Active Users:1105 Time:22/11/2024 09:19:10 PM
Re: The subject line? I disagree (obviously. ) - Edit 1

Before modification by Joel at 11/11/2011 08:30:42 AM

Which is to say, never. Put another way, the Tea Party wants to "fix" government in the same sense that OWSers want to "fix" corporate Americas government (the same sense that vets "fix" broken legged horses.) Guess which position is flirting with treason. Hint: I know of no incumbent governor running for president by telling OWS rallies they should assault corporate executives. There is ONE other difference between the Tea Party and OWS: Polling shows the latter is twice as popular as the former.

Can't think of any governors of any party telling people to do that, unless you're knocking Perry about the alleged implied lynching comment... and I think a poll, from Oct 9th, is a tad ridiculous, considering the Tea parties been being blitzed by the MSM for 2 years now and the OWS crowd had barely got their tents pitched at the time of this poll. It was, IIRC, roughly the time the other places started sprouting OWS parallels and the media began reporting anything negative about them... got a more recent one, last week or so?

If you mean the poll, then, yes, I agree that comparing the popularity of a relatively new group of demonstrators to that of one that is several years old and has already strongly influenced a national election is apples and oranges. I again indulged my habit of trolling trolls, and should not have.

Trzaska is not a troll, and you shouldn't imply as much. All things are case by case, most of our population approves of fervent but peaceful demonstrators and does not hold much fondness for wall street, as opposed to say, reactions to Westboro BC protesting Military Funerals. Of course initially approval was high when people's knowledge was very casual, a poll on "Do you think the government wastes money?" would turn up stupid high numbers and mean exactly nothing too.


IMHO, he trolls more often than not, though he seems to have responded to criticism of that (and at this point I cannot claim to be entirely without sin there either, though I do contend it is still more the exception than the rule in my case.) The poll really was apples and oranges though, because even now OWS lacks the Tea Partys prominence and influence. If they cost Dems the Senate by nominating someone like Cynthia McKinney for a seat where Dems had previously been narrowly favored, that would obviously change, but so would poll numbers on OWS' popularity.

Yes, I was most definitely referring to Perry proudly telling a Tea Party crowd "we" would "do" things to the Fed Chair if he came to TX; the fact that Perry left those undefined but clearly negative ACTIONS vague does not mean he was calling for a lynching or any other specific act, but it DOES mean he was (successfully) currying favor with Tea Partiers by saying he would do unpleasant things to a member of the federal government. I mean, really, think about it: Suppose Perry wins the election, is inaugurated President and then convenes a conference with his economic advisors to address the countrys dire economic situation. Should the incumbent Fed Chairman wear a bullet proof vest to that meeting, or give Perry the benefit of a doubt and only expect a punch in the face?

You find Perry's remarks offensive because he made them, and you strongly dislike him, got it.

No, I find Perrys remarks dangerous because he was condoning violent action, just as I found it dangerous when Jimmy Hoffa Jr. did the same thing. That I despise one as the Republican governor of my state and sympathize with the other on many labor issues (though not, as it happens, public unions) is wholly separate from my feelings about their respective statements. I made very clear at the time that Hoffa did not and does not speak for me, and that I want nothing to do with him. I only wish that the left as a whole would do the same, as I wish the right as a whole would disavow Perry the way Ron Paul did (though Paul could hardly be called unbiased about his fellow Texan and competitor for the GOP presidential nomination.)

It is instructive to see how the same people embrace ignorant, self indulgent, directionless radical rabble with whom they sympathize as enthusiastically as they condemn ignorant, self indulgent, directionless radical rabble of a different flavor.

Images of stones, glass houses, pots, and kettles come to mind

Meh. I am not really on the OWS bandwagon simply because they ARE so directionless and counterproductive. It may be true that if you are not angry you are not paying attention, but it is not necessarily true that if you ARE angry you ARE paying attention. I sympathize with many of the OWSers greivances but, to the very limited extent they have proposed purported "solutions," those rarely seem worthy of that name. As oft discussed, the factors I, along with the OWSers, criticize foster the widespread alienation manifesting in both OWS and the Tea Party, but in neither case does that make alienation valid, legitimate or constructive: It is a symptom of the deeper disease, and should never be mistaken for a cure.

