The DMV is so insidious. They are allowed to tax used property sales.

Discussion in 'General Motoring' started by LovingPerson, Feb 24, 2004.

  1. LovingPerson

    Greg Houston Guest

    x-no-archive: yes

    That is true---in the immediate short term. But over the longer term (3+ years)
    the government collects much more money because of the economic growth that takes
    place when people can spend their money as they need to. That is why the economy
    and the treasury receipts have increased following tax cuts, although there is a
    slight delay of course for this to happen. But I'll take long term economic
    growth over a short term fix any time.
     
    Greg Houston, Mar 6, 2004
  2. "He complains because he had to go to Vietnam and Bush didn't, but
    when he came back he protested the war with Jane Fonda."
    So did the Republicans when Clinton was in power. The war was wrong
    and it was acknowledged as such later on.
    WWII had nothing in common with Iraq. In fact, take a read of this
    from the US Army War College:

    http://www.carlisle.army.mil/ssi/pubs/2003/bounding/bounding.pdf
    "The result has been an unnecessary preventive war of choice against a
    deterred Iraq that has created a new front in the Middle East for
    Islamic terrorism and diverted attention and resources away from
    securing the American homeland against further assault by an
    undeterrable al-Qaeda. The war against Iraq was not integral to the
    GWOT, but rather a detour from it."

    Keep in mind *why* you went to war. Saddam had WMDs and was ready to
    use them. Whoops. Saddam was tied to al-Qaeda. Nothing provable
    yet! What ministry was secured as soon as the US moved into Baghdad?
    Why, the Oil ministry!
    Let's see, they left office with a record surplus, didn't they? One
    would think that those responsible republicans would have the total
    debt paid off by now, wouldn't they? And it's not just "a deficit",
    it's a record breaking deficit that doesn't even acknowledge billions
    of dollars that they know they will have to spend.
    What do you consider those tax breaks to be if not a bribe?
    --
    Brandon Sommerville (remove ".gov" to e-mail)

    Her name was Valerie Plame, and she was a NOC. She was keeping weapons of mass
    destruction out of the hands of terrorists. What was the Bush administration doing?
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/022404A.shtml
     
    Brandon Sommerville, Mar 6, 2004
  3. LovingPerson

    Ted Guest

    The document cited was an opinion by a visiting instructor at the War College, and is
    not a position of the War College.
    I'm sorry you so mournful that Hussein's death grip of Iraq has ended. If only we
    could go back to the good ol' days of gassing, lobbing off ears, and mass grave
    filling, eh?

    "Now, let's imagine the future. What if he fails to comply, and we fail to act, or we
    take some ambiguous third route which gives him yet more opportunities to develop this
    program of weapons of mass destruction and continue to press for the release of the
    sanctions and continue to ignore the solemn commitments that he made?

    Well, he will conclude that the international community has lost its will. He will then
    conclude that he can go right on and do more to rebuild an arsenal of devastating
    destruction.

    And some day, some way, I guarantee you, he'll use the arsenal."
    Bill Clinton, speaking on Iraq and Saddam Hussein - 1998
    Listen to the Audio Clip: http://tinyurl.com/67rz


    Hamas had been working in Iraq with the support of Hussein for years. Al-Quaeda was
    found in Iraq and is there right now. Should we have counted on the kindness of
    Hussein to keep Al-Quaeda out?
    Among dozens and dozens of other targets.
    A surplus that arrived, do not forget, only after the Congressional elections of 1994.
    Unfortunately the Clinton budget left us a faltering economy that was going down fast
    even before Bush was sworn into office.
    It is interesting to find that a party that ran deficit after deficit is now more
    concerned about a deficit than fighting people who want to destroy the country. The US
    Debt after WW 2 was over 12% GDP. Today it is about 5%, and will be grown out of as
    the economy expands again.
    Allowing the people to invest in the economy, thereby leading to economic expansion.
    And judging by the spectacular growth in GDP over the last several quarters, it has
    been extremely effective.
     
