Jump to content
×
Are you looking for the BariatricPal Store? Go now!

ariscus99

LAP-BAND Patients
  • Content Count

    890
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by ariscus99

  1. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Changed this little tidbit for you. Also, a quick question -- what decade in American history saw the fastest rise in real economic output, real GDP, and real per capita income growth? And how much of this can be contributed to organized labor?
  2. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Unions did nothing of the kind. America had a thriving middle class before the unions were ever a factor.
  3. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Here's another way of looking at unions. Prof Hayek was simply brilliant!
  4. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    However 22 states are right to work states, and they are among the most economically sound states right now.
  5. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Quite simply because I love my job. I love helping people. I love the adrenaline rush of going into a burning building while everyone is running out. I love the comrade re of the fire house. I get to have a family of another 1000 people in my dept. knowing any one of them would lay down their life for me, and I would do the same for them. You son may understand, police have a similar feeling towards one another, but very few others understand the brotherhood that makes up firefighting. However, in the near future I will be leaving my "cush union job" to go back to school to pursue a career that I wont be forced into unionization(thank god). Public sector employees with their benefits package do make more than their private sector counterparts, it's been shown several times, I'm fairly sure I've posted it at least once. The salary level in and of itself may be lower but not once benefits are factored in, as I have proved, with facts. So your okay with the democrats from WI being docked 100% of their pay as long as they continue to flee the state and refuse to do the job they were elected to do? So they shouldn't EVER? But it was okay for the democrats to force the federal employees to do so?
  6. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Talking about the same topic in another forum and this little gem came up, pretty good summation of what unions are really all about.
  7. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    You know, I'm looking around, and I don't see obama giving them back their rights. Something he could advocate for, but has chosen not too, so yes I can say obama doesn't allow them to participate. Why is he not "hitting the street in comfy shoes" like he promised? Because he's a hypocrite and is trying to keep his head down. Unless you have a different explanation for yet another failed obama promise?
  8. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    From the krugman article; The above demonstrates my point that the left doesn't really care about "fairness" or whatever; they just want to destroy America. Public sector unions are the exactly opposite of private sector unions. Early labor organizers thought that unions were needed because an individual worker had no bargaining power with an employer who owned the entire company, and so the owners were exploiting the workers, living high on the hog at their expense. Now, public sector employees are living high on the hog at taxpayer expense. The average salary for public sector employees is nearly $70,000 a year, compared with an average of $40,000 in the private sector. Public sector unions don't represent "the interests of middle- and working-class Americans." Instead, those public sector unions are extorting taxpayers to fund their sinecure jobs with their lavish benefits and pension programs. None of these people's lifestyles would be possible were it not for all the taxpayers getting up and going to work every day at private sector jobs. The protestors are protesting not greedy capitalist tyrants, but the taxpayers, those middle-class Americans who make their entire lifestyle possible. It's a disgrace and a perfect opportunity to get rid of public sector unions once and for all.
  9. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    On PATCO...again:
  10. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Great idea! And we can start by docking the pay 100% for the senators who decided to flee the state and not do the job they were elected to do! Good thinking CM! The last governor we had here in CA did it salary free. Another great idea would be to switch to a part time legislature with really drastic pay cuts, since our state lawmakers work even less than teachers do, why not switch to a part time and let them get second jobs. Also Krugman's Nobel doesn't give him free reign to comment on anything and then to be left unchallenged. He's commenting on unions here, not strictly economics so it's not as if his Nobel makes him an expert on this topic. Bush went to Harvard and Yale; should we use that to determine whether he was right or wrong? Anyways, Krugman overplays his hand by acting like unions are always playing for the good side against the mean rich people. They're not. They are advantageous to employees, and that's it. Unions don't do any favors to the rest of us (the consumers), and they certainly aren't good for business. We've seen this play out again and again in the auto industry and now public schools across the country. Unions aren't inherently bad; they serve the good purpose of making sure employees are treated decently. But that's old news now. Now, unions just grab for power like anyone else with money. And yet . . . krugmans economics have been nothing but wrong - dead wrong. Why should any of us listen to anything the keynesians have to say? They were unable to predict the current crisis (like the Austrians have) and have been woefully impotent in implimenting any policy that has helped. And if someone who supposedly an "expert" doesn't know his ass from a hole in the ground in his supposed area of expertise, why I should I listen to anything he has to say on any other subject?
