reply 50 - post 50 is the last one on the previous page.

Sorry, thank you for playing. [Smile]
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
Fugu - Just before midterms? Democrats can seize that and run with it. They can make it an election issue. "Republicans don't care about the future of America's energy security." If they vote against it.

It's the same thing Republicans have been doing to Democrats for years over tax cuts versus raising taxes. All the Democrats have to do is get the ball rolling and pounce where they may.
 
Posted by fugu13 (Member # 2859) on :
 
No, they can't, not particularly. Most maneuverings in Congress don't involve voting, and even when they do people rarely care. Were someone to vote against a bill receiving a lot of positive publicity, sure, but if the President doesn't get behind the bill and the Republicans don't get behind the bill, then they'll just say any Democrat sponsored bill goes too far and preferably not let it reach the floor.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
So Democrats put forth a bill that exactly matches what the President proposed in his speech. They can always ask for more later, and probably won't get it, but that doesn't leave the President any more to maneuver.

Besides, how can you say that? voting doesn't matter? Republicans hammer Democrats every election on voting records that involve taxes. When it comes to money, people take notice, and energy prices are on the minds of a LOT of lower income voters. People will take notice, with or without the media, if the Democrats play it even marginally well.
 
Posted by fugu13 (Member # 2859) on :
 
The President's proposal in his speech was hardly exact enough for a bill. And I repeat, it would hardly be likely to hit the floor. In fact, since they're in a majority they could pretty easily get the Democrats to kill it by adding unwanted riders.

Yes, voting doesn't matter in most cases. Both sides use it to get out their own constituencies, but its not very important for changing the opinions of those who don't know who they're voting for, merely those who aren't necessarily going out to vote.

The few times its been used successfully, such as by certain Bush campaign supporters, the voting records are twisted to such an extent the ads were effectively lying about his opponents. First, I like that fewer Democrats use such ads. Second, it doesn't much matter how anyone votes as far as those ads are concerned, since they're twisted versions of the truth anyways (guess what, everyone in Congress has voted against bills that included money for cancer research!).

Particularly as the Dems won't be campaigning against Bush himself, while they might be able to get a campaign together talking about unfulfilled SOTU promises, it wouldn't net them many votes.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
There is plenty they can take from it. Energy was just one thing, I think they can take his call for more teachers and use that heavily to their advantage as well. Energy and Education have been democratic (some might say Liberal) issues for awhile now.

It all depends on how they play it, and how much media attention they can get out of it before the midterms. Attacking Bush equals attacking Republicans to a lot of people, and the more he messes up, and the more scandals hit, the more ineffective they will look.

If it dies in committee, it's one more thing the Democrats can add to their list of ways Republicans are hurting America.

They CAN use this, it's just a question of how, and media willingness to follow along.
 
Posted by Irami Osei-Frimpong (Member # 2229) on :
 
1) For the record, he has called for a reduction in oil dependence or the implementation of alternative energy every year that I can remember, and my memory isn't bad.

2) Reducing our imports 75 percent from the Middle East could cause more harm than good. As the long as Middle East oil is necessary for a stable world economy, then we are beholden to that region. In addition, I thought we were pushing for economic growth and free democracies in that region. If that's the case, shouldn't we be promoting a relationship, and not cutting and running. Anyway, maybe I'm talking nuance.


3) I have more math and science than I'll ever need or want. I do agree that the US should house the best math and science facilities in the world, but as to general education, I think that the primacy of science-- even the psuedo-sciences-- in American education lead to a political and moral deficiency. Free and equal people in a democracy need to be able to read, write, and think. I'm not sure they need to take integrals.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Irami Osei-Frimpong:
1) For the record, he has called for a reduction in oil dependence or the implementation of alternative energy every year that I can remember, and my memory isn't bad.

2) Reducing our imports 75 percent from the Middle East could cause more harm than good. As the long as Middle East oil is necessary for a stable world economy, then we are beholden to that region. In addition, I thought we were pushing for economic growth and free democracies in that region. If that's the case, shouldn't we be promoting a relationship, and not cutting and running. Anyway, maybe I'm talking nuance.

So much as I remember, there has always been an emphasis on producing MORE oil at home to reduce foreign oil. I don't recall him ever advocating a switch away from an oil based energy ecomomy. Feel free to prove me wrong by checking previous states of the union. I'm not positive.

And how does a reduction in our consumption ruin the world economy? If anything, it helps it. Our reduction in consumption will balance the rise in consumption from China and India. Otherwise, prices would skyrocket and snarl the world economy.
 
Posted by ricree101 (Member # 7749) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyrhawn:
So much as I remember, there has always been an emphasis on producing MORE oil at home to reduce foreign oil. I don't recall him ever advocating a switch away from an oil based energy ecomomy. Feel free to prove me wrong by checking previous states of the union. I'm not positive.

He's mentioned support for fuel cell cars before. I believe that it was in the last State of the Union address. I don't think that there was as much emphasis on it as there was this time. I think the most significant part of the energy portion wasn't his call for research, it was the lack of proposed domestic drilling increases.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
Yeah, I mentioned that earlier. This is the first time in a couple years he hasn't called for the opening of ANWR.
 
Posted by TL (Member # 8124) on :
 
quote:
I don't recall him ever advocating a switch away from an oil based energy ecomomy. Feel free to prove me wrong by checking previous states of the union. I'm not positive.
It's been a theme, actually. Bush has been talking about the need for good alternative energy sources since the Bush /Gore election.

I remember this quite specifically, because it almost caused me to reconsider how goofy I thought he was during that campaign. 'Here's a moderate, forward-thinking Republican,' I thought.

Ultimately I voted for Nader, but Bush would have been my second choice, over Gore.

Now I see how suckered I was.

'Human-animal Hybrids'... Good lord. He's like a crazy person.
 
Posted by Nato (Member # 1448) on :
 
quote:
Bush said:
The best way to break this addiction is through technology. Since 2001, we have spent nearly $10 billion to develop cleaner, cheaper, more reliable alternative energy sources -- and we are on the threshold of incredible advances. So tonight, I announce the Advanced Energy Initiative -- a 22 percent increase in clean-energy research at the Department of Energy, to push for breakthroughs in two vital areas. To change how we power our homes and offices, we will invest more in zero-emission coal-fired plants; revolutionary solar and wind technologies; and clean, safe nuclear energy. Breakthroughs on this and other new technologies will help us reach another great goal: to replace more than 75 percent of our oil imports from the Middle East by 2025. By applying the talent and technology of America, this country can dramatically improve our environment ... move beyond a petroleum-based economy ... and make our dependence on Middle Eastern oil a thing of the past.

quote:
Lyrhawn:
Did he seriously just say that? I think I just had a tiny orgasm. An energy plan from BUSH that is based on alternative energy and innovation and NOT based on drilling in Alaska!? It's a miracle! He must have been channeling Al Gore and John Kerry.

