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JackRiddler wrote:.
How was I going to resist assimilating this into the Wall Street thread? O miraculous quote function!
vk: In what way do you think TD and Co. would agree with the original proposition, Fuck Zero Hedge, and the accompanying argument by gh?
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barracuda wrote:gnostic, please change your subject line to reflect the posting guidelines.
Also, could you cite some examples?
The President’s budget is a joke. If we follow that path of trillion dollar deficits we won’t make it another five years without an explosion. A big one.
There is no way we can avoid that fate unless Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and the military come on the table.
...The state of emergency we've been living under for the past 10 years has interfered with the free markets. Political decisions determine who gets bailed out and who doesn't, who stays afloat and who goes under, who gets rewarded and who gets prosecuted (and if prosecuted, who gets hit hard and who gets off with a slap on the wrist ... or a slap on the back)
...Therefore, if enough of us speak out against the ongoing lies, we may have some chance of helping the economy and reinstating some semblance of a free market ... which would help increase the value of our money, and make investing simpler
For example, wouldn't it make more sense to decreases taxes on "the poor" so they would be able to keep more of their $ rather than giving it to the Government to waste on a grossly-inefficient bureaucracy with a questionable (if not downright poor) track-record of allocating capital efficiently?
Here's what's certain: Over the past 20 years (well, '86-'07), GDP has increased 3.02%/year and has been positive for every year except once, in 1991, and even then, it was only -0.23%. Meanwhile, average tax rates for the top 1%, 10%, and 25% have gone down on average 1.64%, 0.79%, and 0.67% respectively over this period.
Chew on that: When we cut taxes, we experienced significant economic growth, +87% GDP from 1986-2007. Many have argued that this # would be even higher if "The Rich" (usually arbitrarily defined as those who make more than $200,000 or $250,000) were taxed more heavily based on comparisons to prior periods when taxes and GDP growth were higher. Most of these comparisons are false, in that they ignore fundamental shifts in reality. Our economy, population, and relative standing in the world today (to say nothing of any # of other variables) is NOTHING like it was generations ago, so any fair comparison would have to somehow adjust for this, and I'm not entirely sure that's even possible (or how one would go about doing so if it were).
This is government capture of a democracy. There are so many people entirely dependent on and beholden to government largesse, that this single block of people vote always for the (or one of the) "government party(/ies)," whatever they happen to call themselves. In a parliamentary system, this yields a permanent majority for left of center and leftoide parties to such a degree that the moderate right ends up looking extreme.
The conservatives aren't any such thing in most such places on the planet, and even the "extreme right" parties are actually just statist, socialist parties with a nationalistic or xenophobic flair. Those fringe views exclude the moderate right from making coalitions with them, and it is probably just as well because the so called far right parties are also just big government parties.
This phenomenon is of course not limited to Europe. California is already there. It is run by the government for the government, so large and so coddled have become the mass of state employees and their objective allies the permanent welfare class.
vanlose kid wrote:JackRiddler wrote:.
How was I going to resist assimilating this into the Wall Street thread? O miraculous quote function!
vk: In what way do you think TD and Co. would agree with the original proposition, Fuck Zero Hedge, and the accompanying argument by gh?
.
well. i think they'd agree with the characteristic in the OP, maybe not the wording, though i don't think it'd bother them any, seeing the kind of stick they get in their comments. i think they are "liberatairians" in the capitalist mode, not that they're hiding this.
i've seen TD junked for being too soft on the poor and mortgage frauded, and naive re what the people brought to Tahrir, and worse.
re the org prop, TD'd probably say: you don't agree, fair enough.
what one should remember is that TD and some of the more sympathetic voices on there like CogDis have been on a learning curve. you can see it if you go back to their blogspot days.
you can even see it here among us. i'm all for learning curves.
another thing ZH is not some monolithic thing or movement, and they certainly aren't the solution. nor do they pretend to be.
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gnosticheresy_2 wrote:vanlose kid wrote:JackRiddler wrote:.
How was I going to resist assimilating this into the Wall Street thread? O miraculous quote function!
vk: In what way do you think TD and Co. would agree with the original proposition, Fuck Zero Hedge, and the accompanying argument by gh?
.
well. i think they'd agree with the characteristic in the OP, maybe not the wording, though i don't think it'd bother them any, seeing the kind of stick they get in their comments. i think they are "liberatairians" in the capitalist mode, not that they're hiding this.
i've seen TD junked for being too soft on the poor and mortgage frauded, and naive re what the people brought to Tahrir, and worse.
re the org prop, TD'd probably say: you don't agree, fair enough.
what one should remember is that TD and some of the more sympathetic voices on there like CogDis have been on a learning curve. you can see it if you go back to their blogspot days.
you can even see it here among us. i'm all for learning curves.
another thing ZH is not some monolithic thing or movement, and they certainly aren't the solution. nor do they pretend to be.
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The entire thrust of the site is free markets are the solution but the reason they aren't working is because they've never been implemented properly. It's the exact same argument that socialists use about socialism.
I wouldn't be that arsed except that ZH is so ubiquitous now, quoted and cited here there and everywhere especially on alt/underground/whatever-you-want-to-call-it sites like RI (it was even cited by the Guardian recently so it's got some readership clout). Yes it's just one point of view as you rightly point out, but it seems to be the only point of view that anyone cites and it's getting annoying.
Nordic » Thu Feb 26, 2015 7:39 pm wrote:What is "tracker content"?
Nordic » Thu Feb 26, 2015 8:00 pm wrote:So ... Does this mean that 85 places are tracking the content of zerohedge, or does it mean that 85 entities are spying on zerohedge users, or does it me that zerohedge is allowing (through a financial deal) to spy on the users of the site?
Yes I'm a digital Luddite.
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