RE: The REAL Welfare Story (Full Version)

All Forums >> [Casual Banter] >> Off the Grid



Message


Real0ne -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/28/2008 12:18:05 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: popeye1250

quote:

ORIGINAL: luckydog1

Yes lets get back on topic.  How about naming a specific example of "Corprate Welfare", and lets look at the pros and cons of it.  Liked I asked way back.  If we are going to talk about the "Real Story" lets get real.  Not generalised rhetoric, an actuall, specific example.  For example I noted that Wallmart, takes the full credit for upgrrading thier energy efficiency/ making green improvements.


You know that guy "BONO"?
Remember a few years ago his "forgive third world dept" B.S.?
What got "forgiven" was all the bad loans that big banks made to third world countries.
And to add insult to injury those big banks are again making bad loans to third world countries that they know can't be repaid!
Think they'll be looking for another bailout from the Taxpayers a few years down the road?
Those banks stockholders should take the hit not U.S. Taxpayers!



legislated and legalized fraud, robbery by any other name, by BOTH parties!!!!!


Thats why I cant help but laugh my ass off when I see people digging in their heels to defend a political party and especially at those who apologize for the government!   Sad state of affairs.  







thompsonx -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/28/2008 2:11:35 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: luckydog1

Yes lets get back on topic.  How about naming a specific example of "Corprate Welfare", and lets look at the pros and cons of it.  Liked I asked way back.  If we are going to talk about the "Real Story" lets get real.  Not generalised rhetoric, an actuall, specific example.  For example I noted that Wallmart, takes the full credit for upgrrading thier energy efficiency/ making green improvements. 

luckydog:
Lets look at the specific case of Archer Daniels Midland the largest farmer in the U.S.  ADM lobbies Congress to put a price floor on the price of corn.  Corn sells for less than the price floor and ADM collects the difference.  Not good enough?  ADM runs the largest cattle feeding enterprise in the U.S.(not the largest single one but combined) and buys corn at spot which is below the floor price and feeds it to the cows that wind up in your Big Mac.  Corporate welfare and they collect on both the production and the consumption end of the equation subsidized by the taxpayers...Nice work if you can get it.
This is not the only place that ADM has it's nose in the public trough but you asked for an example.
Then of course there is the state you live in.  More federal pork there than any state in the union.  Everyone in the state is on welfare from the Republicrat Governor,senators and congressmen all the way down to you.
thompson








SugarMyChurro -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/28/2008 4:25:41 PM)

Wow, ADM - they've never been discussed here before...

[8|]

"ADM is heavily subsidized also. They have turned being subsidized into a kind of art form with which to burden the taxpayer. Read here if you like: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archer_Daniels_Midland " - SugarMyChurro
http://www.collarchat.com/fb.asp?m=1219196

"As far as the redistribution of wealth goes: that's what government does every day, government takes from you and gives it to Halliburton, Blackwater, Koch Industries, ADM, etc. No one bitches about that very much - so few of us have paid enough attention to notice it." - SugarMyChurro
http://www.collarchat.com/fb.asp?m=1141952

"What LordandMster said. Strawman if there ever was one - meaning more FUD from ADM." - SugarMyChurro
http://www.collarchat.com/fb.asp?m=1518365

At the wiki link you just have to read the "Criticism of ADM" part. Classic stuff!

Edit: And, of course, luckydog took part in the thread with the wiki link!





Real0ne -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/28/2008 6:31:11 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: SugarMyChurro

Edit: And, of course, luckydog took part in the thread with the wiki link!



WOW!

quote:

ORIGINAL: luckydog1
I agree the sooner we can require every citizen to carry a national ID (health)card the better(or should we just have a national DNA database, or a RFID chip, those would probably be better than cards).



Very educational SMC!







