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The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Discussions about the economic and financial ramifications of PEAK OIL

Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby Livewire713 » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 03:41:31

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR11', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Livewire713', 'C')og thinks he'll be able to walk the streets with a pocket full of dough while people are starving around him.


No one in the US is going to starve. The whole mechanism of food stamps is designed to prevent both ends of the agricultural chain from being separated from each other. Even the lowest dregs of humanity can get a food stamp card, and buy enough food to prevent starvation. As long as the US is a massive agricultural power, those cards will not fail to be able to purchase enough calories.

That said, the notion of the wealthy, morning coat wearing snob, walking the streets littered with those in poverty is so archaic. The modern wealthy will never expose themselves to even the slightest contact with those dangerous conditions. The progress of the last fifty years has built ever greater ability for the upper class, or might as well say it, the American Nobility, to completely extract themselves from the everyday conditions of average Americans. Yall don't think the wealth gap is just so that some brat can have a cooler car and bigger house, right?


AgentR11 Cog said he wants to cut food stamps to the moochers, thats what I was replying to. I don't know how it is in East Texas but where Im at the seperation of very poor and upper middle class can be just a few blocks, no gates involved. The world headquarters of Caterpillar is a stones throw from a rather large and dangerous housing project called Taft Homes. Two of the three Hospitals here are surrounded by poor people.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby SeaGypsy » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 04:27:39

To give another perspective. I spend about half the time working in Australia, the other half at home in the Philippines with my family and fledgling business.

Australia has one of the best welfare systems in the world.
Due to our mining based fiscal position, nothing drastic is happening to demand overhaul of the system.
There is an element of abuse of the system, but it is relatively small, most people who get welfare need it. As long as a person complies with the demands of the system/ proof of job applications/ enrolment in courses/ etc. the payments continue.

We also have universal medical coverage.
Before anyone starts screaming about tax, I will say that on an income of $30k earned over 6 months I pay no tax effectively.
As long as myself and my children are in Australia for half the time, I retain full tax concessions.

In the Philippines there is effectively no state welfare system beyond the most basic medical service. To get a pension you have to have paid in 10 years running, any collects come out and the maximum collect is about $60 a month. Most people work for between $3 and $10 a day. Almost everyone lives with extended family in a socialised economic system within the home. Income is not just handed out as cash, it is carefully converted into survival for the family.

Two very different systems. My point is this question I keep pondering; which system is more sustainable in the long run?

I can see the initial breakdown of social security systems taking decades. There will be a lot of trauma as this happens, much of it because of the nuclear mentality fostered so nicely in us by our upbringings.

The US system is obviously coming under strain. It will likely only get worse. The issue which comes next is resilience. America is bred on resilience. It may be a little hard to see it through the blubber and hype, but the genes are there. The pain of loss in is a nanny state is in direct proportion to the dependence nurtured during her time with the child.

Really we are all sucking at the teat of the oil driven monster that is the industrial age at it's zenith. No-one here gets out alive. Moral relativism aside.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby Cog » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 06:03:50

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Quinny', 'S')o what do you do with the unemployed who can't find work. Kill them?


I don't intend to do anything with them. They are free to scratch and claw their way to some type of subsistence lifestyle as best they can. Since I fully expect unemployment to continue to rise, its obvious that whatever part of the population continues to work can not support the ever-growing numbers who can not. The 99 week unemployment compensation was a huge mistake by the government since it merely gave false hope of a recovery and increased the deficit.

There still remains this sort of false hope around here, that I hear repeated in Congress as well, is this is just another recession and we will grow our way back to a glorious future. Growth is impossible. The sooner we lower expectation of what is possible and be honest about it, the sooner we can get to some sort of lower lifestyle that we will all be living, myself included.

While on the subject of unemployment, we all know the stories of people who had very good paying jobs for decades but had saved nothing and lived an opulent lifestyle. Their life as they knew it is in ruins and it should be. Katrina was a good example of people who knew a storm was bearing down on them and still couldn't manage to fill a water container. Such short term thinking will not work in the future that is now upon us. The huge power-down of everything is happening whether we like it or not. You are either counting on the government to save you from it or you are planning to deal with it the best you can.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby NickyBoy » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 08:08:32

You understand its cheeper and less intrusive to support these people then it is to have the security force needed to deal with a zombie horde of starving humans with nothing to loose?

Welfare is a bribe (cheep at twice the price) to prevent the unemployed having to commit crime just to stay alive. All this talk about it being the 'morally correct thing to do' is just frosting to make people feel good.

Take welfare away and those who 'have' will be killed in short order by those who don't.

I personally am fine with a few moochers getting free food out of my taxes if it means I wont be killed tomorrow by a desperate man trying to get food for his starving children.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby Cloud9 » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 08:52:04

The plan is to erode the benefits through inflation and changing the CPI. The Snap cards will still spend but they will buy less and less. The sirloin and lobster days are coming to an end. Grandma is not going to lose her social security, it just going to buy less and less. Beans and rice will be the order of the day.

During the prior great depression my grandpa lost a section of land because he could not sell enough cows off of it to pay the taxes. The state has the power to impoverish us all.

