"Obama comes in and starts government ownership of private corporations, firing CEO's from the White House." I do realize that this doesn't have anything to do with the current discussion, but I don't know where else to ask you about this. I understand that many people hated the bailout of the auto industry. I wasn't really pleased about it. I felt some sympathy with the argument that if a company can't make it in this market, then it should be allowed to fail. If terrible mismanagement puts a company on the road to bankruptcy, then so be it.But I also had some sympathy with the opposite argument, that in this time of terrible unemployment, to allow the auto industry to collapse wasn't necessarily good for the US as a whole. Our manufacturing base is shrinking as it is, and I didn't like the idea of allowing it to shrink any further.I'm still not sure whether the course of action Obama took was the right one or not. It may have been the right one because the auto industry still survives here...I guess we will never know. But as I went back and forth about whether or not I supported this move or not, one thing that never occurred to me was that the Obama administration desired to overtake the ownership of any private corporation. Obama himself said that he didn't want to own a car company! That struck me as a truth founded in logic...President Obama had enough on his plate without going around and taking over big American corporations. Why would he want to take on MORE? So I have to ask you, do you really believe that the current administration WANTS to overtake American businesses?
I do not trust anything Michele Bachman has to say, ever. I happily listen to anyone who has a different point of view, but that woman lies. I'm sorry, but I will not believe anything that comes out of her mouth.Don't get me wrong..I do not like the idea of big government swallowing up everything in its path. But reading the Washington post story, I have to wonder if there are some industries that might benefit from government intervention in the short term. I would like to think that no, there aren't, but in times as these, we should be openminded to all possible solutions. I just don't buy the idea that this administration WANTS government to get bigger and bigger and control more and more of our lives. I really don't believe that. I know some do, but I just don't. Now, there may be those in CONGRESS who want more and more power and want to see that power in the hands of big corporations...I just might believe THAT!
Dear MooseMom, is it working for Europe right now?
Well, for all those that are taking Sarah Palin to task, how about the 2004 Democratic ad as well and other democratic ads using crosshairs and targets?http://granitegrok.com/blog/2011/01/if_dean_and_the_other_boohoo_hampsters_w.htmlhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XqB4tyvxWKA&feature=youtu.behttp://thespeechatimeforchoosing.wordpress.com/2011/01/09/listen-up-lefties-the-difference-between-the-dncs-bulls-eyes-and-sarah-palins-surveyors-crosshairs/
Quote from: Hemodoc on January 10, 2011, 01:45:25 PMWell, for all those that are taking Sarah Palin to task, how about the 2004 Democratic ad as well and other democratic ads using crosshairs and targets?http://granitegrok.com/blog/2011/01/if_dean_and_the_other_boohoo_hampsters_w.htmlhttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XqB4tyvxWKA&feature=youtu.behttp://thespeechatimeforchoosing.wordpress.com/2011/01/09/listen-up-lefties-the-difference-between-the-dncs-bulls-eyes-and-sarah-palins-surveyors-crosshairs/The main difference that has been pointed out is that these maps don't name specific candidates, nor is it from a specific candidate with specific contact information on it. Doesn't mean I neccesarily condone it, and let's all hope that going forward, such rhetoric (from BOTH sides, and any third or fourth ones that may crop up!) will no longer be tolerated. Saturday in AZ was a wake-up call, and I hope and pray that ALL of us in this country will turn over a new leaf and start discussing our politics and government in civil, adult ways. On a totally unrelated note, is it any wonder that drivel such as Jersey Shore on MTV is one of the hottest shows on cable TV? (and no, I don't watch it - I refuse!) No wonder our political discussions have turned into such crap! Again, I don't know where it started, but it (finally) needs to STOP!!! Keep crosshairs in gun ranges and targets on dart boards!KarenInWA
I never said the gunman wasn't responsible for his actions. He completely and totally is. But, in light of all of this. we need to change how we discuss politics in this country. Palin needs to acknowledge her crosshairs map and eat crow over it, simply because one of her "targets" was shot at. It does not mean she caused it, but she put the gun target on Gifford's district. It was noticed, and it spread like wildfire.KarenInWA
I've thought long and hard about the death penalty. There are such good argument on both sides of this issue that I can't ignore. However...I wish I could remember more of the details of the story I'm about to tell; maybe one of you could fill some in. Right before the execution of Timothy McVeigh, a woman wrote an article that has stayed with me. I don't remember if she had any direct relationship to any of the victims; I am assuming she did, otherwise she wouldn't have been where she was. Anyway, she had the opportunity to speak briefly with McVeigh's father. She was struck by this man's grief, bewilderment and quiet dignity. She had a bit of an epiphany. She knew how much the victims' families were suffering in their loss, and it suddenly occurred to her that when McVeigh was finally put to death, one more family would know such dreadful loss, and she felt that that wasn't right.I've thought about that article for many years, and I think I have to agree. The death of one person affects many. Killing a man who has himself killed brings more loss to more people, and I am not sure that should be the intent of any sort of punishment.Depriving a person of his liberty is no insignificant punishment. He has spent 22 years out in the sunlight, but once he is sentenced, he will rarely see the sun again. What he has to look forward to from a life imprisonment (which is what he should get) is devastatingly harsh. Death would release him from pain. Life in prison would not. Life in prison is by far the harsher punishment, in my mind.Keeping a person alive in those circumstances is very expensive to the taxpayer...that is true. But we have to be very clear about why we are killing someone. Is it just to save the taxpayer money? I'm not sure that is good enough reason in God's eyes.Maybe the debate shouldn't focus so much on politics. If he is indeed mentally ill, perhaps we should be looking at our mental health care system. Did he and his family have insurance that covered mental health checkups and/or treatment? Did the system somehow fail him? If so, how do we fix that? Were there any signs of mental illness that were ignored?Arizona should also be looking at their gun laws. It has been reported that he bought the gun legally, but perhaps that should be under closer inspection. Did someone turn a blind eye to the current laws and sell him this gun?
