Aseahawkfan wrote:This is truly looney land. The Democrat is talking about the Republican raising taxes. Kamala said a whole lot of nothing while talking a lot using political speak. Stop price gouging? How are you even going to decide what price gouging is? Grocery stores earn small margins. Very small. Groceries are one of the lowest margin businesses. Making it seem like grocery stores are earning record profits is like talking about how the minimum wage is at a record level. Inflations causes profit increases without margin expansion and makes the cost of production higher which eats any benefit from "record" profits and shows again Kamala and the Democrats have no understanding of economics. This is just rubbish economics written to make people feel good.
River Dog wrote:That's my biggest complaint about Democrats, that they don't understand economics, think that raising wages won't affect inflation. They must not have been around in the 1980's when we had runaway inflation and one of the ways it was cured it, by getting out of COLA clauses in union contracts. How can a business hold the line on prices when the wages they pay are guaranteed to go up by 10%+? How can they not understand that by denying drug companies a profit on a new drug they have a patent on that it will result in fewer new and revolutionary drugs? They don't understand how a free-market economy works.
One only has to look at the situation California is currently in to see how inept they are at managing an economy. Establishing a minimum wage for just the big fast-food franchises as they did in CA raises the wages for all of them as both the little guy and the McDonald's and Wendy's compete for the same labor. It's so basic that it's hard for me to understand why they don't get it.
River Dog wrote:That's my biggest complaint about Democrats, that they don't understand economics, think that raising wages won't affect inflation. They must not have been around in the 1980's when we had runaway inflation and one of the ways it was cured it, by getting out of COLA clauses in union contracts. How can a business hold the line on prices when the wages they pay are guaranteed to go up by 10%+? How can they not understand that by denying drug companies a profit on a new drug they have a patent on that it will result in fewer new and revolutionary drugs? They don't understand how a free-market economy works.
One only has to look at the situation California is currently in to see how inept they are at managing an economy. Establishing a minimum wage for just the big fast-food franchises as they did in CA raises the wages for all of them as both the little guy and the McDonald's and Wendy's compete for the same labor. It's so basic that it's hard for me to understand why they don't get it.
I-5 wrote:Are you sure that's your biggest complaint? You said earlier you didn't know if empirical evidence that either party "knows how to handle high prices any differently" exists, and that there are too many things beyond their control, like the pandemic, the war in Ukraine, tensions in the Middle East, that have a huge influence on both the US economy as well as worldwide. Be that as it may, if Trump has any operating brain cells left, he should try to debate the economy with Harris, since it's his only chance to ask if people are better than they were 4 years ago. High prices are definitely an issue, not just wage increase, and Harris knows that despite your claim she doesn't understand it. What concrete evidence can Trump bring that prices would be lower for americans? We'll see.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I care far more about how they’ll handle debates than any of the rhetoric they are spewing now. I need to see if either will state the plan to turn things around.
The thing I think Kamala needs to avoid is saying she’ll fix things if she is elected. That’s a bad call considering she’s been the VP of the current administration for the last 3 and half years. If Trump is smart, he’ll challenge her on why it hasn’t been getting better yet and why not implement the plan now as opposed to January 2025. He’ll of course have coherently lay out what he intends to do.
Aseahawkfan wrote:We disagree on drug pricing, which I understand from an investor's perspective. Drug pricing has a lot of controls in place as it is, but still is excessive.
Aseahawkfan wrote:Grocery stores are one of the most consumer friendly businesses in existence. They should not be getting attacked when they already run a high volume, low margin business that is experiencing massive competition which has driven prices down and hurt the grocery store business. The grocery market sector has a massive number of competitors off the top of my head: Kroger's, Albertson's, Costco, Grocery Outlet, Amazon, Walmart, Winco, Trader Joe's, and numerous other mom and pop's which are more expensive than your Big Box retailers. Even within the stores themselves, there is massive competition for price which grocery stores employing loss leaders like bread, milk, and meat because they know purchasing these products will lead customers to purchase other products with hopefully higher margins to use with their loss leaders. Grocery stores themselves are massive for competition by offering product variety at various price points with the grocery store acting as a delivery system controlling costs by managing distribution and the costs associated like fixed costs such as the store and variable costs like labor and electricity and refrigeration. The delivery system is where the store enters the competitive equation though some are vertically integrated and compete against shelf products with in-house brands.