UtopianRanger -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 12:13:18 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: thompsonx

quote:

ORIGINAL: luckydog1

Yes lets get back on topic.  How about naming a specific example of "Corprate Welfare", and lets look at the pros and cons of it.  Liked I asked way back.  If we are going to talk about the "Real Story" lets get real.  Not generalised rhetoric, an actuall, specific example.  For example I noted that Wallmart, takes the full credit for upgrrading thier energy efficiency/ making green improvements. 

luckydog:
Lets look at the specific case of Archer Daniels Midland the largest farmer in the U.S.  ADM lobbies Congress to put a price floor on the price of corn.  Corn sells for less than the price floor and ADM collects the difference.  Not good enough?  ADM runs the largest cattle feeding enterprise in the U.S.(not the largest single one but combined) and buys corn at spot which is below the floor price and feeds it to the cows that wind up in your Big Mac.  Corporate welfare and they collect on both the production and the consumption end of the equation subsidized by the taxpayers...Nice work if you can get it.
This is not the only place that ADM has it's nose in the public trough but you asked for an example.
Then of course there is the state you live in.  More federal pork there than any state in the union.  Everyone in the state is on welfare from the Republicrat Governor,senators and congressmen all the way down to you.
thompson







Bravo Thompson - You've just pin-pointed one of the greatest malefactors of corporate welfare in the history of this country.

For me.....I see an extreme case of corporate welfare when the market is on the verge of a mass sell-off and plunge protection comes in with federal reserve money and artificially reflates the market by purchasing under the cloak of a straw man.





- R




Archer -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 5:41:17 AM)

OK Lets look at AMD, and it's subsidies, where did they come from?
Anyone remember the days of "Farm Aid" when the idea of closing down family farms, farms that were not at the time part of the huge agribusiness corporations. We had to save the American Family Farmers, so subsidies were bumpped up.
Lo and behold what was the unintended consequences? AMD and other mega corp farming concerns leased those famiy farms and benefited from the subsidies anyway.

So if we cut those subsdies AMD gets less profit from our taxes, (a good thing) what else happens?How many family farms go under because they are not subleased by AMD? Is that a cost we are prepared to accept?







Real0ne -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 6:56:02 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer

OK Lets look at AMD, and it's subsidies, where did they come from?
Anyone remember the days of "Farm Aid" when the idea of closing down family farms, farms that were not at the time part of the huge agribusiness corporations. We had to save the American Family Farmers, so subsidies were bumpped up.
Lo and behold what was the unintended consequences? AMD and other mega corp farming concerns leased those famiy farms and benefited from the subsidies anyway.

So if we cut those subsdies AMD gets less profit from our taxes, (a good thing) what else happens?How many family farms go under because they are not subleased by AMD? Is that a cost we are prepared to accept?






None because the gov also pays subsidies to farmers for their land that is unused.










thompsonx -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 11:06:38 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer

OK Lets look at AMD, and it's subsidies, where did they come from?
Anyone remember the days of "Farm Aid" when the idea of closing down family farms, farms that were not at the time part of the huge agribusiness corporations. We had to save the American Family Farmers, so subsidies were bumpped up.
When in your lifetime have "family farms" (farms of less than 1000 acres) in their aggregate ever represented more than a single digit percentage of the farmed land in the U.S.?



Lo and behold what was the unintended consequences? AMD and other mega corp farming concerns leased those famiy farms and benefited from the subsidies anyway.
My point is and was that this was the intended and not the unintended consequence. 
Had you chosen to read the posted link you would have been aware of that fact.

So if we cut those subsdies AMD gets less profit from our taxes, (a good thing) what else happens?How many family farms go under because they are not subleased by AMD? Is that a cost we are prepared to accept?
We?????????
Are you actually suggesting that we continue to allow corporate gangsters to pillage the public coffers?
You are on record as being in favor of free enterprise.
You are on record as being against government handouts. 
If a business cannot succeed without government handouts then are they really a business?
If corporate gangsters like ADM did not exist do you think no one would take up farming as a business and fill the void left by these hoodlums?





luckydog1 -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 11:22:44 AM)

I would say in the absense of corparate farms and a managed farm policy, that others would certainly start farming as a bussiness.  The food would cost more, the land would be depleated faster than it is currently, requiring a whole lot more fertaliser, for a lower yield.  I do not see how any of that would benefit society or be desirable.  Now I do imagine that some aspects of it could be improved, and I am all in favor of intelligent modification. But I think making sure farm land gets to lie fallow is very important, as well as making sure that adequate crops are grown for the nation, So I am very much in favor of having a Farm Policy.  Coherent water projects (dams, allocation, and irrigation) are needed also, which requires subsidy and policy.




Archer -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 11:59:13 AM)

Thompson did you miss or choose to ignore where I specificly and inside the quote you made said that ending the subsidies would be a good thing?????????????
Perhaps your article made a case for this being the intended consequence, however the subsidies were not sold to the taxpayer that way.

