i don't know whether this is a good law or not, and i will await the results before making a judgment call.
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natty_dread wrote:Do ponies have sex?
(proud member of the Occasionally Wrongly Banned)Army of GOD wrote:the term heterosexual is offensive. I prefer to be called "normal"
Ok, explain this belief to me. How do you suggest those people who are unable to get a job should live?Night Strike wrote:The underlying belief is that there should be no welfare at all
So you're saying, you don't really have a problem with others receiving free money, as long as you get to dictate how they spend it?Night Strike wrote:but if there is going to be a welfare system, then there has to be a method of accountability for the individuals receiving the free money.


natty_dread wrote:Phatscotty... you're such a fucking hypocrite. You preach for freedom and how the government should not interfere in your affairs, and let your make your own decisions. But apparently that only applies to things you think you should be able to do. You only care about your freedom to do as you like, screw anyone else's freedoms.
natty_dread wrote:Please, I'm trying very hard to understand where you're coming from.
They live with their families and friends and do odd-end jobs until they are able to find a permanent job. Listening to how all of the liberals view the helplessness of people, it's amazing how our country could have even survived before all of these big government programs. Yet somehow it did for 150 years. That fact always seems to evade big government people. Once people figure out they can't just siphon money off the government, they'll realize that they actually have to earn the money they need to survive. It's pretty sad how you all think people are so helpless today.natty_dread wrote:Ok, explain this belief to me. How do you suggest those people who are unable to get a job should live?Night Strike wrote:The underlying belief is that there should be no welfare at all
Are you saying that it's possible to get every person employed all of the time, if those lazy bums would just stop being lazy?
Or are you saying, f*ck those people who can't get a job, it sucks for them but it doesn't matter because it doesn't concern you?
Please, I'm trying very hard to understand where you're coming from. How do you suppose to solve the problem? If you got to decide, you would remove welfare. How would you deal with the people who are unable to get a job and make a living?
So you're saying, you don't really have a problem with others receiving free money, as long as you get to dictate how they spend it?Night Strike wrote:but if there is going to be a welfare system, then there has to be a method of accountability for the individuals receiving the free money.
Imagine that, a completely irrelevant scenario to the situation at hand, especially with the final question you pose. By the way, I'd be neither person because I'm not stupid enough to use drugs.natty_dread wrote:Question: in this scenario, would you rather be Person A or B?
Oh wows, that fixes everythingNight Strike wrote:They live with their families and friends and do odd-end jobs until they are able to find a permanent job.
Liberals this, conservatives that. Is there anything you don't view through your made up political dichotomies? Can you not think outside the political agendas for once and simply see people as people, not as "liberals" or "conservatives" or "us" or "them"?Night Strike wrote: Listening to how all of the liberals view the helplessness of people, it's amazing how our country could have even survived before all of these big government programs.
Talking points. How is some stock market guy who pushes around papers for a living "earning" his money any more than someone who lives on government welfare?Night Strike wrote: Once people figure out they can't just siphon money off the government, they'll realize that they actually have to earn the money they need to survive.
Imagine that, a person who is not able to comprehend the concept of a hypothetical scenario.Night Strike wrote:Imagine that, a completely irrelevant scenario to the situation at hand, especially with the final question you pose. By the way, I'd be neither person because I'm not stupid enough to use drugs.

you are simply confused. If you are dependent upon someone else for survival, it's hard (for you) to make a case that they are free or have any liberty. It's even harder to make the case that it's okay to blow money that is meant to help a family who is struggling get high on drugs.natty_dread wrote:Oh, I see. The fact that some people is not able to find a job means that you get to dictate how he lives his life, because you have been able to find a job. That makes perfect sense.Phatscotty wrote:sure they should, but not when they are living off someone else. There are conditions.
