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A Fool's Economic Paradise

By Stephen Pizzo, News for Real. Posted February 27, 2006.


Bushonomics has been the most destructive set of economic policies to hit Americans since Herbert Hoover. No, wait. That understates the problem.

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So, how are you doing? No, I mean really, how are you doing -- you and your family? Are you feeling prosperous, living the American dream? Are you on course for a secure retirement and with smooth going as you sail off into the sunset?

American families saw their real incomes fall 2.3 percent from 2001, according to a Federal Reserve survey of consumer finances released Thursday.

Bush will, of course, blame these negative figures on a "recession we inherited" (Translation: Blame Clinton) and being "attacked on 9/11." (Translation: Blame the terrorists.)

I wonder how many years have to pass before those excuses ring as hollow as they are?

Simply put, Bushonomics has been the most destructive set of economic policies to hit Americans since Herbert Hoover. No, wait. That understates the problem. Thanks to this administration we are all now stuck in a race between two looming catastrophes: an economic collapse or an ecological collapse. Who knows, it even might be a draw.

Oh sure, you say, "There he goes again! Mr. Repent-The-End-Is-Near."

Well, you tell me. Let's just look at the gauges on our economic dashboard and see what they tell us. The Federal Reserve study released Thursday provides us with the most current readings. "This is a tremendously detailed, comprehensive look at the American family's balance sheet and it ain't pretty," said Jared Bernstein, senior economist at the Economic Policy Institute.

Read "Paying employers not to end pensions" and "Paying for retirement."

All of which are among the reasons I continue to believe we are living in the final months of a fool's economic paradise.

The last time we teetered on such a precipice was at the end of the Reagan presidency. Conservatives like to point to the Reagan years as golden times, and for the wealthy and unscrupulous, they were. But Reaganomics, like Bushonomics, was fueled, not by genuine worker productivity and a healthy consumer spending, but hot money -- credit.

During the Reagan administration, banks and savings and loans were deregulated and allowed to lend to anyone, even themselves. That fueled a building boom that was more often than not completely unrelated to housing demand.

Billions of dollars were pumped through the bank accounts of shady speculators and even shadier developers, for housing developments and commercial buildings for which there was no demand. Many of those developments went bankrupt and were later simply torn down.

You know how that story ended. While all the free and easy dough pumped up economic indicators, it nearly killed the thrift industry, with almost half the nation's thrifts going under. And, it left future taxpayers with a $500 billion hole to fill. And, like Bush's tax cuts, Reagan's tax cuts did not, as promised, increase real economic activity resulting in higher tax revenues. They did just the opposite, they gutted the treasury, just as Bush's tax cuts have done today.

How did we escape economic collapse after Reagan? Well, first his successor, George H.W. Bush, was left with no choice but to go back on his "read my lips, no new taxes," pledge, and raise taxes. It was either that or start boarding up government buildings.

That cost Bush I the love and support of the usual suspects that benefit from tax cuts, corporations and the wealthy. And that cost him reelection.

But even the Bush I tax increases proved a drop in the deficit bucket. So when Bill Clinton came to office, he raised taxes on the wealthiest Americans, and by the time he left office eight years later, the U.S. budget was in surplus.

Crisis averted.

Then Son of Bush and his team of economic Taliban arrived, and it was back to voodoo economics; the wrong tax cuts for the wrong people, deficits and profligate borrowing. Happy days were here again -- at least for those with the right connections, or the right lobbyist.

All that loose cash has done it again -- distorted traditional economic indicators. The needles point to "full," but family bank accounts remain empty. Here we go again.

Deborah Reed, an economist at the Public Policy Institute shares my sense of deja vu. "The 1980s were marked by a similar paradox. The economy is growing, but the profits of that are not being shared with workers. They're going to the CEOs and the people owning stock," she said.

It was just lucky for us that Reagan's term in office ended before all his deficit chickens came home to roost at once. We are not likely to be as lucky. This time the perps have three more years at the till.

