The basic premise of Ed's views are what disgust me about the Republicans in general: they don't like Trump, but they are willing to look the other way as long as it is politically expedient.
Uncle Ed wrote:I meant (I say again) on a national level, the popular vote is only a meme to show that the winner in the Electoral College actually "lost", if we were indeed a "pure democracy".
Again, you don't seem to grasp the issue, but Res Ipsa is showing that much better than I.
Gun control. "Group rights are better than individual rights because the Gov't can do more for you." National "Health Care" (forced penalties for not joining up, a 3% jump in my taxes). Promoting racial division/favoritism (for whatever bepoxed reason?!). Doing everything in his power to pull the US downward while taking from us and giving to "developing" nations. Being a woose. Enough.
Ignorant blather, saying nothing about Obama's presidency but much about your own limited understanding.
Ah, the literalist when it suits to deflect a point made. Same holds true for anti-gun lobbyists: "I am willing to allow every citizen to bear flintlocks as his 2nd Amendment right".
So where in the constitution are telecom mergers mentioned? The point, which shot right over your head, is that the Constitution necessarily entails interpretation.
We had more freedom back then.
Specifically, what freedom did you have in 1960 that you don't have now (and of course taxes were exorbitantly higher then, so don't even waste your time with that one).
Socialists pass judgment based on un American principles. The proliferation of liberals and socialists in the "judgment seats" at all levels has been the single most effective way to do end runs on the Constitution. So believe it they are against me and you.
Everything in this is not just false but nonsensical. You can't name one socialist judge, and I'm beginning to have doubts that you even know what's in the constitution you claim to be so concerned about.
I didn't even know who Donald Trump was until he ran. So I don't know what you are talking about. Context would indicate that his own show was some kind of disaster?
Again, you don't get the point, which is that Trump's policy is amateurish and can only be designed—to the extent it is designed—by someone who knows nothing about the region and the history of the conflict. Next I'm sure you'll tell me that his ignorance is a virtue.
The deductions for individuals are significantly increased. Families are favored. I don't recall other improvements/reforms. But nothing sounded iffy.
Sounds like you don't really know what it's in it.
That 3% penalty adds up very fast. That's just one thing. The Fed intruding further into private enterprise, pushing us further toward fascism is the big one. The Fed has no right to dictate medical care decisions, limitations, penalties, etc.
On the face of it, no one has to take the Gov't student subsidy. Students can work their way through college "old school" style. Some will benefit from the subsidy, others are better off not taking it.
Absolutely disgusting the way you have framed this Ed. You should be ashamed. Here's what I wrote:
Someone who actually knows what they're talking about wrote:Also, how do you feel about the graduate student tax? Right now, a graduate student usually receives 1) tuition waiver and 2) a stipend in exchange for teaching course professors don't want to do. An average stipend is around $20k. This bill would include their waiver as taxable income, even though graduate students never see that money. In other words, someone making $20k would be taxed as if they were making about $50k. Do you know how much in real tax dollars that translates to? About $9k. So, the result will be that someone who right now generally is not taxed because they make so little will see nearly half their income gone with this bill.
I though what I wrote was pretty clear. See, these are graduate students, and I'm talking about their paltry stipends and tuition waivers. The tuition waivers aren't government grants. They are granted by the institution. There is no government subsidy involved. And let me emphasize that they are getting paid a stipend—around 20k—in order to work while taking classes. In other words, they are already maxing out the maximum hours in a month. Someone making $20,000, with 0 hours available to get a third job—graduate school is effectively two jobs—will be slammed with a $9,000 tax bill for money they never saw, and which has never counted as income. The Republicans went after them because they know these people are too young and too diverse ever to vote Republican and they need to get that money for the tax cuts from somewhere. They're scrounging for all the loose change under the couch, and they found some here. Why not get it off the backs of poor graduate students?
Now, here comes Mr. Ed, with fond memories of the Partridge days when even undergraduate education was heavily subsidized by state governments and the federal government, which used to pour massive amounts of money into research and education when Ed was that age. Boy Ed, I sure wish I went to school when you and Orrin Hatch did. Sure, Ed can imagine it requires nothing more than summer job to make up the difference, working on the dairy say, or at old man Joe's pharmacy (or as he called it growing up in the innocent days of high taxes, "druggist") down the road from the old Elk Lodge and the barn where they used to chew gum and trade baseball cards. From that totally and abysmally ignorant position, of course it would just as simple as getting another job "old school." But that's not how it works today. Not even close.
It's bad enough that your views, Ed, are so divorced from the reality people face that you can casually assume it's just a question of government subsidy and laziness, forgetting the fact that in your day, the government largely subsidized through indirect means what people today after go into years of debt to acquire. No, what is truly appalling is the root cause of Ed's hang up: “F” those people working their assess off for 20K, and let them pay half their actual salary (upward of 50%) because, at the end of the day, "That 3% penalty adds up very fast." If you think 3% adds up fast, then I'm sure you can imagine how quickly nearly 50% adds up.
In Ed we have another example, dear readers, of the sentiments of a member of the greediest generation.
The system is broken because of ignorant and greedy voters like yourself who've had decades of indirect and direct support of government help and who are in or are about to enter the last phase of your lives, where you will be living off the backs of the younger generation to pay for your medicare and social security, and you old idiots just don't mind damned over everyone because you want to feel better telling ethnic jokes. If you want to blame the dysfunction in the political culture on anyone, quit looking at Obama and take some damned personal responsibility for a change: look in the mirror, Ed.
"As to any slivers of light or any particles of darkness of the past, we forget about them."
—B. Redd McConkie