No wait... He was lying again.
KR Washington Bureau | 02/01/2006 | Administration backs off Bush's vow to reduce Mideast oil imports
quote:
TL:
'Human-animal Hybrids'... Good lord. He's like a crazy person.

BEWARE! THE PIG-MEN!
 
Posted by Morbo (Member # 5309) on :
 
I just saw this on my brother's blog, and it makes me sick. From the NY Times via Daily Kos blog
quote:
The Energy Department will begin laying off researchers at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in the next week or two because of cuts to its budget.

A veteran researcher said the staff had been told that the cuts would be concentrated among researchers in wind and biomass, which includes ethanol. Those are two of the technologies that Mr. Bush cited on Tuesday night as holding the promise to replace part of the nation's oil imports.

So on Tues. Bush is gung-ho for alternative energy, and promising more research money for it, and less then 48 hours later staff cuts National Renewable Energy Laboratory are announced? What an utter liar! His staff will have to spin faster than a Kerr-Newman black hole to explain this travesty away.

Don't they know there is a rhadamanthine interval between the making of promises in speeches and their obligatory abnegation and gainsaying?? 48 hours is just rude and idiotic.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
What a bunch of crap. No one has forgotten the whole "Mission Accomplished" thing from Iraq. Just how much of his bull$h** does he really expect we're going to take? He said CLEARLY in the sotu, there was no waffling. And the VERY NEXT DAY he claims he meant something entirely different?

Where is his credibility? Does it mean so little to him anymore that he can say something in a major address and then retract it the very next day?
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
There, you see why he frustrates me?
He did the same thing with Americorps and so many other issues...
How can people put UP with this?
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
I suppose it's my own fault for being reasonable enough to actually try and trust Bush and Republicans in general.

I should have stuck to my gut and disbelieved their promises. This is what I get for trying to be bipartisan and reasonable. This just confirms that he's a liar.
 
Posted by Glenn Arnold (Member # 3192) on :
 
"zero-emission coal-fired plants"?
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Synesthesia:
There, you see why he frustrates me?
He did the same thing with Americorps and so many other issues...
How can people put UP with this?

People put up with this because they don't want to think of the alternative - that they were wrong to vote for this person. That they made a mistake in judgement. That they were duped.
quote:
Originally posted by BaoQingTian:
But then I got sad after I read the last 10 years of SOTU addresses and compared the promises contained in those with reality. Seems like nothing will get done domestically.

Even if he manages to get these teacher proposals passed, will they get funded? One reason 'no child left behind' doesn't work is because it is underfunded. Many states are near bankruptcy because of the withdrawal of Federal funding for such mandated projects, adding to their already bulging budget responsibilities.
quote:
Originally posted by Evie3217:
"social security doesn't work because, back when it was created, people didn't live as long."

What a crock. Social Security is fully funded well into the future through Treasury Bonds - Treasury Bonds because the Social Security Trust Fund has been raided... um... borrowed from... by one Administration after another, and the fund became these 'IOUs.'

This flap about not having the money to pay for Baby Boomer's Social Security is really about not wanting to pay that borrowed money back. As long as the US doesn't default on the Treasury Bonds that comprise the majority of the Social Security Trust Fund, Baby Boomer's Social Security is funded just fine. Of course, we now have a huge deficit, and we have to choose WHO to pay back. Yes, it will need some tinkering, but there is no immediate 'crisis' in Social Security.

Somehow those who are disadvantaged or poor seem to be the ones who get left out when the budget is drawn up, these days.

Remember - back when we invaded Afghanistan, the first thing that was done toward funding that war was to 'borrow' from the Social Security Trust Fund.
quote:

quote:
The Energy Department will begin laying off researchers at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in the next week or two because of cuts to its budget.

A veteran researcher said the staff had been told that the cuts would be concentrated among researchers in wind and biomass, which includes ethanol. Those are two of the technologies that Mr. Bush cited on Tuesday night as holding the promise to replace part of the nation's oil imports.

So on Tues. Bush is gung-ho for alternative energy, and promising more research money for it, and less then 48 hours later staff cuts National Renewable Energy Laboratory are announced? What an utter liar! His staff will have to spin faster than a Kerr-Newman black hole to explain this travesty away.

Don't they know there is a rhadamanthine interval between the making of promises in speeches and their obligatory abnegation and gainsaying?? 48 hours is just rude and idiotic.

Sadly, this has been typical. I have gotten to the point of believing when I see the actions on these jokers in Washington.

Talk is cheap, and often used as a narcotic for the masses by these bozos.
quote:
Originally posted by Tarrsk:
We played "State of the Union Bingo" (basically, mark a square when the President says the word listed within) and were scoring Bingos within the first five minutes. Talk about your buzzphrase-happy speeches. I think the most egregious offenders this time around were "freedom," "democracy," and "terrorists"- i.e. business as usual.

That sounds like fun, and much better than getting frustrated and upset by more lies and half truths.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
People put up with this because they don't want to think of the alternative - that they were wrong to vote for this person. That they made a mistake in judgement. That they were duped.
It must be awefully comforting to be able to categorize people who disagree with you as dupes rather than entertain the possibility that they have valid reasons for disagreeing.

quote:
Even if he manages to get these teacher proposals passed, will they get funded? One reason 'no child left behind' doesn't work is because it is underfunded. Many states are near bankruptcy because of the withdrawal of Federal funding for such mandated projects, adding to their already bulging budget responsibilities.
Ths is why the Federal government shouldn't be mandating much of anything to the states.
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
quote:
People put up with this because they don't want to think of the alternative - that they were wrong to vote for this person. That they made a mistake in judgement. That they were duped.
It must be awefully comforting to be able to categorize people who disagree with you as dupes rather than entertain the possibility that they have valid reasons for disagreeing.
I knew you'd be right there for me Dagonee. [Wink] I'm flattered by your attention.

Bush and his administration have repeatedly said one thing and done another. Not facing that fact is Denial... that Denial is not a river in Egypt.

When a politician tells you they are going to do one thing - to get elected - and then that politician does something entirely different, I'd say those who voted for him were duped. That is what I read 'in between the lines' from most of the posters on this thread. Does anyone else here agree with that?

This is not about 'agreeing or disagreeing' with me. It is about the Bush Administration misleading the American public by not doing what they said they were going to do. It is about broken promices. It is about misrepresentation.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
This is not about 'agreeing or disagreeing' with me.
You're right. It's about your inability to understand that other people have actual reasons for their political choices and have thought them out as well as your ongoing fascination with accusing people of things you have no evidence for.