Common sense explains things quite easily, things suck right now, and people think things suck even more than they do, thus they assume there is something wrong with the system. A reasonable conclusion, if you're car starts getting crappy mileage and stalling out, odds are good your car needs repairs, or you need a new car. If you are not a mechanic, you are pretty much limited to wild ass guesses, all the more so if your car is fully of lots of complex junk and circuit boards, many of which are ad hoc semi-compatible jury-rigged devices... which accurately sums of the US government, the Tea Party, the OWS, and 99% of the population... where the remaining 1% are mostly people with just sufficient electrical or mechanical skills to view the car and either shudder at the mess, be amazed it works at all, or recognize some fairly impressive designs... likely some combination of all of the above, which remains my own perspective on things. The Tea Party at least has a workable solution, if not necessarily an ideal or pragmatic one... leave the car in a ditch, go buy a new and simpler car.


I have a simpler and more cynical take (those are all the rage now: ) A serious and undeniable problem is manifest in the system. People with a strong preference for one make of car despite no knowledge of mechanics are more inclined to blame the atrociously poor quality of Fords/Chevies/Yugos than to educate themselves about mechanics and diagnose the real problem(s.) The former is easier and more satisfying; unfortunately, it is also incredibly unproductive and, perhaps worse, displays a bias undermining any valid criticisms they might make through little more than pure luck. I have yet to hear the Tea Party argue for any kind of car, new, simple or otherwise; it is more like the Tea Party arguing against making cars while OWS argues against fueling them. Neither of those "solutions" qualifies as such, and that failure in neither validates it in the other.

Occupy Wall Street has not (to my knowledge) suggested tearing down the Constitution, but do seem to want to tear down corporate America every bit as much as the Tea Party wants to tear down the federal government (and while we can debate that and have, I have yet to hear anyone from the Tea Party say a single positive word about any aspect of the federal government;

Probably because you never listen to them except for nasty soundbites from those who dislike them. Most of those I know (and I know many) generally just want the federal government to do less, not cease to function, and are not in the habit of praising the various good things it does anymore than you are of praising Perry or Bush. Alternatively, I have actually complimented both Clinton and Obama, sincerely, as I don't go in for that black/white or ad hominem crap. Thus the glass/stone/pot/kettle remark, I don't happen to have an issue with either the Tea or OWS crowds, even how unorganized they, as I know an awful lot about mobilizing and organizing political stuff and how damn hard it is, I have many criticisms of both groups, more of OWS because I also want to criticize their local organization on top of their politics and naiveté, as the soldier in me wants to rip them up for keeping such a reckless and shoddy camp. No, my issue is with you, for basically accusing both groups of behavior you yourself regularly display. To me the majority of these OWSers are simply young adults doing what young adults always do, feeling pissed off, screwed, and abused and having a very unclear idea of who they should be blaming and how the matter should be rectified, some of them have simply picked wall street. They do deserve a touch of ridicule, and its could to get it, thickens the skin and makes people focus and apply reason to sharpen their message, but like the Tea parties, they do not deserve demonetization and you have demonized the Tea Parties here, many times.


If you have an example of the Tea Party saying something--anything--positive about federal goverment feel free to share it, but until then my statement remains valid. However, my biggest problem with the Tea Party is the tendency among both its chosen leaders and rank and file membership to indulge violent and therefore dangerous rhetoric. I would not condone in OWS either any more than I did when public union supporters sent death threats to the WI capital. Frankly, that I half expect to see it is part of why I am leery of lending OWS even verbal support; they remind me a lot more of the London rioters than of the Montgomery Bus Boycott.

If you want to address issues of personal bias though, it is a bit surreal to see Palin take Obama to task for associating with Ayers, then tell supporters "don't retreat, reload," or Perry accuse Bernanke of treason, then support violence against a government official simply for BEING a government official. When it comes to stone throwing, let he who has never thrown one at the government make the first accusation of treason. I think Bush 43 and Reagan guilty of treason, but never advocated anything more than impeachment for either (in the interest of full disclosure, I did once allude to the possibility of more (without advocating it) when speaking of Reagan, but since he was already dead at the time I think I am off the hook. ) What can I tell you; a liberal can only see so many other liberals gunned down for their politics without getting a touch nervous about violent right wing rhetoric, and dismissing such concerns as irrelevant overreaction only deepens them. It's bad enough when national leaders encourage people to gun you down in the street, but that much worse when other people dismiss it as no big deal, get OFFENDED when you object. Excuse me for living--literally.

That is the main difference I see (at least so far) between OWS and the Tea Party, who both display a lot of ignorant alienation without any constructive suggestions for reform. The one thing the both have in common is mistaking abolition for reform. While I am sure plenty of those sympathetic to OWS would point out they do not call for an outright BAN on corporations any more than the Tea Party explicitly calls for the dissolving the federal government, I am objective enough to realize each of them has those goals in practice if not in name. I think our corporations need reform far more desperately than our federal government, but do not seek the destruction of either, which makes the Tea Party and OWS alike an annoyance, at best (when members of either start stroking guns or clutching Molotov cocktails they become something else entirely.)

