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September 28, 2010 at 12:48 PM #611231September 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM #610194eavesdropperParticipant
[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=XBoxBoy]Sorry to come to this debate a bit late… but might I offer the suggestion that yeah big govt. vs boo big govt is about as meaningless at dem vs rep. or liberal vs conservative.
Seems to me that whether govt control of things is better than corporate control of things hinges on which offers less corruption, fraud and misallocation of resources. In the end it doesn’t matter whether it’s govt sponsored corruption or corporate sponsored corruption, it’s how wisely the resources are applied to improve our lot.
Given the recent history of govt and corporate collusion, I think this whole debate is a side show. The debate shouldn’t be yeah govt. or yeah corporations/free market, it should be how the heck do we control corruption, fraud, theft, and misallocation of resources?
XBoxBoy[/quote]
Except its always been about the money. Whether we’re talking about the first draft of the Constitution reading, “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Property”, to the fact that none of the signers of same were tradesmen, shopkeepers or blacksmiths, through the Louisiana Purchase, Manifest Destiny and Gunboat Diplomacy, to GM using the FBI to put various competitors out of business, its always been about the money and it always will be.[/quote]
Bingo, Allan! There is no statement more true than your last. And when that is the case, economic systems, well laid out as they are on paper, sometimes stumble over human foibles.
September 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM #610278eavesdropperParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=XBoxBoy]Sorry to come to this debate a bit late… but might I offer the suggestion that yeah big govt. vs boo big govt is about as meaningless at dem vs rep. or liberal vs conservative.
Seems to me that whether govt control of things is better than corporate control of things hinges on which offers less corruption, fraud and misallocation of resources. In the end it doesn’t matter whether it’s govt sponsored corruption or corporate sponsored corruption, it’s how wisely the resources are applied to improve our lot.
Given the recent history of govt and corporate collusion, I think this whole debate is a side show. The debate shouldn’t be yeah govt. or yeah corporations/free market, it should be how the heck do we control corruption, fraud, theft, and misallocation of resources?
XBoxBoy[/quote]
Except its always been about the money. Whether we’re talking about the first draft of the Constitution reading, “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Property”, to the fact that none of the signers of same were tradesmen, shopkeepers or blacksmiths, through the Louisiana Purchase, Manifest Destiny and Gunboat Diplomacy, to GM using the FBI to put various competitors out of business, its always been about the money and it always will be.[/quote]
Bingo, Allan! There is no statement more true than your last. And when that is the case, economic systems, well laid out as they are on paper, sometimes stumble over human foibles.
September 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM #610828eavesdropperParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=XBoxBoy]Sorry to come to this debate a bit late… but might I offer the suggestion that yeah big govt. vs boo big govt is about as meaningless at dem vs rep. or liberal vs conservative.
Seems to me that whether govt control of things is better than corporate control of things hinges on which offers less corruption, fraud and misallocation of resources. In the end it doesn’t matter whether it’s govt sponsored corruption or corporate sponsored corruption, it’s how wisely the resources are applied to improve our lot.
Given the recent history of govt and corporate collusion, I think this whole debate is a side show. The debate shouldn’t be yeah govt. or yeah corporations/free market, it should be how the heck do we control corruption, fraud, theft, and misallocation of resources?
XBoxBoy[/quote]
Except its always been about the money. Whether we’re talking about the first draft of the Constitution reading, “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Property”, to the fact that none of the signers of same were tradesmen, shopkeepers or blacksmiths, through the Louisiana Purchase, Manifest Destiny and Gunboat Diplomacy, to GM using the FBI to put various competitors out of business, its always been about the money and it always will be.[/quote]
Bingo, Allan! There is no statement more true than your last. And when that is the case, economic systems, well laid out as they are on paper, sometimes stumble over human foibles.
September 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM #610939eavesdropperParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=XBoxBoy]Sorry to come to this debate a bit late… but might I offer the suggestion that yeah big govt. vs boo big govt is about as meaningless at dem vs rep. or liberal vs conservative.
Seems to me that whether govt control of things is better than corporate control of things hinges on which offers less corruption, fraud and misallocation of resources. In the end it doesn’t matter whether it’s govt sponsored corruption or corporate sponsored corruption, it’s how wisely the resources are applied to improve our lot.
Given the recent history of govt and corporate collusion, I think this whole debate is a side show. The debate shouldn’t be yeah govt. or yeah corporations/free market, it should be how the heck do we control corruption, fraud, theft, and misallocation of resources?
XBoxBoy[/quote]
Except its always been about the money. Whether we’re talking about the first draft of the Constitution reading, “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Property”, to the fact that none of the signers of same were tradesmen, shopkeepers or blacksmiths, through the Louisiana Purchase, Manifest Destiny and Gunboat Diplomacy, to GM using the FBI to put various competitors out of business, its always been about the money and it always will be.[/quote]
Bingo, Allan! There is no statement more true than your last. And when that is the case, economic systems, well laid out as they are on paper, sometimes stumble over human foibles.
September 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM #611252eavesdropperParticipant[quote=Allan from Fallbrook][quote=XBoxBoy]Sorry to come to this debate a bit late… but might I offer the suggestion that yeah big govt. vs boo big govt is about as meaningless at dem vs rep. or liberal vs conservative.
Seems to me that whether govt control of things is better than corporate control of things hinges on which offers less corruption, fraud and misallocation of resources. In the end it doesn’t matter whether it’s govt sponsored corruption or corporate sponsored corruption, it’s how wisely the resources are applied to improve our lot.