[ February 04, 2006, 10:33 AM: Message edited by: Dagonee ]
 
Posted by Nato (Member # 1448) on :
 
In the 2000 and 2004 elections, a lot of people voted for Bush. I bet tons of them had "actual reasons" for doing so.

But I still think they were fooled.

I seem to remember you saying that you voted mostly on the abortion topic. Perhaps you weren't fooled; Bush has installed some justices that may choose your way on that particular issue.

But on EVERY SINGLE OTHER issue, Bush has either lied or failed to deliver effective policy. This administration is a catastrophe, and the constant lies are all the patches holding it together.

Yes, millions of voters WERE fooled by Bush's lies. Of course they had reasons for voting the way they did, but their decisions were based on not-fact. Faced with concerns about Gore and Democrats, people voted for Bush, a "uniter not a divider." Do you really think that was true? (You know about Rove's nasty political tactics of discrediting and lambasting opponents. Is that working to bring the country together?)

On Tuesday, faced with overwhelming failures in every policy he created, Bush launched into his State of the Union address and made more empty promises. We're "addicted to oil," he said, vowing to cut oil imports from the Mideast by 75 percent twenty years from now. The very next day, his administration took it back:
quote:

Administration backs off Bush's vow to reduce Mideast oil imports


WASHINGTON - One day after President Bush vowed to reduce America's dependence on Middle East oil by cutting imports from there 75 percent by 2025, his energy secretary and national economic adviser said Wednesday that the president didn't mean it literally.

What the president meant, they said in a conference call with reporters, was that alternative fuels could displace an amount of oil imports equivalent to most of what America is expected to import from the Middle East in 2025.

But America still would import oil from the Middle East, because that's where the greatest oil supplies are.

There's not much you can say about that besides, "fooled again."

What excuse does Bush have for making so few accomplishments? He can't go the same route as Clinton saying that an opposition Congress stonewalled him. Bush's veto pen is pretty much covered in dust by now, and he had an incredibly partisan Congress behind him (What I mean by this is that the Republican voting bloc rarely split). On the issues, Bush has accomplished nothing.


Let's look at the major issues of the last five years:

The War on Terror has been an abysmal failure. More terrorists are recruited today than before Bush took office, especially in Iraq, where people can see the destruction wrought by the American presence. It gives them new reasons to join with the terrorists. We went to war on the dangerous and unprecedented principle of preemptive attack, fearing Saddam's nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs. When it was shown that these justifications for war were false, the justification for war switched to spreading freedom against tyrrany. Bush may say that hindsight is not wisdom, but it certainly provides the justification for much of his policy.

Despite a campaign statement that he wasn't interested in nation-building, Bush has since announced a desire to spread democracy and freedom. So far, Iraq's secular government has moved toward theocracy, Hamas has won the votes of the Palestinian people, Lebanon's government has grown closer to Hezbollah, and at home we lose more freedoms every day as we are subject to unconstitutional and illegal warrantless wiretaps and "free speech zones." It was an absolute lie from the very beginning that terrorists "hated us because of our freedom." But if you want to chalk up one victory to the Bush administration, at least the terrorists can't hate us because of our freedom anymore.

He mentioned the prescription drug benefit, his largest domestic policy so far. With this plan, Bush managed to spend scads of money to actually make it harder for seniors to get their medication.

On Social Security, Bush made an attempt at "saving" it that was so backwards that even his own party couldn't stand behind it. And at the same time, the Social Security trust fund has been looted. And that is what created the 'crisis' in the first place.

The government is currently operating in technical default. The federal debt has gone over the statutory limit around $8.1 trillion, which means we can't pay our international debts back in full on time. Congress may, of course, raise this limit again. In Bush's five years, he has accumulated more debt than EVERY PREVIOUS ADMINISTRATION PUT TOGETHER. If fiscal conservatives ever supported him, they were fooled big time.

The government response to Hurricane Katrina was a complete failure, and the White House avoided the issue completely in the State of the Union while it denied requests for pertinent documents relating to the investigation of their failed disaster response.

This post's getting pretty long, and I think I've made my point, so I'll wrap it up.

Yes, Americans were fooled by Bush. Yes, they had reasons to vote for him, but those reasons were based on empty promises and lies. It turns out Silkie's right. Bush did say a lot of nice things to get himself elected, but he hasn't lived up to them, and pretty much everybody recognizes that. I guess the people who don't still have the wool over their eyes. If anybody can still formulate thought-out "actual reasons" for supporting Bush's policies, I'd like to see them. I just don't think those reasons exist anymore, now that we've seen what Bush actually does, not just what he says. What person's rationale for voting for Bush has survived the test of time? The only possible way to construct one without admitting you were fooled would be to do it in hindsight. And we all know, hindsight isn't real wisdom.

So when you accuse Silkie, bring out some actual evidence that people have actual reasons for their political choices supporting Bush. Prove that those reasons are not founded in misinformation and empty promises.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
I guess the people who don't still have the wool over their eyes.
I deleted my entire response when I got to this point, because it is utterly clear there's no point - a lesson I shold have learned by now about this forum.

quote:
If anybody can still formulate thought-out "actual reasons" for supporting Bush's policies, I'd like to see them.
It's clear you wouldn't, which is why I won't bother.

Please do whatever you have to do to comprehend this simple fact: it is possible for people who have not been fooled or had wool pulled over their eyes to not regret voting for Bush.

quote:
So when you accuse Silkie, bring out some actual evidence that people have actual reasons for their political choices supporting Bush. Prove that those reasons are not founded in misinformation and empty promises.
"Prove you don't still beat your wife."

Please. It's entirely possible to make all the points you are making without the hubris that those who disagree are blind.

quote:
I seem to remember you saying that you voted mostly on the abortion topic.
You remember incorrectly.
 
Posted by Nato (Member # 1448) on :
 
If I remember your justification for voting for Bush wrongly, I'm sorry. It's been too long, and my memory of what people say on online message boards is weak. What were your reasons? Do you feel Bush has lived up to your expectations?

I'm not making a "Do you still beat your wife?" argument. If anybody can offer a rational support for Bush, let me hear it. By "Prove that those reasons are not founded in misinformation and empty promises," I meant that I would like to see the evidence of Bush's policies working so well. In my post, I provided some of the evidence of Bush's policies not working well. If I have misrepresented the events of the past five years, let me know so I can correct the error. If I've overlooked some major issues where Bush has succeeded, what are they, and why didn't they appear in the State of the Union address?
quote:
I deleted my entire response when I got to this point, because it is utterly clear there's no point - a lesson I shold have learned by now about this forum.
I honestly am interested in what somebody would consider a well thought-out defense of Bush's policies. Because I believe there are major constitutional problems with his philosophy, and I don't understand how he justifies them. I also believe that he intentionally lied to and misled the public unabashedly and repeatedly, and that this led to many failures.

