RossValoryRocks wrote:The main reason I have trouble with you, Monker and 7 is you are amazing at casting blame for the past...and you all spend so much time looking back rather than forward, and it gets frustrating. Because the excuse is always: Well the Republicans did it too...but that doesn't make it right. I know I have excused the behavior of so called "conservatives" at times, and at times I was WRONG to do so,…
I appreciate that RVR.
I can’t speak for everyone, but on the occasions I point out a double-standard, I’m doing that only to point out hypocrisy, not to absolve Obama for any personal failures.
If he fucks up, I want him to be called out.
I think the Cons on here (as well as Deano) are doing a mostly good job of keeping him in check.
But not all criticisms are equal…
The lifeblood of talk radio and, to an extent, Fox News is outrage and anger over
something,
anything.
As a result, some of the pet peeves on the right these days (no flag lapel, bowing, shoes on the oval office desk) are just petty, random, and stupid.
I’m surprised half get as much media traction as they do.
RossValoryRocks wrote:… but what is going now is a travesty, ramming this bill down our throats for political points is NUTS. There was NO NEED to rush this bill through....and I think starting over would have brought a large group of us together to find the BEST way through...no just throw something out there for the sake of "getting something, ANYTHING done" is just plain not sound thinking, and it reeks of political chicanery.
In purely political terms, I have to give Obama credit for sticking to his guns and seeing this bill through.
Contrary to the characterizations out there, he has not pulled a radical 180.
This bill is pretty much what he campaigned on delivering, (and Hillary for that matter), and he did it.
I don’t think it’s the silver bullet Obama pretends, or the Trojan horse to socialized care the hysterical opposition claims.
Personally, to me, since any insurance pool (gov't or private) requires everyone paying in to offset costs of others, it just makes sense to let that be handled by a centralized gov’t agency like Medicare.
Let businesses be concerned with maximizing profit, not providing healthcare to citizens.
RossValoryRocks wrote:We all know mistakes have been made by both sides of the aisle, REALLY big ones, but we as citizens REALLY need to be forward looking right now. The politicians are running this coutry into the ground...at the risk of being a hypocrite here...if you look back a Rome this is exactly how it collapsed. High taxes, give the masses "bread and circuses" so the elites (Senators etc) could keep their privileged status and Rome fell...we are on that path now and frankly its scary.
Part of the problem in getting libs and cons to agree is that their economists view the crisis in different ways. The Keynsians are pointing to the spending policies of The Great Depression and post-WW2 as the solution (ignoring the fact that our manufacturing sector has since been outsourced). Whereas the Neo-Classical/Conservatives are shouting “STOP!”, and warning of imminent inflation and societal collapse. Whatever the answer is, unity is not likely to be achieved through The Tea Party. At a certain point, you just have to say “fuck it” and accept your role as a spectator in an unfolding Greek tragedy on a national scale.