My point again for the I'm not sure how many times in this post is Ending corporate subsidies is a worthy cause, however ending them quickly and indiscriminately will have consequences that will hurt many more people than just the corporate officers and the stock holders.This is not to say we should not proceed to end them just
(Maybe this will make sure that it isn't missed).
 
1. be aware that other people beyond the intended targets will be adversely effected and we need to be willing to accept the responsibility for the damage done to them.
 
2. That we need to look for the solutions that will accomplish the end of subsidies with the least amount of those types of damages instead of blindly ending them and then trying to fix the problem reactively.









SugarMyChurro -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 12:17:36 PM)

thompsonx:

The business model you are trying to describe is commonly known as "We have friends in D.C."

Archer:

To hear you tell it, if corporations didn't exist we'd all be crawling around blind, deaf, dumb and eating mud. The truth is that if corporations didn't exist we would simply find another way to do the things that corporations now do.

AND, I am not actually advocating the abolishment of corporations.

I am merely saying we should regulate corporations far more heavily and allow them to exist for only a set term of years. A corporation shouldn't have rights similar to those of an individual, it should have only contractual obligations - that's it and that's all. Ultimately, I want corporations to return to their original chartered status with intense levels of scrutiny and oversight.

What I want is for the free ride to be over.

Now that's a conservative viewpoint! Just in case you couldn't recognize one...





SugarMyChurro -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 12:20:11 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer
...be aware that other people beyond the intended targets will be adversely effected and we need to be willing to accept the responsibility for the damage done to them.


It is said that nature abhors a vacuum. Gaps in the market would get filled, Archer. Where's your trust in the market to set things aright?

Can't you see the daylight?





thompsonx -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 7:43:26 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: luckydog1

I would say in the absense of corparate farms and a managed farm policy, that others would certainly start farming as a bussiness.  The food would cost more, the land would be depleated faster than it is currently, requiring a whole lot more fertaliser, for a lower yield.  I do not see how any of that would benefit society or be desirable.
Do you have any sort of data to substantiate any of your doom and gloom predictions?
Why would food cost more if we the taxpayer did not have to subsidize ADM?  It would seem to me that it would cost less.  Did you not read the link?
Why do you think the land would be depleted more rapidly,or more fertilizer needed?  Why do you think yields would be lower?
Jerome and Robert Rodael of "Organic Gardening and Farming" would disagree with your assessment and have decades of experience to refute your beliefs


Now I do imagine that some aspects of it could be improved, and I am all in favor of intelligent modification. But I think making sure farm land gets to lie fallow is very important,
Perhaps you should do a little research before you make any more ill informed statements like this.


as well as making sure that adequate crops are grown for the nation,
So I am very much in favor of having a Farm Policy.  Coherent water projects (dams, allocation, and irrigation) are needed also, which requires subsidy and policy.
What has this got to do with getting ADM,Cargill and a host of other parasites out of the public trough?





thompsonx -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 8:08:36 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer

Thompson did you miss or choose to ignore where I specificly and inside the quote you made said that ending the subsidies would be a good thing?????????????
I noticed that you wanted to let ADM and the other corporate gangsters continue their rape of the taxpayers until they can find a more subtle way to do it and then you would be in favor of stooping the current "give away".



Perhaps your article made a case for this being the intended consequence, however the subsidies were not sold to the taxpayer that way.
Clearly you have not read the link provided.  This was not sold to the taxpayers it was bribed out of congress...the taxpayers were not consulted.  Please do me the courtesy of reading what I posted before you disagree with me.

My point again for the I'm not sure how many times in this post is Ending corporate subsidies is a worthy cause, however ending them quickly and indiscriminately will have consequences that will hurt many more people than just the corporate officers and the stock holders.
How so?  If you have concerns for the shareholders of the gangster corporation I say fuck them...there are no guarantees when you gamble in the stock market.  If you don't like the risks then don't play.  Where is your "personal responsibility" mantra when it comes to boardroom gangsters?



This is not to say we should not proceed to end them just
(Maybe this will make sure that it isn't missed).
 
1. be aware that other people beyond the intended targets will be adversely effected and we need to be willing to accept the responsibility for the damage done to them.
Who exactly are these nebulous potential unintended victims?  Again if you are talking about the stock holders  again I say fuck them.
 
