http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americ...ex.html?hpt=T1
USSR
Cuba
:smoking:
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http://www.cnn.com/2010/WORLD/americ...ex.html?hpt=T1
USSR
Cuba
:smoking:
i think you can cross off a bankrupt europe and USA as well, strike....
I think this calls for team america
EDIT BY COUNTARACH: Severe language warning...
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
It's capitalist agitation like this that means I will not be able to retire at 52 with a state pension. :furious3:
cursed neoliberal anglo oppressor a plague on his house :shame:
You forgot the entire eastern block, not to mention various countries scattered around the world. :)
But... but... I thought Obama was a Commie, when he nationalised the banks...
So when USA nationalises. Cuba privatises~:confused:...
I don't recognise this wold any more
So the Long March is finally over?
America didn't do anything, just because we are capitalism's biggest cheerleader doesn't mean we won the game for the team.
Why is it communists never bathe?
America-2 Dirty Communists-1
Forgot Vietnam already?
A draw!? Pft!
America won Vietnam 1-1. :knight:
Spoiler Alert, click show to read:
Doesn't look like a draw to me...
http://wikis.nyu.edu/ek6/modernameri...Evacuation.gif
To be fair, the fall of Saigon 1975 happened almost two years after the US military forces had withdrawn. :juggle2:
That the 1973 Paris peace treaty was a complete excuse for US withdrawal by all involved and that the US didn't do their promised bomb support in case the North invaded again is "minor details". :sweatdrop:
I disagree with you completely, acin.Quote:
No, that would be the long term instability of the USSR's centralized controlled economy due to the inherent bad decisions made by politicians making political decisions when it comes to direction of capital in production instead of what is most profitable.
Well that's typical:
(c) Reagan he's so awesome!
(a) Nah, he's just another mediocre president the likes of which we've seen about 40 of.
(c) How dare you suggest Reagan was anything but awesome!
Stuff and piffle. The number of truly destitute Americans who suffer ANYTHING like the deprivations imposed by poverty on the underclasses in developing nations is so small as to be functionally irrelevant. We have too many in poverty -- at least relative poverty -- but you shouldn't demean the suffering of the truly poor by such a comparison. The poor in the USA are fairly likely to have a TV, electronic games, clean water and food enough (albeit poorer quality) to end up overweight in many cases -- it just doesn't compare.
Once upon a time there was a small village where everyone was happy all the time. The secret to their happiness? They kept a small child in a closet and beat him daily. Thus, no one was everunhappy becuase no one ever had it worse than that child.
Now do you see why your line of reasoning is flawed?
In short: Subjective versus Objective.
The point is we shouldn't ignore the suffering of millions just because someone somewhere else has it worse.
Oh, and since I forgot to address it in my last post, having a TV or an mp3 player or whatever small consumer good you can come up with doesn't mean you're not poor. I know the poor in America aren't aren't as unfortunate as a Darfur war orphan but just because they can afford to spend a fraction of a percent of their income on luxury goods doesn't mean they're on cloud nine, either.
I wouldn't say Reagan was mediocre, I would say he was below average. No the worst, seeing as how a lot of presidents in the 1800s really messed up, but he wasn't good at all.
https://img529.imageshack.us/img529/...2665399213.jpg
cmon guys, this is the org.
Clowns never danced before, beansprouts never grew, ponies never pranced before, until I met you. I like the .org, it's always so civil!
HA. That is completely incorrect in every way.
Even migrant workers in Washington state, some of the poorest people, go to food banks by driving their own cars. How many destitute people in the third world own functioning American cars in decent shape?
Heck, how many middle class Soviet citizens owned cars?
You're comparing being trapped in a box every day and beaten to owning things that didn't exist a dozen years ago? Seamus said nothing of the relatively poor being on cloud nine - he said, quite correctly, that their situation does not compare to the destitute of the third world.Quote:
The point is we shouldn't ignore the suffering of millions just because someone somewhere else has it worse.
Oh, and since I forgot to address it in my last post, having a TV or an mp3 player or whatever small consumer good you can come up with doesn't mean you're not poor. I know the poor in America aren't aren't as unfortunate as a Darfur war orphan but just because they can afford to spend a fraction of a percent of their income on luxury goods doesn't mean they're on cloud nine, either.
ACIN, that has got to be one of the most useless lists in existence.
CR
I think it does a good enough job of summing up reasons why Raegan wasn't awesome. You don't have to agree but you got to admit it contains a fair few good points (tm).
