Again, like the trump comment yesterday, this is in jest.
I’m well aware, man. It’s just that the unintended comedy of that message coming from a guy who is divorced and is now married to a second wife in her 20s is too rich for me.
Again, like the trump comment yesterday, this is in jest.
I’m well aware, man. It’s just that the unintended comedy of that message coming from a guy who is divorced and is now married to a second wife in her 20s is too rich for me.
One thing I’ll never understand is the idea that we should spend heavily on defense, but not on healthcare or food and shelter for American citizens. If we agree that our social contract with the government is for it to keep us safe, I don’t see how getting involved in wars across Europe and Asia does more to protect ordinary Americans than stopping us from dying from disease or sleeping on the side of the road.
You don't believe we spend on healthcare or shelter for American Citizens?
Holy crap.
It should be noted that those conscripts have a choice. Hundreds of thousands of Russian men have made that choice to leave the country. Under Hitler, many Germans chose to go into exile. Others stayed in Germany but were passive resisters throughout the war.Agreed. There is a thread that’s updated every couple day with how much money is being spent on weaponry to kill conscripted Russians.
We very obviously do. However, I’m quite sure you know which party has a more extensive track record of demonizing that kind of spending.
Doesn't every study ever conducted conclude that the happiest women are married with children
The next happiest women are married. And the least happiest women are unmarried?
It is no wonder why miserable people keep voting for their captors
We very obviously do. However, I’m quite sure you know which party has a more extensive track record of demonizing that kind of spending.
Mankiw (not exactly a flaming liberal) has a list of "some important public goods" in his Principles of Microeconomics textbook. The list: national defense, basic research, and fighting poverty. Have he and I been brainwashing the yute of America?
The discussion is interesting: "Advocates of antipoverty programs sometimes claim that fighting poverty is a public good. To see why, suppose that someone tried to organize a group of wealthy individuals to try to eliminate poverty. They would be providing a public good. This good would not be rival in consumption: One person's enjoyment of living in a society without poverty would not reduce anyone else's enjoyment of it. The good would not be excludable: Once poverty is eliminated, no one can be prevented from taking pleasure in this fact. As a result, there would be a tendency for people to free ride on the generosity of others, enjoying the benefits of poverty elimination without contributing to the cause. Because of the free-rider problem, eliminating poverty through private charity will probably not work."
Anyhow the key characteristics of goods that are public goods are non-excludability and non-rivalry. They are technical terms with fairly precise definitions.
Because its the WORST way to do so?
If we cannot agree government run programs are the most inefficient products delivered to consumers, then we can't have a discussion.
I'm in construction, and I've been involved in several gov funded housing projects. Granite countertops, high grade appliances, and extremely expensive windows seems excessive.
Now on my side... we've also done several military jobs, and it is ridiculous the amount of money that's wasted on military construction.
The rub for me is the walk from the vague “anti poverty program” to the actual government program that allegedly achieves it. I agree that the consumption of anti poverty is non-excludable and non-rivalrous, but I’m skeptical whether those conditions hold when we get down to the policy level.
I’m really curious as to what your argument would be that public housing or a national healthcare system would not be economically defined as a public good.
You tend to have reasonable (though wrong) takes on these issues, but both would seem to fit at least from a definitional sense.
I agree this is a problem. I’m not asking for the poor to live a life of luxury. I just don’t want people dying on the side of the road.
The rub for me is the walk from the vague “anti poverty program” to the actual government program that allegedly achieves it. I agree that the consumption of anti poverty is non-excludable and non-rivalrous, but I’m skeptical whether those conditions hold when we get down to the policy level.
National defense clearly satisfies the conditions of being non-rivalrous (my “consumption” of the military intercepting a bomb doesn’t lessen your or anyone else’s consumption of it) and it’s non-excludable (when the military intercepts the bomb, it has to intercept it for everyone…there’s no way to allow the missile to hit and only save/not save people based on their willingness to support defense spending). I don’t view public housing or national healthcare as satisfying those conditions once we get down to the actual policies we’d need to enact to actually execute them.
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hopefully very poorly chosen one announces his candidacy before the runoff and campaigns for Herschel...he has been an amazing asset to the Dems
The rub for me is the walk from the vague “anti poverty program” to the actual government program that allegedly achieves it. I agree that the consumption of anti poverty is non-excludable and non-rivalrous, but I’m skeptical whether those conditions hold when we get down to the policy level.