 
2. That we need to look for the solutions that will accomplish the end of subsidies with the least amount of those types of damages instead of blindly ending them and then trying to fix the problem reactively.
Please do not misunderstand me.  I am not against all subsidies.  I am against corporate gangsters like ADM.  I think their officers should be prosecuted and their assets seized and sold to the highest bidder and the proceeds returned to the treasury from which they were looted.  When I say that their assets should be seized I am not limiting it to corporate assets but also the gangsters personal assets.  Yes throw their fucking wives and kids out of their mansions and let them see what the welfare system is like for the poor.
The mild tone of this post is a direct result of a rather lengthy discussion with Mod11.





Archer -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/29/2008 10:35:34 PM)

Who else gets hurt?
ADM has suppliers those businesses rely on ADM to survive in many cases.
I don't want to excuse ADM hell they are certainly one of the worst in many ways.
What I want to see is the subsidies ended but with their suppliers, small businesses, Women owned businesses, HUBs etc noted and given some sort of way to not go down with ADM. Some of them may have ADM supporting a huge part of their business.

How hard is that to get across? Thousands of employees losing their jobs, farmers who have depended on ADM to lease their property, small businesses that supply ADM. These are the folks I'm concerned about not the CEO CFO or any of the officers of ADM itself. And I'm not saying it can't be done just that before you start knocking down the walls of ADM make sure that those folks have some escape.
And maybe pace out the hammering so that it doesn't hit all at once. Maybe section out Grain this year then Vegitables the next and then Beef.
If you hammer all the sectors of even just the Agricultural at once the employment situation, the small businesses that supply the larger ones etc all hitting the economy at the same time would be staggering.

I'm just saying take care when doing it that the fewest number of those who don't deserve the hammer get hit.

I'm not looking at IF the subsidies should end I'm looking for the HOW do we do it with the least damage to the economy as a whole, and with the fewest number of "innocents" going down at the same time. I'm looking at paceing/ phasing them out over time, giving folks a chance to adjust to find replacement clients, to make their plans as for how to deal with it.

That is why I was on the other tangent to an extent. I work in the environmental field. If one specific oil company got hammered it could put us on a very hard path for a couple years to replace that contract. We're working on it already, but right now if it happend we'd be hurting badly, likely have to terminate 1/4 of the staff. We're expanding and working on diversifying our clients, but overall it will likely be the oil industry that supports half the company for the next 5 years or more.
I'm simply taking a look at the parralells that can be drawn when a large corporation gets hammered and the results that their suppliers, consultants, etc have to deal with.





SugarMyChurro -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/30/2008 3:03:02 AM)

Seriously, Archer - what kind of apologist shit is this? Thousands of people lose their jobs every day because some bean counter places their names on a hit list. Cry me a river...

Suddenly you seem to want special consideration because your company could be effected by a shake-up in the energy industry. I'm sorry, that's not how it works because in the end all you want is another kind of subsidy. Not a personal one to help you back onto your feet or for retraining, but one that effectively props up a whole dead area of the marketplace. Dead things are dead. Economic Reality 101.

And again, that's a conservative viewpoint - just in case you couldn't recognize one...

[8|]

You know, it really doesn't surprise me that a free market, right-winger has his hands out just like everyone else. What corporatists really want is to get theirs at the expense of everyone else - that's the barely concealed agenda that always shines through if the subject is given enough attention. What else could individuals operating under the banner "limited liability for debt" really mean? I really do get it and understand it completely...

It means you want to play but not have to pay!






Archer -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/30/2008 6:35:21 AM)

Wow you really don't see my point at all.  I point out that a "safety net", something a self avowed socialist like yourself has often made the hue and cry for needing to be in place, might be a prudent thing to have already set up before taking a widespread economy wide shift in how business is done like eliminating the hge subsidies that businesses have become addicted to, and you want to argue the point? Even after others who you don't hold the same level of political animus towards have tried to point out that I'm agreeing that they should be ended and our difference is in HOW to proceed to accomplish the same goal, you can't get past your notion that I want to keep them.