It shows a very bad understanding of economics to go after grocery stores as the culprit in food costs given their low margins and how badly that business is doing even with "record" profits, which is a false statement if you delve deeper than a puddle on what it means financially.
I-5 wrote:In general, prices go up over time, and there's no going back. Hence, $.05 cokes and $.10 hamburgers, so really it's rising wages that can balance out the cost of living over time. That's what history shows. But some eras are still better than others. We've had it pretty good the last 30 years or so, under both republicans and democrats....until after the pandemic.
I-5 wrote:By less productive I think is what others would call more vulnerable. What do you suggest happens to those people? I recognize that not everyone has the same abilities or the given the same starting point in life. There is also prevalent mental illness in the US can be fatal without reserouces to support. Ship them somewhere? How do you make our system benefit more people, or does it just benefit those who have the means to get ahead? I realize this is a huge question that doesn't have a satisfactory answer. I don't think any party has the right answer on it either, but I want to know who is trying to seiously address it. A microcosm of this question is the concept of charter schools, which their very existence implies that public schools aren't good enough. So intead of fixing the problem, just leave them to rot and create more privileged schools.
I-5 wrote: A microcosm of this question is the concept of charter schools, which their very existence implies that public schools aren't good enough. So intead of fixing the problem, just leave them to rot and create more privileged schools.
I-5 wrote:By less productive I think is what others would call more vulnerable. What do you suggest happens to those people? I recognize that not everyone has the same abilities or the given the same starting point in life. There is also prevalent mental illness in the US can be fatal without reserouces to support. Ship them somewhere? How do you make our system benefit more people, or does it just benefit those who have the means to get ahead? I realize this is a huge question that doesn't have a satisfactory answer. I don't think any party has the right answer on it either, but I want to know who is trying to seiously address it. A microcosm of this question is the concept of charter schools, which their very existence implies that public schools aren't good enough. So intead of fixing the problem, just leave them to rot and create more privileged schools.
I-5 wrote: A microcosm of this question is the concept of charter schools, which their very existence implies that public schools aren't good enough. So intead of fixing the problem, just leave them to rot and create more privileged schools.
MackStrongIsMyHero wrote:I had long response for this, since it's a huge thing happening in my neck of the woods, but the shorter version is a lot of money is being thrown at the public education system in my area, and it isn't producing results. The number one reason is the students aren't coming from homes that value education. They treat the public school system like a daycare and show no investment in their child doing well in school. Charter schools, magnet schools, private school, moving out of the parish (i.e. county) into adjacent parishes with good public schools, and incorporating areas of the parish into independent cities with their own independent school districts are all responses to a poorly managed and poorly performing public school system, and all of those options are vilified as leaving the less fortunate behind.
So my question is, what are the Democrats (who I assume you're saying are serious about fixing this problem) actually doing to fix this problem other than throwing money at it like has been done for decades? You can't make people do better simply by dumping money into the system. As far as how you can get to the bedrock level and make families/communities/cultures care about their education and role in a functioning society, I don't know, but more money isn't making these people do better. Republicans don't have the answer either, but I'm hesitant to throw money at half-measures and ineffective would-be solutions just for the sake of trying.
River Dog wrote:It's the same story with the homeless problem, trying to fix it by throwing money at it. They never get to the root cause.
River Dog wrote:It's the same story with the homeless problem, trying to fix it by throwing money at it. They never get to the root cause.
Aseahawkfan wrote:The root cause is, "I like doing drugs and don't want to work, so I'm going to be a homeless beggar and find enough money to buy my drugs daily."
Not everyone as some truly have mental problems, but a lot of it in Seattle and Washington State from what I've seen which is pissing people off. You offer to clean people up and help them find jobs, they don't want them. Interferes with their drug use.
I've watched a couple of friends descend into heroin. Nothing you can do for them until they want out. I've seen more than a few folks descend into the bottle. Nothing you can do for them until they want something else. It's best even if hard to let them to go where they're going and give them help when they finally want it and that doesn't mean handing them cash to buy more drugs or letting them steal it from you. It's a horrible thing to watch, but when they are locked into those drugs it's all they care about.
