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  1. #1
    Senior Member Senior Member Fisherking's Avatar
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    Default Re: A Problem of Shrinkage

    Quote Originally Posted by Sasaki Kojiro View Post
    Yes. That's like saying "these referees are terrible, let's pick random fans".
    And sending a bunch of rich lawyers to Washington to write laws is a better idea?


    Education: that which reveals to the wise,
    and conceals from the stupid,
    the vast limits of their knowledge.
    Mark Twain

  2. #2

    Default Re: A Problem of Shrinkage

    Quote Originally Posted by Fisherking View Post
    And sending a bunch of rich lawyers to Washington to write laws is a better idea?
    If they are rich then they are less likely to accept bribes, and if they are lawyers they have a certain level of intelligence. Understanding the law would help in writing new ones...

    Palin/Plumber 2012!
    Last edited by Sasaki Kojiro; 10-29-2009 at 16:18.

  3. #3
    Senior Member Senior Member Fisherking's Avatar
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    Default Re: A Problem of Shrinkage

    Sorry but I tend to disagree with all but the intelligence part.

    It is rather a conflict of interest for those who make money from the law to make new ones...

    Being wealthy never stopped greed.

    Those are the last people you want representing you, yet they seem the most likely to want the job...

    Think about it.

    By the way, a Quote I love;


    When the white man discovered this country Indians were running it. No taxes, no debt, women did all the work. White man thought he could improve on a system like this.




    Education: that which reveals to the wise,
    and conceals from the stupid,
    the vast limits of their knowledge.
    Mark Twain

  4. #4

    Default Re: A Problem of Shrinkage

    Quote Originally Posted by Fisherking View Post
    Sorry but I tend to disagree with all but the intelligence part.

    It is rather a conflict of interest for those who make money from the law to make new ones...

    Being wealthy never stopped greed.

    Those are the last people you want representing you, yet they seem the most likely to want the job...

    Think about it.
    The presidential salary is lower today than it was it 1789.

    So did all the rich lawyers make greedy laws to benefit themselves whereas poor garbage collectors would have no conflicts of interest?

    I'll go back to my original example. The refs in the NFL should be the best in the country, yet they still make mistakes. Is the solution to improve the instant replay system and change some of the more arbitrary rules, or is it to pick random people from the crowd and have them referee?

    Cynicism is a cop out for the disillusioned

  5. #5
    Senior Member Senior Member Fisherking's Avatar
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    Default Re: A Problem of Shrinkage

    Quote Originally Posted by Sasaki Kojiro View Post
    The presidential salary is lower today than it was it 1789.

    So did all the rich lawyers make greedy laws to benefit themselves whereas poor garbage collectors would have no conflicts of interest?

    I'll go back to my original example. The refs in the NFL should be the best in the country, yet they still make mistakes. Is the solution to improve the instant replay system and change some of the more arbitrary rules, or is it to pick random people from the crowd and have them referee?

    Cynicism is a cop out for the disillusioned
    Your analogy is a bit off.

    The referees don’t make the rules of the game. They act as a police force to enforce the rules.

    At its inception the Governing Bodies of the United States were not conceived as partisan camps.

    We were to select Representatives to act on behalf of the people, all the people and not on behalf of a third party (the Party).

    They represent the interests of the Party that got them elected and if they have higher notions of their position they are soon shown the way it really is.

    Along the way they have restyled them selves not as Representatives of the People but as their Leaders.

    It is no about service to the community and nations but instead about power and prestige.

    They are beholden to special interests who gave them money and to the Party that sponsored their election.

    The Parties have their own interests and agendas. Some times these may serve the people but first and foremost they serve the Party.

    Furthermore, the laws that govern the people need not be written in such a way as to be unintelligible to those without legal training. In fact it started out in the other extreme.

    Laws were not meant to be ambiguous, unintelligible, or to require someone with legal training to interpret them.

    The original “final arbiter” of the law was meant to be the jury and not the courts. When the Supreme Court took upon its self the right to judge laws it did not draw it from the courts but because it was also the supreme jury of the land.


    I am not being cynical. I would like to see Representative Government. At the same time I know that this thread is not going to change the world.

    It is just a discussion.

    The Republicans are having problems. The Democrats have recovered form the problems they were having. At worst a new Party will arise to take the place of one that fails but the system will go on giving power to an Elite who do not represent their constituents but their own interests and that of their party.

    Selecting candidates from the voting base and making the final selection by vote might rid us of Parties but it is not going to happen because it does not serve the interests of those in power.


    Education: that which reveals to the wise,
    and conceals from the stupid,
    the vast limits of their knowledge.
    Mark Twain

  6. #6
    Nobody expects the Senior Member Lemur's Avatar
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    Default Re: A Problem of Shrinkage

    Man, what the heck is up with South Carolina? Is there something in the water?

    SC state attorney caught with stripper, sex toys in graveyard

    A deputy assistant attorney general who said he was on his lunch break when an officer found him with a stripper and sex toys in his sport utility vehicle has been fired, his boss said Wednesday.

    Roland Corning, 66, a former state legislator, was in a secluded part of a downtown cemetery when an officer spotted him Monday. [...]

    As the officer approached, Corning sped off, then pulled over a few blocks away. He and the 18-year-old woman with him, an employee of the Platinum Plus Gentleman's Club, gave conflicting stories about what they were doing in the cemetery, Officer Michael Wines wrote in his report, though he did not elaborate.

    Corning gave Wines a badge showing he worked for the state Attorney General's Office. Wines, whose wife also works there, called her to make sure Corning was telling the truth.

    He then searched the SUV, where he found a Viagra pill and several sex toys, items Corning said he always kept with him, "just in case," according to the report.
    Last edited by Lemur; 10-30-2009 at 22:00.

  7. #7
    Part-Time Polemic Senior Member ICantSpellDawg's Avatar
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    Default Re: A Problem of Shrinkage

    Quote Originally Posted by Lemur View Post
    Man, what the heck is up with South Carolina? Is there something in the water?
    SC state attorney caught with stripper, sex toys in graveyard

    A deputy assistant attorney general who said he was on his lunch break when an officer found him with a stripper and sex toys in his sport utility vehicle has been fired, his boss said Wednesday.

    Roland Corning, 66, a former state legislator, was in a secluded part of a downtown cemetery when an officer spotted him Monday. [...]

    As the officer approached, Corning sped off, then pulled over a few blocks away. He and the 18-year-old woman with him, an employee of the Platinum Plus Gentleman's Club, gave conflicting stories about what they were doing in the cemetery, Officer Michael Wines wrote in his report, though he did not elaborate.

    Corning gave Wines a badge showing he worked for the state Attorney General's Office. Wines, whose wife also works there, called her to make sure Corning was telling the truth.

    He then searched the SUV, where he found a Viagra pill and several sex toys, items Corning said he always kept with him, "just in case," according to the report.

    In South Carolina, I would most likely be a Democrat. Wherever a party is in power it tends to ellicit more corruption. I tend to trust blue state Republicans in practice more often than Red state Republicans. Purple state Republicans are good too.

    If they are the kings of the castle, they are corrupt and would most likely be Democrats if that was the party in power. They seek power and use stale politics, rather than come up with new ideas that serve the people.
    Last edited by ICantSpellDawg; 11-02-2009 at 13:36.
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