Whatever made you think I was advocating ignoring poverty in America? I said that most poor in America have it a lot better than those facing crushing poverty on the fringes of Sao Paolo etc. I may have vastly different ideas about HOW poverty should be reduced, but none would deny that doing so is a worthy goal. Nor do I have a problem with starting in the USA first -- charity begins at home.
wow and it was all meant to be a joke.......... im sorry i forgot the title of this thread begs for intelligent discourse
He was far from awesome. War on Drugs (FAIL)
Massive Spending (FAIL)
Claiming he was the sole reason the USSR FAILED (BIG FAIL)
Supply Side Economics (FAIL)
Funding Death Groups in Latin America (FAIL)
Pulling out after terrorists murdered our soliders in Lebanon (Fail)
I wasn't even born when Reagan was president, and I that's just a short list off the top of my head. I think you get the jist.
Edit: My bad. He president for about 5 more mths.
Okay then. Let's be blunt. I don't believe I have to justify a darn thing. We're better off and anyone who thinks we aren't is missing the boat.
I do not believe that equality of outcome is ever possible in a healthy economic system. Nothing works better than the marketplace, but the marketplace reflects the values of those people who comprise it -- and they do not value all contributions equally. There will always be people therefore -- some by happenstance, some by circumstance, and some by their own actions/choices -- who do not receive/benefit as much as others. To benefit the most people to the greatest extent, the goal is and must be to grow the entirety of the economy and enhance wealth. This drags up the lowest in society too. Do they benefit as much as the economic winners? Or course not. But they do benefit.
THAT has been the story of the USA. We work hard, got lucky, and had fewer idiot stumbling blocks put in the way of people's success. So right now, today, you can live a life in the USA as a poor person that is better than the life of a poor person virtually anywhere else. Poverty is NOT relative when you are living it. You either have enough to eat or you don't. You have drinkable water or you don't. You have a roof over your head or you don't. You have affordable entertainment that engages you or you don't. You have access to learning or you don't. By all of these standards, the poor in the USA are better off.
Doesn't mean I don't want to see things get even better. Doesn't mean I don't do charity effort to help out. But "poverty" in in the USA is $5500 per person per year with no taxes and a bunch of publicly funded services. It just isn't the same thing.
Oh, come on. A rising tide doesn't lift the people who don't have any boats to begin with, now does it?
Um, no. As long as you can be left in the street to die of easily treatable diseases here, I can think of entire continents that have it better than us. Social mobility is dead in the water and hard work had nothing to do with the US rise to prominence (such as it is). We're at the top of the heap because our competitors were eroded to dust by WW2. That's it.
Well, this is what I was getting at earlier. Your position, if this is true, is a highly unusual one, because most people who claim that the poor in America have it better off do so to try and distract people from actually improving their lot. If you're just saying it for it's own sake, well...you're not exactly wrong, but it really raises some red flags about your intentions. I'll grant that I may have misjudged you, however.
On a macro level it does. Since the 1820s, the USA has been steadily improving in per capita GDP at a rate better than most of the rest of the world. Nor was it WW2 that "sealed the deal," since we'd passed the UK prior to WW1. By no means have we eradicated poverty, nor will we, but the "rising tide" has established a higher standard for virtually all US residents.
You'd make a better argument if you decried Reaganomics for enhancing the disparity between the top 15 and bottom 15 percent of the population, pointing to the potential for socio-cultural destabilization.
As noted above, the USA had passed by the rest of the world economically by the very early 20th -- even given the economic strength of the Empire upon which "the sun never set." Yes, we took a big bounce upward in the 1950s for the reasons you note, but the trend predates this event.Quote:
Originally Posted by jabarto
Social mobility was never as easy as the Horatio Alger stories made it out to be. The very existence of the Knights of Columbus and other "immigrant" organizations underscores this. Yet the USA was never and is not now as calcified as many societies have been in the past. My wife is one of two children of Italian immigrants. Neither of her parents had an 8th grade education and Dad was a cobbler/corviser while Mom raised the children. Their son is a neurosurgeon (formerly at Johns Hopkins) and MBA and their daughter is a Corporate Director with two Masters and a soon to be Ph.D. Either of them makes more in one year than their parents ever earned in any 3 years. Easy? Of course not -- but such stories are not rare, maybe not even uncommon.
And the disease thing is just hyperbole. Any person can walk into an emergency room and be treated. If you set your standard at 100% coverage of all persons at all times, then ALL societies are failures. The health care debate is too long to go into here, but I will remind you that the number of persons receiving no care is small and a portion of those not receiving care are choosing not to avail themselves of services which are -- however cumbersomely administered at times -- available.
