Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

"In answer to flint's original question: Democrats can claim this is 'bush's economy" for the same number of years republicians blamed Clinton for issues in the Bush years (which btw was right up till when Obama came to power)"
idd, but his point still stands...

Hey fool, welcome back. smile

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

or we can be realistic and blame the whole housing collapse on the clinton administration for making it illegal to refuse to loan to people who obviously couldnt afford it

So I told the cop, "No YOU'RE driving under the influence... of being a JERK!"

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eFjjO_lhf9c

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

how about blaming BOTH sides for having some part in causing the debt problems?

Buddugoliaeth neu Marwolaeth

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

wait? Are you saying that we should all take collective blame for not being able to manage our finances? And that neither side of the political spectrum is fully to blame? Of no one is going to like that idea!

"Sticks and stones may break my bones, but i am Jesus"
"Nothing is worse than a fully prepared fool"

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

Personally I like to blame the supermarket that stopped selling the cookies I liked. From there all problems started.

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

> EmperorHez wrote:

> how about blaming BOTH sides for having some part in causing the debt problems?


Well... how is each side to blame?  Before asserting both need to take responsibility, you should at least state the specific action for which each side is uniquely responsible.

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

i blame them for attempting to create a two party system with two sides of a spectrum in order to seperate a proper voting pool into smaller less effective majorities. I don't think there should be political parties involved in the senate whatsoever, we should judge each person by thier choices, which seems to be hardly the case.

I blame both parties for being unable to resist large unnamed investments "because of the 2nd bush" that detur them from making proper decisions in an effective time. the fact is they wait until things are already too bad and then rush some crap unread bill through.

I blame both sides for passing tax cuts AND injeting cash for a whopping effect of tanking the system. they act like different parties but tend to the same things they think work, but they only want them to go through if they are the controlling party.

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

How about blaiming the US political system as a whole? The 2 party system doesnt seem to be working out anymore, since the republicans wont accept anything the democrats launch, and vice versa, This means that you would need a majority in both chambers to reach make a point, and since that hasnt happened yet, i doubt it will ever happen. Both parties are running their own agenda, not for the good of the country (as they should) but for the good of their own party.

I survived the Test? of 12-4-03, anyone remember that?

34 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 07-Aug-2011 01:36:02)

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

@twoisdeath and CrazyOne


First of all, I don't agree with either of your statements.  The two-party system has managed to survive for... 200 years.  Kind of a long time for an unsustainable system to continue.

But anyway, that's not really why I made this post.  What both of you are engaging in is the same terrible politics which creates the problems you're worried about.  When we ask about the causes, and solutions, to economic crises and the best solution someone can come up with is to overturn non-economic sectors of a society, they really aren't engaging in economic policymaking.  Instead, either you're using the crisis to justify your own beliefs (you begin with the assumption that the two-party system is bad, and cite only slightly related issues as the cause of the crisis to justify your thesis) or you're simply grasping at straws in coming up with actual policy prescriptions.


Either way, your prescriptions don't help.  The best you can hope for with those policy prescriptions is that someone who knows what to do will magically appear and make everything better.  It doesn't work that way, because it still relies on people like you to vote... people who either don't know or don't care about the workings of the economy and ways that it will be fixed.  Long story short... even if a two-party system is removed, you'll still have a screwed up economy because people such as yourselves who aren't evaluating the economic issue aren't able to effectively vote for good economic policy... and the problem repeats itself.



***************************************

Okay, now that my slight rage post is done, let me try to better explain what I mean... If you understood the above, you can ignore this:

Regardless of whether or not your political prescription is adopted to solve the crisis, economic solutions will be needed (stock investors won't suddenly say "We have a multiparty democracy... quick, let's hire another 2 million workers, drop the price of oil, and fix the banking industry!").

Instead, the best case scenario for your idea is that better politicians come into play to make better economic decisions.  However, your system (just like two-party democracy) relies on the voters, as they are the ones with the power to hire and fire.  As a result, without actually knowing the best economic decision, your policy equates to restructuring government in the hopes that someone magically comes and fixes the economy, without going through the work of actually figuring out how to best fix the economy.  Even if your multiparty system was adopted, the result would be that you would get your multiparty system, then say "Um... okay, now what?"

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

i fail to see how blaming something suggests a solution, but thank you for your point of veiw smile

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

> twosidedeath wrote:

> i fail to see how blaming something suggests a solution, but thank you for your point of veiw smile



If by "blaming something" you mean a policy (like what dpenguins did), then you have a problem.

If we can summarize that X policy causes Y, and Y is bad... and thus blame X for Y... preventing or undoing X can either reverse Y or prevent another instance of Y.

In Dpenguins case, he cited a logical statement that a specific policy caused the economic crisis.  Whether it's true or not can be debated.  But if, through debate, we can identify that the policy in question did trigger the economic crisis, it stands to reason that avoiding that policy would avoid future economic crises.  tongue

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

I didnt said the 2 party system was bad, i said it appears not be working out at the current time anymore. I base this (my belief, not necesarily the truth) on the fact that the 2 houses in the US are separated in a democratic majority house wich will block anything republican,and vice versa. Ergo, they are only eying eachother at the moment and not the greater good. Both republicans and the democrats had good ideas on reforming the economy, but since they wont give eachother way, both their ideas failed.

