Two weeks til Obama gets eviscerated in the debates, you mean.Unless I'm mistaken, they don't allow teleprompters.
notsureifserious
Two weeks til Obama gets eviscerated in the debates, you mean.Unless I'm mistaken, they don't allow teleprompters.
As far as income inequality goes, I haven't seen any evidence that it has a negative effect on incentives to be productive. I'd imagine that it would be the reverse, since my natural reaction to seeing someone with a lot more money than me would be to try to replicate their success, but I could be wrong.
Two weeks til Obama gets eviscerated in the debates, you mean.
Unless I'm mistaken, they don't allow teleprompters.
notsureifserious
Yeah I bet Obama is going to fail so hard in the debates. I mean its something that's completely new to him. He's never done it before.
Oh wait.
Yeah I bet Obama is going to fail so hard in the debates. I mean its something that's completely new to him. He's never done it before.
Oh wait.
Obliviowned
Two weeks til Obama gets eviscerated in the debates, you mean.
Unless I'm mistaken, they don't allow teleprompters.
Good message, good response, why does he stumble so much with his speaking? He was so much sleeker and more charismatic pre-2008. Still miles ahead of Willard.
He's debating a guy that refuses to say what he'll do when/if he's elected. He has a plan, but it's a secret plan. Obama is going to destroy this idiot.
He's debating a guy that refuses to say what he'll do when/if he's elected. He has a plan, but it's a secret plan. Obama is going to destroy this idiot.
How does oblivion keep trollin' people successfully. Has no one caught on to his schtick.
Mitt and Obama are evenly matched in the debates. Both are good debaters, neither are great. Mitt will be well prepared and do fine. Everyone writing him off and lowering expectations will help.
Mitt wont do well until he actually decides to speak in detail about his plans. He's already lost the election, though. Might as well drop that idiotic "we're not going to go into the details of our plan until we're in office" approach.
That's not trolling. That's a republican.
Mitt and Obama are evenly matched in the debates. Both are good debaters, neither are great. Mitt will be well prepared and do fine. Everyone writing him off and lowering expectations will help.
Oblivion already trolled the thread.
To be fair to Obama, he's got a lot of things on his mind, so he can't really keep up with campaign issues.
On the other hand Mittens doesn't really have an argument for his stances.
Yes yes anyone who doesn't acknowledge Obamadagod is trolling. Hillary stomped Obama several times and Mitt's a better debater than old man McCain.
It doesn't matter whether he has a good argument for his stances. Presidential debates are not the Oxford Union.
I didn't say a good argument. I said an argument. He's proven time and time again that he's unprepared for even his own press conferences.
He's been pull in Palinesque responses even during events without cameras when it comes to answering questions.
Yes yes anyone who doesn't acknowledge Obamadagod is trolling. Hillary stomped Obama several times and Mitt's a better debater than old man McCain.
He's not going to be unprepared for the debates. If arguments were important, GWB wouldn't have ever been president. Romney is too stiff and self-conscious to have a great debate performance, but he will hold his own.
Two weeks til Obama gets eviscerated in the debates, you mean.
Unless I'm mistaken, they don't allow teleprompters.
This is not a vacuum. Give me the first world countries you're talking about, and I'll bet most of them have either healthcare for all citizens, lower income inequality, better mobility between social classes, or more likely all of the above. All of these things factor into education because they provide factor into the environment that our children are being brought up in. If I'm born poor, everyone I know is poor, no one has moved significantly from their social position unless through illegal means, my parents don't care about my schooling because they're poor and everyone they know is poor and that's just how life is, of course that's going to effect how well students living in poverty do in school (and that's a large percentage of students, 22%). Schools with predominantly low-income students do not get the same funding, making for worse teachers and environment, and an incentive for increased apathy towards schooling itself. Private schools, which would invariably rate higher than the national average for standardized tests, are not required to take them, skewing your figure.We already spend way more money than other 1st world countries on education per capita, with mediocre results. We need to fix the system, rather than funneling more money into a broken one. Right now, it's inefficient, is not geared to prepare students for the job market, and does not guide them onto learning tracks that will be most beneficial to their future careers.
The conventional wisdom on minimum wage is that it hurts (with businesses willing/able to hire fewer employees) more than it helps.
As far as income inequality goes, I haven't seen any evidence that it has a negative effect on incentives to be productive. I'd imagine that it would be the reverse, since my natural reaction to seeing someone with a lot more money than me would be to try to replicate their success, but I could be wrong.


Open Source said:Someone of the people I've known who were on various aid programs for a long time were there not because it was comfortable for them, but because they'd given up hope of a better lot in life and wouldn't even try.
Most other rich countries are beating us on this.
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It should probably be renamed to the European Dream.
The gini coefficient has no connection whatsoever with social mobility. While I generally agree with the idea that mobility is low at the moment, I hate the argument about income inequality, since I fail to realise how is that a bad thing.
Social mobility and poverty level are valid points. Income inequality is not.
No group of people is more intolerant of those who don't agree with them than those who shout from on high about tolerance.
