Moderator: Dictators in Training
Haylo wrote:Coming from you that's rich. You may not like what I have to say, like say Minrott, but at least put out a thought out post. I can respect someone with a differing opinion, I don't respect a blind hate mongering idiot. You shit on this entire board with your stupid ass posts and one liners and no one takes you seriously. I'm full of shit? No you are a freaking idiot. You are so very scared that someone who is "different" may take this race that you're running around like some deranged decapitated chicken. In short, fuck off.
Minrott, obviously we don't agree and are likely never too agree. I wasn't screaming and raging at anyone in my post, rather just laying out my thoughts. I don't believe that everyone who is poor is some sack of shit who isn't trying. It's unfortunate that you think that if you have no money you aren't worth anything. I know people who have been working their entire lives and they simply have nothing extra left over with to go out and do better things with. Every penny they earn is going towards making sure their families have shelter and food. How do you suggest these people get ahead? That's the problem I have with things as they currently stand. It's not possible for people to reach for some of the things they could in the past because costs keep rising and dollars certainly aren't stretching as far. Do you really believe that the majority of people don't want to be better than they are? I guess where we differ is that I believe in offering people help in achieving those dreams, you think they should reach out and snatch them, even if it's not really attainable.
Diekan wrote: I think you'll find that the gripe isn't with helping those in real need, but the out-of-control abuse of the programs we already have. I think you'll find that those of us sick of it are not willing to keep throwing more and more money into a system that has no real means of any reasonble control. It's not about hating the poor or turning our backs on them if they are in real need so much as it is about being sick and tired of low life trash that have made a career of bilking the system.
brinstar wrote:Evermore wrote::popcorn:
Side bets: how long till someone makes a racist remark?
shut up you fucking kike
Haylo wrote:Coming from you that's rich. You may not like what I have to say, like say Minrott, but at least put out a thought out post. I can respect someone with a differing opinion, I don't respect a blind hate mongering idiot. You shit on this entire board with your stupid ass posts and one liners and no one takes you seriously. I'm full of shit, sickening? No you are a freaking idiot. You are so very scared that someone who is "different" may take this race that you're running around like some deranged decapitated chicken. In short, fuck off.
Minrott wrote:Oh bullshit. I have friends you would consider "needy." Hell. I was needy at one point in my life. Hand ups work. Hand outs do not. My friends, who don't make much money, scrape by check to check, why are they like this? Because they can't handle money. They aren't any more disadvantaged than anyone else in the country. No one is barring them employment because of their race. No one is barring them education because of their sex. Every fucking reason you can come up with as to why someone is "needy" is a bullshit excuse.
Life is rough. Wear a helmet. I'm not your mother, I don't love you. People get dealt shitty hands, but unlike a poker game, everyone has the ability to change their cards. It takes work. It might even take a little luck. But every "poor" person I've ever met is "poor" because of the choices they've made themselves. They chose to spend money unwisely. They chose to do poorly in school. They chose a low paying job that was easy rather than a higher paying job that was physically demanding. They chose to do drugs.
Life has fucking consequences, we all pay them, and to stand there and scream at the "rich" that they have it easy and call it their responsibility to help the "poor" is the most pathetic line of bullshit to ever be uttered in human existence. The "rich" are the biggest philanthropists to ever exist, yet you give them no credit because it's easy to give when they have so much. Still, they could keep it and make millions more, but they don't in more cases than I can count. You blame everything on other's greed. Greed is necessary. I want you to be greedy. I want you to look out for number one. I want you to try to get everything you can for yourself, because that means if I want it, I have to work harder than you to get it. When we all have to work harder to get it, the end result is a stronger, self reliant society. No one deserves a god damned thing that I don't. People are not born with poverty in their genetic code. They have to want out of it to get out of it, and that takes greed.
Liberals: Darwin for Nature, nurture for Society. What a joke.
Want to end poverty? Teach fiscal responsibility every year from K-12. Poor kids grow up to be poor adults because they don't have any clue as to how money works, other than that they can trade it for shiny things at the store.
Harrison wrote:Martrae wrote:I dunno. I'm constantly surprised by the kindness and generosity of people.
The fact you're surprised by it says enough, though.
I nearly shit a brick if a car slows down or stops to let me pass in the crosswalk.
Haylo wrote:Seriously, we need social help programs, period. There are always going to be people that need help, if the government doesn't help them, we are no better than these countries we're always so quick to rush in and forcibly "help". If you really worried about the state of this country and how hard and far it could/would fall, let there be a point where the poor and disadvantaged have no recourse and no where to turn. They will riot in the streets and no one wins in a situation like that.
Don't insinuate my positions to ever be influenced by race, it's every bit as endearing as Mindia claiming Colin Powell can't have ideological reasons for supporting Obama. If you believe in helping people attain their dreams, that's wonderful. So do I.
Minrott wrote:Clakar: That's where we differ. You are under the belief that some people are poor and incapable of anything. Your blind disgust and self hate is disguised as charity for those who can't help themselves. You are the worst kind of liberal, the one who believes "some animals are more equal than others." I on the other hand see everyone as an equal, with the right to be prosperous on their own account, and not kept in the squaller of society by a pittance of government handout. Redistribution of wealth is a self fulfilling prophecy, one that your kind uses to keep others "in place." People that don't need your kind charity earn your hate, because by not depending on you, you have no control over them. How very Christian of you.
Is most disturbing of all. Not everyone is equal and for you to think this way goes to show how little you actually know.Minrott wrote:I on the other hand see everyone as an equal, with the right to be prosperous on their own account, and not kept in the squaller of society by a pittance of government handout.