In a multi party system, one of the bigger partys can try and find help with a smaller party to get a majority and make the changes that are necessary, like if there would (for example, dont read to much into it) there would a 40% democratic party, a 40% republican party and 20% other party, than either side could try and win the help of the third party to gain the needed majority.

I survived the Test? of 12-4-03, anyone remember that?

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

You may believe the two-party system works or doesn't work.  I'm not really posting to argue that.

However, considering the subject matter at hand in this thread is the economic crisis, its causes and effects... if you're blaming the recession on the two-party system, similarly to how twoisdeath was doing, then you're engaging in the terrible politics I mentioned above... and not actually presenting anything to address the recession in any substantive manner...

If you aren't, then you're off topic.  hmm

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

39 (edited by CrazyOne 07-Aug-2011 06:42:45)

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

I am indeed blaiming atleast part of the current recession on the two party system, since they are unable to give eachother room for their own ideas, and thus it creates a standstill in wich neither want to give way to the other. In a multi party system the likelyness if it getting to that point is less, since there are more partys to work and agree with on points, and try to go on from there.

I survived the Test? of 12-4-03, anyone remember that?

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

Bush reduced taxes by record levels and massively increased spending. Obama wasted a trillion on fiscal stimulus and increased spending.

you dont just turn around one day and are 14 trillion in the hole.

Buddugoliaeth neu Marwolaeth

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

wild eyed zarf, it amazes me how you push to catogorize me as this or that to try and argue against me. i can blame the whole damn system if i want to, and just because something manages to survive 200 years doesnt mean its perfect in any way, thats why there is evolution, which in a sense is what our political system has done over the last 200 years in order to survive. aswell dictatorship works very well, but its not the best for everyone, just a select few.

42 (edited by Zarf BeebleBrix 07-Aug-2011 15:21:24)

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

The point, CrazyOne and twoisdeath, is that you're playing a diversionary tactic here.

In the end, the only way to fix an economic crisis is through an economic solution (whether it be some sort of tax relief, change in inflation rate, regulatory restructuring, or whatever) will be the policy that finally fixes the economy.

Your policy won't.  People will not suddenly begin investing, hiring, and spending because we change our legislative structure.  The best case scenario you can hope for is that, following your policy enactment, someone will randomly do something to make the economy better.  You don't know what, though.

I say you're either using the recession to advocate an issue unrelated, or you honestly don't know or give a crap about what economic policy will fix the economy.



You can blame whatever the hell you want, twoisdeath.  However, that doesn't make it right.  Answer this argument and show you're right... or concede the argument.  Simple as that.

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

The only way to fix the current American economical crisis is for America to disband and solidify as one nation at a later date.


One way to improve America though, would be to improve its politicians. Enforce all elected politicians to publicly declare a set of goals for their term; If they fail to meet those goals shoot them...

I am sKoE
Do you know what the chain of command is here? It's the chain I go get and beat you with to show you who's in command.

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

Zarf: What if one believes that there are current politicians in parliament (i am kiwi, sue me) that have the know-how and plans to right the economy, one believes that these people have the vision, but they are hamstrung by being in one of two political parties. If the electoral process was reformed to allow a multi-party system then these people could form new parties with like minded people. One could believe that these people could then gain a large share of the seats in parliament and thus be able to set out the economic prescription one believes to be the correct one, be it tax increases or spending cuts or both. Then, in a way, setting out to reform the system helps to reform the economy, not by magic but by allowing the people you feel have the best plan to work on fixing the economy.

"Sticks and stones may break my bones, but i am Jesus"
"Nothing is worse than a fully prepared fool"

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

The world needs a Tobin tax to finance the national debts. The hysteric reactions of the financial market won't help until they have to pay a fair share.

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

@You_Fool

1: First, let me make the assumption that you're right and the two-party system is inherently an obstacle to economic solutions.  For their proposal to be successful, the proposal would need the following steps to take place:

Step 1: Legal barriers to a multiparty system are removed.
Step 2: A new election takes place.
Step 3: The new election results in a multiparty representation.
Step 4: The multiparty representation passes economic policies that fix the economy.

Let me go through each of these steps to indicate the problems faced.

Step 1: There are a number of legal barriers one would need to overcome.  We're talking about everything from repealing restrictions on campaign finance law to probably reversing winner takes all results in elections.  Constitutional amendments require 3/4 approval from the states to pass... so even if the idea is accepted... it's going to at least take a couple years to scrounge up that 3/4 approval.

I'll be easy on you an say it takes 2 years to rally the votes through to get the amendment going... trust me, I'm doing you a favor with this timeline.

Step 2: Elections for the Presidency happen every 4 years, House every 2, and 1/3 of the Senate every 6 years.  Okay, so the '12 Presidential election won't be affected by the amendment... but you will be able to catch the midterm elections!