Given the recent history of govt and corporate collusion, I think this whole debate is a side show. The debate shouldn’t be yeah govt. or yeah corporations/free market, it should be how the heck do we control corruption, fraud, theft, and misallocation of resources?
XBoxBoy[/quote]
Except its always been about the money. Whether we’re talking about the first draft of the Constitution reading, “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Property”, to the fact that none of the signers of same were tradesmen, shopkeepers or blacksmiths, through the Louisiana Purchase, Manifest Destiny and Gunboat Diplomacy, to GM using the FBI to put various competitors out of business, its always been about the money and it always will be.[/quote]
Bingo, Allan! There is no statement more true than your last. And when that is the case, economic systems, well laid out as they are on paper, sometimes stumble over human foibles.
September 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM #610199briansd1Guesteavesdropper, that was a great post.
September 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM #610283briansd1Guesteavesdropper, that was a great post.
September 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM #610833briansd1Guesteavesdropper, that was a great post.
September 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM #610944briansd1Guesteavesdropper, that was a great post.
September 28, 2010 at 1:03 PM #611257briansd1Guesteavesdropper, that was a great post.
September 28, 2010 at 1:17 PM #610204Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=eavesdropper]
Bingo, Allan! There is no statement more true than your last. And when that is the case, economic systems, well laid out as they are on paper, sometimes stumble over human foibles.[/quote]Eavesdropper: Given your intellect, I thought you’d appreciate this little exegesis about business and political interests getting closely entwined. Back in the 1980s, I did military advisory work in Central America. The “bible”, if you will, for counterinsurgency work was the USMC Small Wars Manual, written circa 1940, and largely based on the Marine campaigns during the so-called “Banana Wars”. The main architect of these campaigns was a Marine named Smedley Butler, who was something of a Zelig-like character for the US during the 1920s and 1930s.
I bring Butler up, largely because of comments he made later in his life, wherein he recounted that his time with the Marines in places like Central America, China and elsewhere was largely in support of American business interests in those parts of the world, and I think we’d all agree that little has changed since then.
His comments, “War is a Racket” are interesting, to say the least:
http://www.fas.org/man/smedley.htm“Plus c’est la meme chose”.
September 28, 2010 at 1:17 PM #610288Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=eavesdropper]
Bingo, Allan! There is no statement more true than your last. And when that is the case, economic systems, well laid out as they are on paper, sometimes stumble over human foibles.[/quote]Eavesdropper: Given your intellect, I thought you’d appreciate this little exegesis about business and political interests getting closely entwined. Back in the 1980s, I did military advisory work in Central America. The “bible”, if you will, for counterinsurgency work was the USMC Small Wars Manual, written circa 1940, and largely based on the Marine campaigns during the so-called “Banana Wars”. The main architect of these campaigns was a Marine named Smedley Butler, who was something of a Zelig-like character for the US during the 1920s and 1930s.
I bring Butler up, largely because of comments he made later in his life, wherein he recounted that his time with the Marines in places like Central America, China and elsewhere was largely in support of American business interests in those parts of the world, and I think we’d all agree that little has changed since then.
His comments, “War is a Racket” are interesting, to say the least:
http://www.fas.org/man/smedley.htm“Plus c’est la meme chose”.
September 28, 2010 at 1:17 PM #610838Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=eavesdropper]
Bingo, Allan! There is no statement more true than your last. And when that is the case, economic systems, well laid out as they are on paper, sometimes stumble over human foibles.[/quote]Eavesdropper: Given your intellect, I thought you’d appreciate this little exegesis about business and political interests getting closely entwined. Back in the 1980s, I did military advisory work in Central America. The “bible”, if you will, for counterinsurgency work was the USMC Small Wars Manual, written circa 1940, and largely based on the Marine campaigns during the so-called “Banana Wars”. The main architect of these campaigns was a Marine named Smedley Butler, who was something of a Zelig-like character for the US during the 1920s and 1930s.
I bring Butler up, largely because of comments he made later in his life, wherein he recounted that his time with the Marines in places like Central America, China and elsewhere was largely in support of American business interests in those parts of the world, and I think we’d all agree that little has changed since then.
His comments, “War is a Racket” are interesting, to say the least:
http://www.fas.org/man/smedley.htm“Plus c’est la meme chose”.
September 28, 2010 at 1:17 PM #610949Allan from FallbrookParticipant[quote=eavesdropper]
Bingo, Allan! There is no statement more true than your last. And when that is the case, economic systems, well laid out as they are on paper, sometimes stumble over human foibles.[/quote]Eavesdropper: Given your intellect, I thought you’d appreciate this little exegesis about business and political interests getting closely entwined. Back in the 1980s, I did military advisory work in Central America. The “bible”, if you will, for counterinsurgency work was the USMC Small Wars Manual, written circa 1940, and largely based on the Marine campaigns during the so-called “Banana Wars”. The main architect of these campaigns was a Marine named Smedley Butler, who was something of a Zelig-like character for the US during the 1920s and 1930s.
I bring Butler up, largely because of comments he made later in his life, wherein he recounted that his time with the Marines in places like Central America, China and elsewhere was largely in support of American business interests in those parts of the world, and I think we’d all agree that little has changed since then.
His comments, “War is a Racket” are interesting, to say the least:
http://www.fas.org/man/smedley.htm“Plus c’est la meme chose”.
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