By the time the next president is sworn into office he/she may have to take a crash course in Franklin Roosevelt's first years in office. Even if the next president is able to plug the holes in this ship of fools, it might be too late. Worldwide disruptions in food and energy, and human migration forced by global warming might well sink us anyway.

On the bright side -- at least the water will be warm.

Digg!

Stephen Pizzo is the author of numerous books, including "Inside Job: The Looting of America's Savings and Loans," which was nominated for a Pulitzer.

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LET'S HERE IT FOT THE GIPPER!
Posted by: Tom Degan on Feb 27, 2006 3:30 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It's amazing. America's love affair with Ronald Reagan has got to be the sickest relationship in the history of disfunction. It just goes to show that in the advertising age you can sell the American people anything if it's packaged right. While he was president, the social and economic infrastructure of this country damn near fell apart - and yet - the electorate has been so dumbed down that most people, it seems, think he's second only to Washington. Listeners of Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity will tell you that Ronnie's number one. It's insane.

Bad as Reagan was though, one always had the feeling, real or imagined, that there were level heads in the shadows who would keep things from totally falling apart; They would be there to reign in the gipper if he got too out of control. I don't get that feeling today. This Bush mob is insane.

"A week mind is like a microscope, which magnifies trifling things but cannot recieve great ones"
Lord Chesterfield

Well, gee, dosn't that just explain, to the tee, the idiot in charge now? I always thought that Ronald Reagan was a fool and he was, no doubt about it. But George W. Bush makes him look like Einstein. The public, I think, is starting to awaken to this fact. They havn't been sleeping for the past twenty five years - THEY'VE BEEN IN A FREAKING COMA! Unfortunately, as the writer of the above piece makes perfectly clear, it may be too late.

Tom Degan
Goshen, NY
tomdegan@frontiernet.net

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» RE: Great comment Posted by: ShaSpirit
» RE: LET'S HERE IT FOT THE GIPPER! Posted by: scott balogh
» RE: Let's "HEAR" It "FOR" The Gipper Posted by: ConnecttheDots
» RE: Let's "HEAR" It "FOR" The Gipper Posted by: JimTheAnarchist
» RE: LET'S HERE IT FOT THE GIPPER! Posted by: monkeywrench
» RE: LET'S HERE IT FOT THE GIPPER! Posted by: triana1326
george233
Posted by: george233 on Feb 27, 2006 3:36 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
George W cannot be held responsible for his actions after all he did donate to science in a big way when he donated his brain before he was elected(????) president. To date the USA is about three trillion dollars in debt, by the time of the next election it could well be FIVE TRILLION in debt. That in anyones terms is a heap lot off dollars.The counting of votes for Geo.W. was diabolical. It appears as though the vote counters for the election were given employment in the Bush administration as they did a great job in his election

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» RE: george233 Posted by: kelly.nickell
» RE: We are 8 trillion in debt NOW Posted by: IndyElliott
» RE: We are 8 trillion in debt NOW Posted by: IndyElliott
Fool's Economic Paridise- Reason to Overthrow Bush
Posted by: rangerjim on Feb 27, 2006 3:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
If there was ever a reason to remove George Bush and Dick C heney from office by whatever means is necessary, the screwed up economy together with a totally unnecessary war started on the basis of a succession of lies from their toilet mouths is it. This whole administration ought to be either strung up or put in racks and so should many of the greedy corporate CEOs and cokeheads on Wall Street as well. His destruction of the social safetynet for the needy to line the pockets of the greedy make for ample reason why a revolution in this country is overdue. This isn't an administration in the traditional sense of the word, IT'S A DAMNED CRIME FAMILY!!!!!!!!!!

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Here's a great explanation...
Posted by: Linette on Feb 27, 2006 4:22 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
...of why the Bush tax cuts have actually been damaging to the economy:

Answering Republican Tax Cut Populism

Excerpt:

"Democrats need to stop letting the Republicans get away with their constant efforts to associate income tax cuts with economic growth and prosperity. It’s true that Congress has the power to do certain things that will stimulate economic growth, but cutting income taxes isn’t one of them. The actual truth is quite the opposite of what Republican politicians have been repeating for years: income tax cuts, by themselves, only have the power to contract the economy, not stimulate it..."