    Ted, Mar 7, 2004
  4. LovingPerson

    BigJohnson Guest

    It was people like you that kept the US out of WW II for three
    years, a delay that caused millions of innocent people to die
    needlessly and nearly resulted in the axis powers of Germany,
    Japan and Italy ruling the world. Your naive' parochial comments
    indicate you are just yet another one who still doesn't
    understand the US and the rest of the world has been at war with
    terrorism around the world since 9/11. Will it take another such
    attack somewhere in the US before you wake up? The Presidents
    willingness to take on, along with the leaders of over thirty
    other countries, the worlds terrorists and terrorists government
    like Iraq, or any terrorist wherever they are, or whoever they
    are, or whoever harbors them that has shown the world terrorist
    countries like Iran, Libya and North Korea that the US will do
    whatever it takes to protect our freedom. Thank goodness the
    majority of Americans understand that, as well, and they will
    re-elect the President.


    mike hunt
     
    BigJohnson, Mar 7, 2004
  5. LovingPerson

    Louis Hom Guest

    growth over a short term fix any time. >[/QUOTE]

    I only wish that I thought our President was interested in the
    long term economic health of our country. If he had taken the time to
    construct a genuine multinational force to take on the problems of Iraq,
    we wouldn't be burning $4.2B/month (and we might not have lost so many
    soldiers over such a long time). I think that would have been the more
    prudent course and would have greatly benefited our nation in many ways,
    economically and diplomatically. I think the current administration is
    more interested in short term takes though.
    I guess we'll have to agree to disagree that infrastructure
    development is a short term fix. I see it as a short term fix that has
    long-lasting benefits (you get tangible benefits (e.g., less wear and tear
    on transporation equipment, better schools, who knows -- maybe even less
    crime) from a short term injection, and the money goes through a lot of
    hands before it goes back to the government, meaning that the income of
    lots of individuals (as well as the government) are boosted. It gets
    large numbers of formerly underemployed people consuming again so that the
    growth becomes self-sustaining).
     
    Louis Hom, Mar 7, 2004
  6. LovingPerson

    Greg Houston Guest

    I only wish that I thought our President was interested in the
    long term economic health of our country. If he had taken the time to
    construct a genuine multinational force to take on the problems of Iraq,[/QUOTE]

    I consider 60 nations to be a genuine multinational force. What is the minimum
    required integer that you consider to be "genuine?" In fact it is more countries
    that participated in Operation Desert Storm in 1991. Yet, I don't see anybody
    criticizing (past or present) that there were not enough countries in the force
    then. Why?

    How many nations did Bush's predecessor, Bill Clinton, construct in a
    multinational force when taking on the problems of Iraq during his military
    strikes in 1994, 1996, and 1998??? (More missiles were fired at Baghdad in 1998
    than the entire 1991 Gulf War!)

    How many would we have lost?

    I didn't say otherwise. A growing economy will (if desired) assist your
    infrastructure development far more by a stagnant one.
    But in the case of high tax rates, that is lieu of the greater future revenues in
    the future that would be generated by a growing economy, and you loose those
    improved benefits on transportation equipment, better schools and maybe even less
    crime in the future.
    That is hardly likely to be the case. An improved (growing) economy is what gets
    people consuming, both employed and previously unemployed. And tax cuts do
    improve the economy, witness the 6% GDP growth for the past six months, although
    the majority of the benefits have yet to be seen.

    The fact is the economy is doing as well as desired, and that is the worst time to
    have high taxes. Example: Japan. Despite a recession, Japan's government
    INCREASED taxes to fix short term revenue needs. The result was a long term
    depression that still haunts Japan's people and its tax revenue today.
    Oh, ok, now your post makes a lot more sense! :)
     
    Greg Houston, Mar 7, 2004
  7. Yes, and also didn't invest what was needed to counter terrorism before
    it was too late. Keep in mind that virtually all of the planning and
    preparation for the 9/11 attacks took place while Clinton was in office.
    And Bin Laden and Al Qaeda largely came to power and organization
    while Clinton was in office. If Clinton had went after terrorism even
    half as aggressively as Bush is now, we'd quite likely have never had
    9/11. Of course, doing that would have cost money and then the budget
    wouldn't have been balanced. Also, much of the budget balancing came
    from tax revenue during the tech sector bubble that simply wasn't a
    sustainable economy and Clinton just happened to be the one in office
    when this bubble was growing and left just as it burst.