There is a tape that just came out today where the President is saying he likes redistribution. I disagree, Romney said in an afternoon interview with Fox News.
The audio, posted to YouTube by an unidentified user and dated Oct. 19, 1998, appears to be of remarks by then-Illinois State Sen. Obama at a conference at Loyola University in Chicago.
Let me just close by saying, as we think about the policy research surrounding the issues that I just named policy research for the working poor, broadly defined I think that what were going to have to do is resuscitate the notion that government action can be effective at all, he says.
There has been a systematic I dont think its too strong to call it a propaganda campaign against the possibility of government action and its efficacy. And I think some of it has been deserved. The Chicago Housing Authority has not been a model of good policy making, and neither necessarily has been the Chicago Public Schools. What that means then is that as we try to resuscitate this notion that were all in this thing together, leave nobody behind, we do have to be innovative in thinking what are the delivery systems that are effective and meet people where they live.
And my suggestion, I guess, would be that the trick and this is one of the few areas where I think there are technical issues that have to be dealt with as opposed to just political issues I think the trick is figuring out how do we structure government systems that pool resources and hence facilitate some redistribution, he said, because I actually believe in redistribution, at least at a certain level, to make sure everybodys got a shot.
The Romney campaign signaled that it plans to make the comments a focal point of its messaging in the coming days. It appeared to be an attempt in part to try and deflect criticism from Democrats over Romneys surreptitiously-recorded comments referring to Obama supporters as people who are dependent on the government and feeling entitled to health care, to food, to housing, to you-name-it.
That didn't really come out right, did it?
How does large income disparities not effectively make a plutocracy?
As long as mobility is encouraged (e.g. with free high quality education and no help from government to big companies) and poverty is controlled (free healthcare, strong social security), i have no problems with mega-billionaires. Especially since a decent portion of the current richest people in the world are people that have the most respect for (Gates and Buffet, for example).
To answer your question of how: with an effective democracy. Something that we lack at the moment, and which Democrats are not interested in creating.
So you're fine as long as the rich people are decent. That's not really a check on anything.
This may have been posted already since it went up at like 6 last night, but Romney's camp said they're going to be attacking Obama for that 1998 recording over the next few days:
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politic...-for-redistribution-remark-in-1998-recording/
Start that deflecting, baby.
What the fuck? So Obama was talking about how the Chicago Public Housing authority and Chicago public schools should allocate their resources . . . . and . . . . what? I guess the fact that he used the word 'redistribution'? Did that suddenly turn him into Karl Marx or something? What am I not understanding?
The gini coefficient has no connection whatsoever with social mobility. While I generally agree with the idea that mobility is low at the moment, I hate the argument about income inequality, since I fail to realise how is that a bad thing.
Social mobility and poverty level are valid points. Income inequality is not.
The gini coefficient has no connection whatsoever with social mobility. While I generally agree with the idea that mobility is low at the moment, I hate the argument about income inequality, since I fail to realise how is that a bad thing.
Social mobility and poverty level are valid points. Income inequality is not.
Comparing the US with one high-mobility state (Denmark), journalist Kevin Drum concluded that lack of mobility for the poorest children seems to be the primary reason for America's lag behind other developed countries.[31] A study from the Economic Mobility Project found that growing up in a high-poverty neighborhood increases Americans risk of experiencing downward mobility and explains a sizable portion of the black-white downward mobility gap. The reports analysis also showed that black children who experience a reduction in their neighborhoods poverty rate have greater economic success in adulthood than black children who experience poverty rates that increase or are stable.
As far as income inequality goes, I haven't seen any evidence that it has a negative effect on incentives to be productive. I'd imagine that it would be the reverse, since my natural reaction to seeing someone with a lot more money than me would be to try to replicate their success, but I could be wrong.
He's debating a guy that refuses to say what he'll do when/if he's elected. He has a plan, but it's a secret plan. Obama is going to destroy this idiot.
I'm sure these people are just terrible at picking up on patterns.No, he's just about trolled every political thread I've been in and people still fall for it.
Those corporations are people. Shouldn't they be counted in the 47% figure?
I'm sure these people are just terrible at picking up on patterns.
... or they haven't seen/remembered his previous posts.
Not to be a killjoy... honestly curious. Isn't habitually trolling threads supposed to get you banned or was that never actually the case?
You're technically right - as long as those issues are taken care of for the bottom end, then it doesn't matter how large a wealth disparity there is at the top end. This is especially evident if we lived in a post-scarcity society, where the only purpose of wealth was to serve as an indication of status.
But of course we don't - and that large gini coefficient is in real terms strongly correlated with social mobility, access to services, taxation rates, etc.
Income inequality effects poverty effects social mobility. It's like, all interconnected and shit, man.
People expecting a debate blowout on either side will be disappointed; both are good debaters. The problem for Romney is that he is clearly behind, so he'll likely have to come out the gate aggressive. Given his problem with low favorability he won't be doing himself any favors by constantly attacking Obama. Meanwhile Obama will basically be repeating his 2008 performance against the desperate McCain: agreeing with his opponent sometimes while slowly twisting the knife here or there.