Therein lies the fear of the state.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby prajeshbhat » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 08:56:11

It may be worthwhile to discuss what to do what happens when the government is no longer capable to supporting people on welfare. If all those doom and gloom predictions are correct, dollar is one screw-up away from hyperinflation. Almost all countries need trade with US just to maintain the feel of a functioning economy (globalization). Of course an all out currency war is not out of question. So basically all countries have the same problem(fiat currency). Even the developing ones. If the government collapses, mafia rule is inevitable. Isn't it better to just pay taxes to a democratically elected government.
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Re: US economic recovery is complete. Expansion has begun.

Unread postby vision-master » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 09:55:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('AgentR11', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('vision-master', 'D')o you lack love?

Nope.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he path to Love
Worry for others
Pray for everyone
Listen to those who YOU have cast away


I cast none away. But I do not expect more of people than to be what they are. It is neither my obligation, nor desire, to fix others; only to accept them.

Our government's approach to those in need is precisely wrong because of this. Thousands and thousands of employees, constantly striving to fix people. All they do is destroy.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'F')orgive your transgressors
Work towards a brighter future


There is nothing to forgive, as none have been given the opportunity to offer transgression towards me; but the future?

The future is death.
Our fate is sealed.


Death is nothing more than westing, as the sun sets in the west, only to rise once again the next morning. :)
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby Cloud9 » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 10:09:22

I am not an anarchist. I subscribe to the social contract theory. The local mafia is protected by the state. If it were not so then rough justice in the form of vigilance committees would take them out.

I have watched the tax deeds advertised in the legals in the local paper. One law firm out of Orlando usually runs four to six pages of notices every Wednesday. A hand full of guys are buying up the county for pennies on the dollar. The local government in an effort to fund its day to day expenses is enabling this transfer of wealth. The local street thug is small change compared to these guys backed up by the full letter of the law.
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Re: US economic recovery is complete. Expansion has begun.

Unread postby Expatriot » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 10:14:21

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lore', '')$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cog', 'T')ime for some austerity. We can't afford to extend the government teat to the mooch class anymore. It's pretty obvious, and gladly so, most people don't see it the way you do.


Yet.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby vision-master » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 10:22:10

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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby AgentR11 » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 15:29:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Cloud9', ' ')A hand full of guys are buying up the county for pennies on the dollar. The local government in an effort to fund its day to day expenses is enabling this transfer of wealth. The local street thug is small change compared to these guys backed up by the full letter of the law.


If you felt the prices were below market value, you could bid on them too.

What I suspect is true, is that those properties were appraised far above their real economic value, and now at auction true price discovery is happening.

Don't know you local situation of course, but still, if they are bargains, and you know it, shouldn't you bid?
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Re: US economic recovery is complete. Expansion has begun.

Unread postby Outcast_Searcher » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 16:12:53

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Pops', 'L')et's not forget slackers who take the homeowners interest deduction or whose income tax is deferred on an IRA, or write off use of a personal car or home office, and lets not forget those freeloaders who receive compensation in the form of employer provided health insurance but pay no tax on it's value and ...

Pops, you're absolutely right. It would be nice to get rid of ALL that stuff, go to something like the FAIR tax with ONE large deduction per family to help the poor, and be done with it.

Unfortunately with the MANY special interests who fight tooth and nail to give up their special favor (there are thousands upon thousands of these, and the list grows over time) -- it's VERY difficult to get this idea to get any traction.

Regardless, this doesn't FUNDAMENTALLY address Cog's point about big governments' shortcomings, aside from preventing confiscatory tax rates for the most productive folks. (But it's a step in the right direction).
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.
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Re: US economic recovery is complete. Expansion has begun.

Unread postby Outcast_Searcher » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 16:26:47

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Lore', '
')You’re welcome to your libertarian opinion, that is your right, and one which I would defend. It’s only when such contrarian ideology steps over the line of dangerous political enforcement against the benefit of good citizens that bothers me.

It's nice that you are at least tolerant of Cog's opinion, given that this is America and most of the mooch class would NOT be at all tolerant.

However, look at what is implicit in your last sentence. WHO are the "good" citizens? The biggest moochers or the most productive? Enforcement of WHOSE benefit? The top 1% of the earners pay over 40% of the tax burden, even though they only earn about 20% of the income -- AND they provide most of the jobs. Their profits are, naturally, redistributed to the mooch class in the name of "good government" and "fairness". This is the OPPOSITE of enforcing the benefit of good citizens, IMO.

If you want to disregard property rights and be a redistributionist, at least have the guts to call it what it is. Theft, for the benefit of the mooch class.
OF course, the left would NEVER be willing to call it what it is. That might interfere with their aim of an ever-larger and MORE redistributionist government.

I don't think it is practical (at least not yet) to go as far in society a Cog wants, but I commend him for being honest and having the guts to state his (unpopular) views. Once the mooch class bankrupts us, they can then cry about how hard things are, since they will have screwed things up for the still productive members of the middle and upper middle class too.
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby Cog » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 17:17:23

I think I understand the board membership a lot better now. OF2 is not the only cornucopian running around, this board is filled with them. They might call themselves progressives but I smell corn.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby davep » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 17:36:05

I may be displaying deep ignorance of US politics, but didn't government payroll increase massively under George Bush jr's presidency with all the homeland security spook stuff etc?

