Sorry to see that the Republican side is unelectable (imo) this time around. I had really wished that Romney had his ship set on a better course last time around. A moderate Republican (socially and fiscally) would do well, but it seems that the Republicans haven't learned that. If I was still able to vote, I would either sit this one out, or see what platform Sanders was running on, and just vote in the State/Local ballots.
I wonder if electing a candidate (for the republicans) who isn't fabulously rich is even possible now? It seems that the default headline for republican nominees is "Republicans elect Rich Dude as presidential nominee" and that can't be good for a party that wants to appeal to enough people to win the presidency.
Yup and why find it strange that the Republicans nominate rich people after all the money goes where the person will protect their interests. Thus why I am a Democrat, while I cant handle a lot of their views I also don't want someone who will make the rich richer which is what has been happening thus the bir disconnect between the top half and the lower half
I know this may sound pious and a little trite but do not place your hope (or trust) in party nominees and presidents. Place your hope in God both for this world and the next.
I don't mean to sound impious or unbelieving, but God sometimes allows us to reap what we sow. Hitler was duly elected. There is a long, long line of kings among the Hebrews who were TERRIBLE men. I'm not sure I think it wise to just sit back..... passively.... and believe that whoever is elected is who is best. God may PERMIT wrong to happen (for his own reasons) but that doesn't make the wrong, right.
But we digress. Probably a discussion for another day.
RICHEST and POOREST Presidents of the USA.....
Richest Presidents in US History
1. George Washington
2. Thomas Jefferson
3. Theodore Roosevelt
4. Andrew Jackson
5. John Kennedy
NOTE: # 1 and #2 had wealth in property and personally did not have much expendable income. Jefferson died nearly penniless. If we eliminated land wealth from the formula, JFK would be beat all 4 above him - combined.
NOTE: Trump would trump JFK by about 5 fold.
POOREST PRESIDENTS in US History
1, James Buchanon
2. Abraham Lincoln
3. Andrew Johnson
4. Ulysses Grant
5. James Garfield
NOTE: The last president to not be super rich was Harry Truman, who left office over 60 years ago. He began president automatically at the death of FDR (the 9th Richest president in US history, btw)
I do not agree with you at all, ImaginaryDay. It is the Democrat side that is unelectable. Americans are not so far gone as to vote for either a socialist (which is how Sanders describes himself) or a communist, which essentially is what Hillary is.
Sanders has virtually no chance to be elected, even if he should get the nomination. And Hillary is even worse. Her criminal activity has made many people, include a good number of Democrats, despise her. She is perhaps the most unqualified AND unelectable candidate in American history.
Yup and why find it strange that the Republicans nominate rich people after all the money goes where the person wiull protect their interests.
Thus why I am a Democrat, while I cant handle a lot of their views I also dont want someone who will make the rich richer which is what has been happening thus the bir disconnect between the top half and the lower half
The fundamental problem with the Republicans is that they want to cut people who truly need help while making and protecting the rich. Who do you think Trump will help?The Democrats don't nominate rich people, right? I mean Hillary must be down to what, her last $25 million or so?
The trouble with a lot of policies that notionally help the poor is that they often do anything but help them. A lot of welfare-type policies can create huge disincentives to work and it's hard to see much merit in a system that allows people to regard unemployment as a lifestyle choice. There's obviously far more to it than "welfare bad, work good" but some system that supports without enabling has to be better than merely throwing money at situations in the hope they will go away.