River Dog wrote:I haven't seen an objective, definitive study that shows what you're saying, but it's certainly my gut feel. I also get the feeling that the lifestyle in some ways appeals to them, that they have a social network of sorts that keeps them feeling wanted or worth something.
My plan would be to make available the resources they need to get straight, give them some very basic housing, ie tents, cots, space heaters, etc, give them food that grocery stores can't sell, like stuff beyond the expiration date so long as it's not unhealthy, keep them isolated from the general public, assist them with job placement and housing if they get themselves straight and prove it by passing multiple drug tests, roll back most if not all of these liberalized drug laws, criminalize homelessness, and build more prisons if we have to, like Escape from New York. I don't know if it would work or not, but the bleeding-heart, I feel your pain carrot method practiced by liberals damn sure hasn't. Time for an entirely different approach.
I-5 wrote:Back to the OP and the weirdness of it all, I looked into the republican line that Tim Walz mandated that boys restrooms carry tampons. The boring truth is that the measure Walz signed already exists in half the states, and was authored by 2 students who wanted to support their fellow students by having schools provide feminine hygiene products to any menstruating students. The idea is some students aren’t prepared for their period (for example they’ve never had a period before and didn’t being a tampon) to help them avoid embarrassment if an accident happens at school. It wasn’t a political issue, until Walz was tapped to be Harris’ running mate. This is a classic example of looking for problems, and how weird for republican attack dogs to spin it the way they did. Weird is accurate.
River Dog wrote:Yeah, despite the advice of a lot of senior Republicans, like Lindsey Graham, the Trump campaign is not keeping their eye on the prize by focusing on the real issues that will decide the election, like the economy and inflation, issues that surveys have said gives Republicans an edge. Trump is obsessed with completely irrelevant things, like crowd sizes and personal attacks against his opponent. He just can't get that professional wrestler personality out of his system. Kinda like asking a tiger to change the color of their stripes.
I-5 wrote:Unfortunately, I think the problem goes deeper than Trump. He's not the one that came up with this weird line of attack. Someone else did. This isn't the party of the recent past, the party of Romney (who I respect and admire), or even the party of George W. Maybe Trump has infected the party too much? MAGA itself is a beast that needs to be driven far away from the republican party. When I see and hear MAGA in the media, they don't resemble my many conservative friends who I talk to in real life. Their party is gone.
River Dog wrote:I agree. The Republican Party of the Reagans, Bushes, McCains, and Romneys is gone, at least for the time being. Trump has been very successful in purging it of anyone that isn't a loyalist. That's one of my hopes in getting rid of Trump, that it might return to some sense of sanity and provide us with a decent alternative to a party in the Democrats that I find just as unacceptable as the current crop of Republicans. There are good R candidates out there, Nikki Haley, Liz Cheney, Chris Christee, etc, that aren't from the MAGA branch.
River Dog wrote:I agree. The Republican Party of the Reagans, Bushes, McCains, and Romneys is gone, at least for the time being. Trump has been very successful in purging it of anyone that isn't a loyalist. That's one of my hopes in getting rid of Trump, that it might return to some sense of sanity and provide us with a decent alternative to a party in the Democrats that I find just as unacceptable as the current crop of Republicans. There are good R candidates out there, Nikki Haley, Liz Cheney, Chris Christee, etc, that aren't from the MAGA branch.
I-5 wrote:To be sure, there are many annoying characters on the democratic side that make me cringe, too. But even the most obnoxious ones I've seen do not advocate violence to others, or overthrowing the government should they lose, etc. It's that violent element that to me is a threat to us all. There is one commenter I've encountered in a youtube thread that just keeps repeating 'you'll see' over and over again when it comes to election day if things don't go his way. That's the MAGA element I'm talking about. I can handle obnoxious, but there is no place for threats, and that comes exlusiviely from MAGA fringes.
River Dog wrote:I don't disagree with you, and I'm not voting for any MAGA Republicans. My litmus test for them is if they are endorsed by Trump. If they are, then I'm not voting for them. Jerrod Sessler, running for Congress in my district, was endorsed by Trump so he won't be getting my vote.
My problem with the Democrats has little to do with personalities or personal behavior as are the problems I have with the MAGA Republicans. It's mostly fiscally oriented stuff, personal responsibility or lack thereof, their anti-business stances, law and order, etc, that I disagree with the Democratic approach on.