Dagonee, I respect you, your vast knowledge, and your reasoning ability. I regret that I offended you and made you feel like you needed to erase the part of your post I most wanted to see.

If you'll accept my apology and respond to these questions, I'd be very glad to read it. If you feel that it is not worth it, you of course don't need to put any more effort into responding to me, then I've ruined what could have been an insightful and productive conversation.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
If you'll accept my apology and respond to these questions, I'd be very glad to read it.
Thank you. One caveat: this is designed to outline my thinking. Much of it is conclusory, not because I arrived at these positions without reasoning, but because each conclusion would require a post of this length to even begin to explain.

I'm not particularly interested in arguing any one of them, and am not intending to convince any one. I am presenting these to demonstrate why it is possible to not regret voting for Bush in either election without being blind.

Also, remember the decision who to vote for is not an open field but a choice, between Bush and Gore the first time (I swallowed my revulsion of the campaign finance law and voted for McCain in the primary) and Bush and Kerry the second time. My remarks are in the context of that binary choice.

The best way to sum up my position is that I

1.) favored Bush and opposed his opponent very strongly on several issues,

2.) favored Kerry only slightly on one issue over Bush,

3.) slightly approved of Bush over his opponent on many issues, and

4.) disapproved less of Bush than I disapproved of his opponent on many more issues.

quote:
The War on Terror has been an abysmal failure.
I entirely disagree. It's going better than I expected, actually. More details below.

quote:
More terrorists are recruited today than before Bush took office, especially in Iraq, where people can see the destruction wrought by the American presence.
People have also begun to see the effect Islamic terrorism is having on Muslims. The insurgents, especially the foreign ones, are becoming more unpopular as time goes on.

quote:
It gives them new reasons to join with the terrorists. We went to war on the dangerous and unprecedented principle of preemptive attack, fearing Saddam's nuclear, chemical and biological weapons programs.
This was not the only reason given, nor was it the reason I supported the invasion. Finding out Sadaam had been playing a double game to make it appear as if he had weapons when he didn't did not surprise me.

quote:
When it was shown that these justifications for war were false, the justification for war switched to spreading freedom against tyrrany.
The tyrrany argument was there from the beginning.

quote:
Despite a campaign statement that he wasn't interested in nation-building,
1.) 9/11 changed his mind on this.

2.) This is not something Bush campaigned on the second time.

quote:
So far, Iraq's secular government has moved toward theocracy
A religious party won a plurality. There will have to be some alliance with secular Shi'a and/or Kurdish parties. It's a far cry from a Theocracy, and there are many signs that it won't become one.

It's worth noting that Iraq's "secular" government was a brutal totalitarian regime.

quote:
Hamas has won the votes of the Palestinian people
Yep. Not sure how to blame this on Bush, though. Nor am I sure what any President could have done to stop it.

quote:
Lebanon's government has grown closer to Hezbollah,
By some measures - there representation has varied from 12 seats in '92 up to 23 now. At the same time, Hezbollah's non-terrorist activities public benefit have increased. It's not clear if the terrorist activities which they have continued or the charitable activites have attracted more voter support.

Although they joined the government, my understanding is that they were not necessary to the coalition's majority and that this was largely symbolic. I'm not prepared to say developments in Lebanon are either positive or negative at this point. I'm definitely not saying Hezbollah's involvement is good - I think it sucks. But I'm not sure the situation in Lebanon is a net negative.

quote:
at home we lose more freedoms every day as we are subject to unconstitutional and illegal warrantless wiretaps
I'm not going into it in depth here, but it is not at all clear that the wiretaps are unconstitutional. There are two issues: 1.) the separation of powers, which is very gray but with strong arguments against the Bush administration's view, and 2.) the fourth amendment issues, in which Bush's view is much stronger than the opposition.

This is one of the fuzziest areas of Constitutional law, and I would like to see SCOTUS clarify. But the interpretations in favor of Bush's policy are strong enough that I consider this akin to Congress passing an unconstitutional law - something to be corrected, not criminalized.

quote:
"free speech zones."
"Free speech zones" were instituted in the Clinton administration. I'm not fond of them. Although I don't think every gathering of public officials should have to navigate through a sea of protesters, I'm not a big fan of limiting demonstrations. But it's not a Bush administration phenomenon, and I had no reason to believe Gore (who was VP of the administration which instituted them) or Kerry would have reduced their use. Remember, the Democratic convention in 2004 was "protected" by heavy use of speech zones. Yes, it was a Republican city administration that did so, but I didn't hear Kerry condemning them.

quote:
But if you want to chalk up one victory to the Bush administration, at least the terrorists can't hate us because of our freedom anymore.
Because we're so opressed. I mean, people who call Bush a liar and criminal on the Internet are thrown into jail as soon as it happens.

Oh, wait.

quote:
He mentioned the prescription drug benefit, his largest domestic policy so far. With this plan, Bush managed to spend scads of money to actually make it harder for seniors to get their medication.
I'm entirely against the prescription drug benefit as passed. I have yet to hear a convincing explanation as to why age, with no showing of need, makes someone eligible for such coverage. But, compared to the other plans being floated, I prefer it.

quote:
On Social Security, Bush made an attempt at "saving" it that was so backwards that even his own party couldn't stand behind it. And at the same time, the Social Security trust fund has been looted. And that is what created the 'crisis' in the first place.
I thought Bush couldn't blame Congress?

I favor private accounts. I favor separating the concept of safety net from retirement savings. No one has had the balls to even seriously propose raising the retirement age - something that could give us an extra 40 years of solvency.

Again, I'm stuck with a mediocre choice and a choice I find to totally suck.

quote:
The government is currently operating in technical default. The federal debt has gone over the statutory limit around $8.1 trillion, which means we can't pay our international debts back in full on time. Congress may, of course, raise this limit again. In Bush's five years, he has accumulated more debt than EVERY PREVIOUS ADMINISTRATION PUT TOGETHER. If fiscal conservatives ever supported him, they were fooled big time.
Yep, not real happy about this. I'd like to see some very large spending cuts, especially in areas that should be state functions.

I want the federal government smaller. I had no good choice to make that happen.

quote:
The government response to Hurricane Katrina was a complete failure, and the White House avoided the issue completely in the State of the Union while it denied requests for pertinent documents relating to the investigation of their failed disaster response.
Not a campaign issue, so I won't go into it.

On social issues, I utterly oppose the DOM amendment, but the abortion issue is far more important to me than civil gay marriage rights. In addition, there is a serious problem with the way SCOTUS is currently operating, and there are a host of reasons why I prefer a "conservative" judicial interpretive method, even when it runs counter to my policy preferences. Whether Alito or Roberts vote to strike down Casey and Roe (which would require another appointment unless Kennedy flops again), I know enough about their judicial philosophies to know I prefer them to Breyers/Souter/Ginsburg and about half of Stevens.
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
Does anyone else here believe that the Bush Administration misled the American public by not doing what they said they were going to do?
 
