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The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
If Perry beats Obama, with his "Christian" support for Israel, can we kiss goodbye Arab/Muslim support for the "war on terror"?
Will it make the US any safer? Perry, stood shoulder to shoulder with a foreign politician, Israeli deputy speaker of the Knesset, who criticized the President of the United States. Is the US becoming a banana republic? If Obama had any balls, he would ban this sucker from entering the US again. What would Perry say of Harry Reid went to Israel and stood shoulder to shoulder with the new Labour Party leader and denounced Netanyahu? Discuss for nest week! |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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Don't slip on the peel. |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
I thought it about Reagan; I thought it about Bush 43: now I say to myself, "Rick Perry, a viable candidate, what is the American world coming to?"
But, clearly, on this, don't go by me. Itzik Basman |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
It is so ludicrous to suggest Obama hasn't bent over backwards over and over again to work with republicans, that I was tempted to just not say anything. It hurts to have to acknowledge reasonable people feel this way. Perhaps there's some correlation between my reluctance to say anything and the fact that the majority of the right seem to think Obama is the most radical president in US history.
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Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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The Republican candidates are trying to play Obama as not supportive enough of Israel because they still want to portray him as a liberal internationalist wimp, but he certainly hasn't governed that way. On the contrary, he's been in Netanyahu's pocket all the way. So Republican posturing in "defense of Israel" is about as persuasive (and truthful) as posturing that they are flag-waving patriots while Obama refuses to wear a flag pin. |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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I can't tell if you're being intentionally provocative, or if you actually believe that. I understand you're probably disappointed with Obama on Israel, but that doesn't call for wild exaggerations. To get to the right of Barack Obama on Israel...isn't very difficult. Let is count the ways. You could stop giving speeches where you essentially imply moral equivalence between the enemies of Israel and Israel itself. You could stop hectoring them about settlements. You could have a much warmer personal relationship with the Israeli PM. You could not suggest 1967 borders (with the swap caveats, I suppose) as a baseline for negotiations. These might be positions don't like, but they certainly exist, and you shouldn't pretend otherwise. |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
Geez, Matt. Your LeanForward ad sounds a lot like Chuck Todd's, the big difference being that you, a conservative, are riding public transport while Todd is riding solo in his car.
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Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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Your other points characterizing the Palestinians as "enemies," pretending Obama is not sympathetic to Zionism, and fretting that he's not warm and fuzzy enough with Netanyahu are frankly too silly to entertain. Here is the argument for not only why you can't get to the right of Obama, but why arguably he's worse than Bush on Israel. I don't share Rosenberg's view that Obama is worse than Bush, but he's certainly right to point out that O is continuing decades of US unblinking loyalty to right-wing Israeli positions. Quote:
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Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
Here's some support of that point:
http://www.thedailybeast.com/article...to-israel.html |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
Here is what Rush said about Elizabeth Warrens comments "Nobody ever got rich on his own"? What this is, Marx had a thing called surplus value. This is Marxism, pure and simple, and the surplus value of the... Marx's belief is that workers, laborers, are getting screwed by not getting any of the profits of the company, only their wages."
"Ms. Warren, the government doesn't have any money until it takes it from people first. But this notion that we're all just one giant commune is the justification for the redistribution of wealth." "By the way, what if the factory fails, Ms. Warren?"Are you gonna pay for the failure? You gonna help 'em keep their house? The factory builder has risked everything. Nobody else risked anything. "The left in this country is jazzed. They were celebrating this. This is the greatest thing that's ever hit YouTube to them."But I'm telling you, folks: This grand total here of 60 seconds is more instructional and informative of what we're up against. These are like one-armed lunatics in a fight. They never stop swinging no matter what. This is the kind of stuff they believe: Total collectivism. It's all found in Marx. |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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You're a little in denial that Republican posturing on this isn't persuasive. Obama's speech at the U.N. is proof of that. I think this clears everything up; we are not, never were, and never can be anything more then a supporter of whatever the Israelis themselves decide to do. This is the political reality. The sooner this is realized, the quicker progress can be made. It's time to stop blaming and looking toward US politicians and focus on Israel itself. They elected Bibi Netanyahu. He represents them. If they want something different, they will elect someone different. |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
So, we can conclude that neither you nor Rush understand a blip about what Elizabeth Warren (or Marx) said. Great. Keep passing the meme and the ignorance. That's the Great Republican Party these days.