IMO, the historical trend is that the creation of wealth (which is strongly related to technology advancements) benefits everybody in a democratic and non corrupt country. My argument is that the developed world is losing the democratic part of the equation, and that is making the poverty levels rise. That, and not inequality, is a huge problem.
Let me put it this way: would you rather be a middle class american today or a european king in medieval times? Would you rather be a poor american today or part of the european middle class in medieval times?
Yes, of course he is.
McCain gave Bush that work in 2000.
Obamadagod...LOL.
Dudeis saaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaalty and I'm not even sure why.Abides
They must be sitting on a mountain of valid policy if you think they'll be preprared for the debates.
Which begs the questions, why are they not divulging it? The countries lively hood depends on it. I'd consider it close to treasonous if they are withholding it from the american public.
That dont plague your mind?
They will hardly have need for debate skills during the debate. It is not like they will actually be debating stuff.
Moderator: "Candidate 1, [ Some semi-tough specific question about a position ]"
Candidate 1: "[ Sidesteps specific question and tells general prepared quote partly blaming Candidate 2 while totally not answering the question ]"
Moderator: "Candidate 2, your rebuttal"
Candidate: "[ Sidesteps points made by Candidate 1 and tells general prepared quote partly blaming Candidate 2 while totally not answering ]"
Mobile Suit Gundam 08th MS Team 11
So, how do you top the best Gundam fight ever? You aim straight for the heart.
While Shiro's and Aina's naivete reaches series highs despite all of the shows efforts to dissuade it, this was still a fantastic emotional climax. Ginias and the Fed general put the ideals of our heroes to the test, but their realpolitik doesn't stop our heroes from believing in a brighter future. And while the ending was bittersweet (and I honestly have no clue how they could have survived), it was a perfect sort of triumph. Peace is not easily earned.
I mean, Shiro loses a leg. That's fucking hardcore.
While I don't care for throwaway villain motivations (so that line about Ginias's mother really did nothing for me), his repeated acts of full-on douchebaggery make him a great villain who I was happy to see die. The watch saving her life is about as cliche as it gets, but it's still nice.
Karen Joshua is a great character, and I really like her arc. She reveals emotional depth without ever discarding her strength and fierceness. I don't want to say she was underutilized (I don't know if further exposure would actually help), but she was definitely my favorite of Shiro's subordinates.
This was a great finale, so I have no idea what I'm going to see next week.
It looks like it's raining, huh...
I don't see your point. Yes, poor people (or people of any class) have it better now than they did in the past due to technology. That's a given.
You're saying that income inequality doesn't effect poverty. Resources and goods and assets are to some degree finite at any given snapshot in time. If the rich are taking more of that pie or more of the relative growth of that pie (income inequality), how does that not make poverty levels rise???
Of course it's income inequality is not a direct variable that correlates 1:1 with poverty, the real world is much too complex for that to be the case, but it seems like you're saying one has no effect on the other, which seems impossible to my mind. Can you explain this position better?
pg said:Money Is Not Wealth
If you want to create wealth, it will help to understand what it is. Wealth is not the same thing as money. Wealth is as old as human history. Far older, in fact; ants have wealth. Money is a comparatively recent invention.
Wealth is the fundamental thing. Wealth is stuff we want: food, clothes, houses, cars, gadgets, travel to interesting places, and so on. You can have wealth without having money. If you had a magic machine that could on command make you a car or cook you dinner or do your laundry, or do anything else you wanted, you wouldn't need money. Whereas if you were in the middle of Antarctica, where there is nothing to buy, it wouldn't matter how much money you had.
...
The Pie Fallacy
A surprising number of people retain from childhood the idea that there is a fixed amount of wealth in the world. There is, in any normal family, a fixed amount of money at any moment. But that's not the same thing.
When wealth is talked about in this context, it is often described as a pie. "You can't make the pie larger," say politicians. When you're talking about the amount of money in one family's bank account, or the amount available to a government from one year's tax revenue, this is true. If one person gets more, someone else has to get less.
I can remember believing, as a child, that if a few rich people had all the money, it left less for everyone else. Many people seem to continue to believe something like this well into adulthood. This fallacy is usually there in the background when you hear someone talking about how x percent of the population have y percent of the wealth. If you plan to start a startup, then whether you realize it or not, you're planning to disprove the Pie Fallacy.
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This is why so many of the best programmers are libertarians. In our world, you sink or swim, and there are no excuses. When those far removed from the creation of wealth-- undergraduates, reporters, politicians-- hear that the richest 5% of the people have half the total wealth, they tend to think injustice! An experienced programmer would be more likely to think is that all? The top 5% of programmers probably write 99% of the good software.
...
To get rich you need to get yourself in a situation with two things, measurement and leverage. You need to be in a position where your performance can be measured, or there is no way to get paid more by doing more. And you have to have leverage, in the sense that the decisions you make have a big effect.