Posted by Synesthesia (Member # 4774) on :
 
I do.
I know this is the way of politicians, but these guys have taken it to the extreme.
 
Posted by Nato (Member # 1448) on :
 
Thanks, Dagonee. I realize that took a lot of time, and I'm glad you put it in.

You mentioned that some of the blame for certain policy failures should lie with Congress, and I agree. I approve of Congress on about the same level as I approve of Bush. I don't think the politicians on either side of the aisle really represent their constituents or the American people as a whole. I don't believe that the Republican base supports the partisanship and vast corruption in the party leadership, and I don't think the relatively gutless and uninspiring Democrats truly represent their following.
quote:
No one has had the balls to even seriously propose raising the retirement age - something that could give us an extra 40 years of solvency.
I think somebody should raise this issue. With advances in health making productive life possible longer, I think that this could be a way to mitigate the shortage. Furthermore, I can't really imagine being able to retire when I get to age 55 anyway. The topic will have to come up eventually. I would like to see increased worker protection phased in though. I was disappointed to see Bush make it harder to qualify for overtime pay.
quote:
I prefer a "conservative" judicial interpretive method,
quote:
2.) the fourth amendment issues, in which Bush's view is much stronger than the opposition.
Do you believe that the 4th Amendment doesn't cover electronic surveillance? Why is Bush's case stronger? (You don't have to answer if this is going to take too long, I imagine it would be pretty involved)

Do you think Bush acted wrongly under the FISA law that prohibits warrantless wiretaps against American citizens instead?

quote:
Silkie:
Does anyone else here believe that the Bush Administration misled the American public by not doing what they said they were going to do?

I believe that the Bush Administration has misled and lied to Congress, the American people, and the world. I also think they are strong on politics, but weak on policy, meaning that they are good at getting their way through political maneuvers, but that their way is ineffective in the long run.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
Do you believe that the 4th Amendment doesn't cover electronic surveillance? Why is Bush's case stronger? (You don't have to answer if this is going to take too long, I imagine it would be pretty involved)
Short answer: yes, 4th amendment covers surveillance. In one of the threads on this topic I give a pretty good overview of fourth amendment.

What is questionable is how much the fourth amendment covers calls into and out of the country, especially when intercepted for purposes of gathering foreign intelligence or as part of military operations. There's SCOTUS dicta that suggests (without deciding) that such conversations receive less protection.

Think about customs - everyone can be searched without probable cause when they come into the country. This is only an analogy, but it's an example of how crossing the border can change the analysis.

quote:
Do you think Bush acted wrongly under the FISA law that prohibits warrantless wiretaps against American citizens instead?
Depending on things we don't know yet about the program, FISA may not have been able to constitutionally restrict the eavesdropping.
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
quote:
Originally posted by Nato:
No one has had the balls to even seriously propose raising the retirement age - something that could give us an extra 40 years of solvency.

I think somebody should raise this issue. With advances in health making productive life possible longer, I think that this could be a way to mitigate the shortage. Furthermore, I can't really imagine being able to retire when I get to age 55 anyway. The topic will have to come up eventually. I would like to see increased worker protection phased in though. I was disappointed to see Bush make it harder to qualify for overtime pay.
The retirement age is being raised. Here is the posting of the schedule for it being raised, from the Social Security Website.

The current retirement age (for full benefits) is 65, not 55. If you retire as early as 62 (the earliest you can retire and collect SS benefits) your benefits are cut, taking into account that you will be collecting benefits over a longer period of time.

I will be 59 this year, and my husband will be 60. Our adjusted Social Security retirement age will be 66. I have been working since I was 15 years old. Even though I cannot 'retire' I am very ready for retirement. Thank goodness my husband is OK with me not working anymore.

As for raising the age further I have this to say..
quote:
When 900 years you reach, look as good, you will not. Yoda

 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
67 isn't high enough - that's what I think it needs to be raised from.

The central problem with Social Security is its hybrid nature as both a retirement plan and a social insurance plan. The two functions need to be split, with the social insurance portion being pay as you go and the retirement plan portion being essentially an enforced savings plan based on percentage of salary. I believe Australia has a system like this.
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
67 isn't high enough - that's what I think it needs to be raised from.

The central problem with Social Security is its hybrid nature as both a retirement plan and a social insurance plan. The two functions need to be split, with the social insurance portion being pay as you go and the retirement plan portion being essentially an enforced savings plan based on percentage of salary. I believe Australia has a system like this.

As someone who has an arthritic knee, a few other health issues, and a Grandchild that I'm helping to raise, I respectfully disagree Dagonee. You have no idea how old 59-60 feels, and how far away 66 - or 67 - is. It feels like I have worked all of my life. You live in a different sphere of this world than I do.

If our system WAS dedicated, with no one allowed to dip into it - we wouldn't be in the situation we are in with Social Security. The Social Security Trust Fund would not have been borrowed from again and again over the years. But greedy politicians - just like the greedy Corporations of today who are cutting Pension Plans - just don't care. A promice isn't sacred anymore.

As for Savings based plans, all possibillities should be examined in a creative way. It's a little late for hubby and me to start a 'retirement savings account' but I don't discount that idea.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
As someone who has an arthritic knee, a few other health issues, and a Grandchild that I'm helping to raise, I respectfully disagree Dagonee.
I have a knee I've had to have surgery on twice and some pretty serious chronic conditions.

Besides, the new retirement age wouldn't effect you.

quote:
If our system WAS dedicated, with no one allowed to dip into it - we wouldn't be in the situation we are in with Social Security.
Not true. The system still runs out of money sometime in the future even if the IOUs were paid off. It's not fiscally sound if the working population doesn't continue to increase.

quote:
As for Savings based plans, all possibillities should be examined in a creative way. It's a little late for hubby and me to start a 'retirement savings account' but I don't discount that idea.
Of course it has to be phased in.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
What should the retirement age be? 80?

My life expectancy is like 78 years for a non-smoking male. I've been working since I was 15 too (only 6 years ago mind you), and the thought of working another SIXTY years (almost) so I can MAYBE enjoy a little bit of the thousands of dollars I've paid into the SS fund for a year or two before I die doesn't make ANY sense to me. I could save that money aside for the next six decades and buy myself a vacation home before I die to live my life out in.

I realize I'm mostly paying for everyone else, but I see no point to Social Security existing at all if the retirement age is pushed back that far.
 