    Matt
     
    Matthew S. Whiting, Mar 7, 2004

  8. I only wish that I thought our President was interested in the
    long term economic health of our country. If he had taken the time to
    construct a genuine multinational force to take on the problems of Iraq,
    we wouldn't be burning $4.2B/month (and we might not have lost so many
    soldiers over such a long time). I think that would have been the more
    prudent course and would have greatly benefited our nation in many ways,
    economically and diplomatically. I think the current administration is
    more interested in short term takes though.[/QUOTE]

    I agree had that been possible in a reasonable time frame.
    Unfortunately, most governments in place today are too much like France
    and don't have the spine to take on terrorists. We simply no longer had
    time to wait to try to achieve UN consensus.

    Infrastructure development is a good thing, no doubt. However, if we
    don't have a secure nation, it is like putting lipstick on a pig.


    Matt
     
    Matthew S. Whiting, Mar 7, 2004
  9. LovingPerson

    satyr Guest

    The White House could only list 48 on March 25, 2003. A few evidently
    joined after that but it doesn't seem like they would have even had
    time to put their boots on before the war started.
    It is a matter of quality not quantity. The "coalition of the
    willing" was mostly a collection of minor nations who couldn't say no
    and risk the pittance of financial aid they were getting from the US.
    The problem with such allies is that they don't have much to give.
    Not much military and certainly no cash. Among our valued partners
    were Afghanistan, Albania, Angola, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Bulgaria,
    Columbia, Croatia, Czech Republic, Dominican Republic, El Salvador,
    Eritrea, Estonia, Ethiopia, Hungary, Georgia, Honduras, Latvia,
    Lithuania, Macedonia, Mongolia, Nicaragua, Panama, Philippines,
    Poland, Palau, Iceland, Costa Rica, Marshall Islands, Rwanda,
    Slovakia, Solomon Islands, Micronesia, Oman, Romania, Slovenia, Tonga,
    Turkey (most noted for what they didn't give us - a base for US troops
    despite the offer of a $26 billion dollar bribe), Ukraine, Uganda and
    Uzbekistan. Of the few major contributors, most were bribed to do so
    against the expressed wishes of their own citizens. Bottom line: We
    are paying about 90% of the cost of this fiasco, which is pretty much
    as it should be. I feel sorry for the Brits who are paying for most
    of the rest despite the clear sentiments of the people not to do so.
    Because that time our coalition members paid more than half the cost.
    Was Clinton spending a billion dollars a week on it?
     
    satyr, Mar 7, 2004
  10. LovingPerson

    Greg Houston Guest

    x-no-archive: yes
    "Only 48." 48 or 60 or 10 nations would all meet the definition of "multinational,"
    which was the issue addressed above. Or does you definition of "multinational" only
    mean a 48 nation minimum?

    BTW: I'm curious, if a house is built for two families, do you consider that to be a
    multifamily dwelling?
    The earlier poster said, "If he had taken the time to construct a genuine multinational
    force to take on the problems of Iraq..." What are your concerns with the quality, of
    say, Australian forces?
    You conveniently forgot Australia, Denmark, Netherlands, Spain, S Korea, United
    Kingdom. Other countries are doing what they can, including permitting overflights.
    What other nation did you have in mind to be the necessary ingredient to be
    "multinational"?
    So a force is only "multinational," according to you, if somebody else is paying more
    than half the cost. By this criteria of yours, where is your outrage at going after
    Al-Quaeda in Afghanistan? I sure hope that the USA can take action in the future,
    without inquiring if somebody else will send the bill on time.
    Thirty five + billion dollars was spent on "containing" Saddam, with no end in site
    for this recurring cost. The US will withdraw from Iraq as soon as possible and Iraq
    will be able to support itself.

    I'm sorry that you appear to be so regretful that Hussein's rape rooms, torture
    chambers, and mass grave fields are no longer being actively patronized. That's a real
    shame, no?
     
    Greg Houston, Mar 7, 2004
  11. This was forwarded to me by a friend recently. It seems to apply quite well to
    this OT discussion.

    ----FORWARD---

    At about the time our original 13 states adopted their new constitution, in
    the year 1787, Alexander Tyler (a Scottish history professor at The
    University of Edinburgh) had this to say about "The Fall of The Athenian
    Republic" some 2,000 years prior. "A democracy is always temporary in
    nature; it simply cannot exist as a permanent form of government. A
    democracy will continue to exist up until the time that voters discover
    that they can vote themselves generous gifts from the public treasury. From
    that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates who promise
    the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that every
    democracy will finally collapse due to loose fiscal policy, (which is)
    always followed by a dictatorship."

