Comments below in  BF
 
 
1/1/2012 10:31:22 P.M. Pacific Standard  Time, [email protected] 
writes:

Back to a more serious consideration of this after  my WTHDTCF (where the 
heck did that come from) moment, 

I'm not really  trying for sympathy for these folks. I DO have a problem 
with the falsehood in  advertising that one is a millionaire at $250,000 a 
year. I thought that they  had to make $1,000,000 to actually qualify. I mean 
$1,000,000 NOT = $250,000.  But I forgot that we were dealing with Obama 
math. 

He obviously  flunked. 

Most folks don't think that THEY are in occupations that are  "overvalued," 
and at what point does that occur? 
 
Well, no, who does ?  And some people,  like doctors, may not be.  Still, 
even they 
may be.  I'm still  wondering how a 25 minute routine medical exam costs 
over  $  250.
Or why a tooth extraction comes  in at $ 150 for 15 minutes worth of actual 
work.
Then there are lawyers, but I doubt if you would argue about  them.
 
Lower on the totem pole, union workers who may bring home $ 50  and hour for
assembly line work,  or grade school teachers who net  $50,000 per year. Or 
more.
 
I don't know where exactly to draw the line, but it has to  be  drawn 
somewhere.
We cannot realistically have a nation of millionaires, the  economy doesn't 
work 
that way.  And as things are, in fact, the  middle class keeps getting 
squeezed. 
Actual take home in constant dollars has  declined for the middle class 
over the past 20 - 30 years. And the % of the  poor has increased.
 
 
 
 
 
The cost of living in some places is such that a  median income isn't 
enough. What does one do about that? What CAN one do about  that? Rent and 
price 
controls?? That doesn't always work out so well.  


Uhhh, there are 50 states. May not get the  max income but lifestyle may be 
better
elsewhere, for far less, in  another state. $ 50,000 can be like 70,000 
someplace  else.
 
 


Abolishing government is not the answer, but you may have hit on  something 
with the abolishing of the mega-banks and financial institutions. I  don't 
believe in the "too big to fail" category. If something is "too big to  
fail" it should be "too big to exist." I also think that should be applied to  
government departments. Extremely large and unwieldy bureaucracies should 
also  be "too big to exist." A business should not be under scrutiny from 14 or 
more  regulatory agencies. I would hope for a single point of contact, but 
that's  probably overly optimistic. 

Welfare frauds should be prosecuted. But  then John Corzine should also be 
prosecuted, and NOT be serving as an adviser  to the administration, which 
he IS. Of course, one losing 1.8 Billion in this  administration is a piker, 
since this administration is $2.4 Trillion in the  hole annually. And since 
it was unpatriotic for Bush to run smaller deficits  than this (according to 
Obama himself in the 2008 campaign), what does this  make Obama?  
 
Well, I  think Bush 43 did us  all a lot of damage. So,  I don't excuse him 
for  anything.
However, nothing prepared us for  BHO  Take just about everything Bush did 
and
multiply it by 2 or 3 or more.  



Just heard Mark  Steyn talk about his latest book. All about  economics.
We are  racing  --fast--  for the nearest cliff to zoom off of. This is  
not good.




David 

  _   
 
“A society that does not recognize that  each individual has values of his 
own which he is entitled to follow can have  no respect for the dignity of 
the individual and cannot really know  freedom.”—Fredrich August von Hayek   



On 1/1/2012 9:38 PM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
 
Why is it that I cannot work up even a  teeny bit of sympathy for lawyers
earning $ 249,000 ?  There must be  some reason. I  just can't figure it 
out.
 
Hell, if a lawyer was "only" earning a  measly $ 100,000 I still would
be unable to work up any  sympathy.
 
The median income in the United States  is somewhere between $ 40,000 and $ 
50,000.
The bottom 20% live at or below the  poverty level. The upper 7 % of 
households
earn about 33 % of all income. About 2  % earn over $ 250,000.
 
To argue that this income distribution  is exactly how God wants it, that 
all people
who earn $ 250,000 deserve  every dime strikes me as utterly ludicrous ;   
they simply
work at occupations that the market  over-values.
 
The counterpart concerns the lower  levels of income. Let's say half of all 
people
on welfare don't merit what they get.  This half consists of bums and ne'er 
do wells
and idiots, etc. About half seems  roughly correct.
 
So no matter how you slice it, there's  a lot of injustice / unfairness in 
the system.
 
This DOES  NOT say that central  planning is better, in most ways it 
decidedly is NOT.
It just says that we don't live in  anything like Utopia ;   we live in a 
good  country but
one with a lot of  problems.
 
