Did Obama Throw the Debate?
Luminosity 10 Oct 2012
They basically work for the same people: banksters, Wall Street, oil companies, big business, rich people, and the defense industry. Did they have a word with him? Did they tell him the he was out and Romney was in? Can you even do that? What would it take to get someone to throw a presidential race?
Now Romney's polls are up, they say. How many people were that undecided this late in the game?
If you want to watch the real debates, the ones that included all viewpoints, go to Democracy Now. They pieced together an expanded debate, editing in Green Party Candidate Jill Stein and Justice Party Candidate Rocky Anderson. What a pleasure it was to hear the truth spoken. Jill Stein is my president.
http://www.democracy...ee_hour_special
What do you think happened?
To see more of my commentary, go to my blog at:
http://www.longecity...at-7-commentary
Edited by Luminosity, 10 October 2012 - 03:41 AM.
Application 10 Oct 2012
Connor MacLeod 10 Oct 2012
PAUL RYAN IS ALSO REPTILIAN-HUMANOID (DONT ASK FOR HIS REAL NAME, EVEN A CRUDE APPROXIMATION IS IMPOSSIBLE IN ANY HUMAN TONGUE.) THE GOOD NEWS IS THAT BIDEN IS NOT A STAR-SEED, JUST A HUMAN (WHICH, IF YOU ARE CURIOUS, IS WHY OBAMA SELECTED HIM), SO PSIONIC ATTACKS ON MATRIX HOLOGRAM WILL HAVE NO EFFECT ON HIM. HOWEVER, BIDEN IS AS DUMB AS WOOD, SO WE'RE PROBABLY SCREWED IN ANYCASE.
scottknl 11 Oct 2012
http://rationalwiki....iki/Gish_Gallop
Some days I'm so glad I'm not a lawyer or a politician.
niner 11 Oct 2012
rwac 11 Oct 2012
Luminosity 13 Oct 2012
cesium 14 Oct 2012
Turnbuckle 14 Oct 2012
Luminosity 17 Oct 2012
http://www.examiner....-obama-imminent
mikeinnaples 30 Oct 2012
Chemistry explains it once again... Mormons don't drink coffee, but the religion takes no stance on methamphetamine. Meanwhile, someone slipped Obama a couple Ambien. Chris Christie was obviously appraised of all this in advance.
The real question is who slipped Chris Christie all those big macs.
Luminosity 05 Nov 2012
Romney drinks diet coke because his religion, formed in the 1800's, only prohibits coffee and tea.
Lister 06 Nov 2012
Obama’s excuse (he was a little down because of the flight) along with legitimately feeling that he’d failed at completing his set goals was the reason for his poor performance. Obama doesn’t strike me as someone who easily rids himself of blame when he screws up.
To Obama that debate was probably (to a degree) the parent teacher meeting after the child fails on the last test and may not graduate on. Obama was probably dreading the debate for months.
Brafarality 06 Nov 2012
At this point, I think President Obama has reestablished a narrow but definite lead and am hoping that this results in a VICTORY today!
Oh Yeah! Love Barack Obama. Best thing to happen to American politics in a loooong time.
Luminosity 07 Nov 2012
niner 07 Nov 2012
rwac 07 Nov 2012
1. The social conservatives who seem to be pro life without exceptions for rape.
2. The anti-immigration wing of the GOP
Obama won, but the GOP kept the house, and kept filibuster capability(40) in the senate.
Lister 07 Nov 2012
That's the issue really; it's a "Show". Regardless of whether Mitt had won instead of Obama this would still be the issue.
In Canada our politics is mostly boring, reasonable, and productive. Sometimes we see the rare political scandal and a bit of poo flinging but mostly it’s boring and not worth the attention. That’s how it should be.
niner 07 Nov 2012
Lister 07 Nov 2012
And on deck, The Fiscal Cliff! I wonder how that's going to work out? It's ok with me if we hit the cliff. I don't think it's going to have as profoundly negative an impact on the economy as some people do. I see a relatively brief and shallow recession if a-sequestering we go.
I’ve always been a Liberal. I feel there is a place for Government in our life. That being said I feel that with us living in capitalist society we should allow things to run their course.
The reason for the 2008 fiscal collapse was because of a failure within the system. That failure was prevented from occurring and as a result we’re still susceptible in the west to an even larger collapse.
I hope that the fiscal cliff occurs and I hope that it will result in another financial collapse. True it’s easier for me to say that being that I’m in Vancouver and I’ll likely feel the effects of that collapse a lot less. But I also feel that we are starting to see a much lower growth rate around the world and our economies are still geared to work with a high rate of growth.
We need to collapse and reorient ourselves. Whether you are a Republican, a Democrat… A Liberal, Conservative, NDP, Green, or Parti Québécois (to name a few Canadian parties) – we need to remap, reorganize and rethink our views of a sustainable lifestyle and society.
With Climate change, an increasing middle class in countries like India and China, an ever increasing resource expense… It’s only natural to think that things can and will become more challenging in the future. Based on this one cannot expect to have such a high growth rate for much longer.
Does that make sense? And what does that have to do with Obama throwing the debate? I think it has a lot to do with his reaction during that debate. I think he sees the same thing I do.
niner 07 Nov 2012
The reason for the 2008 fiscal collapse was because of a failure within the system. That failure was prevented from occurring and as a result we’re still susceptible in the west to an even larger collapse.