    "The average age of the worlds greatest civilizations from the beginning of
    history, has been about 200 years. During those 200 years, these nations
    always progressed through the following sequence: From Bondage to
    spiritual faith; From spiritual faith to great courage; From courage to
    liberty; From liberty to abundance; From abundance to complacency; From
    complacency to apathy; From apathy to dependence; From dependence back
    into bondage."

    Professor Joseph Olson of Hamline University School of Law, St. Paul,
    Minnesota, points out some interesting facts concerning the most recent
    Presidential election:

    Population of counties won by:
    Gore=127 million
    Bush=143 million

    Square miles of land won by:
    Gore=580,000
    Bush=22,427,000

    States won by:
    Gore=19;
    Bush=29

    Murder rate per 100,000 residents in counties won by :
    Gore=13.2
    Bush=2.1

    Professor Olson adds: "In aggregate, the map of the territory Bush won was
    mostly the land owned by the tax-paying citizens of this great country.
    Gore's territory encompassed those citizens living in government-owned
    tenements and living off government welfare..."

    Olson believes the U.S. is now somewhere between the "apathy" and
    "complacency" phase of Professor Tyler's definition of democracy; with
    some 40 percent of the nation's population already having reached the
    "governmental dependency" phase. Pass this along.
     
    James C. Reeves, Mar 7, 2004
  12. LovingPerson

    satyr Guest

    The key is the word genuine. How many Australians are there? How
    many billions of $US did they contribute? Other than the US and the
    UK, the coalition hasn't pitched much into the pot.

    You can throw in Japan too. Overflights are nice, but lets get to the
    bottom line. What percentage of the total monetary cost of this war
    is being borne by American taxpayers? Be sure to add in the cost of
    bribing some of these nations into nominally supporting it.
    What is your definition of "multinational?" Having a bunch of
    countries that contribute virtually nothing but don't oppose you (even
    if their citizens mostly do.) It seems by your definition, all we
    needed was Eritrea to have a multinational coalition.
    $35 billion over eight years? We could have contained him until his
    kids died of old age for what Bush has spent already. Not that even
    the $35B could really be justified as money well spent.
    Define "soon."
    Oh please spare me. Bush I and Reagan never made a peep while this
    was going on. Bush I even let Saddam fly his helicopters to crush the
    Shiite uprising after the Gulf War. This was after Bush had
    encouraged the uprising with his remarks.
     
    satyr, Mar 7, 2004
  13.  
    Ted Mittelstaedt, Mar 7, 2004
  14. There is only one definition of a multinational coalition that is accepted
    by
    anyone who knows anything about warfare. That is, when the war is won,
    is a coalition in control or is just a few governments?

    The Iraq war was was not a multinational effort. The US and to a lesser
    extent, Britian, are calling the shots there now. The other "coalition"
    partners are in name only.

    Contrast this to Afghanistan which was truly a multinational effort. When
    that
    war was over, the UN was left in charge and is still in charge there today.
    All true but you do have to give Bush credit for once thing that he did
    accomplish. This is, that Bush has made a statement to the world that
    the US military is superior to all other countries military, and that the US
    population wants it that way, and furthermore that the US had taken up
    the mantle of being the world's policeman, and that the US population
    pretty much approves of this.

    Now of course, nobody likes a dictator or bully and being in the role
    of the world's policeman makes the US a lightning rod for accusations
    of this. But the fact of the matter is that without a policeman, things for
    the vast majority of people in the world would be a lot worse. Take what
    just went on in Haiti for example. The threat of US invasion has kept
    the revolution there as bloodless as possible. The rebel military
    commanders
    did not end up looting the country after they won, which is the usual course
    of action, because they know that the US is looking over their shoulder.

    Ted
     
    Ted Mittelstaedt, Mar 7, 2004
  15. The US and the rest of the world has been at war with terrorism
    for the last 150 years. Unfortunately, due to Vietnam, the US public
    soured on the idea that you have to get your military out into the world
    to protect the country. So we had a generation of government
    bureaucrats and such that didn't want to take any risk of losing any
    soldiers to hostile fire, and so they kept the US military on US soil
    as much as they could.