So... assuming you get the amendment passed in 2 years, the next soonest election you could influence would be the '14 midterms.

Step 3: You are making the assumption here that the election will automatically result in a multiparty system when legal barriers are removed.  Now, you could theoretically be correct... but the thing is, Republicans and Democrats haven't built themselves as the same types of political parties that your multiparty systems are familiar with.  They aren't issue-based parties.  The parties are more fluid, having a general philosophy, but having an interest in maintaining broad coalitions.  That's why you see the prevalence of moderates like McCain, Lieberman, etc., in their respective parties, despite having plenty with which to disagree from the mainstream unit.

It's likely, then, that more people will still embrace the Republican and Democratic parties, even with the ability to accept the Libertarian, Green, or other parties.

In addition, the prevalence of two parties means that many existing parties don't have the foundation to be challengers because they're issue-focused... which means they can't be broad enough parties to win over a large number of supporters.  I'm not saying it may be impossible... but it would take time.

Step 4:

I want to flag this issue, because this is also my a priori complaint with two's argument here.  The multiparty system, just like the two-party system, is still a democratic process.  In the end, it requires the voters to listen to the list of prospective candidates' arguments, and choose the candidate which they believe will enact the policies which best shape their country.  In other words, it falls on the voters.

Now, this thread is trying to discuss that very question: "What should fix the economy?"  When trying to analyze the economics behind the problem, twoisdeath and CrazyOne are silent.  Remember... it's the voters who, in the end, are responsible for electing the people who establish the policies.  If the voters don't know what they believe will fix the economy... then the voting itself is meaningless in exacting any change in representation which would result in effective policymaking.

Long story short, you guys are going it the wrong way.  Policymaking should be a question of "what do I want," followed by a question of "how do I get there."  Either twoisdeath and CrazyOne are engaging in answering the second first without knowing what they want... or all they really want is the multiparty system, which means they're being disingenuous.

You can have your multiparty system debate... but figure out the economic solution first.


Oh, right... one more problem:

Look at the timeline I set up there.  Those are pretty conservative estimates.  That means, if you adhere to the idea that this is your solution, you've pretty much gone with a "screw the economy until about 2015 at the earliest (this assuming a multiparty system can quickly establish a coalition to pass legislation... also unlikely).

This is under the quickest of circumstances.  A more realistic interpretation would say that you've left the economy to die for another 6 years without even examining the economic part of the solution.  I don't need to get into a sad story of the results... there's plenty of them.  What I can say, though... is that it would be pretty much on you... that's your well-thought out system, after all!

Make Eyes Great Again!

The Great Eye is watching you... when there's nothing good on TV...

Re: When is it Obama's economy for Democrats and Liberals?

Zarf: I am actually mostly in agreement with you, but someone had to play the devils advocate. It is better to have solutions to the actual problem first before solving a different one in the vague hope it will solve the first.

However I do live in a 2-party system that moved to a multi-party system for the scenerio I pointed out, that the majority of people didn't like the economic direction of the main parties, but due to the mostly 2 party system couldn't get the right people into parliment with the appropiate amoutn of power. This was due to the un-fair nature of First Past the Post elections. This was best illistrated in the late 70's early 80's when one party managed to be in power and in-act unpopular legilsation despite having only ~30-40% of the total popular vote. Over the course of the 80's then 90's we managed to get a change in voting system, not before we dragged ourselves through hell in the early 90's (higher unemployment than now, worse income disparity, etc...)  before finally making the system work through the 00's and possibly now moving forward (though the party I like is not in power so I would dispute that idea tongue)

The change to a multi-party system through proportial representation allowed people with new or different ideas to take these to the electorate without being forced into the rigid framework of one of 2 parties and having to follow the party lines. TO be fair the 2 main parties are still the main parties, though they have become even more moderate, allowing the fringes to develop into other parties, which the relative popularity between the minor parties determining the direction of the main parties policies (i.e. slightly more socialist/green/libertain/liberal/conservitive/etc...)

So the argument is that we do have the right ideas in governance, they just can't get their ideas working due to the voting system. Yes we need to find a solution now, but one path to a better future is a longer one and requires a complete make over of our society, I argue this is needed everywhere. Not all solutions should be focused on the next election cycle only, though some should be, and one should have a vision of what is being fixed by the solution. Fixing the US economy I wil leave to you and your fellow americans, fixing the NZ economy I think is more about thinking for the future, not short-term gains, such as a capital gains tax, re-distribution of wealth at a fair rate (take from much higher earners who can afford, but not at too high a burden to force them to flee overseas or find tax-loopholes,) and also looking at increasing trade with China and India, mostly to avoid being dragged down with the US and Europe. wink These are more goals of the left parties in NZ, long-term economic fixes as opposed to the short term blindness og the right wing parties (sell assessts and hope that sorts everything out.)

Doesn't stop the 2 party system from being flawed though. (though my understanding is that the US system is closer to a multi-party system due to the 2 parties being more of 2 coalitions than true parties in the way I would think of them.)

"Sticks and stones may break my bones, but i am Jesus"
"Nothing is worse than a fully prepared fool"