There was certainly a failure within the system, but it wasn't prevented from occurring. It did occur. Then the mess was cleaned up with a huge government intervention so that we wouldn't have another worldwide Great Depression. Instead, we got off relatively easy with the "Great Recession". How do you figure that we're still susceptible to an even larger collapse? The prevention of that is what Dodd-Frank is supposed to be about. I guess that since Dodd-Frank didn't fix every possible way in which things could blow up, there is still a possibility of another financial crisis, but I think the odds of that have been reduced, and if one does happen, it will probably be smaller than it otherwise would have been.
Lister 07 Nov 2012
There was certainly a failure within the system, but it wasn't prevented from occurring. It did occur. Then the mess was cleaned up with a huge government intervention so that we wouldn't have another worldwide Great Depression. Instead, we got off relatively easy with the "Great Recession". How do you figure that we're still susceptible to an even larger collapse? The prevention of that is what Dodd-Frank is supposed to be about. I guess that since Dodd-Frank didn't fix every possible way in which things could blow up, there is still a possibility of another financial crisis, but I think the odds of that have been reduced, and if one does happen, it will probably be smaller than it otherwise would have been.
To me the larger issue is the debt and the philosophy behind it. With Obama in office perhaps he’ll leave with a Surplus but I don’t see that larger debt issue (globally) going away. If another Great Depression had occurred I think we may have come upon a reason to really look hard at how we live our lives and change.
It’s standard for people to be in debt these days. Debt is a HUGE issue! The bailout mended things short term but it completely ignored the larger issue. Dodd-Frank and other resolutions like it may fix some of the holes that caused the 2008 collapse but I feel there is a larger philosophical issue in the west that we’ve completely failed to address.
It wasn’t just the holes in finance that sunk the ship it was the unrealistic expectations of the public. People in the west still think they deserve to be wealthy and I think that is a huge failing. There is a virtual flood of highly educated people from the east willing to work 16hrs a day for next to nothing. We need to take a good long look at the broader issue or we’re doomed to drive this issue deeper and deeper. Just how far down can we go before there’s no way back?
niner 08 Nov 2012
Lister 09 Nov 2012
Debt is not fundamentally bad in the abstract. Debt that exceeds your ability to service it is the problem. Credit is fundamental to the functioning of modern economies. Our national debt was not really a factor in the credit crisis. Some members of the public may have had unrealistic expectations, but the real problem was that unregulated mortgage originators were writing utter garbage loans to people who shouldn't have gotten them. They conned the people into getting in over their heads, much of the time. They immediately flipped these loans to Wall Street, who repackaged them and sold them as "safe" securities. Thus the mortgage originators who wrote the loans had no skin in the game, and no incentive to do anything except write more bad loans and sell them. I find it hard to put much blame on the financially naive public in this case; certainly not equal to the blame that the financial industry bears.
Hmm...
Perhaps you’re right. I know that credit is essential. I also recognize that through inflation that 15 Trillion Dollar Debt will slowly become less and less at a rate likely higher than the repayment.
I still feel that we’re stepping into serious levels of unknown. The US debt is nowhere near breaking the GDP as far as servicing it goes but I still feel like that number is large enough to merit concern. Should we subscribe to failed austerity like they did in the EU? Probably not...
I guess with the price of things rising faster than income eventually we’ll settle out in a place that lines up better with a slower national growth rate. That being said it feels as though we’re walking a fine line between a working system and a full on financial collapse far greater than the 2008 crisis.
Resources will likely remain limited for many more years to come. With population projected to hit 10 Billion can we really say we’re safe with the rate of change we’re currently experiencing? I don’t know. With Obama in office it feels a lot better than it did (thank you to those who voted). Even so I still feel as though in the long run a full on depression would have brought better results. It’s tough to explain why though.
niner 09 Nov 2012
I still feel that we’re stepping into serious levels of unknown. The US debt is nowhere near breaking the GDP as far as servicing it goes but I still feel like that number is large enough to merit concern. Should we subscribe to failed austerity like they did in the EU? Probably not...
It's not really unknown. It's been seen before in this country, as a fraction of GDP, and has certainly been seen in other industrialized economies. If anyone thinks the US debt is scary, they should see Japan! The US debt is manageable at the moment, but we do need to bring it down. You're right that austerity is the wrong approach. The countries that went that route after the 2008 meltdown have not recovered the way we have. If we had chosen the misguided approach of trying to fight a recession with austerity, we'd be in a depression now.
I guess with the price of things rising faster than income eventually we’ll settle out in a place that lines up better with a slower national growth rate. That being said it feels as though we’re walking a fine line between a working system and a full on financial collapse far greater than the 2008 crisis.
Resources will likely remain limited for many more years to come. With population projected to hit 10 Billion can we really say we’re safe with the rate of change we’re currently experiencing? I don’t know. With Obama in office it feels a lot better than it did (thank you to those who voted). Even so I still feel as though in the long run a full on depression would have brought better results. It’s tough to explain why though.
I think there are people who are trying to sow fear, and they are doing a good job of it. Scared people are easier to manipulate. The US is not the next Greece, and economic disaster is not around the corner.
Luminosity 10 Nov 2012
I wonder how real this "fiscal cliff" is. I wonder if this is more professional wrestling with a predetermined outcome. Obama somehow couldn't reverse the Bush tax cuts in four years but he could push through unpopular programs like Obamacare, the Stimulus Package and the Bank Bailout. Anyone know more about the mechanics of the fiscal cliff and what will happen if there is no deal?
Lister 11 Nov 2012
I doubt it will be quite as bad as they make it out to be though politically speaking it could be a disaster. It has to be said that a vastly majority of republicans signed Grover Norquists “Americans for Tax Reform” Pledge which blocks them from agreeing to any raises in taxes. This “Cliff” may be a convenient way for Republicans to allow for tax increases without breaking the pledge.
Perhaps for that reason it may go through. We’ll see.