He provides the simple logic that Democratic politicians need to repeat whenever the Republicans start praising the wonderful benefits of their tax cuts.

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We must remember our history
Posted by: bookwoman on Feb 27, 2006 5:55 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Last evening I finally watched "Cinderella Man", the story of James J. Braddock, a boxer whose strength of mind and character led to his comeback to win the heavy weight championship of the United States. The film and acting is excellent, but the thing which affected me the most was the portrayal of the times. The film takes place in the span of time from just before the Stock Market Crash of 1929 to 1935. It shows families trying to stay afloat in an economy which had been destroyed by unworkable agrarian ideas which no longer worked in an industrial society. It shows men begging for a day's work so that they could feed their families. It shows a mother watering down milk so that she can give some to each of her children. To the credit of Ron Howard, the Director, it also shows that some people were still doing very well with shopping sprees in expensive stores and ownership of large shiny cars. As a History teacher, I was already aware of what went on during the Great Depression, but seeing it on the screen makes it all the more real and also opens it up to many more people who may not be aware of how bad it was. 25% of the labor force was unemployed, and it must be remembered that married women with children did not work. Therefore, each one of the men represented by this percentage had a wife and at least one child who were also suffering and not getting enough food, etc. When I was younger, I knew a lady who had been sent away during this period, along with her brothers, because her father and mother could not feed them. They lived with their grandparents on a farm for five years before they could return to live with their parents.

I wonder how bad our current economic problems would be if it weren't for unemployment compensation, social security or welfare. I wonder how many of our people would really be hurting worse than they are. The people at the top of the economic ladder, those who would have been still shopping in big fancy stores and jumping into shiny new automobiles in 1932, are doing well. They got big tax cuts and their stocks are doing well. I don't find that this is true of the middle class who is paying much more for many of the things it requires to survive such as utilities, rent, food, medicines, etc., and I don't know how much longer it will take a leader to come forward to start yelling this to the skies.

Watch "Cinderella Man" so that you can see the world to which George Bush and his group want to return. A world without social security or unemployment compensation to help us through the bad times; a world where workers have to stand outside of hiring place for a day's work to feed their families. It seems that the big budget cutting bill, which reduced so many pieces of the safety net which keep families going during bad times, and which was supposedly passed and signed a couple of weeks ago has a flaw in it which makes it unConstitutional. It should go back to be voted on again, but the Republicans, fearful that the moderate Republicans who voted for it, will come to their senses this time and withdraw their support are running from that option. I think the citizens of this country who believe in fairness should start calling their congressional representatives and complain that this bill is not legal and must be revoted. If it doesn't pass this time, perhaps a better law which represents the real feelings of the citizens of this country will become law instead.

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» RE: Cindarella Man is fiction Posted by: IndyElliott
» Don't Shop Til It Stops! Posted by: BeeGee
» RE: Don't Shop Til It Stops! Posted by: triana1326
» HA! Posted by: Iconoclast421
people loved Reagan's rhetoric
Posted by: Iconoclast421 on Feb 27, 2006 7:25 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
What was it he said about alien life?

"...in our obsession with antagonisms of the moment, we often forget how much unites all the members of humanity. Perhaps we need some outside, universal threat to make us recognize this common bond. I occasionally think, how quickly our differences worldwide would vanish if we were facing an alien threat from outside this world."

He was just appealing to the sci-fi / ufo crowd and that got him some support. I personally think he was dead wrong. If we faced a serious "external threat"... we wouldn't know what hit us. Especially with these morons in charge.

And that whole spiel about government being the problem? Well he was right, but that doesn't mean he had any intention of fixing it.

Bush is doing the same thing now. "We are addicted to oil." NO [censored] SHERLOCK.

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Chins up
Posted by: Lincoln fan on Feb 27, 2006 7:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
It is hard to remain optimistic in these times. What gives me hope is that more people every day realize that their true enemy is not the Republicans but the corporate establishment that controls them.