  11. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    So, quick trivia for all the boys and girls out there: Who stripped one of the biggest unions of their collective bargaining rights? Answer: Republicans right? No no no, Jimmy Carter and the Democrats. Why doesn't anyone know about this? Because it would make all the hypocritical democrats look even more foolish than ever. Now everyone is wondering why President Obama hasn't held good to his word that if someone tried to strip unions of their right's he'd be there in "some comfy shoes marching with you all"? Well, he doesn't keep many promises so this isn't really too much different, but he can't really go and advocate for something that he doesn't allow 2 million of his employees to participate in without looking a little silly. Here's the story; Wow, democrats busting unions and deregulating? What's that all about? Here's more;
  12. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    That money is going to a business that performs abortions. Connect those dots. Eliminate the service from planned parenthood, and move that service to another clinic, get the people who donate the money to planned parenthood for abortions do donate it to other places that do abortions so planned parenthood is no longer a part of the abortion world, which would make many people much more at ease about giving them money for women's health and family planning. What is wrong with planned parenthood not offering abortions, but instead referring it elsewhere?
  13. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Good dodge. A+ Don't be angry with me, because I've done my best not to use the government, and think that others can do the same if they want to. It's choices that I and my family have chosen throughout our lives. I understand it's not for everyone. But I think the country would be a much better place if people tried harder. I understand that you're older, and have experienced most that life has to offer so you are an absolutely brilliant old lady who knows more than anyone in there 20's could ever know. I get that, I really do. But see, what maybe you don't get is that just because it took you, 40-50-60+ years(I don't know your age) to gain all this knowledge through experience, doesn't mean everyone else will take as long to gain experience's. On a daily basis I see some of the worst the world has to offer, and I see people at their worst most vulnerable time's. It can accelerate certain parts of a life having to deal with this. It affords me the opportunity to see an aspect of human life that you've never seen, and probably never will. Allowing some young dumb idealistic punk like me to have knowledge that maybe others of my age don't. And then again maybe it doesn't. But I know I've seen things you've never seen, never will, and probably can't imagine or want to see. And if that doesn't add up to life experience, well I must be headed the wrong way. But I'm happy with it. Now, do your best not to contort this into something it's not, I know how you love to do that. I'm not saying I know it all, or that I have nothing left to learn, I know that the exact opposite is true. What I'm saying is you sound ignorant when you write me off based on my age.
  14. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    By all means keep abortion safe and legal. I've never once said I was against it. I wouldn't want my wife or daughter or sisters to have one, but I know it's not my choice, and it shouldn't be. If I had to carry a child I sure as hell wouldn't let someone tell me what to do about it. That doesn't mean however I should sit around for 24-25-26 weeks and then decide to have an abortion, late term abortion and abortions of viable babies is disgusting and that should be illegal. Like what this guy was doing, delivering live babies and cutting their spinal cords with scissors. But if a woman wants a first trimester abortion, then have at it, after some soul searching hopefully. It shouldn't be used as a form of birth control, which it currently is. I don't think anyone would have any problem fully supporting Planned Parenthood if they removed abortions from the list of services offered. Why not do that? It's bargaining, right? I don't want my money going to support abortion. It should be paid for out of pocket or by your INS company or by donation. Get some of your rich liberal buddies to donate some money to clinics that do abortions. But not at the same clinics that the government funds. People know the consequences of sex. No birth control is 100% effective. Most everyone knows that as well. But to say something as outlandish as the blood of the aborted fetus' are on the hands of republicans because they don't want government money going to clinics that do abortions is irresponsible, and disgusting. The republicans aren't forcing them to have sex or have abortions, the blood is only on the hands of the people making the choice.
  15. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Great story about more passing of the buck. So people who are upside down in their homes and are behind in payments will have the banks forgive(at the cost of several billion to the banks) the price down to the current market value? Well what about the people who are upside down but not behind in payments? Screw you responsible American, you don't need help. The white house isn't talking about this yet, because they know if it comes out that this will in fact be the case, that they are only going to help people behind in their payments or in foreclosure, millions will stop paying their mortgage to try to get a slice of the government pie. And why shouldn't they? If they don't they're going to penalized for doing what they are contractually obligated to do. Don't worry big brother is here to help you out again. Though I suppose your jumping for joy about this cm because the banks will be paying for it, redistributing some wealth around yay.
