Gisteppo wrote:
I don't see a few blaming the big CEO's, I see people around the country making $14 an hour busting their asses building houses for a living for people that spend 40 hrs a week in an office making decisions that cause companies to fail, only to receive millions in bonuses. Thats just human nature.
The loan crisis can be traced back to Regan's deregulation, which was perpetuated by every president that followed him. Greed fueled by a lack of rules caused it. People that should never have received loans got them, and the market collapsed.
Your side blames Regan, but my sides blames Clinton as the starting point. It was under Clinton's reign that they invoked laws to give more "needy people" the sub prime loans. The banks took it from there, but Clinton started it, and the Democrats IN CONTROL OF THE HOUSE AND SENATE under Bush doubled down on that same law. When McCain warned of the Freddie and Fanny problems, the Democrats, including Barny Frank who should have known better, claimed all was well.
Your side blames lack of regulation but my side blames laws intended to encourage banks to loan to
People that should never have received loans got them, and the market collapsed.
I think both sides were a little dirty on this one.
So, one party in complete power, with lobbyist having limited influence with this one party, and people that are fired up like they were in Nazi Germany and Czarist Russia, and the recipe is in the oven, how long do we let it cook?
We will have to agree on disagreement here. I don't have so little faith in the American populace that they will be railroaded. We are an independent group, and inflammatory statements aren't going to do anything but militarize small factions and incite violence.
This goes back to both your first statement about how many are blaming the CEOs and to the press. I love to quote Gerbals, the propagandist for NAZI Germany, simply because I have claimed so often that we are on the same path as Germany. He said that if you tell a lie often enough that people will eventually believe it. He also said that the more outlandish the lie, the easier it would be to convince the populace. The fair and balanced press is dead in this country. The democrats want to shut down talk radio because, except for Fox TV, it is the only Conservative opposition anymore. With the liberal media getting tingling feelings up and down their legs, is it any wonder why people are believing the story line that is being presented. More importantly, mix a little truth into the mix and it makes the lie seem plausible. Were the CEOs greedy? Yes. Was Regan partly at fault? Yes. Are the Democrats at fault? Yes. In fact, if a fair and balance press would report all sides equally accurate, we would see that there is blame for all on this one.
anglinarcher wrote:I find it interesting that while ammo is in short supply, the components to reload are not. I, and my friends, and the stores I frequent, believe the problem is in factory reloading capacity.
Yes, in certain calibers this is the case, but how many .375 rounds are being built for military use? I agree that much of the material and labor is being sent to wartime efforts, but read up on the lead/China connection, you will learn some interesting things strewn about in the rhetoric. Expect less lead in the US.
It is not that .375 rounds are being sent to war, it is that the production lines that make the .375 have been converted over to the military rounds, .223, 9mm, etc. A shortage may come to past due to the lead issue, but at present, it is production line capacity, not lead, not primers, not powder.
anglinarcher wrote:Regarding what? Do you mean DC's law, the one overturned after a long and heated legal battle, and only but the supreme court? What type of law do you legislation do you refer to? Perhaps the ones that require handguns to be delivered after a waiting period, or the one that prevents someone from Washington from buying an handgun out of state?
I am referring to NATIONWIDE legislation. The DC situation went to the supreme court for a particular reason. DC isn't a state. DC has no powers of legal authority that aren't granted by the federal government or local townships, so if something gets past a local court, it gets submitted to the higher courts more rapidly because the layers of circuit courts are thinner.
Weapons legislation is state based. Gun laws here are different than gun laws in Montana, and the US govt has no say in that. Thus the union.
The federal government has specific rights under the Constitution. The States have certain rights given to them by the same Constitution. States cannot do things reserved for the federal government, but you are correct that the federal government should not do things not specifically granted to it under the constitution. However, the right to have and bear arms is specifically a federal government issue.
It will be interesting to see what happens now that Montana is trying to pass a law that does an end-a-round to the Feds. I heard this morning that Montana wants to allow guns to be made, and apparently kept, in Montana, and because this means that no trade crosses state boarders, they would not, by proposed Montana law, be subject to registration. I don't know the details yet, but we shall see if your theory holds true.
All I ask is that you dig a little bit of faith out of whatever hole its crammed into right now. The people of our beloved country won't roll over and take whatever is thrown at them, and regardless of how bad you may think it is right now, ALL of the current politicians have to answer to the voters very, very soon. If things go right, they stay in office. If they go wrong, new blood comes in. Its a cycle, and one MUST have faith in the process, or we all become extremists....
There are those that call you the extremest, and of course there are those that call me that same thing. We are on opposite ends of the spectrum, but, we serve to educate. Did you not quote something about the uneducated always vote contrary to their best interest?
Faith is not the issue, it is education. The two of us are educating each other, and, if we are lucky, other people. Let's not end this quite yet.
PS, I have to travel for the next two days, so if I don't get back for a while, don't worry, I am enjoying this far too much to end this now.
Too much water, so many fish, too little time.