Abolish the government as a solution to  the problem ? 
Hell, why not abolish the mega-banks  and financial institutions ?  
Their execs deserves every penny of  million dollar bonuses we all pay for
each time we write a check or buy  something on credit ?  Yeah ? O really ?
 
Billy
 
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
-----
 
 
1/1/2012 7:16:08 P.M. Pacific Standard  Time, [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])  writes:

As Lady Thatcher once said: "Eventually you run  out of other people's 
money." When Obama was campaigning on taxing the  rich making over $250,000 per 
couple (they're millionaires you know,  despite not earning that million per 
year that I thought was required),  there were some lawyers in the blogging 
world who decided to stop working  for the year when they had earned that 
amount. Why? They figured that they  could sacrifice the extra income and not 
give it to the wasteful  government. Due to the fact that your employer 
deducts it before you see  it, the only way to stop paying is to stop earning. 

If I ever  reach those lofty heights, that would be a point to consider.  

David

  _   
 
“A society that does not recognize  that each individual has values of his 
own which he is entitled to follow  can have no respect for the dignity of 
the individual and cannot really  know freedom.”—Fredrich August von Hayek   



On 12/31/2011 8:22 AM, [email protected]_ (mailto:[email protected])  wrote:  
 
There is only so much even the most  well endowed religious charity can 
accomplish.
Basically they can help a small  class of people extensively, like unwed 
mothers
or orphans, but when it comes to  large classes of people, like the 
unemployed
in times of economic crisis, all  that really is possible are food boxes
and maybe spare clothing or bus  fare.
 
The problem is the "I've got mine  and screw everyone else" effect which
self-reliance theories promote even  as they also promote self reliance.
This effect works directly against  religious values and if the 
self-reliance
philosophy is strong enough it  over-rides religion.
 
The problem is made worse when many  people ( not a majority, but too many )
take advantage of the system and  won't work even when they can, or like 
some
women, have babies as a source of  welfare income --which everyone else
pays for.  The Left is  generous with the money of the working class,
the Right is unable to comprehend  that its bromides for dealing 
with large scale social needs are  ridiculously inadequate.
 
This is the   dilemma.
 
Billy
 
-------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
12/31/2011 2:00:24 A.M. Pacific  Standard Time, [email protected]_ 
(mailto:[email protected])  writes:

P.S. The actual development of catholic  charities make a topical
question of the relationship between  private and government charity
programs.