Phatscotty... you're such a fucking hypocrite. You preach for freedom and how the government should not interfere in your affairs, and let your make your own decisions. But apparently that only applies to things you think you should be able to do. You only care about your freedom to do as you like, screw anyone else's freedoms.Phatscotty wrote:If your son earns 100$, he can probably spend it how he wishes. But if you give him 100$ to buy books for school, is it really unfair for you to ask your son to make sure the money is spent on books and not on a hooker?????
Night Strike wrote:natty_dread wrote:Ok, explain this belief to me. How do you suggest those people who are unable to get a job should live?Night Strike wrote:The underlying belief is that there should be no welfare at all
If your friends and family can't help, you rely on local churches and charities. When a severe drought hit an area in Texas in the 1800s (I forgot the exact year), the president refused to bailout the affected farmers. Instead, the community raised many more times the amount of money than the federal government would have given. People are better off when they are helped by other people, not when they are "helped" by the government.natty_dread wrote:Oh wows, that fixes everythingNight Strike wrote:They live with their families and friends and do odd-end jobs until they are able to find a permanent job.![]()
Like it or not, we're not in the 18th century anymore. What if your friends and/or families are not willing or possible to support you? What if you can't get even "odd-end" jobs? You should just curl up and die?
Liberals this, conservatives that. Is there anything you don't view through your made up political dichotomies? Can you not think outside the political agendas for once and simply see people as people, not as "liberals" or "conservatives" or "us" or "them"?Night Strike wrote: Listening to how all of the liberals view the helplessness of people, it's amazing how our country could have even survived before all of these big government programs.
As for your question, I'm not sure when your country started "big government programs", but I'm guessing after WWII? So, you know...in those times, a lot of people didn't survive. A lot more than today.
Talking points. How is some stock market guy who pushes around papers for a living "earning" his money any more than someone who lives on government welfare?Night Strike wrote: Once people figure out they can't just siphon money off the government, they'll realize that they actually have to earn the money they need to survive.
,Imagine that, a person who is not able to comprehend the concept of a hypothetical scenario.Night Strike wrote:Imagine that, a completely irrelevant scenario to the situation at hand, especially with the final question you pose. By the way, I'd be neither person because I'm not stupid enough to use drugs.
Imagine also a person who is completely unable to put himself in the shoes of another person or to think from any other perspective but his own.
They live with their families and friends and do odd-end jobs until they are able to find a permanent job.[/quote]Night Strike wrote: So you're saying, you don't really have a problem with others receiving free money, as long as you get to dictate how they spend it?
Night Strike wrote: Listening to how all of the liberals view the helplessness of people, it's amazing how our country could have even survived before all of these big government programs. Yet somehow it did for 150 years.
Nice phrase that means absolutely nothing. No one really wants big government. People want effective government. Right now, we need a bigger government than they did in 1776 because there is so much more for government to do.Night Strike wrote: That fact always seems to evade big government people.
OH, yeah.. like those big corporations that pay little in taxes and yet depend very heavily on the entire infrastructure and largely free education system of this country.Night Strike wrote: Once people figure out they can't just siphon money off the government, they'll realize that they actually have to earn the money they need to survive.
Sadder is people like you who absolutely refuse to study or learn from history... and who find it too convenient to ignore the real users in our society. Newsflash you could pay every welfare check in the country with the bail outs give to banks who had no problem giving out bad mortgages, leaving houses empty, etc, etc, etc.... and while you are quick to advocate putting drug users in jail (not disagreeing, note), you completely bypass as irrelevant that each and every one of those jerks is still out free and clear. Sure, they put Madoff in jail, and a couple of others, but not the many others who were involved and they system itself has not been changed. THAT is where the abuse of our country lies... the banks, the tax system. Welfare needs fixing, but its not what is driving our country to the brink of depression.Night Strike wrote: It's pretty sad how you all think people are so helpless today.
Imagine that, a completely irrelevant scenario to the situation at hand, especially with the final question you pose. By the way, I'd be neither person because I'm not stupid enough to use drugs.[/quote]natty_dread wrote:Question: in this scenario, would you rather be Person A or B?