A fundamental problem with any centrally run welfare system is that the further removed the people claiming are from the people receiving and the people awarding, the more open to abuse the system is likely to be. If a system operates entirely on personal charity people can gain their own sense of need and (hopefully) meet it. If you live next to me, in the other half of a duplex, and learn that I lost my job and can't pay my mortgage or feed my children, you may take pity on me and give me some help. In return I may do something for you (perhaps wash your car, mow your grass, shovel snow from your driveway, whatever). I'm unlikely to repay your kindness by hosting loud parties into the night and if you notice that shortly after I gladly accept some of your money I'm unloading several cases of beer from my car you may decide that I'm not as needy as you first thought and reduce or stop the handouts. Once that link is broken and someone in central government (whether at state or federal level makes little difference) decides that, due to my circumstances, I am entitled to a certain amount of money that comes from your taxes, there's no sense of where the money flows. In my mind I'm not getting money from you, I'm getting money from the government, so I don't owe anything in return because the government doesn't make me do anything. There's no sense that I can do something in exchange for it, no sense of where the money comes from (other than the vague idea that "the rich" are taxed) and so I have no particular reason to care if my loud parties keep you up at night because you still have to pay the taxes that fund my welfare payments. And of course the people in central government who administer it all have to be paid, so more money is soaked up that way.
The fundamental problem with the Republicans is that they want to cut people who truly need help while making and protecting the rich. Who do you think Trump will help?
Wasn't the saying "teach a man how to fish, you've fed him for life" from an English woman's book published some time around 1890? Anne Isabella Ritchie, the daughter of William Makepeace Thackeray, (who, if her photograph is any guide, was a studious young woman) wrote a story titled Mrs. Dymond, sometime in the 1880s and it includes this line.Conservatism believes in HELPING those who NEED help ("teach a man how to fish, you've fed him for life")
Liberalism believes in making people dependent on government ("hand a man a fish, and you've fed him for a meal")
Liberalism believes that people are stupid, irresponsible, incapable - and government has to take care of them. Conservatives believe that people responsible and want to pursue their dream - get out of the way, empower them.
Conservatism believes in HELPING those who NEED help ("teach a man how to fish, you've fed him for life")
Liberalism believes in making people dependent on government ("hand a man a fish, and you've fed him for a meal")
Liberalism believes that people are stupid, irresponsibile, incapable - and government has to take care of them. Conservatives believe that people responsible and want to pursue their dream - get out of the way, empower them.
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I hope you're right, but it seems to me there are enough tribal voters on both sides that you could put a turnip against a cherry pie and both would probably still attract 25-30% of the vote. And America did elect Obama twice - even if Romney wasn't the most inspiring of alternatives they obviously liked Obama enough and in enough numbers for him to get a second term.
Although I've seen a few articles describing how Sanders would fund his proposals it does seem like he is proposing a European style of socialism. If that's what people want it does have some merits but it also comes with a cost. In Europe it's very common (possibly universal, but not sure on that) to have a Value Added Tax instead of your existing sales tax. I'm aware of VAT varying between 19-25% across Europe (there may be outliers, that's just from what I've personally come across). I'm not sure how the average American would take to prices going up by nearly a quarter.
There do seem to be ongoing issues in the US, specifically with healthcare and education. From what I can see healthcare is an expensive proposition whichever way you look at it, where you get the choice between being slowly bled dry by insurance premiums or risk being bankrupted by Fate rolling bad dice your way. And student loans seem like an endless millstone around the necks of people trying to repay them. Arguably a lot of people going into higher education should maybe reconsider their plans, but it's easy to see why people look for radical solutions and worry about the fine detail later. That said a lot of people point at the National Health Service (NHS) that the UK has had for some decades now as if it were some kind of healthcare utopia when it is also a very mixed bag. It's great to know that if you have cancer and need $250,000 worth of chemotherapy this year you don't face the choice between selling everything you own or just dying quietly, but at the same time some of the stories of ineptitude from within the NHS are truly mindblowing (I've seen some first hand and others from reliable sources who I know personally).
What worries me about US politics in general is that I get the impression a lot of voters are so politically biased they won't consider that The Other Guy might have something worth listening to, or that Their Guy might be anything less than a shining beacon of virtue. Even looking at the assorted questions relating to Hillary that never seem to go away it seems that Republican-leaning voters regard it as evidence she is a crook and should be in jail rather than the White House, and Democrat-leaning voters regard it as evidence that the Republicans can't counter her policies so sling mud at her instead.