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Comment Re:Issues (Score 1) 376

He continued the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan that he vowed to stop, kept Guantanimo Bay open which he vowed to close, and then attacked Libya which Bush was NOT involved in. Oh, and by Obama's metrics (e.g. that the six highest tax rate years in the last 30 are the "baseline" and that collecting less in taxes is "spending" and has to be "paid for") he *did* in fact give a "tax cut" that increased spending.

So Obama is no different.

Comment Re:$100,000 deeper in debt (Score 1) 524

That is probably because Slashdot largely consists of people who are in their 20s and 30s. About half of the younger ones are doing better as four years ago they were in school and making little to no money and now they are one of the ~50% of fairly recent college grads who managed to find a job. The ones who appear to be in their 30s mostly say that they are better off because of being in a good relationship (or out of a bad one) and/or having children are why they are better off.

Comment Re:Thank you transplant!! (Score 1) 524

There are really two options.

1. Eveybody pays for themselves and they decide what they are willing to pay for or get a loan for.
2. The govenment steps in and dictates who gets what.

Neither one are good but there really aren't any good options in a distribution of scarce resources scenario. The first option leads to people dying because they can't afford treatment. The second option leads to government rationing boards, aka "death panels" if you wish. The first option in my opinion is *slightly* better because it technically leaves the choice in the hands of the individual and doesn't create a massive, bloated, unaccountable and unresponsive government buraeucracy. It also rewards people taking care of themselves with lifestyle choices, etc. But it still sucks as some people really do have bad luck in getting an inherited disease/hit by a bus/etc. and can't pay for something that wasn't their fault.

Comment Re:But it had nothing to do with Obama (Score 3, Interesting) 524

There is actually a good amount of truth in that "tired fallacy." If you are a runner running a race, nothing I can do will help you run faster as only you can make yourself do that. But I can sure make you run slower if I whack you in the kneecap with a crowbar. Government is pretty much the same way.

Comment Re:Panadol? Tylenol? (Score 1) 513

Yes, we medical people in the U.S. have heard of a bunch of foreign generic and trade names for drugs in the U.S., including paracetamol. (We generally call it "APAP" rather than acetamiophen or paracetamol after its chemical trade name acetyl-para-aminophenol as it has fewest letters.) Do you think that no foreigner has ever had to go to a hospital in the U.S. and that nobody American has ever gotten drugs from a foreign pharmacy? Come on...

Comment Re:Us versus Them (Score 1) 113

Ron Paul and his supporters align themselves with the Republican Party because if Ron Paul and the libertarian-leaning Republicans split off from the authoritarian-right Republicans, a non-split-up Democrat Party (even though it has three factions- the blue collar union Democrats/historical Democrats, the old hippie Democrats, and the statist Democrats) would walk all over them for decades until their infighting split them up and left us with about five political parties. The little-L libertarians in the Republican Party realize that even the last four years under a statist Democrat are far more ugly to bear than electing a authoritarian-right Republican like Romney and thus stick with the Republican Party as a whole. It's a "we're screwed if we do, we're REALLY screwed if we don't" methodology.

Comment Re:What would it take... (Score 1) 233

- Rewriting the Constitution in "modern legal language" to give much, much less room for the judicial "interpretation" that has rendered much of the Constitution invalidated (10th Amendment, anybody?)
- Getting rid of the previous judgments based on an extreme amount of mental gymnastics used to allow acts that were clearly unconstitutional- e.g. "The Switch in Time that Saved Nine" that allowed the Commerce Clause to be used as justification to allow regulation of almost everything*.
- Tightening up some of the loopholes in the Constitution that allowed for creeping government growth- there needs to be a balanced budget article in the Constitution, for example.

The basic framework set by the Founders was solid but 200+ years of many people with huge incentives of increasing their power and influence trying to get around it using any means possible has succeeded in gutting much of it that got in their way. Hitting a reset button would be the best thing that comes to my mind.

*Except to force people to not avoid participating in a market, that apparently is allowed under the 16th Amendment (see the Obamacare decision.)

Comment Re:not the solution (Score 1) 156

Perhaps the nearly immobile lives that youngsters live has something to do with it as well? Recess and gym are a fraction of the time they used to be, if they even still exist in schools. You can't have kids memorizing material for the federally mandated achievement tests that determine a larger and larger chunk of cash-strapped school districts' budgets if they are outside running around. If that isn't enough "persuasion" to cut recess and gym, the fear of lawsuits if little Brayden (or Aiden or Kayden or Jayden) catches a hangnail as he trips over his own feet and falls into the mandatory two-foot-thick rubber mat on the playground will. It's no better at home. There is the same worry about Brayden catching a hangnail as at school, but now since it is unsupervised, you have to worry about (the one in ten million chance of) a child molester kidnapping Jimmy! Go out and supervise Brayden yourself? And miss watching "Jersey Shore?" That's ludicrous! Better to have Brayden stay inside.

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