Minrott wrote:Gypsiyee: I appreciate your mothers position, honestly. You mention consideration on a case by case basis. Wouldn't that be grand. Even I could be convinced your mother needs help on an individual basis. But federal programs are massive bureaucracies that cannot operate in that fashion. There's a man in Ohio, that works every bit as hard as your mother. Maybe even harder. His entire adult life has been dedicated to the running of his own business, his family life has suffered because of it, his social life has suffered because of it, he's been on the brink of financial ruin because of it. Like your mother, he's persevered through it all. Finally, he's made it over the top of the hill, and his business is growing. He's making $250,000 a year, even though it requires 18 hour days 6 days a week to do it. If only we could evaluate his taxes on an individual basis, to see that he's not some trust fund baby who "owes" society for his wealth. If only we could see that this man, given the opportunity will continue to grow his business and eventually employ other people who perhaps previously could not find work. But, like I said, federal programs are massive bureaucracies that don't work in this fashion, and his hard fought earnings will be pilfered to help your mother or someone like her.
As far as counting my blessings, I haven't been blessed. I've made a choice to live where I do, and how I do. I could have just as easily lived in Milwaukee or Minneapolis and made double the money I do now. But I carefully evaluated the benefit of that and chose to stake my claim where I have. Don't act as if it's easy, as I suspect you know it's not. Building an operating farm, albeit a small one, from nothing is not as simple as buying a lot in the country. Just as I know it's not easy for someone in poor position to pick up everything and leave their situation, I know it can be done.
ClakarEQ wrote:Minrott wrote:Clakar: That's where we differ. You are under the belief that some people are poor and incapable of anything. Your blind disgust and self hate is disguised as charity for those who can't help themselves. You are the worst kind of liberal, the one who believes "some animals are more equal than others." I on the other hand see everyone as an equal, with the right to be prosperous on their own account, and not kept in the squaller of society by a pittance of government handout. Redistribution of wealth is a self fulfilling prophecy, one that your kind uses to keep others "in place." People that don't need your kind charity earn your hate, because by not depending on you, you have no control over them. How very Christian of you.
Really, you see everyone equal do you. How about the vet with no legs, So vets with no legs aren't capable of providing for themselves? That's demeaning.or the homeless adult with a 5th grade education,Homeless does not mean helpless. I am not to be penalized for choices this person made or the auto-worker with 30 years on the job and knows nothing else but what it was he used to do?Again, why am I penalized for his choices? What about those folks Minrott, are they all your peers?Everyone of them. They're American, they're human, and they all have the ability to change their position.
Your narrow minded blinders on care about me and not about you. Let me guess, you'd shit on your own mom if she got in your way, right?Nope, I help those around me, rather than depending on the Government to steal for them
My blind disgust and self hate, o rly, LOL. I realize you've never been in a real position of need or your eyes would be open, not closed as they seem to be.It couldn't possibly be that I've had to work for what I have, work currently to better my position, and believe because of that that anyone else can do it too?Is most disturbing of all. Not everyone is equal and for you to think this way goes to show how little you actually know. Thank you for proving my point.Minrott wrote:I on the other hand see everyone as an equal, with the right to be prosperous on their own account, and not kept in the squaller of society by a pittance of government handout.
You didn't answer my question Minrott, are you a Christian?Are you Muslim?
Gypsiyee wrote:To address the "Joe the Plumber" guy, I can appreciate the type of work that goes into getting there, but one thing needs to be noted in this situation - paying taxes is not quite the same as those who need help. I can appreciate how hard he works, but the fact will remain that he did not pay higher taxes when he didn't have the money, but now he is at a point where he does. I would say that all people at that level work hard, and they enjoy greater profits because of it. That does not mean they should also enjoy bigger tax breaks. There is an implication here that because he works long hours, he shouldn't have to pay as much, and I can't wrap my head around that logic.
I don't what what the fuck lenders were thinking giving something of value to someone without the means or mentality to keep it
"What America needs right now is not more talk and long-term strategy, but a concrete way to create more imaginary wealth in the very immediate future,"
Ordinary Income: The top two income tax brackets would return to their 1990’s levels of 36% and 39.6%. All other tax brackets would remain as they are today. Obama would also restore the 1990’s levels for the personal exemption and itemized deduction phaseouts (known as PEP and Pease). Obama would work with the Treasury Department to adjust the thresholds of these rates slightly to ensure that no married couple making less than $250,000 (or single making less than $200,000) was affected by these changes.
Capital Gains: Families with incomes below $250,000 will continue to pay the capital gains rates that they pay today. For those in the top two income tax brackets – likewise adjusted to affect only families over $250,000 – Obama will create a new top capital gains rate of 20 percent. Obama’s 20% rate is equal is the lowest rate that existed in the 1990s and the rate that President Bush proposed in 2001. It is almost a third lower than the rate that President Reagan signed into law in 1986.
Minrott wrote:Liberals: Darwin for Nature, nurture for Society. What a joke.
Minrott wrote:Want to end poverty? Teach fiscal responsibility every year from K-12. Poor kids grow up to be poor adults because they don't have any clue as to how money works, other than that they can trade it for shiny things at the store.
Minrott wrote:We may never agree, but I'm certain we could always come to a compromise. This, is what I believe is the most wrong of the system. We're becoming so out of balance that instead of seeking middle of the road compromise, we try to get a homerun for our own ideology every chance we can..
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