I hope that the lower income sector of our society realizes that the Democrats are Republican Lite and are controlled by the same corporatocracy.

I hope that the rich of our society realize that corporations are their enemies too. They must breathe the polluted air, eat the food genetically doctored, and face the perils of ozone depletion and global warming like the rest of us.

I hope that all people will realize that they must join together to make "government of the people, by the people, and for the people" a reality.

Join The Lincoln Initiative, a non-partisan grassroots movement, not an organization. There are no leaders, no registration, no contributions, no meetings, and no hassle.
Click on a new idea

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It's not the economy - it's the cowboy
Posted by: mcbride on Feb 27, 2006 8:07 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ronnie Rayguns saved us from the evil of communism. Remember the mircophone incident. Bush is saving us from tarrah. If you make people afraid you can do anything in the name of safety and money is no object.

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GETTING BETTER???
Posted by: FAITHCARR on Feb 27, 2006 8:26 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Well our family now makes ONLY $10k less than we were making a year ago. We now have health insurance again, although I've progressed to 2nd stage renal failure. And the co-pays are hard to afford. My hubby's new hobby is keeping his car running wihtout a mechanic. And I'm considering selling weed to make some side money. MEANWHILE, our Dem senator (B. Nelson F) keeps voting against us. Oh well, I've learned how to garden and we count on my crop to provide vegetables. And the squirrels are starting to look tasty.

Got to tell ya, it's looking bleak. And I can no longer afford to get to meetings, or print protest flyers, or support progressive candidates and media.
We've been played, and the game is near over.

Faith Carr

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You are right
Posted by: ghoster on Feb 27, 2006 8:45 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yep, the game is being played out and it seems that there is nothing that individuals can do except prepare for the worst, hope for the best, there is no leader of the opposition. So do we wait for some leader to arise and then survive the initial sorting out process. Getting involved seems to be a one way ticket to those shiny new camps. Underground means not using the internet to put yourself at risk, Total Information Awareness is real and functional, don't doubt it.

If there is any light at the end of this tunnel I sure don't see it, fortunately it can't last forever, and with the climate change that seems imminent what else is waiting in the wings for the world? We might be a fluke of the universe and have no right to be here.

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ronnie vs w
Posted by: chanceny on Feb 27, 2006 11:05 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I will never get over my amazement at the length & depths of the Regan LONG goodbye. People sure old enough to have LIVED thru Regan's realm, so sad, so lost, so mournful - and this guy had been a potato for years - more than a couple when he actually still reigned! These people and the blessed inheritors of their genes, could very well, some day in our distant future (IF there's to be one), greive as unabashedly for their boyking W. There is still 40% of Americans that support this SMIRKING HYPOCRITICAL ASSWIPE! 40 effin %!! The reverse-mirror image between fundamentalists reflects flailing fanatical frenzied crazies, some waving swords peering from their turbans, others clinging to their golden crosses! So swallowed up in their vision-thing and All eagerly awaiting the arrival of their one true god's prophacy of end of days. Ronnie encouraged those cookoo-crazies so they claimed him as thier patron saint. They hung around and busied themselves spreading their proud bigotry, enriching their coffers and spreading their tentacles to entrench themselves into power. The Clinton years had them so frothing they could and would not contain their venom. There was a grand coming-together of the good-ole boy born-againers and the eagerly awaiting neocons who were just drooling as they tasted their oncoming victory. W was chosen for the same reason ronnie was crowned head-guy - Manchurian-like moldability credentials and personal likeability. At least in Ronnie's case, that was sometimes true! But in this new bushite kingdom 40% of 'us' have made this screw-up a movie star! Unless these born-againers realize Jesus preached love, not war, charity, not greed and NO FALSE IDOLS - we're doomed. We've not been so divided since the Civil War - and then we had Lincoln!!! And look what killed him!