On 31 dec, 09:38,  cornucopianow _<[email protected]>_ 
(mailto:[email protected])  wrote:
> Hello David,
>
>  Just like you I would prefer charity by private organisations.
>  Of course the charities do a good job. But the position of the
>  churches in the 1800's was  another one as it is today as well  was
> that of the goverment. Or would you prefer to return to  the 1800's?
> Nowadays the churches may not be ale to embetter  the situation of the
> poor as much as would be desirable and in  my opinion there is a task
> for the government here also. But I  realize that the postion of the
> churches in the Netherlands  may be another on than that in the United
>  States.
>
> Have a nice day,
>
>  Walther
>
> On 28 dec, 21:29, "David R. Block" _<[email protected]>_ 
(mailto:[email protected])  wrote:
>
>
>
> >  Hello Walther,
>
> > Good to have a name other than Mr  or Ms Anonymous. :-)
>
> > Communism lite refers to  what it sounded like to me. I can always 
change
> > my  mind.
>
> > The quote from Von Hayek appears on all of  my e-mail, until I decide to
> > change it. Other  alternatives are available from Neal Boortz, Gerald
> > Ford,  Winston Churchill, Benjamin Franklin, Barry Goldwater, Robert  A.
> > Heinlein, Thomas Jefferson, P. J. O'Rourke, Ronald  Reagan, Ringo Starr,
> > Mark Twain, and Will Rogers. And von  Hayek's family moved to the US
> > because of the Nazis, not  the Communists, although "escaping Tyranny"
> > would fit  either one.
>
> > They are for entertainment purposes,  mostly. Although one is slipping 
in
> > here below because it  seems appropriate.
>
> > More below.
>
>  > David
>
> > “A society that does not recognize  that each individual has values of
> > his own which he is  entitled to follow can have no respect for the
> > dignity of  the individual and cannot really know freedom.--Fredrich
> >  August von Hayek*
>
> > On 12/28/2011 9:09 AM,  cornucopianow wrote:
>
> > > Dear Mr.  Block,
>
> > > "Communism lite" refers to a  non-existent society. It is certainly 
not
> > > a society  which the Civil Manifesto advocates.
>
> > > The  quote of von Hayek  presumably refers to Soviet Russia. It  does
> > > not apply to a society based on the Civil  Manifesto
>
> > > - "Their existence is not my  responsibility". Mr. Block would you 
like
> > > to live on  a society in which thousands of children have no
> > >  satistactory food as is the case in the Netherlands and certainly  is
> > > the case in Great Britain? I would rather  not.
>
> > DRB: I give to my church for a food program  for the homeless. It may 
not
> > (definitely not) make it to  the UK or The Netherlands, but surely
> > someone in the UK  or The Netherlands can give to their local charities.
> > No?  I don't think that the government needs to be operating  charities.
> > This used to be done by churches in the 1800s,  and i don't really
> > consider it "progress" to move it to  the government. Doing that runs
> > square into a problem  noted by P. J. O'Rourke:
>
> > "There is no virtue in  compulsory government charity, and there is no
> > virtue in  advocating it. A politician who portrays himself as "caring"
>  > and "sensitive" because he wants to expand the government's  charitable
> > programs is merely saying that he's willing to  try to do good with 
other
> > people's money. Well, who  isn't? And a voter who takes pride in
> > supporting such  programs is telling us that he'll do good with his own
> >  money -- if a gun is held to his head."*--P. J.  O'Rourke*
>
> > DRB: Charity, under pain of IRS Audit,  really isn't that charitable.
>
> > > -The idea is  not a mandatory retirement but to guarantee a decent
> > >  period of retirement for everybody. Of course many people ccan  
deliver
> > > their contributions until old  age.
>
> > > -Unemployment should be as short as  possible. The employment benefits
> > > should not hinder  returning to the workforce.
>
> > > -I have to study  the savings and loan debacle to see what actually
> > >  happened.  Meant is a maximum mortgage of 400.000  dollars.
>
> > DRB: There was a lot of non-existent  property on the books of many
> > Savings and Loans.  Undeveloped developments (Clinton's Whitewater) were
> >  carried on the books as having been developed, bogus oil rigs were  on
> > the books in Oklahoma, Louisiana, and Texas, and  general shenanigans
> > prevailed pretty much nationwide.  $400,000 is a fantastic amount for a
> > mortgage in Dallas,  TX, but kind of low for Hollywood.
>
> > > -I think  that affordable health care for everybody is possible 
without
>  > > a giant government department.
>
> > DRB: I  think that a giant government department is what we are going  
to
> > wind up with. And with the corruption evidenced by the  US government at
> > this time, that's not a good  thing.
>
> > > -I am very sorry for your daughter.  It must be a very demotivating
> > > experience for her.  It would take more space to analyse the situation
> >  > in which this happens. The factors which are responsible for  this
> > > outcome should be removed.
>
> >  DRB: That would be "advisers" at the Universities that she attended,  
who
> > obviously have some bias towards encouraging  continued enrollment-even
> > if the student cannot afford  it-THEY need the money, coupled with an
> > economy in the  dumper. Kind of hard to remove that last factor. I'm not
> >  exactly in favor of encouraging a college degree just for the sake  of
> > encouraging a college degree. Same thing with a  Master's degree, which
> > is where the debt was incurred.  Somebody is really "dumbing down" the
> > bachelor's degrees  if everything requires a Master's.
>
> > > -The  exploration of mineral energy seems to have a lot of
> > >  disadvantages. The fostering of green energy is a good idea.
>  > > -You are welcome! The idea of the Civil Manifesto is not to  specify
> > > the diet of whoever may be. The idea is that  shifting the balance 
from
> > > meat to plant is  advantageous for the wellbeing of society.
>
> > DRB:  As long as they are not about to go bankrupt (Solyndra), I  would
> > like to support it. Sadly, most of the green  initiatives that the
> > current administration has chosen to  promote seem to be chosen based
> > more upon their campaign  contributions than their financial stability 
or
> > even the  marketability of their products and ideas.
>
> > >  Thank you for your comments. You are the first one who reacts to  the
> > > Civil Manifesto. I whish your daughter may soon  find an occupation
> > > which matches her  education.
>
> > DRB: Well, I would hope so,  too.
>
> > > Sincerely,
>
> > >  Walther Micke- Tekst uit oorspronkelijk bericht niet weergeven  -
>
> > - Tekst uit oorspronkelijk bericht weergeven --  Tekst uit 
oorspronkelijk bericht niet weergeven -
>
> -  Tekst uit oorspronkelijk bericht weergeven -

--  








-- 
Centroids: The Center of the Radical Centrist Community 
<[email protected]>
Google Group: http://groups.google.com/group/RadicalCentrism
Radical Centrism website and blog: http://RadicalCentrism.org

Reply via email to