    If you look at the failed Hostage Rescue Mission for the Iran
    hostages that took place under President Carter that is a perfect
    example of how bad the military had sunk after Vietnam. There's
    a good argument to be made that if the US military then had flown
    in, guns blazing, even if all the Iran hostages had died, that
    9/11 never would have happened.

    What we are seeing today is that US foreign policy and the US
    military is going back to the way it used to be, back in the latter
    half of the 19th century and the earlier part of the 20th, through
    WW1 and WWII.
    I think they do now. 50 years from now, who knows? Perl Harbor was
    as horrible a disaster to it's generation as 9/11 was to the current one,
    but people eventually forgot.
    I think that most people have the sense to understand that Al Gore would
    have done the exact same thing in Afganistan as Bush did. And as for
    Iraq, I think that if Bin Laden had been captured, that neither Bush or
    Gore would have ever invaded Iraq. It was the failure of capturing Bin
    Laden which really made it necessary to demonstrate that the US means
    business, thus invading Iraq was a necessity.

    Ted
     
    Ted Mittelstaedt, Mar 7, 2004
  16. The college hasn't spoken against it, has it?
    No one said a thing about gassing when he actually gassed them. In
    fact, Rumsfeld was over there around that time, wasn't he? Saddam was
    a danger only to the Iraqi people, much like he was when the Americans
    were providing him with weapons and military advice.
    Irrelevant. Up until 2002 the CIA put Saddam as a low grade threat.
    Suddenly, for some strange reason, in 2002 he became a high grade
    threat despite the fact that nothing changed. In fact, the
    information that was released to the public as coming from the CIA
    bears very little resemblance to what the CIA sent to the
    administration as George Tenet has pointed out.

    In fact, the UN acknowledges that Iraq didn't have squat in the way of
    WMDs since '94.

    Regardless of how nice a guy Saddam was, doesn't it bother at least a
    little that Bush flat out lied to you? Vast stores of WMDs, remember,
    yet not a trace. A mushroom cloud in the imminent future,
    particularly because he's trying to buy uranium from Niger.
    Completely baseless, but terrifying in the post- 9/11 world. This
    from a man who can't even prove that he served his full term in the
    Guard.
    Iraq was supporting minor pro-Palestinian groups, not Al-Qaeda, who
    hated the secular government in Iraq as much as they hate the
    Americans.
    Yet nothing to protect the people themselves. Looting was rampant and
    nothing was done about it, period, despite the fact that under the
    Geneva conventions (remember those? Bush apparently doesn't) it's the
    responsibility of the occupying army to ensure security.
    And Bush has presided over the loss of over 2 million jobs and
    encourages more offshoring. That'll help the economy.
    Everyone in the world was running huge deficits then. That doesn't
    excuse it, but taken in context it's not as bad as it seems. It seems
    that the Democrats have learned from their mistakes, Bush seems intent
    on reliving them.
    Why is Bush not including Iraq and Afghanistan operational funding in
    the budget? Doesn't that strike you as a tad dishonest?
    Amazing that the GDP is rising so much yet there is no commensurate
    rise in jobs, isn't it?
    --
    Brandon Sommerville (remove ".gov" to e-mail)

    Her name was Valerie Plame, and she was a NOC. She was keeping weapons of mass
    destruction out of the hands of terrorists. What was the Bush administration doing?
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/022404A.shtml
     
    Brandon Sommerville, Mar 7, 2004
  17. Yet interestingly enough around the world no one but Americans seem to
    think that the world is a safer place from terrorists.

    There is also proof now that Bush had reason to suspect that Al-Qaeda
    was planning an attack using commercial planes up to a year before the
    attack happened, yet the claimed complete surprise.

    Why are Bush, Cheney and Rice refusing to testify before a full 9/11
    commission?