By way of example Enron and Worldcom both died (good riddance to bad apples) the result economy wide was 38-41 billion dollars the first year according to a Brookings Institute paper. http://www.brookings.edu/Views/Papers/Graham/20020722Graham.pdf
Shift that around and make it an economy wide sudden withdrawl from the addiction to subsidies and the results from my view would be even worse.
I'm just advocating that insted of making it a cold turkey quit process that a weaning them off approach would have a less dramitic effect on the economy as a whole. Giving people time to adjust and during that adjustment a safety net until they can gt back on their feet. If and I don't doubt it at all, there are criminal acts as opposed to it ought to be a crime acts, then by all means a quicker more direct action is called for, but we still need to be prepared to provide a safety net much like the ones cried for forthe employees during the 2001 to 2002 Enron and Worldcom scandals.









thompsonx -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/30/2008 7:20:31 AM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer

Wow you really don't see my point at all.
You make your point abundantly clear.

I point out that a "safety net", something a self avowed socialist like yourself
I realize you are talking to SMC and not me here because I have never taken that position.

has often made the hue and cry for needing to be in place, might be a prudent thing to have already set up before taking a widespread economy wide shift in how business is done like eliminating the hge subsidies that businesses have become addicted to,
All I have advocated is putting those gangsters in jail,confiscating their ill gotten gains and closing down the subsidies that they used to rape the taxpayers with.
Do you suppose for one moment that there will be less of a demand for the goods and services that these hoodlums currently provide?  The fact is that those goods and services would then be provided at non taxpayer subsidized prices...oh my...free enterprise.

and you want to argue the point? Even after others who you don't hold the same level of political animus towards have tried to point out that I'm agreeing that they should be ended and our difference is in HOW to proceed to accomplish the same goal, you can't get past your notion that I want to keep them.
You have been quite clear in your desire to abolish them as soon as you can find another tit to suck on.





by way of example Enron and Worldcom both died (good riddance to bad apples) the result economy wide was 38-41 billion dollars the first year according to a Brookings Institute paper. http://www.brookings.edu/Views/Papers/Graham/20020722Graham.pdf
Shift that around and make it an economy wide sudden withdrawl from the addiction to subsidies and the results from my view would be even worse.
The results that the Brookings institute estimates of 2002 (remember this is your cite.) clearly have  not to have been borne out by the events that have since transpired.

I'm just advocating that insted of making it a cold turkey quit process that a weaning them off approach would have a less dramitic effect on the economy as a whole. Giving people time to adjust and during that adjustment a safety net until they can gt back on their feet.
You have used the necessarily vague terms like "cold turkey" and "weaning them off".  Would you please put some meat on the bones of that "cold turkey"?  How much time are you talking about?  If you had read the cites that have been given to you then you would recognize that the amount of money that these thugs extort from the taxpayers is far in excess of the paltry sums that the Brookings institute laments as a loss to the GDP.  How much longer would you be content for ADM and their ilk to continue their rape of the taxpayer...1 year,5 years,10 years? 
If congress shut the tap off tomorrow do you really think that ADM would go out of business overnight?  They have published cash reserves in the zillions not to mention the amount of equity that would be available to them through conventional "borrow money for a fee" systems.
Everyone who has contributed to this thread seems to have received at least a passing grade in econ 1A.  So I think it would behoove us to conduct this discussion at some level above that.

If and I don't doubt it at all, there are criminal acts as opposed to it ought to be a crime acts, then by all means a quicker more direct action is called for, but we still need to be prepared to provide a safety net much like the ones cried for forthe employees during the 2001 to 2002 Enron and Worldcom scandals.
ADM or some company that does the same thing will not cease to exist if the criminals are put in jail and the "free money tap" is turned off.  They will just be forced to do so as a "free enterprise" and not as a criminal enterprise.






Archer -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/30/2008 8:29:58 AM)

OK you want me to put forth the how to that I've been asking for from you and SMC, (I smell a trap but will compliy just for sh%&'s and giggles).

Next budget cycle drop Grain subsidies meanwhile have an adjustment period of a year or less duration to get employees and those who can demonstrate adverse effect from the drop (not to include the big guys like ADM themselves but their suppliers could get some relief). Time to get them past the initial effect. 2009 continue to drop subsidies Taking the worst offenders with the least benifits out first and proceeding to other idustries/ sectors.
Would take a bit of sudy to determine the order of subsidies dropped that I don't care to spend at the moment so you'll have to deal with vauge in that area.