Nice try. Any concept of the money needed to keep a farm afloat TODAY???? Ever hear of "Farm Aid"? What happens today is that some old guy hangs onto his farm as long as possible, eeking out a living or maybe not really. Then as soon as he dies, his kids or nieces/nephews, other relatives sell it off to some big real estate broker and ensure there is far less farmland available.Night Strike wrote:
If your friends and family can't help, you rely on local churches and charities. When a severe drought hit an area in Texas in the 1800s (I forgot the exact year), the president refused to bailout the affected farmers. Instead, the community raised many more times the amount of money than the federal government would have given. People are better off when they are helped by other people, not when they are "helped" by the government.
LOL... please DO think a tad more about what you say. Stocks are pure weath redistribution, plain and simply.Night Strike wrote: I'm not familiar with the intricacies of the stock market (or why we have it in the first place), but their money doesn't rely on taxing it off other people. They make their money off investments, not be wealth redistribution.
Actually, a lot of people on welfare work, not necessarily fulltime, but not by choice. Beyond that, a LOT of people who work fulltime get all kinds of non-welfare assistance... everything from reduced lunches for kids at school to free or reduced medical care (at least for the kids), to free childcare, etc, etc, etc,Night Strike wrote: Plus they're working 40 hours a week to make their money, not sitting on a couch.
Night Strike wrote: our hypothetical scenario makes no sense, that's why it's uncomprehendable. I wouldn't want to be either person, so your scenario doesn't work. There's nothing wrong with a person inheriting money, and there's nothing wrong with a person being born into a poor family. What's wrong is their decision to do drugs.
Agreed, but you repeatedly refuse to hold wealthy individuals and big businesses to that same standard.Night Strike wrote: And if a person is making money off the taxes from another, then they should be accountable for their actions in order to receive the money. It's irrelevant what type of person they are. If you want money from the government, you have to be responsible.
Ironically enough, part of that is already on the books. However, if you are going to deny anyone ever convicted of any drug conviction getting student loans, then you are saying that simply being caught with a small amount of marihuana or even cocaine is so much more henious than theft, even murder that unlike those crimes, drug use means a person should forever be condemened to poverty -- unlesss, of course they happen to be lucky enough to be born wealthy or launch into something like a lucartive acting career.Night Strike wrote: Here's a REAL comparison. In order to qualify for federal education loans, the applicant must not have any drug convictions on their records. And that money has to be paid back! Why should a person who is getting free money NOT have to also have either a clean record or undergo drug testing?
Now you are getting closer to the truth. See, the reality is that EVERYONE on earth depends on others for survival. Some people just admit it more than others. And yet, we still see liberty.Phatscotty wrote:you are simply confused. If you are dependent upon someone else for survival, it's hard (for you) to make a case that they are free or have any liberty.natty_dread wrote:Oh, I see. The fact that some people is not able to find a job means that you get to dictate how he lives his life, because you have been able to find a job. That makes perfect sense.Phatscotty wrote:sure they should, but not when they are living off someone else. There are conditions.
Phatscotty... you're such a fucking hypocrite. You preach for freedom and how the government should not interfere in your affairs, and let your make your own decisions. But apparently that only applies to things you think you should be able to do. You only care about your freedom to do as you like, screw anyone else's freedoms.Phatscotty wrote:If your son earns 100$, he can probably spend it how he wishes. But if you give him 100$ to buy books for school, is it really unfair for you to ask your son to make sure the money is spent on books and not on a hooker?????
No one here is saying that drugs are wonderful or that the people on drugs should not be "strongly encouraged" to change. The issue is that drugs are not the main reason for welfare dependance. Nor is cutting off welfare the best way to get people to reform. It just isn't. You have some kind of illusion that it will work, but no data at all supports what you claim.. in fact the opposite.Phatscotty wrote:It's even harder to make the case that it's okay to blow money that is meant to help a family who is struggling get high on drugs.