River Dog wrote:I don't disagree with you, and I'm not voting for any MAGA Republicans. My litmus test for them is if they are endorsed by Trump. If they are, then I'm not voting for them. Jerrod Sessler, running for Congress in my district, was endorsed by Trump so he won't be getting my vote.
My problem with the Democrats has little to do with personalities or personal behavior as are the problems I have with the MAGA Republicans. It's mostly fiscally oriented stuff, personal responsibility or lack thereof, their anti-business stances, law and order, etc, that I disagree with the Democratic approach on.
I-5 wrote:To me, you’re not just voting for policiy, you’re also voting for leadership ie maturity, judgement, poise etc. This is why though I didn’t agree with Romney, I would have been more than fine with his leadership. He also knew to not shove his religious beliefs on his constituents.
River Dog wrote:I agree with that comment, too. You have to weigh the two attributes against each other.
I also take a look at who is likely to control Congress. I don't want to see one party in complete control of both branches of government, especially if it happens to be the Democrats.
River Dog wrote:I agree with that comment, too. You have to weigh the two attributes against each other.
I also take a look at who is likely to control Congress. I don't want to see one party in complete control of both branches of government, especially if it happens to be the Democrats.
Stream Hawk wrote:But you'd be OK with Republicans controlling both branches? Your rationale makes no sense. Republicans are MAGA now. And we all know who would control the executive branch.
I didn't say that. I said 'especially' the Democrats. That doesn't mean that I'd be "OK with R's controlling both branches".
I didn't say that. I said 'especially' the Democrats. That doesn't mean that I'd be "OK with R's controlling both branches".
Stream Hawk wrote:I’m confused. You said “especially the Democrats”, which infers you’d prefer Republicans controlling over the Democrats.
Stream Hawk wrote:I get it, you are a lifelong Republican. And you despise Trump and MAGA Republicans. Which we clearly agree on! But unfortunately, MAGAs have hijacked your party. I prefer common sense and a Democratic way of the world. While I hate paying excess taxes, some taxes are needed. I also think that the middle class should not be taxed so high - like they would be under Trump. Adam Kinzinger is a Republican I can get behind behind!
Aseahawkfan wrote:I still don't know why we don't have a strong middle class party any more. Republicans have sold out to the wealthy. Democrats like to operate like a charity where the middle class pay most of the taxes for their badly run programs. Sure would be nice to have a strong middle and working class party getting tax cuts and building the institutions for the middle and working class who may not be rich, but don't look at themselves as poor either. They earn their place in this world and provide the majority of taxes for the government and provide the wealth through consumption for the wealthy. It seems to met he wealthy have enough money to take care of themselves and the poor and I mean truly poor who don't want to work or are engaged in negative behaviors are a waste of money. The middle and working class should be the place where a political party needs to strongly align and set things up for them to prosper. And not this handout rubbish. Middle and working class people like to earn their place in the world, not be given it, but it needs to be affordable. Middle and working class are getting squeezed by bad economic management and the wealthy have the power to make sure they don't pay for the bad economic management while the Democrats don't want to own up to their lousy economics and want to sell the poor and victim angle to get middle and working class people to pay more taxes.
Hell, middle and working class voters voted for 30 dollars tabs in Washington State. 30 dollars for tabs is not something a rich person cares about. Washington State Democrats gave us 30 dollar tabs we voted for, then added a bunch of other taxes they gave a different name to get the yearly tabs bill back up to what it was before and more. That's Democrat policy right there. Pure Democrat. Not helping the middle or working class and only giving you a subsistence hand out for the poor, then tacking on as many little taxes as they can the middle and working class pay for.
Damn, we need a third party that is for the middle and working class to get them tax cuts and better economics.
....middle class pay most of the taxes for their badly run programs
Aseahawkfan wrote:....middle class pay most of the taxes for their badly run programs
I-5 wrote:And what is wrong exactly with this statement? What if the programs are well-run? Meanwhile, the rich find ways to not pay taxes but reap lots of benefits from being in the US.
I-5 wrote:And what is wrong exactly with this statement? What if the programs are well-run? Meanwhile, the rich find ways to not pay taxes but reap lots of benefits from being in the US.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 21 guests