    Don't you find it interesting that Ahmad Chalabi has pretty much
    acknowledged to lying through his teeth to get the Americans to
    invade.
    http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/opinion/162728_thomas02.html?searchpagefrom=1&searchdiff=6

    But no, more chest thumping is certainly in order from you, isn't it?
    Any president that yells "Bring it on" to terrorists from behind the
    protection of his troops is pathetic, particularly when he was never
    truly one of them.
    --
    Brandon Sommerville (remove ".gov" to e-mail)

    Her name was Valerie Plame, and she was a NOC. She was keeping weapons of mass
    destruction out of the hands of terrorists. What was the Bush administration doing?
    http://www.truthout.org/docs_04/022404A.shtml
     
    Brandon Sommerville, Mar 7, 2004
  18. |
    | | > x-no-archive: yes
    | >
    | > Louis Hom wrote:
    | >
    | > > In article <>, <>
    | wrote:
    | > > >Tax cuts are not an attempt to 'give' you anything. When the
    | > > >government cuts the tax rates, as it has under Kennedy, Reagan
    | > > >and Bush they are merely taking less of your money not giving you
    | > > >money it's your money.
    | > >
    | > > Whether you consider it giving money back to taxpayers or not is
    | > > irrelevant. The net result is the same -- the government receives less
    | > > money.
    | >
    | > That is true---in the immediate short term. But over the longer term (3+
    | years)
    | > the government collects much more money because of the economic growth
    | that takes
    | > place when people can spend their money as they need to.
    |
    | This is just the old conservative rubbish spewing again. Re-read a
    | statement Louis
    | made " Extra money given out to the people who already have adequate funds
    | doesn't significantly increase spending"
    |
    | Like it or not, our economy is driven by consumer spending. Only consumer
    | spending
    | on goods and services creates jobs because someone has to make those goods
    | and
    | do those services. Thus a job is created.
    |
    | Our economy is not driven by investors investing money, like Bush & Co. want
    | you to
    | believe. If you cut taxes on the rich, as Bush has done, the rich just take
    | their
    | extra money and put it into investments. They don't spend it on buying more
    | goods. And
    | investments are all designed to keep money from reducing. Let's look at
    | some common
    | investments that the rich make. Well there's treasury bonds for one. And
    | why are those
    | bonds issued? To fund the deficit that is created by reducing taxes on the
    | rich. Nice
    | little circle that Bush has going there to get the government to fund his
    | friends. There's
    | land, for another. This just drives up property prices so that even more
    | businesses end
    | up leasing instead of owning their property, and more people end up renting
    | instead of
    | homeowning, the end result is to create an entire economy of landlords who
    | get money
    | for nothing, just because they have a deed in hand. There's bonds issued by
    | governments
    | like local governments for school and road construction, for another. This
    | creates some
    | jobs in the short term, but in the long term it doesen't because most of
    | those projects
    | are just upgrading old roads, schools, bridges and such that already have a
    | staff of people
    | running them.
    |
    | > That is why the economy
    | > and the treasury receipts have increased following tax cuts, although
    | there is a
    | > slight delay of course for this to happen. But I'll take long term
    | economic
    | > growth over a short term fix any time.
    | >
    |
    | So would anyone. But with all the supply side economics of cutting taxes on
    | the rich
    | that has gone around this time, it isn't working. The Feds continue to
    | lower interest
    | rates in an attempt to stimulate growth, it isn't working. Job creation has
    | fallen far below
    | the minimum needed to keep pace with population growth. February's figures
    | for example
    | are a miserable 20,000 jobs created. We need a minimum of 150,000 new jobs
    | every
    | month to keep pace with population growth.
    |
    | It would have been much better if the tax cuts never would have happened.
    | Because what
    | would have happened then is the extra money the government was getting off
    | the rich
    | would be spent on buying things, which would create jobs. Instead, federal
    | spending has
    | been constricted and the rich that got extra money as a result of the tax
    | cut have not
    | been spending this money.
    |
    | Ted
    |
    |

    I have to admit, except for Paul Krugman of the New York Times, I've not heard
    any other economist explain it quite the way you did.
     