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» RE: ronnie vs w Posted by: chief of okeefe
» RE: ronnie vs w Posted by: triana1326
Popsigh.
Posted by: popsigh on Feb 27, 2006 11:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I just dont understand why America is letting the Bushfire go on? This is burning up America and incidentally, the world. It seems to me, a fairly obvious fact that Bush and cohorts are in the arms of the rich Arab nations and are willing to sell this country right down the river for their own enrichment. Bush should be impeached now for his traitorous actions, it is not necessary for us to wait until he has finally sunk America. Americans, it seems to me have become a nation of Pansys, too delicate to stand up and fight for their rights. I dont have a vote in this country yet, but the way things are going there wont be a country for me to vote in anyway. Get moving America.

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Re: "Let's hear it for the Gipper"
Posted by: willymack on Feb 27, 2006 12:18 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some time ago, my boneheaded next-door neighbor said that he'd heard that some people wanted Reagan's head to go on Mt. Rushmore alongside the others already there. He thought it was a great idea and asked me what I thought. I said "sure, and while they're at it, they should put up his brothers, too". He asked me who they were, to which I replied: " Larry,Moe, and Curly". He hasn't talked to me since.

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» RE: e: "Let's hear it for the Gipper" Posted by: ConnecttheDots
» Careful everybody... Posted by: Coleman
Go not quietly into the night...
Posted by: gonzoskismet on Feb 27, 2006 3:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, ladies and gentlemen, it does seem as if we live in the darkest of times. But, unfortunately, it's going to take a real capper to wake people up in this country. And it's going to hurt a lot of people. It took the Depression and the threat of Father Coughlin and Huey P. Long to make the politicians in Washington realize that they were about to loose their bread and butter, the American consumer. If nobodies got any money, they don't have an economy to pay their salaries, fund their armies and fill their pork barrels.
And , as far as the concentration camps and other dark clouds go, maybe that is what Americans will need to convince them that their government has indeed been hi-jacked and the time has come to 'water the Tree of Liberty with the Blood of Patriots.' God knows, nothing else has. Perhaps as Pink Floyd so eloquently said 'a short, sharp shock' will wake them up and give them the courage to take back what has been stolen from them. Who knows? I'd hate to see it go that far but that may be necessary. As long as they can keep you seperated and at each others throats, that's the road that lies ahead. What they fear is a united America.
But, one bright spot in all of this gloom is this: Nothing else they have tried has worked out. Iraq is a disaster, Katrina was a disaster, the Ports Deal is a disaster. Why should anything else they've got planned work out? Just goes to show Bob Dylan was right when he said 'Don't follow leaders, watch your parking meters.' And as far as the NSA is concerned 'Hello, boys, you're on the sinking ship, too. Have a nice day.'

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» RE: About Trailblazer Posted by: Conan the Younger
Go not quietly into the night...
Posted by: gonzoskismet on Feb 27, 2006 3:29 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Yes, ladies and gentlemen, it does seem as if we live in the darkest of times. But, unfortunately, it's going to take a real capper to wake people up in this country. And it's going to hurt a lot of people. It took the Depression and the threat of Father Coughlin and Huey P. Long to make the politicians in Washington realize that they were about to loose their bread and butter, the American consumer. If nobodies got any money, they don't have an economy to pay their salaries, fund their armies and fill their pork barrels.
And , as far as the concentration camps and other dark clouds go, maybe that is what Americans will need to convince them that their government has indeed been hi-jacked and the time has come to 'water the Tree of Liberty with the Blood of Patriots.' God knows, nothing else has. Perhaps as Pink Floyd so eloquently said 'a short, sharp shock' will wake them up and give them the courage to take back what has been stolen from them. Who knows? I'd hate to see it go that far but that may be necessary. As long as they can keep you seperated and at each others throats, that's the road that lies ahead. What they fear is a united America.
But, one bright spot in all of this gloom is this: Nothing else they have tried has worked out. Iraq is a disaster, Katrina was a disaster, the Ports Deal is a disaster. Why should anything else they've got planned work out? Just goes to show Bob Dylan was right when he said 'Don't follow leaders, watch your parking meters.' And as far as the NSA is concerned 'Hello, boys, you're on the sinking ship, too. Have a nice day.'