I don't think my position is unusual at all. People in the USA are among the most charitable - by amount and by percentage of wealth donated -- around. Nor do I think most of us -- at least outside of government -- ever try to put obstacles in somebody else's way. Most of us are just trying to improve things for ourselves and for our families, and helping out a bit with those in need when we can. There are selfish folk who do little to help others, there are people who are so busy/distracted that they don't notice those in need -- which is sad. All-in-all, however, I think most folks aren't trying to harm those around them at all -- my success does not have to come at someone else's expense.Quote:
Originally Posted by jabarto
@Seamus you story about faster growth of GDP per capita might've been valid up to about the 80's. However there are a few point you don't consider.
GDP per capita is now no longer the measure by which the USA leads the world or not. On the Human development indices, at least, the USA is good but not the absolute top by a clear measure and a major part of that is though as little as the USA likes to acknowledge it, the states have a far more serious poverty problem on their hands than much of Western Europe... There is far more income inequality in the USA than there is in Europe which is how GDP per capita is skewed in favour of a high average.
Also the USA have the 6th highest (not the highest) GDP per capita which, incidentally stands at $47K rounded upwards according to wikipedia. Now, here's the question: does it translate to approximately every working citizen making a multiple of $47K so that he/she might support the family and it evens out as the $47K per capita? Or does it translate in a few Larry Ellissons' making ~$1bn a year and the rest making a correspondingly lower amount? A few $1bn a year incomes do a lot to skew something which averages out at a mere $47K...
EDIT: Incidentally the Mr. Ellisons covers for a few % of the *entire* USA. If you took his salary of ~$1bn worth of salary and stock, spread it out in chunks of $47K you would cover for a small town in USA terms (21277 people according to my calculator).
This is nothing new. Cuba's leadership realized the system was unsustainable shortly after the USSR collapsed and has been privatizing throughout the '90s and the last decade, especially in the tourism industry.
Besides the contextually dishonest distortions, outright lies, and baseless ad hominems? My favs...Quote:
Originally Posted by ACIN
'Horrible excuse for a human being in general.' I guess the maker of the graphic had some empty space to fill. :laugh4:
'Laid wreath and made speech at SS cemetery.' An SS cemetery? How awful of him! Except that Kolmeshohe Cemetery is not at all an 'SS Cemetery'. Here's the real story.
:smitten:Quote:
Mr. Reagan, in his address, said: ''I have just come from the cemetery where German war dead lay at rest. No one could visit here without deep and conflicting emotions.''
He added: ''The evil world of Nazism turned all values upside down. Nevertheless, we can mourn the German war dead today as human beings, crushed by a vicious ideology.''
So your graphic not only completely fabricated the nature of the cemetery, but took a rather forward thinking and nuanced position by Reagan, that was both intellectually honest and politically brave, and spun it as something bad. If I didn't happen to know of that particular event, I would think 'Gee, what a horrible excuse for a human being!' :grin:
Tell me you posted that mess for shock value and that you don't really take all of it at face value.
I didn't post it for shock value but I didn't take all of it at face value. There are still multiple points on the image that are valid, some like the SS cemetery are ridiculous but even if you researched all the points you would have to concede that Reagan is nowhere near the territory of a "terrific" or even a "good" president. He was mediocre at best, below average in my opinion.
You would find very little support for such a dream in the U.S.A. The French and Russian revolutions are held to be fine examples of how enforcing equality of outcomes is exactly as productive as plowing the sea.
I think 95% of Americans believe in equality of opportunity, with rubber safety bumpers for the unlucky, unfortunate or incapable. Even the rather hysterical conversation we're having as a nation right now is over the contours of that idea, not its essence. Republicans don't actually want the poor to die of treatable diseases in the streets. Democrats don't actually want to enact socialism. That's all hype and posturing.
Most of us agree on the fundamentals.
I wasn't saying about forcing equality of outcomes, it was merely seeing what the world be like if that was the case, that people earned around the same amount. (higher and lower based on type of work, hours spent, and other such things)
I do think earning more than 500,000 per year is definitely a overkill of a salary and I don't think anyone actually deserves to earn that much.
Because there is no moral justification or sane socioeconomic argument or justification for it.
There isn't any work where earning an average of 500k per year is deserved, especially as doctors, top intellectuals and other crucial or specialist work only hits around the 150k mark. 250k tops.
The people with over 500k are simply exploiting others for the money, since that money could easily be used to hire many more workers, fund research, apprenticeships, pay others a higher salary, and list of many other things.
What does, lets say, the Director of the BBC do, which earns over 800k, while the Prime Minister, Specialist Doctors, Head of the Ministry of Defense, Police Chiefs (many others) earn between 150-200k ? It is simple exploitation.
What could he do for 800k, which 40 people earning 20k couldn't do?
No one deserves that sort of wage for their work, year in, year out.
Unless we'd reinvent it. Money was originally invented to show off wealth, something that's kind of human.