BigSky, as has been pointed out by various people in this thread, lots of candidates/political figures have used weaponry imagery. It's certainly not confined to one person, one time or one side. But Sarah Palin is sort of the woman of the moment. She has a passionate following. She has made herself incredibly visible. She quit her governor's job so that she could use her time to becoming even MORE visible, and there's absolutely nothing wrong with that (although I'm not sure that quitting the job that you were elected to do is a morally or politically good idea). She portrays herself as a huntress who certainly knows her way around guns. She portrays herself as being aggressive, and you pair that with her gun imagery, and she is set up for just this sort of mayhem. I do think that some smart PR people who do not like her have taken this opportunity to put all of those elements together and try to make her the villain of the piece, but she gave them a lot of ammunition (see how easy it is to speak in weaponry terms)?I'll give Sarah Palin one thing...she usually has her finger on the pulse of a particular part of the nation. I'm a little surprised that she has not made more of a statement either in her defense, an apology or an exhortation to get back to civil political discourse. Like I said before, she is very well placed to show some leadership in this regard, but she has said next to nothing, and that surprises me. No doubt she is aware of the debate surrounding the Arizona killings. Granted, I don't think she OWES anyone anything, but she could make a lot of difference if what we really want is reason. What do you think? Like it or not, she has been identified as a player in this whole thing...do you think that making a more detailed statement would be a good thing, or do you think it's best for her to just lie low?
I've thought long and hard about the death penalty. There are such good argument on both sides of this issue that I can't ignore. However...I wish I could remember more of the details of the story I'm about to tell; maybe one of you could fill some in. Right before the execution of Timothy McVeigh, a woman wrote an article that has stayed with me. I don't remember if she had any direct relationship to any of the victims; I am assuming she did, otherwise she wouldn't have been where she was. Anyway, she had the opportunity to speak briefly with McVeigh's father. She was struck by this man's grief, bewilderment and quiet dignity. She had a bit of an epiphany. She knew how much the victims' families were suffering in their loss, and it suddenly occurred to her that when McVeigh was finally put to death, one more family would know such dreadful loss, and she felt that that wasn't right.I've thought about that article for many years, and I think I have to agree. The death of one person affects many. Killing a man who has himself killed brings more loss to more people, and I am not sure that should be the intent of any sort of punishment.Depriving a person of his liberty is no insignificant punishment. He has spent 22 years out in the sunlight, but once he is sentenced, he will rarely see the sun again. What he has to look forward to from a life imprisonment (which is what he should get) is devastatingly harsh. Death would release him from pain. Life in prison would not. Life in prison is by far the harsher punishment, in my mind.Keeping a person alive in those circumstances is very expensive to the taxpayer...that is true. But we have to be very clear about why we are killing someone. Is it just to save the taxpayer money? I'm not sure that is good enough reason in God's eyes.
I think this review of political violence is very helpful.http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/01/the-cloudy-logic-of-political-shootings/69147/Peter I think you're putting forward a false equivalencey to say the rhetoric is the same on both sides of the aisle. That Cantor situation case in point: "A Richmond Police detective was assigned to the case. A preliminary investigation shows that a bullet was fired into the air and struck the window in a downward direction". A bullet is randomly fired in the air somewhere in Ohio Virginia and the left is as vitriolic as the right? The rhetoric on the right, from the most prominent figures on the right, is of a magnitude difference than anything that was said by the left against Bush through an election decided by the Supreme Court, and the long 8 years of improbable bungling. The language of delegitimization and demonization of Barack Obama are in a different league.That is the milieu that this happened in, just as the Kennedy assassination happened in the milieu of hatred that was Dallas 1963.
Quote from: Bill Peckham on January 09, 2011, 11:15:53 AMI think this review of political violence is very helpful.http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2011/01/the-cloudy-logic-of-political-shootings/69147/Peter I think you're putting forward a false equivalencey to say the rhetoric is the same on both sides of the aisle. That Cantor situation case in point: "A Richmond Police detective was assigned to the case. A preliminary investigation shows that a bullet was fired into the air and struck the window in a downward direction". A bullet is randomly fired in the air somewhere in Ohio Virginia and the left is as vitriolic as the right? The rhetoric on the right, from the most prominent figures on the right, is of a magnitude difference than anything that was said by the left against Bush through an election decided by the Supreme Court, and the long 8 years of improbable bungling. The language of delegitimization and demonization of Barack Obama are in a different league.That is the milieu that this happened in, just as the Kennedy assassination happened in the milieu of hatred that was Dallas 1963.This is very nicely stated and I agree with it totally. I was in hospital following my transplant when all of this was unfolding and watched CNN for roughly 10 hours a day, so remember this better than most news stories. Eric Cantor seemed a little too eager to prove that the right were also targets of extremism.
I saw an interesting interview on CNN with Ms Giffords campaign manager. Apparently there is some list that ranks the 435 members of the House in order of their liberalness/conservatism (I don't quite understand who does this list or if No 1 has the most conservative or the most liberal voting record, but anyway), and she was ranked 217th...right straight in the middle. If this kid did have a political agenda, it was one fuelled by extremism, and THAT's the worrying thing.