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What the??
Posted by: Benonymous on Feb 27, 2006 4:36 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The thing I can't figure out is the fact that the whole Republican/Industrial junta is at this moment lining its pockets at the expense of the taxpayer but when the ass drops out of the whole thing they'll be living in the same country as all the disenfranchised poor that they created! Are they going to live in closed communities and roll around in their obscene wealth? The poor folk might get upset about that and bust in, kill everyone and steal all the goodies. When J Citizen hasn't a buck to feed his family and some politician/CEO zooms past in his gold plated Hummer, won't it be obvious where all the wealth went? Who want's to be the rich man in a sprawling slum. You're a target and so's your family. Short sighted greed. Humans are so dumb.

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Where does the borrowed money come from?
Posted by: Smiff on Feb 27, 2006 4:58 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I'm an Aussie taking an interest in your part of the world.

I'm wondering where these phenomenal amounts of borrowed money are cominng from, and who are the beneficiaries of the interest being paid?

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Money, not corporations, is the root of the problem
Posted by: metamind on Feb 27, 2006 7:05 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Corporations are creatures of profit. They're all about money.

Take your analysis one level deeper and realize how the money system produces the results we are now experiencing BY ITS NATURE. Going after the corporations is missing the point in my opinion. We need a NEW ECONOMIC SYSTEM.

This means that we need another method of allocating resources, other than money, one that operates on a different principle than numbers.

THis would be a quality-oriented economic system in competition with the quantity-oriented economic system which we have now. What is quality? That's the central question.

I support the idea that "quality is consensus" and "quality is wisdom." But in our political economy, wisdom is irrelevant.
Witness who we have as President. We need a wisdom discernment system to identify political wisdom as a form of capital.

We the People have turned our power over to "the money people." We did it to ourselves. Witness George Bush, the Republican Congress and a republican-biased media.

Millions of man-hours have been put into designing the money system. How many hours will it take to design an alternative which can compete with it?

The alternative to an alternative is tyranny. No, thanks!

Steve Moyer
http://stevemoyer.us

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clinker
Posted by: cottontail on Feb 27, 2006 10:20 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Hell, most of you folks are under 80 and you don't know much of anything about the great Depression. The "amiable dunce" Ronald Reagan was a traitor to his class. But most folks join the Republican Party when they strike it rich. TV has so dumbed-down this society that it's too late to save the Republic. The only question is: what will emerge from the ashes.

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Fallacies abound
Posted by: GreyZone on Mar 1, 2006 11:14 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The last chance we had to alter our course was when President Carter was in office. The nation refused. Clinton did nothing and is at least as culpable for the coming disaster as his Republican cohorts. The Democratic controlled congress did nothing, until the Republicans kicked them out and managed to do nothing as well yet cost even more.

Blaming one political party solely for the coming disaster is wrong. Both parties are part of the problem and participants in making it happen. Yes, the Republicans may be "more" guilty but don't give me the crap that this makes the Democrats into angels. What it really does is make the Democrats into lesser demons.

I am aware of exactly one Republican and a handful of Democrats who really understand that homo sapiens just committed suicide and is taking the entire planet down with it. The rest of them still believe in all manner of partisan nonsense, partying madly while Rome burns.

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i do believe its to late.
Posted by: reno on Mar 7, 2006 5:35 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Right, so now, after five years of dealing with this nut job(bush), people are starting to come around? How could we have let him back in office in the first place??!! For every reason above and many more all throughout this site, hes a menace! But now its okay right? We see now what he is they say. Its still too late.
Im one of the American citizens, who pays his taxes and abides by the law. I live in poverty. No matter how hard i work my family and I cant get out.
All he cares about is lining his and his 'friends' pockets with gold, while trying to look like the christian, Texan, all american patriot that he is not.
I believe that if we even survive this term of presidency, we better have a president that can do a real bang up job, or America's toast.

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