    James C. Reeves, Mar 7, 2004
  19. LovingPerson

    Louis Hom Guest

    But it seems like we didn't have any such problem waiting to
    organize against the threat in Afghanistan. American forces have provided
    less than half of the occupying force there since at least May 2002,
    according to CENTCOM. We took the time to build a convincing case and
    enlist the economic and military support of our allies, and it's worked
    out pretty well.
    In Iraq, we rushed in essentially on our own, and now we're stuck
    there essentially on our own (we have, what, about 125,000 troops there,
    while the Brits have maybe 12-14K . . . the Dutch and Polish presence is
    even smaller, and it sounds like the Japanese are all in Qatar & Kuwait).
    I think back to late 2002 when polls showed that about 25-30% of
    the American public disapproved of invading Iraq. Bush dismissed this
    minority as insignificant. At the same time, however, his international
    coalition only constituted about 25-30% of the members of the UN, and this
    somehow represented a mandate. (Yes, I realize that support from Britain
    is different from support from Slovenia, but I think it's still an
    interesting point to consider.)
    Anyway, I think we can all agree that we want our boys home as
    soon as possible. I'm from San Diego and have family friends (in the Navy
    or Marines) who were sent to Iraq at one time or another in the past 18
    months. Just want everyone back safe.
     
    Louis Hom, Mar 7, 2004
  20. LovingPerson

    Mike Powell Guest

    <snip>

    Nope. His name was actually Tytler, but he never wrote this or
    anything like it. This quote appears to have been made up -- probably
    some time in the 1970's -- and has been circulating ever since. See:
    http://www.lib.ed.ac.uk/faqs/parqs.shtml#Aftytler1

    Whether the subject quote has meaning, of course, depends on your
    political disposition to some extent. The quote loses some of its
    credibility when attributed, more appropriately, to "Anonymous," but
    I'm sure it resonates with many people -- principally conservatives.

    They should be wary, though, of these thoughts and ideas that are just
    a little too politically convenient. Much of the alleged Tytler quote
    is just plain wrong. First of all, the average age of the world's
    great civilizations is more in the range of 1000+ years -- not 200
    years. Second, the sequence of bondage to spiritual faith to courage,
    etc. is not supported by any particular historical analysis -- it's
    just "feel good" history, not fact. Third, the "collapse" of
    historical democracies (e.g., the Athenian Republic, which is often
    what this quote supposedly refers to) have *not* been due principally
    to "loose fiscal policy" and people voting themselves "largesse" from
    the public treasury. If you read Tytler's _Universal History..._,
    you'll see he discusses the Athenian Republic and the reasons for its
    decline. The reasons weren't "loose fiscal policy" and government
    handouts -- instead, according to Tytler, it was corrupt government
    officials, complacency, and getting into a war for which they were
    woefully unprepared.

    So my point is that even though the alleged Tytler quote fits in quite
    nicely with the ideology of many conservatives, they do themselves a
    disservice by using it because it's more historical fiction than
    historical fact.
    Again, another big NOPE. Joseph Olson had nothing whatever to do with
    these statistics or the quotes attributed to him. Someone just made
    this stuff up and added his name to it.
    These are actually right, more or less, with the exception that the
    final state-counts were Gore = 20, Bush = 30. Of course it's only the
    electoral college numbers that mean anything... dirt doesn't vote.
    These numbers are just plain wrong. Someone made them up. If
    you actually take the trouble to gather the data and calculate the
    rates, you find:

    Gore counties = 6.5
    Bush counties = 4.1

    Not such a big difference. See:
    http://www.snopes.com/politics/quotes/tyler.asp

    Further, it's possible to recalculate the averages and compare only
    the high-population-density counties won by Bush to the
    high-population-density counties won by Gore -- doing so makes
    the difference essentially disappear (Bush = 7.0, Gore = 7.5). So
    in other words, the observed difference in murder rates is largely
    due to the fact Gore won more of the urban counties while Bush won
    more of the rural and suburban areas.

    None of this says ANYTHING AT ALL about whether Gore voters are more
    crime-prone than Bush voters. Based on exit-poll demographics, I'd
    say it's likely there's not much difference (if any) in crime rates
    between these two voter groups. By and large, criminals don't vote
    all that much (along with about half of all potential voters...).
    Again, Olson had nothing to do with this. Further, you should
    consider the demonstrable fact that Bush won most of the states that
    *get* more money from the federal government than they pay in taxes
    while Gore won most of the states that pay more than they get. That
    doesn't seem consistent with this idea that the people in the Gore
    territory are living off the hard-working folks in the Bush territory.
    See:
    http://psweb.sbs.ohio-state.edu/faculty/hweisberg/conference/Lacy-OSUConf.PDF

    -Mike P.
     
    Mike Powell, Mar 7, 2004
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