Ideally ending them right away from a taxpayer perspective seems good, but I'm looking for workability as opposed to idealism. So now that I started the idea off down the path of OK here's a general idea of how to do it with less collateral damage, how about some in kind return. How do you forsee the implimentation. End all at once? end them in phases?
You mentioned that some subsidies were actually valuable while others had been abused so badly that their benifits were eliminated entirely and then some. I agree. So how do we determine which ones are which?  The worst of them are easy to see ADM etc. But at some point the determination becomes more difficult. (again not saying don't do it just saying we need to go in with eyes open, with a standard of what makes a subsidy worth ending and what makes it worth keeping.)




thompsonx -> RE: The REAL Welfare Story (1/30/2008 4:48:33 PM)

quote:

ORIGINAL: Archer

OK you want me to put forth the how to that I've been asking for from you and SMC, (I smell a trap but will compliy just for sh%&'s and giggles).
I have stated my plan clearly and often...lock the thugs up and confiscate their ill gotten gains.
Spare me the paranoia.  I am not trying to trap you or trick you I am simply fucking up fed and sick of having billionaires telling me how much they are helping the economy by making themselves rich at the taxpayers expense.  And I am double up fed and sick of middle class wanna bees making excuses for them.  It's your money too that they are stealing. 
I would rather support every fucking drug addict and loafer in America for the rest of their life than give these filthy rich sons of bitches a dime.  They have more money than they can count and still they want more....fuck me dead... when is enough enough?

Next budget cycle drop Grain subsidies meanwhile have an adjustment period of a year or less duration to get employees and those who can demonstrate adverse effect from the drop (not to include the big guys like ADM themselves but their suppliers could get some relief). Time to get them past the initial effect. 2009 continue to drop subsidies Taking the worst offenders with the least benifits out first and proceeding to other idustries/ sectors.
How about we lock the parasites up and confiscate their ill gotten gains...If you had bothered to read the link I posted it mentions that they are already under indictment and three of them are already in the slammer.

Would take a bit of sudy to determine the order of subsidies dropped that I don't care to spend at the moment so you'll have to deal with vauge in that area.
How about every asswipe piece of shit billionaire corporation that has it's nose in the public trough we indite for racketeering and use the RICO act to confiscate their shit and lock them up? 

Ideally ending them right away from a taxpayer perspective seems good, but I'm looking for workability as opposed to idealism.
Sounds to me like you want to keep letting them fuck us while we hire some more overpaid asswipes to tell us how much good they are doing by hireing "women and minorities" and we need to keep up the good work cuz it....blah blah blah
I am an old fuck and I have seen this shell game played over and over again.

So now that I started the idea off down the path of OK here's a general idea of how to do it with less collateral damage, how about some in kind return. How do you forsee the implimentation. End all at once? end them in phases?
Go back and look at the link you posted from the Brookings Institute.  In 2002 they said the same thing that you are saying now and all you have to do is look at the stock page of the local newspaper to see all their "hand wringing" was just so much more smoke and mirrors.  The stock market is up some 2000 + points since all that "hand wringing" about collateral damage.  Yeah right.
The rich get richer and the taxpayer gets it in the shorts.


You mentioned that some subsidies were actually valuable while others had been abused so badly that their benifits were eliminated entirely and then some. I agree. So how do we determine which ones are which?
I should think the best way would be to stop making excuses for the thieving bastards.  WalMart needs a hand out like a whore needs the clap.

The worst of them are easy to see ADM etc. But at some point the determination becomes more difficult. (again not saying don't do it just saying we need to go in with eyes open, with a standard of what makes a subsidy worth ending and what makes it worth keeping.)
You are one of the ones I have seen bemoan the cost of welfare on the boards.  If we just took the subsidies that go to ADM and passed it out to everyone who made less than thirty grand a year to the tune of raising them all up to the thirty grand level we would still have money left over.
If we quit subsidizing Haliburton with their no bid contracts and got the fuck out of Iraq and Afghanistan and spent that money on putting solar panels on every roof in the U.S. made plastic bags and incandescent light bulbs illegal we would have more domestic oil than we could use and it would be less than a dollar a gallon. 
You have alluded to the fact that you are a bean counter of some sort.  How about you just run the numbers.  It is not calculus it is just arithmetic.





Page: <<   < prev  1 2 3 [4] 5   next >   >>

Valid CSS!




Collarchat.com © 2025
Terms of Service Privacy Policy Spam Policy
5.859375E-02