lewser wrote:
The problem is your side wants certain people to pay for other peoples mistakes. How many of the uninsured 47million or whatever are High School and then College grads? How many are just plain dropouts? Why don't people have to pay for their mistakes anymore?
Maybe because the 'payment' in many cases is unpayable in this or several other lifetimes?
But they should pay for their 'mistakes.' Like, say, a woman who didn't take up a career so she could stay at home and raise her and her husband's kids? Which of course would make her a hero of the cultural right. He abandons her at some point, she goes to work at Wal-Mart, then gets breast cancer. Looknig forward to seeing you at the funeral, as her kids follow the casket, yelling 'Losers! Pay for her mistake, you dumb brats! Shoulda thought of that before, and chosen a better mother!'
lewser wrote:
If their punishment for not finishing school, is to have minimum wage jobs with no health insurance, well, so be it. Why is it people above a certain wage bracket have to pay more? Why isn't every single tax payers monies being used, huh?
Ah yes, that little smear.
http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/tue-a ... s-tariffic'Those ****ers. Starbucks-sweeping, Arugula-washing, Volvo-fueling Laundromat Liberals. And their government-leeching scheme to not pay federal income taxes. 'Course they do most likely pay payroll taxes, state, local, sales and excise taxes, but the important thing is, knowing that doesn't make you as mad, does it?
So, who are these scofflaws? Generaly, they're a buncha lowdown, unloveable no-accounts...Single mothers making minimum wage, heads of households making less than thirty thousand a year, and the worst of the worst, grandmothers on fixed incomes...Hey Granny! Want any Grey Poupon with your catfood?'lewser wrote:
I have a serious question Dave (hypothetical of course): When/if your bank account is running low, do you:
A) Find someone with more money and borrow it.
B) Stop spending money
C) Decide that other people without money like yourself think it is your right to have more money and vote in leaders who will do their best to take it from others.
D) Spend more money you don't have.
E) Borrow money from people who haven't been born yet.
F) All the above except B
I have no problem helping people truly in need, but the sense of entitlement is getting really old.
Yank.
What the holy jesus are you going on about? Is the subject income redistribution, or universal insurance? Look, I'll spell it out very simply. What people 'on my side' are looking for is something that every single other industrial democracy has had for years, if not decades, if not half centuries (see Great Britain, which hasn't fallen apart despite 63 years of socialist healthcare). Which begs the question, why are WE on the defensive, why isn't the burden on your side to come up with some plausible reason we are on one side of a divide, and everybody else in the goddamn world is on the other?
Anyway, I know you're not talking about yourself when you kvetch about the tax burden being raised to pay for health care. 'Cause your taxes haven't been raised a penny, and aren't likely to be raised a penny, for it. Your concern for the super-rich is so touching.
Fact: The rich can afford it, they're getting richer every year. See, we're increasinly living in a 'plutonomy,' as the rich get richer and grab hold of the reins of government in order to perpetuate a system that rewards them disproportionately.
What??? What commie put this nonsense into my head?
The commies at Citigroup! That's who!
http://digbysblog.blogspot.com/2010/05/ ... oyers.html"Asset booms, a rising profit share and favorable treatment by market-friendly governments have allowed the rich to prosper...[and] take an increasing share of income and wealth over the last 20 years..."
"...the top 10%, particularly the top 1% of the US-- the plutonomists in our parlance-- have benefited disproportionately from the recent productivity surge in the US...[and] from globalization and the productivity boom, at the relative expense of labor."
"...[and they] are likely to get even wealthier in the coming years. [Because] the dynamics of plutonomy are still intact."
Oh, one last thing. None of your yanking, whatever the fuck that's supposed to be, explained away 'your side's' candidate for the U.S. Senate's spectacular inability to come up with a non-junior high approach to serious governance.