I wonder how THEY expect to preserve the Constitution while crippling its institutions.) That kind of vague extremist rage is not helpful, however understandable, and abolishing American business is no more in Americas interest than is abolishing American government. Regulation and accountability are one thing, moratoria quite another. What I have seen of both the Tea Party and OWS allows no middle road; there does not seem to be any degree of federal power the former would accept, let alone value, or any degree of business power the latter would. From my perspective that the middle class should use Big Business as a check on Big Government, and vice versa, both groups are an obstacle, because each of them would, if permitted, eliminate the principal balance to the others favorite target.

This is all very rational, and I'd accept it as such if you'd not had so very many posts over the years that aren't middle of the road. I don't know if maybe you've had a recent epiphany or something, but it is hard to take such comments seriously coming from you when you so often favor giving certain groups powerful tools to beat off existing checks or the introduction to new checks where there is clear unbalance. I've never heard you praise a conservative politician or ideology unless they were doing something that knocked the right.


It has been known to happen; occasionally I even find myself defending conservatives from leftist attacks (though less often since wads stopped posting regularly. ) I endorsed Olympia Snowes proposal during the healthcare debates to (basically) let the states handle healthcare until/unless they were found to have <95% enrollment after a few years, at which point a federal public option would kick on for those states. Maybe that does not count since she is a "RINO," and IIRC Obama took her up on that offer only to see her withdraw it, but it was a fair proposal in itself, and a lot better than the bill we eventually got, not least because it would not have coerced anyone into anything and would have provided near universal coverage. I even endorsed the proposal from Lamar Alexander (definitely not a RINO) that all the federally purchased GM stock be distributed to individual tax payers. I confess to feeling it was a publicity stunt rather than a serious proposal, and a fair amount of amusement over the far right Republican who made the flat tax a national issue introducing a bill far more socialist than the silent partnership the government had instead, but the fact remains that a conservative took a policy position I endorsed in opposition to the Democratic president.

My consistent position has been that I strongly prefer a socialist model to either a communist or laissez-faire one, because it is the only one in which Big Government and Big Business must compete with each other for taxpayer/consumer support, thereby preventing either from exploiting the public. Communism lets bureaucrats play the public off against private industry while laissez-faire lets industrialists play the public off against government, but a nation that guarantees minimal essential needs via government while meeting non-essential ones through private industry, as well as maintaining the private availability of superior essential needs, allows the public to play government and industry off against each other. I believe that is not only in the nations best interest, but that it would vastly reduce the need for government to aggressively enforce product quality and safety standards, since consumers would simply vote with their wallets for government options if those options also became superior to private ones. Essentially, public options prevent collusion, which is a far more damaging aspect of laissez-faire economies because, in practice, collusion is far easier than achieving monopolies. Modern America has no true monopolies (though AT&T is working over time to reconstruct theirs, even if they had to take the long route of selling themselves to a Baby Bell who bought them and most of the other Baby Bells,) but many collusive oligopolies who regard both the public and government as simply another resource to exploit for profit. Thus, when corporations do things that are risky, unethical or otherwise unprofitable, the taxpayers they defrauded and fired to cut costs step in to ensure profits with a bailout. To say that process is not working is something of an understatement; it works fine for Goldman Sachs and GM, but not so well for anyone else.

Oh, and I WILL respond to your last NB, I have just been a bit preoccupied lately with trying to pass my driving test, stay current (and make the homework deadlines) for the online Intro to AI class and prepare for the Norwegian course I start tomorrow evening.

I confess to being curious what the "AI" stands for there, but take your time.

People keep saying that so often I am starting to think "AI" is used for a far more things than I previously suspected, but in this case it means "artificial intelligence." During TMJs impromptu "chat reunion" I mentioned I am attempting an SF novel revolving around AI and having some concerns about embarrassing myself with too much lay ignorance, which prompted someones mention of an online "Intro to AI" class Stanford was about to launch. Enrollment was as simple as going to the helpfully provided link and awaiting the confirmation email, and now I spend several hours a week watching video lectures and doing homework in addition to 5 hours/week in Norwegian class. Essentially, I am a part time student again, so I do not have quite as much free time as previously. It has been interesting thus far, though I have occasionally felt my lack of higher math knowledge.

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