It's a shame people think that the idea that a stimulated economy produces jobs is a Republican theme only
I'd like to see where governments actually create jobs that contribute to the bottom line directly. Not as a "cost center". I don't have a problem with cost centers in business - they either contribute to the production of the bottom line (though they don't help create it directly) or they get flushed out as too expensive, in a well-run business. But the government is a cost center and doesn't create jobs itself - the best it does is create an environment within which jobs can be created by its citizens. Too big and oppressive and there are natural consequences as we see in Argentina.
Screw Reagan and his "trickle-down" theory - it sounds absurdly elitist, as if the poor people are dogs under the table feeding off the rich folks' scraps. To me, that happens when government either creates the conditions that force the poor to live that way, or create conditions that allow individuals in society to treat people that way, or a mix.
The reality is that poor people in a richer, freer country have better lives than the poor people in a poorly-run, over-bearing country that tries to control everything. Is that enough? Not for me - I'd rather thousands of people like me be free to do business and hire as many people as needed to do the work instead of being bogged down with ginormous (did you all know that's a "real" word?) regulations that make me want to limit salaries and the number of people I employ.
I'm not "accepting" poverty any more than I accept my eventual death. I know it's going to happen but I guarantee that I'll go kicking and screaming (at least figuratively) Just like death, poverty is still an incurable disease, at least while we have to have production and the gathering of raw materials, and shaping of ideas by mostly human hands. There will always be work that is underpaid in relation to other work but is in that status because it is relatively unskilled work, which is simply not as valuable as skilled work - otherwise we'd be pretty much like our cousin simians - intelligence and the ability to puzzle out the universe is our gift, not our curse. I'd rather be a human than an ape any day.
I'd rather be poor in the US (I've been there and it took me years to climb out) than poor in Argentina (I see it first-hand at least a couple of times a month as I have many poor relatives who live here in awful conditions amongst thousands of other poor people).
It's not trickle down - it's relative.
I'd like to see where governments actually create jobs that contribute to the bottom line directly. Not as a "cost center". I don't have a problem with cost centers in business - they either contribute to the production of the bottom line (though they don't help create it directly) or they get flushed out as too expensive, in a well-run business. But the government is a cost center and doesn't create jobs itself - the best it does is create an environment within which jobs can be created by its citizens. Too big and oppressive and there are natural consequences as we see in Argentina.
Screw Reagan and his "trickle-down" theory - it sounds absurdly elitist, as if the poor people are dogs under the table feeding off the rich folks' scraps. To me, that happens when government either creates the conditions that force the poor to live that way, or create conditions that allow individuals in society to treat people that way, or a mix.
The reality is that poor people in a richer, freer country have better lives than the poor people in a poorly-run, over-bearing country that tries to control everything. Is that enough? Not for me - I'd rather thousands of people like me be free to do business and hire as many people as needed to do the work instead of being bogged down with ginormous (did you all know that's a "real" word?) regulations that make me want to limit salaries and the number of people I employ.
I'm not "accepting" poverty any more than I accept my eventual death. I know it's going to happen but I guarantee that I'll go kicking and screaming (at least figuratively) Just like death, poverty is still an incurable disease, at least while we have to have production and the gathering of raw materials, and shaping of ideas by mostly human hands. There will always be work that is underpaid in relation to other work but is in that status because it is relatively unskilled work, which is simply not as valuable as skilled work - otherwise we'd be pretty much like our cousin simians - intelligence and the ability to puzzle out the universe is our gift, not our curse. I'd rather be a human than an ape any day.
I'd rather be poor in the US (I've been there and it took me years to climb out) than poor in Argentina (I see it first-hand at least a couple of times a month as I have many poor relatives who live here in awful conditions amongst thousands of other poor people).
It's not trickle down - it's relative.