Posted by Nato (Member # 1448) on :
 
I'd really rather have a society where everybody could retire at around 50 if they wanted to. I wonder what it would take to create that.
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
Imperial conquest and pillaging.
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
quote:
What should the retirement age be? 80?
WTF? Did I say 80?

There are studies that 70 would be sufficient.

Here's a very simple thing people need to keep in mind: we can't afford the system as it stands now.

quote:
I'd really rather have a society where everybody could retire at around 50 if they wanted to. I wonder what it would take to create that.
A willingness to make people 18-50 work their asses off and sacrifice most of their earnings to support the over 50 people and the under 18 people.
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
quote:
What should the retirement age be? 80?
WTF? Did I say 80?

There are studies that 70 would be sufficient.

Here's a very simple thing people need to keep in mind: we can't afford the system as it stands now.

quote:
I'd really rather have a society where everybody could retire at around 50 if they wanted to. I wonder what it would take to create that.
A willingness to make people 18-50 work their asses off and sacrifice most of their earnings to support the over 50 people and the under 18 people.
I think part of this is a change in social structure that has happened in this country since the SS system was initiated. And of course the Baby Boom, my generation, is about to overload a system that was a good one, for the time that it was created. But times have changed. We have few extended families anymore - Great Grandma has her own place, and the cost of supporting that place has risen faster than her income.

A few years ago my mother had a health crisis, and I helped my sister take care of her. Mom was hospitalized for a long time. Of course she lost her job because of her health, and was left with only Social Security to live on: about $500. a month. Try living on that! Mom lived in another state, and I had to travel back and forth, and finally moved her here. Years ago we would have lived in the same town, or nearby. I don't regret making the choices I made, but choices have consequences. I lost my job over fulfilling my personal obligations to my family.

Mom is now in another state (where my sister lives), and in her own place (assisted living) again, but it took a while for that situation to stabilize.

My daughter had a child out of wedlock. She lives with us now, since her income isn't enough to pay for her to live in her own place. She also can't afford childcare, so I'm her childcare, so she can work. Again, choices have consequences. She chose to have her child, and we are helping to raise him. We could have let her be a burden to the system, but we are family, and that means something to us.

My daughter has no health insurance. She works for a national corporation and they make sure she doesn't work enough hours per week to qualify for those benefits. She was offered a 'Health Savings Account' and declined it, since it was a 'use it or lose it' situation - if you don't spend it in the insurance year, you lose all of the saved money in the account. My husband's insurance offers a 'Health Savings Account' that is administered the same way. Most of the Health Savings Accounts that I am aware of are administered that way. But that is another thread.

Working past today's retirement age is nice in theory, but remember, people who are 'too old' are being replaced by younger people all the time. Several years ago my husband was downsized out of a middle management job. A younger man that he had trained was given his job. The job had a new title, and a lower salary. My husband went back to school to get a trade job, which in theory he will not be laid off from, since he is skilled labor.

You don't see retired people working in Grocery Stores for fulfillment - they can't afford to live on just Social Security, and they have to work just to pay household expenses. Even though we will 'retire' at 66, odds are one of us is going to have to have a job, just to be able to pay the utilities and household expenses.

God willing we will still have our health, and be able to live independantly.
 
Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
So many comments, so little time.

At first I was going to mention, "You can't spell Bullsh$# without Bush" but that's just too cheap a shot.

Silkie, I agree with you that there is a lot of hypocracy in the Bush administration. Heck, he was even verging on caving in on his Abortion policy with his previous Supreme Court nominee--when he was forced to back off. However, slamming the people who voted for him, for good reasons, is not a way to get them to accept your reasoning. Slam me and I go on the defensive too.

My five year old reminds me much of politicians including our President. Today we told Sasha to clean his room. He informed us that he was, but....it sounded exactly like what we hear in regards to alternative energy. "I am, but..."
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dan_raven:
---Silkie, I agree with you that there is a lot of hypocracy in the Bush administration. Heck, he was even verging on caving in on his Abortion policy with his previous Supreme Court nominee--when he was forced to back off. However, slamming the people who voted for him, for good reasons, is not a way to get them to accept your reasoning. Slam me and I go on the defensive too.

I didn't mean to slam anyone who voted for the Bush Administration. If it came across that way to anyone, I am truly sorry.

I am simply saying - in hindsight, given current events, do you NOW think you made a mistake when you voted for Bush et al?

It's hard to let go of an ideal. We all want our government and our Federal officials to live up to the ideals that we were taught in school. But people adminster those laws, and people are fallible.

Do you think that the people in charge of our country let us down?
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
quote:
What should the retirement age be? 80?
WTF? Did I say 80?

There are studies that 70 would be sufficient.

Here's a very simple thing people need to keep in mind: we can't afford the system as it stands now.

quote:
I'd really rather have a society where everybody could retire at around 50 if they wanted to. I wonder what it would take to create that.
A willingness to make people 18-50 work their asses off and sacrifice most of their earnings to support the over 50 people and the under 18 people.

I never said you said that, but you said that it should be raised from 67, I inferred a tone in your statement that implied it should be raised much higher than 67, not just 3 more years to 70.

However, if that's the case, I say scrap Social Security all together. I don't see how it is beneficial for me to pay thousands of dollars out of my paycheck for the next 50 years and then maybe get some of that back after I've worked an incredibly long time. I'll probably die shortly after retiring at that age. I can make much better use of that money myself. It's not my fault that other people my age are horrible at saving their money, I don't see why I should have to pay for their lack of financial skill and basic restraint.

And there isn't a snowball's chance in hell of young people being willing to pay MORE than we already do. Everyone I know who is my age and is aware of the Social Security issue is pissed as hell about it. The first candidate I see who offers to nix Social Security has my vote. I refuse to be financially responsible for cleaning up for the messes of the generation before me.

I already have to worry about the foriegn policy screwups, environmental pollution screwups, and deficit/debt screwups for the rest of my life. Social Security is just one more I don't want to deal with.
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyrhawn:
quote:
Originally posted by Dagonee:
quote:
What should the retirement age be? 80?
WTF? Did I say 80?

There are studies that 70 would be sufficient.

Here's a very simple thing people need to keep in mind: we can't afford the system as it stands now.

quote:
I'd really rather have a society where everybody could retire at around 50 if they wanted to. I wonder what it would take to create that.
A willingness to make people 18-50 work their asses off and sacrifice most of their earnings to support the over 50 people and the under 18 people.
I never said you said that, but you said that it should be raised from 67, I inferred a tone in your statement that implied it should be raised much higher than 67, not just 3 more years to 70.

However, if that's the case, I say scrap Social Security all together. I don't see how it is beneficial for me to pay thousands of dollars out of my paycheck for the next 50 years and then maybe get some of that back after I've worked an incredibly long time. I'll probably die shortly after retiring at that age. I can make much better use of that money myself. It's not my fault that other people my age are horrible at saving their money, I don't see why I should have to pay for their lack of financial skill and basic restraint.