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Matt needs to stop whining about Palin and her fans
Matt,
Conservatives don't read conservative columnists or websites to read attacks on Sarah Palin. We've gotten that from the Liberal MSM 24/7 for the last 3 years. That's why you get attacked. And as shown by Tucker's running Tyson's remarks on Palin "The Daily Caller" seems to have a problem with Palin and strong women in general. Maybe, its the bow-ties. As for Rubin, if you run a google on her Palin columns she comes off as David Frum with tits. |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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Marx held that, in capitalism, labour was merely a commodity: in exchange for work, a labourer would receive a subsistence wage. Marx speculated, however, that the owner of capital could force the worker to spend more time on the job than was necessary for earning this subsistence income, and the excess product—or surplus value—thus created would be claimed by the owner. I suppose that this can be directly related to what Warren was saying. She seems to be saying that the rich don't pay enough for the benefits they get from society so they should pay more taxes on the profits they wrest from the workers and society in general and give it to the government so it can be distributed to the people it was originally taken from. Yet they do pay more than anyone else. However people on the left will say they're paying less than they did before and on and on it goes. Bottom line, Warren doesn't want the rich to think they got where they are on their own and they need to pay back, or actually forward, an unspecified amount but more than they are currently paying. And the crowd went wild. |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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On a deeper level, I think what she is saying is that whatever wealth/property a person owns in society, it is not just their property and wealth. Since they used public property and public capital in terms of publicly educated workers, the wealth they own belongs to everyone, not just them. Therefore we all have equal say in deciding how the wealth, which just happens to be in a particular person's safekeeping, is to be distributed to the rest of us to whom it belongs as well. If one assumes she was in polemic against Republicans, I don't know what else she could have been saying. Obviously Republicans realize that wealth comes from an economy in which many people, as well as the public, contributes to. Everyone knows this. So, if someone has a an explanation other then what me or badhat has described, I'd be interested to read that. |
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I found Limbaugh's comment and elaboration tendentious and, well, simply put, wrong. Read what he said (according to carkrueger): Quote:
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I actually have never heard of taxes being described as a payment of debt for public goods utilized in production. We all use the roads and pay to have them built. Trucking companies pay more to use the roads and pass that on to the folks whose freight they carry. I also think consumers benefit from suppliers being able to transport their goods. Everyone shares the cost and benefit. When a business builds a factory they pay lots of fees to be able to do this. They pay property taxes. Their locality gets the benefits of sales tax they generate and the sales tax their employees pay when they buy stuff. So this is not a one way street. Communities benefit from business, too. I have never heard of business paying taxes to pay back for the education that its workers get. It would seem that the workers are gaining the benefit from education by being able to secure a job and fulfill job requirements. Too bad the education system doesn't do a better job. Maybe if business paid more taxes... |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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Not that this actually has a chance of happening. |
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Also, what she said, taken at face value, is obvious. No Republican would disagree with it. She basically reiterated that we all live in an interdependent economy. Maybe she phrased it in a slightly different way then a Republican would: "No one got rich by themselves". Maybe a Republican would phrase it something like "Our market economy helps those with initiative and talent to do what they do best, which in turn helps all of us". But both of these ways of expressing it say essentially the same thing. I'm trying to figure out what it is she said that makes it so noteworthy to liberals. That's what I came up with. Yes, I'd say it seems a bit of an overstatement to me. But the leftist impulse in regards to 'income inequality' often seems understandable, to me, in these overstated terms. The argument over taxes isn't over whether or not rich people should pay taxes. It's over whether or not their taxes should be increased. As I've said before, I think the real motivations on either side are not stated very often. I think the right essentially does not want the government getting any more money. They want to starve the beast. While on the left, I think 'inequality of income' and the desire to make it more equal, is a more powerful motivating factor then trying to fix the budget deficit. |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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No one likes to think that they have been taken advantage of and that somehow those rich have managed to get away with what was rightfully theirs. It's a powerful hook to tell people this. This is the message which is being broadcast all over the left these days. The narrative fits well with bank bailouts, record profits and two wars which weren't paid for. I agree that the main impulse of the thinking republican is to starve the beast. He knows that when the government is given more money it will always want more. |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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I think the question isn't so much using the tax structure to reduce inequality, but the question of how to close the deficit in a way that doesn't INCREASE the gap between rich and poor. The Republican solutions in terms of cuts are almost all targeted at the poor and the middle class. The Democrats' solutions are primarily increased taxes on the very wealthy. I don't think either are attempts directly to either increase the gap or decrease it. I just think that there's an agreement that someone is going to have to forego something, and the GOP tends to see the poor and middle class as coddled and undeserving and don't see the fact that their policy would increase this gap as a problem. The Dems tend to see the gap as a problem and don't want to make it worse. I don't think the current proposals are as much an attempt to reduce inequality as they are an attempt to keep it from getting worse. |
Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
Speaking of folks who don't know much about E Warren, include the staff of E Warren.
Then again, maybe they just thought that if she didn't hide the extra $128,000, people might think she was one of the hated overpaid rich. "The Warren campaign revised the figure following a POLITICO report on Thursday, highlighting the fact that the Congressional Oversight Panel, which oversaw the TARP program, has not publicly disclosed exactly how it spent $10.5 million on salaries, travel, consultants and other expenses. Warren said she now supports public access to the oversight panel’s records, though her campaign wouldn’t say if she plans to actively push to open up the records." Not bad for something she testified to the Congress was a "part-time job". Change You Can Believe In! |
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This is really small bore potatoes. When you consider that it takes Republican congressmen 200K to feed their families for a year. http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/we...xrs=share_copy |
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You need to listen to the leaders in your party and hear the eat the rich rhetoric. Quote:
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Re: The Week in Blog: Leaning Forward (Bill Scher & Matt Lewis)
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Of course, politics is more then just a game of inches. Its a game of compromise, consensus building, etc. as well. The Republicans are taking a risk here in fighting for every inch and refusing to compromise, but I think its a calculated risk. Quote:
I do understand your point as well. And in the end, reluctantly, I agree that if we do need to raise taxes at this time, it should be exclusively on the rich. If it stays at a 4% marginal increase, I don't see that as a travesty at all. But I do always see a substantial risk, in terms of public perception as to how to solve problems, in raising taxes. |
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I have never heard the rhetoric. The only time i hear the rhetoric is when republicans talk about what they claim dems are saying. Sayhing that we need to return to a somewhat more progressive taxation policy is hardly the same as "eat the rich" All of the republican solutions to the deficit are cuts that inordinately affect the poor and middle class. |
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