Where is the hypocricy? Let us count the ways...Night Strike wrote:Where is the hypocrisy?natty_dread wrote:Phatscotty... you're such a fucking hypocrite. You preach for freedom and how the government should not interfere in your affairs, and let your make your own decisions. But apparently that only applies to things you think you should be able to do. You only care about your freedom to do as you like, screw anyone else's freedoms.
Entitlements are causing this country to go bankrupt. Welfare is an entitlement, so if we can save money by stopping the money flow to drug addicts, then we're improving our system. And it makes sense that if someone decides to live off the government's free money, then they need to be accountable for their actions. If I'm not allowed to have drugs due to borrowing money from the government that I will later have to return, then why should people who get free money be allowed to use drugs?Woodruff wrote:Where is the hypocricy? Let us count the ways...Night Strike wrote:Where is the hypocrisy?natty_dread wrote:Phatscotty... you're such a fucking hypocrite. You preach for freedom and how the government should not interfere in your affairs, and let your make your own decisions. But apparently that only applies to things you think you should be able to do. You only care about your freedom to do as you like, screw anyone else's freedoms.
The Tea Party believes in reducing government expenditures! Except when those expenditures go to something we want, in which case we are in favor of expanding them!
Personal freedom is vital to our economic sustainability! Except when that personal freedom has to do with something we don't like, in which case we do not support that freedom!
Well, there's two, at the very least. I'm simply stunned that you couldn't see them for yourself.
Incorrect. Idiotic policies, a very few of which have anything to do with entitlements, are what are causing this country to go bankrupt. Entitlements really are NOT the problem. However, that is thoroughly irrelevant to the hypocricy.Night Strike wrote:Entitlements are causing this country to go bankrupt.Woodruff wrote:Where is the hypocricy? Let us count the ways...Night Strike wrote:Where is the hypocrisy?natty_dread wrote:Phatscotty... you're such a fucking hypocrite. You preach for freedom and how the government should not interfere in your affairs, and let your make your own decisions. But apparently that only applies to things you think you should be able to do. You only care about your freedom to do as you like, screw anyone else's freedoms.
The Tea Party believes in reducing government expenditures! Except when those expenditures go to something we want, in which case we are in favor of expanding them!
Personal freedom is vital to our economic sustainability! Except when that personal freedom has to do with something we don't like, in which case we do not support that freedom!
Well, there's two, at the very least. I'm simply stunned that you couldn't see them for yourself.
And costing ourselves more money by doing so. And increasing the nanny state that you Tea Partiers keep railing about. And yet, this isn't hypocricy in your mind? How is that even possible?Night Strike wrote:Welfare is an entitlement, so if we can save money by stopping the money flow to drug addicts, then we're improving our system.
Wow. I am speechless that you could even say that.Woodruff wrote:Incorrect. Idiotic policies, a very few of which have anything to do with entitlements, are what are causing this country to go bankrupt. Entitlements really are NOT the problem. However, that is thoroughly irrelevant to the hypocricy.Night Strike wrote:Entitlements are causing this country to go bankrupt.
Night strike, it appears you forgot to respond to this part of woodruff's post. I'll just help you here by posting it again so you won't forget about it again.Woodruff wrote:Night Strike wrote:Welfare is an entitlement, so if we can save money by stopping the money flow to drug addicts, then we're improving our system.
And costing ourselves more money by doing so. And increasing the nanny state that you Tea Partiers keep railing about. And yet, this isn't hypocricy in your mind? How is that even possible?

radiojake wrote:I like the part where some people seem to think any job (regardless of the negative consequences on environment, or even if the said job only contributes to landfill) means that people have earned the money they receieve.
Just because someone has spent 40 hours a week producing or selling shit that will invariably be thrown away and added to landfill, they shouldn't feel anymore righteous than someone on welfare.
Example: Anyone who works in advertising, or at McDonalds, or mining, to name a few, contributes NOTHING to society and infact I think they need a bullet.

