[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
Not only has every conservative on the list come out of the woodwork now
just to say I'm too left, for Michael and Kat I'm not left enough, because
I didn't vote for Nader.
Aagh..
Kristin
I like that... :-). I actually do not agree with many of Nader's
positions... I wasn't voting for those things though... I was voting for the
environment. The issues I like most about Nader were equal rights, personal
freedoms, and the environment. I don't like Republicans much because they
*don't* maintain a seperation of church and state (constantly forcing their
morals upon others through laws which oppose what they consider "immoral"...
that is a violation of personal freedoms. I think eating meat is immoral,
does that mean there should be laws against eating meat?), and are typically
very anti-environment. I don't like Democrats because the last democrat in
office was a hypocritical liar. I knew that Nader would never win. My vote
for him was for the environment, and, in my veiw, it was heard quite well by
the democrats. As I said before the election, if I believed that Gore was
sincere about his environmental stance, I would have voted for him.
I'm not a communist... far from it, though I do feel that many manual labor
workers are underpaid, considering all that they really do contribute (heck,
they contribute more than someone who makes animations or programs web pages,
but they get paid less). People are not paid by contribution though, they
are paid by what drives the economy, supply and demand. There is a high
supply of "unskilled" workers, so if someone refused to work for such low
pay, someone else will just fill the void. "Skilled" workers (usually just
gifted workers who are lucky enough to have a natural nack for something that
most other people can't do) get paid more because there are fewer people to
fill voids, so people with such skills can demand higher pay.
Michael Harney
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