And there isn't a snowball's chance in hell of young people being willing to pay MORE than we already do. Everyone I know who is my age and is aware of the Social Security issue is pissed as hell about it. The first candidate I see who offers to nix Social Security has my vote. I refuse to be financially responsible for cleaning up for the messes of the generation before me.

I already have to worry about the foriegn policy screwups, environmental pollution screwups, and deficit/debt screwups for the rest of my life. Social Security is just one more I don't want to deal with.

I understand your feelings about that Lyrhawn. When our retirement age of 66 comes we will have paid into Social Security for more than 50 years. At this point we feel like we have been working forever.

Through my childhood and adulthood, my generation was told we were paying into our retirement account - Social Security. Meanwhile the various administrations were dipping into that account. They left us a stack of IOUs. (Treasury Bonds)

If those IOUs are added into the Social Security equation, Social Security is fully funded well past that doomsday date that Bush was bandying about last year - (I forget what that date was... ) The 'crisis' in Social Security is because current administration doesn't want to pay that money back.

As for our children working their backsides off to support us - - - not exactly.

What our children will be doing is working their backsides off to PAY BACK what the politicians took. To PAY BACK all of those IOUs (Treasury Notes) that were left in the drawer when various administrations - including this one - were fiscally irresponsible and ran us into the huge deficit debt we all have. One of the things that bothered me about the war in Iraq is that it's financing ( in part) was from our retirement funds - the Social Security Trust Fund.

And you will be working to pay back the Chinese, and Koreans, and the others that ALSO hold T-notes and have financed our National Debt.

Our National Debt is at the highest point EVER, and the current administration is about to ask for another raise in the debt ceiling.

Maybe what we should ALL look for in a person running for Congress is a willingness to force our country to balance our budget, and a committment to lower the National Debt. We aren't convincing as the savior to the World when we don't take good care of our OWN people here at home.

That is what I liked about our mixed government under Clinton. Whatever his sexual preferences, Clinton kept the spending in check with veto power, unlike our current rubber stamp policy. And the Republican congress back then managed to balance the budget, with those restraints.

Many conservative groups have complained that the current spend spend spend Congress is the antithesis of the Republican ideals.

[ February 06, 2006, 09:23 AM: Message edited by: Silkie ]
 
Posted by blacwolve (Member # 2972) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Silkie:
Does anyone else here believe that the Bush Administration misled the American public by not doing what they said they were going to do?

I do, but I've seen no indication that a democrat would have behaved any differently.
 
Posted by fugu13 (Member # 2859) on :
 
At least the Democrats have, historically, not been as good at it [Smile] .
 
Posted by Glenn Arnold (Member # 3192) on :
 
quote:
What should the retirement age be? 80?
quote:


WTF? Did I say 80?

There are studies that 70 would be sufficient.

In keeping with your idea about separating the retirement plan from the social insurance plan, I think that we need to reevaluate what retirement means.

At the time Social Security was enacted, people weren't expected to live as long. The retirement age was based on the idea that at a certain age people would be too infirm to continue working, so the "retirement plan" was really intended to take care of people who were infirm because of age. They weren't expected to live very long at that point.

You could get rid of the age limitation and replace it with health stipulations. Perhaps your age could count for a certain number of points toward retirement, but infirmities would have a higher priority. Thus a 35 year old with MS would be eligible ror retirement, but in order to retire without any physical infirmities you'd have to be 80.

MOST people have some physical infirmities, and would retire say, between 65 and 72, with some outliers both younger and older depending on health.

quote:
If our system WAS dedicated, with no one allowed to dip into it - we wouldn't be in the situation we are in with Social Security.
quote:
Not true. The system still runs out of money sometime in the future even if the IOUs were paid off. It's not fiscally sound if the working population doesn't continue to increase.

That "sometime in the future" is too nebulous for my taste. Pay off the IOUs and we could stop worrying for the most part.

As to the working population increasing, it's generally assumed that that means the younger population, but it doesn't need to be.

As I've pointed out a number of times on this forum, my greatest heroes are two men who worked well into their "retirement years." One was 84 when he got laid off. Between the two of them they had almost 110 years with the same company. And both of them were productive, and a great resource of accumulated knowledge.

The hitch was that they both loved their jobs, in addition to being really good at it. Not everyone is that lucky. But among the lessons they taught me was that loving your job is more important that earning a lot of money.

If only we could convince americans that leisure isn't the greatest pursuit, and also that older workers are still useful. Increasing the working population by putting useful people back to work is a much better proposition than just expecting our children to support us in out old age.

Edit: Is this better? turns out I used a squiggly bracket { instead of a square one [.

[ February 06, 2006, 10:20 PM: Message edited by: Glenn Arnold ]
 
Posted by Dagonee (Member # 5818) on :
 
Glenn, is "In keeping with your idea...both younger and older depending on health" part of your own post? The quotes are confusing me.
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Glenn Arnold:
That "sometime in the future" is too nebulous for my taste. Pay off the IOUs and we could stop worrying for the most part.

You made me do my homework.

Here is a well known economist's analysis of the Social Security "Crisis." I posted an exerpt, but the article is too long to post here, so I have put a link at the bottom if you want to read the whole thing.
quote:
Confusions about Social Security
By Paul Krugman

The Economists' Voice
Volume 2 Issue 1 2005

Summary: There is a lot of confusion in the debate over Social Security privatization, much of it deliberate. This essay discusses the meaning of the trust fund, which privatizers declare either real or fictional at their convenience; the likely rate of return on private accounts, which has been greatly overstated; and the (ir)relevance of putative reductions in far future liabilities.
The Trust Fund

But the privatizers won't take yes for an answer when it comes to the sustainability of Social Security. Their answer to the pretty good numbers is to say that the trust fund is meaningless, because it's invested in U.S. government bonds. They aren't really saying that government bonds are worthless; their point is that the whole notion of a separate budget for Social Security is a fiction. And if that's true, the idea that one part of the government can have a positive trust fund while the government as a whole is in debt does become strange.

But there are two problems with their position.
The lesser problem is that if you say that there is no link between the payroll tax and future Social Security benefits - which is what denying the reality of the trust fund amounts to - then Greenspan and company pulled a fast one back in the 1980s: they sold a regressive tax switch, raising taxes on workers while cutting them on the wealthy, on false pretenses. More broadly, we're breaking a major promise if we now, after 20 years of high payroll taxes to pay for Social Security's future, declare that it was all a little joke on the public.
The bigger problem for those who want to see a crisis in Social Security's future is this: if Social Security is just part of the federal budget, with no budget or trust fund of its own, then, well, it's just part of the federal budget: there can't be a Social Security crisis. All you can have is a general budget crisis. Rising Social Security benefit payments might be one reason for that crisis, but it's hard to make the case that it will be central.