The US federal deficit accounts for one third of all US federal spending. It is obvious there must be cuts. You could just completely eliminate medicaide and social security and ballance that budget, though that would be a pretty bad idea IMO. Either way if you really care about entitlement spending, I don't see why you'd be supporting something which will increase entitlement spending, either that or just decrease the amount actually reaching people that need it.Night Strike wrote:Wow. I am speechless that you could even say that.Woodruff wrote:Incorrect. Idiotic policies, a very few of which have anything to do with entitlements, are what are causing this country to go bankrupt. Entitlements really are NOT the problem. However, that is thoroughly irrelevant to the hypocricy.Night Strike wrote:Entitlements are causing this country to go bankrupt.
But don't worry, we don't have any problem with entitlements.![]()

Mineral resource mining is destroying the environment.Baron Von PWN wrote:radiojake wrote:I like the part where some people seem to think any job (regardless of the negative consequences on environment, or even if the said job only contributes to landfill) means that people have earned the money they receieve.
Just because someone has spent 40 hours a week producing or selling shit that will invariably be thrown away and added to landfill, they shouldn't feel anymore righteous than someone on welfare.
Example: Anyone who works in advertising, or at McDonalds, or mining, to name a few, contributes NOTHING to society and infact I think they need a bullet.
Why would you want to shoot miners?
By many measures, (a very old philisophical debate) someone who simply plops down large amounts of cash and sits back to collect, particularly if inherited or won through gambling in the stock market don't earn their money, either. They have not worked for their living. That is one reason (of many) why many people are happy to tax these inheritances and other such gains more heavily than earned income. (not saying I agree, but they are valid debates).Phatscotty wrote:the main difference is, the recipient did not earn the money. They only qualified for it. I understand the need and the concept, but nobody seems to respect the principle.
I see, so you would be in favor of anyone using drugs losing their inheritances, stock options and other unearned income?Phatscotty wrote:Anyone who does not use/abuse drugs will not be affected by this.
If they were thinking that logically, they probably would not be taking the drugs to begin with.Phatscotty wrote:Anyone who is using drugs will meet their moment of clarity when they must decide between getting another check or getting high.
Agreed, but your idea of what will happen is just wrong... and this is not a guess.Phatscotty wrote:This is a good thing. If this issue concerned people spending their own money that they earned on drugs, I would agree it's none of my f'n business.
Agreed... and let's start with those CEOs of banks that took our tax dollars then instantly decided to change everyone's credit card "agreements" so that virtually everyone saw increased interest rates, late fees assessed in error, etc.Phatscotty wrote:We should demand accountability in the dollars that are publicly spent just as we try to hold accountable public officials for their words and actions.
This is another good philisophical debate. Not sure I agree with the categories you have drawn below, but yes, it should matter whether you are producing needed food, particularly in an environmentally responsible manner, healing/teaching people or simply selling some plastic gimic. Maybe the gimics ought to be taxed a bit higher. (but then you have to define gimics versus need).radiojake wrote:I like the part where some people seem to think any job (regardless of the negative consequences on environment, or even if the said job only contributes to landfill) means that people have earned the money they receieve.
To follow this line, they may be worse, because they are using resources that could go to other, better needs (like fuel, etc.), taking up space that could go to producing other goods or agriculture, and then leave us with a pollution that future generations will have to deal with.radiojake wrote: Just because someone has spent 40 hours a week producing or selling shit that will invariably be thrown away and added to landfill, they shouldn't feel anymore righteous than someone on welfare.
You bring up an interesting line of reasoning, but I cannot agree fully with your categories. McDonalds is not the best or healthiest food, but it is food and recently has moved toward more environmentally sustainable production options. They no longer use styrofoam, for example. They absolutely can improve, but compared to the companies putting out GMOs without truly testing them the way they should (given the very long term impact of any error/problem), etc, etc.... not so bad.radiojake wrote:Example: Anyone who works in advertising, or at McDonalds, or mining, to name a few, contributes NOTHING to society and infact I think they need a bullet.