And wasn't it on his watch that the whole subprime bank implosion (and hence reduced levels of taxation due to an imploding economy) occurred?

So why are Republicans now screaming about debt under the Democrats? Surely there's a massive element of legacy here given that the majority of that debt was handed down? Heliopter Ben is a symptom, not the cause, of the current malaise.

Maybe I just don't get how things work over there.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby Quinny » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 17:46:17

Not a corny at all but just recognise that capitalism needs growth and IMO the loss of cheap oil will stop this happening. Whether it's a long emergency or a fast crash, IMO socialism will be a better means of managing the devastation that PO will cause.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby AgentR11 » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 17:54:34

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('davep', 'I') may be displaying deep ignorance of US politics, but didn't government payroll increase massively under George Bush jr's presidency with all the homeland security spook stuff etc?


Yep, and there are plenty of Republicans, myself included, who were absolutely horrified by his treachery in this regard, as well as in regard to failing to raise revenue in the name of shared sacrifice when we declared war. Not that I would have been happy with Gore's handling of the situation as a whole either, but that doesn't get Bush II off the hook for bad governance in my book.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'A')nd wasn't it on his watch that the whole subprime bank implosion (and hence reduced levels of taxation due to an imploding economy) occurred?


Meh, this one's blurrier, as it was a couple decades in the making; no president could have done anything about it at that point in time. Basically, we spent those two decades telling everyone and their dog that they should sign mortgages, and play real estate speculator, even if they spent their afternoons as minimum wage burger flippers... Everyone, including the people themselves who played "flipper" games, and took equity loans for vacations bears the burden of guilt there.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o why are Republicans now screaming about debt under the Democrats? Surely there's a massive element of legacy here given that the majority of that debt was handed down? Heliopter Ben is a symptom, not the cause, of the current malaise.


To put it in a very tacky way that should be evocative enough for someone living in the over-pacified European theatre...
The Republican party is very much subject to uneducated agitation. Basically, think of it as a fusion of small and medium sized corporate interests, landed interests, religious conservative interests, and viking/hun/redneck/bloodlust interests. Sometimes the rednecks get to lead. Sometimes the landed interests point the rednecks at a particularly juicy target, and the rednecks think its even more tasty that the landed interests did. EG: Debt Ceiling.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')aybe I just don't get how things work over there.

The Dems btw can be characterized just as tackily, and their coalitions drive them to nutty fruitbar land too.

Such is the nature of a permanent two party, winner take all system.
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby davep » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 18:14:24

That's a fair response Agentr.

But as for $this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 't')he over-pacified European theatre

I guess you haven't seen my peakoil photo...

Image

I've lost about 20 pounds since then though and no longer resemble a redneck tellytubby :-D
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Re: The Mooch Class (split from Recovery Complete)

Unread postby Sixstrings » Wed 20 Jul 2011, 18:25:48

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('davep', 'I') may be displaying deep ignorance of US politics, but didn't government payroll increase massively under George Bush jr's presidency with all the homeland security spook stuff etc?

And wasn't it on his watch that the whole subprime bank implosion (and hence reduced levels of taxation due to an imploding economy) occurred?


Yes, and yes. It wasn't just wars and homeland security, Bush and the Republican Congress expanded all areas of government and spending. They passed a prescription drug benefit for seniors, that was a big one (ironic eh, a sound liberal idea but it doesn't work because we pay so much more than you Europeans for drugs). So no, you're not misunderstanding a thing -- they either have the memory of a gnat or they're outright hypocrites.

The only thing new is the Tea Party wing in the House. They're hypocritical too, all for national cuts yet want federal spending and projects in their district. :roll:

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')o why are Republicans now screaming about debt under the Democrats?


It's not really about debt, what they're for is income redistribution to the top 1% and corporations. They want to cut social benefits so they can give even more to the rich, the debt is irrelevant they'll keep cranking that up to give it to the rich too. Also the military machine has to be fed and it costs a fortune.. neither party will touch that so there's no solution to our deficit problem.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'S')urely there's a massive element of legacy here given that the majority of that debt was handed down? Heliopter Ben is a symptom, not the cause, of the current malaise.


Helicopter Ben is the shadow government. These Tea Partiers don't understand that.. if they force a default the Fed will just open the floodgates with money printing, so what will be accomplished? Well old folks will suffer but hedge funds and banskters will get mountains of more free cash to play with.

By forcing default, all the Tea Party accomplishes is devaluation of the dollar.

$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'M')aybe I just don't get how things work over there.


No you understand it just fine. Everything pols say is just cover for another agenda.. cutting benefits doesn't mean reducing the debt, it means more money to hand out to the rich. Tax cuts and free trade deals have proven to not create jobs, yet they keep pushing more of that as a solution to the jobs crisis. Basically Davep we have a unified government controlled by the rich and corps, all the supposed differences are a smokescreen.
Last edited by Sixstrings on Wed 20 Jul 2011, 18:45:05, edited 6 times in total.
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