But those who insist that we face a Social Security crisis want to have it both ways. Having invoked the concept of a unified budget to reject the existence of a trust fund, they refuse to accept the implications of that unified budget going forward. Instead, having changed the rules to make the trust fund meaningless, they want to change the rules back around 15 years from now: today, when the payroll tax takes in more revenue than SS benefits, they say that's meaningless, but when - in 2018 or later - benefits start to exceed the payroll tax, why, that's a crisis. Huh?
I don't know why this contradiction is so hard to understand, except to echo Upton Sinclair: it's hard to get a man to understand something when his salary (or, in the current situation, his membership in the political club) depends on his not understanding it. But let me try this one more time, by asking the following: What happens in 2018 or whenever, when benefits payments exceed payroll tax revenues?
The answer, very clearly, is nothing.
The Social Security system won't be in trouble: it will, in fact, still have a growing trust fund, because of the interest that the trust earns on its accumulated surplus. The only way Social Security gets in trouble is if Congress votes not to honor U.S. government bonds held by Social Security. That's not going to happen. So legally, mechanically, 2018 has no meaning.
Now it's true that rising benefit costs will be a drag on the federal budget. So will rising Medicare costs. So will the ongoing drain from tax cuts. So will whatever wars we get into. I can't find a story under which Social Security payments, as opposed to other things, become a crucial budgetary problem in 2018.
What we really have is a looming crisis in the General Fund. Social Security, with its own dedicated tax, has been run responsibly; the rest of the government has not. So why are we talking about a Social Security crisis?
It's interesting to ask what would have happened if the General Fund actually had been run responsibly - which is to say, if Social Security surpluses had been kept in a "lockbox", and the General Fund had been balanced on average. In that case, the accumulating trust fund would have been a very real contribution to the government as a whole's ability to pay future benefits.
As long as Social Security surpluses were being invested in government bonds, they would have reduced the government's debt to the public, and hence its interest bill.
We would, it's true, eventually have reached a point at which there was no more debt to buy, that is, a point at which the government's debt to the public had been more or less paid off. At that point, it would have been necessary to invest the growing trust fund in private-sector assets. This would have raised some management issues: to protect the investments from political influence, the trust fund would have had to be placed in a broad index. But the point is that the trust fund would have continued to make a real contribution to the government's ability to pay future benefits.
And if we are now much less optimistic about the government's ability to honor future obligations than we were four years ago, when Alan Greenspan urged Congress to cut taxes to avoid excessive surpluses, it's not because Social Security's finances have deteriorated - they have actually improved (the projected exhaustion date of the trust fund has moved back 5 years since that testimony.) It's because the General Fund has plunged into huge deficit, with Bush's tax cuts the biggest single cause.
I'm not a Pollyanna; I think that we may well be facing a fiscal crisis. But it's deeply misleading, and in fact an evasion of the real issues, to call it a Social Security crisis.
The Economists' Voice Article, Archived



[ February 06, 2006, 11:24 PM: Message edited by: Silkie ]
 
Posted by Glenn Arnold (Member # 3192) on :
 
" Glenn, is "In keeping with your idea...both younger and older depending on health" part of your own post? The quotes are confusing me."

Yeah, sorry, the double quotes bracketed my own.

I'll see if I can change it.
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by fugu13:
At least the Democrats have, historically, not been as good at it [Smile] .

[Big Grin] A clumsy thief is better - easier to catch!
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
Everyone who didn't watch the Colbert Report last night should check the comedycentral website tomorrow for his word of the day, it's all about the President's position switch on energy and the cut on middle eastern oil.
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
The date at which the trust fund will run out, according to Social Security Administration projections, has receded steadily into the future: 10 years ago it was 2029, now it's 2042. As Kevin Drum, Brad DeLong, and others have pointed out, the SSA estimates are very conservative, and quite moderate projections of economic growth push the exhaustion date into the indefinite future.

So what this means is that we Baby Boomers will be cashing in "our" Treasury bonds, which will pay for "our" Social Security.

This "Social Security Crisis" was another scare tactic, meant to force us to make choices we really don't have to make.

Yes, the system needs a few tweaks. I think Medicare/Medicaide should be split off from Social Security. Federally assisted/mandated Medical coverage should be available to everyone who does not have private insurance. And then we should negotiate for lower drug prices like Canada does. People shouldn't have to wait until they are desperately ill to go to the doctor. And people shouldn't have to choose between eating and affording life saving drugs.
 
Posted by Silkie (Member # 8853) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Lyrhawn:
Everyone who didn't watch the Colbert Report last night should check the comedycentral website tomorrow for his word of the day, it's all about the President's position switch on energy and the cut on middle eastern oil.

Will do! [Smile]
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
quote:
Originally posted by Morbo:
I just saw this on my brother's blog, and it makes me sick. From the NY Times via Daily Kos blog
quote:
The Energy Department will begin laying off researchers at the National Renewable Energy Laboratory in the next week or two because of cuts to its budget.

A veteran researcher said the staff had been told that the cuts would be concentrated among researchers in wind and biomass, which includes ethanol. Those are two of the technologies that Mr. Bush cited on Tuesday night as holding the promise to replace part of the nation's oil imports.

So on Tues. Bush is gung-ho for alternative energy, and promising more research money for it, and less then 48 hours later staff cuts National Renewable Energy Laboratory are announced? What an utter liar! His staff will have to spin faster than a Kerr-Newman black hole to explain this travesty away.

Don't they know there is a rhadamanthine interval between the making of promises in speeches and their obligatory abnegation and gainsaying?? 48 hours is just rude and idiotic.

The researchers for the lab have been rehired, and Bush has blamed the isseue on a paper error more or less.

I am both saddened and joyed at the recent Bush energy plan. He's on the go about it, touting all over the nation, and it's awesome to see a president, a Republican no less, being so proactive about renewable energy.

It just makes me sad that he really has no intention of actually following through with any of his promises to fund any of the initiatives and causes that he's mentioned. He's budget is a joke, and is underfunded by billions of dollars. But at least it's getting some attention.

I'm really curious too as to what technologies he's talking about when he says these things will totally change the face of energy in the nation in the coming years.
 
Posted by Dan_raven (Member # 3383) on :
 
ps. From the Yahoo article on the same thing, they noted that they found $5 Million to rehire these people, out of the $28 Million short fall
 
Posted by Lyrhawn (Member # 7039) on :
 
The money used to rehire them was taken from other programs in the energy department. The energy secretary said the money was taken from underperforming projects that bore no fruit.
 


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