  16. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    How can fringe benefits cost nearly as much as a workers salary? Answer: Collective bargaining.
  17. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    I like how you say the blood of the babies will be on the republican's hands, once again passing responsibility onto someone else. Are the republicans forcing these women to have sex? Are they not allowing them to walk into the neighborhood drug store and buy condoms, or spermicidal foam, or any of the other dozens of contraceptives? Are they hindering them from taking some of their own money, walking into a doctors office and paying the $60 fee to be scene and the $50 dollar prescription? Life and it's choices have consequences. If a women chooses to have unprotected sex, that is her choice. If a man chooses to have unprotected sex it's his choice. People need to take RESPONSIBILITY for their actions. I doubt there are few people out there who don't know that the consequences of unprotected sex are often pregnancy and STD's. I'll believe the republicans have blood on there hands when you show me how they are forcing people to have unprotected sex. Hell I walk into the bathroom of my local grocery store and buy and FDA approved condom for 25 cents. If I CHOOSE not to use it, I suffer the consequences. There is not statute stating I must have sex, or preventing me from budgeting for birth control myself. It's another part of the nanny state that democrats are working towards.
  18. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Here; You can't even keep up with the crap your spewing anymore, you copy and paste and copy and paste and don't really know what your putting down, you forget stuff, it's a little sad. Thanks for playing.
  19. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    No, you skewed it the way that made your argument sound best, like most liberals do. I am not backpedaling, and have no need to, my family did what it had to do to survive with out being a leech on society. I would love people to have the devotion my parents did to their children to make ends meet on their own to instill a strong work ethic in there children. Show me in the post where I say every struggling American needs to dig through a dumpster? Show me that, in black and white, or get off you high horse, I can contort your words too, however I like to be honest and not do that. Try it sometime. You take every last letter to a disgusting extreme to try and get a point across, your intellectually dishonest, it's quite disturbing. I don't do the job I do for the money or the benefits, I volunteered throughout high school and college as a firefighter, no pay, no benefits, and showed up day in and day out to help others, not for money, because there was none, not for health insurance, because there was none, not for retirement, because there was none. I'm not allowed to volunteer anymore, because of my union, or I would still be doing it. If walmart's hiring why are there so many unemployed cm? They must not want to work right. You heard it here first, cm says the unemployed masses refuse to work for walmart where they can climb the ladder to management!!!! Wow, that sounds dishonest, well, cm would say it so I can too.
  20. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Are you saying that a lack of hard work does not lead to job loss? In your field we all know it doesn't, once you reach tenure as a teacher you can do nothing, have failing students, fail your tests, rape your students, you name it (again, I'm not saying YOU personally did these things okay, focus on that while you read so your next post doesn't say that I called you a rapist because I know if I didn't make that clear you would) and you can't be fire. New York has upwards of 700 teachers getting paid to surf the internet and play scrabble because they can't be fired, thanks unions! So in part, yes I'm saying if people lose there jobs it sometimes has to do with them not working hard. If I had to layoff ten people who do you think I'm going to choose from my 50 employees, the hardest workers? The ones who show up every morning 10 minutes early with a smile on their face? Or the one who whines and complains and I catch sitting around all doing nothing? Of course some people's job loss was beyond their control. But not all of them.
  21. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    I'm not backpedalling on anything, I was very clear about what I meant, you feel free to spin it in your mind in whatever way you need to to make yourself feel good. "You" was meant as a generality, not you specifically. The world doesn't actually revolve around you, get over yourself, your acting like a sixteen year old girl. And my union, as I've said wont allow me not to be a part of it.
  22. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Thethousands of mortgage defaults and foreclosures in the "subprime"housing market (i.e., mortgage holders with poor credit ratings) is the directresult of thirty years of government policy that has forced banks to make badloans to un-creditworthy borrowers. The policy in question is the 1977Community Reinvestment Act (CRA), which compels banks to make loans tolow-income borrowers and in what the supporters of the Act call"communities of color" that they might not otherwise make based on purelyeconomic criteria. Theoriginal lobbyists for the CRA were the hardcore leftists who supported theCarter administration and were often rewarded for their support with governmentgrants and programs like the CRA that they benefited from. These includedvarious "neighborhood organizations," as they like to callthemselves, such as "ACORN" (Association of Community Organizationsfor Reform Now). These organizations claim that over $1 trillion in CRA loanshave been made, although no one seems to know the magnitude with muchcertainty. A U.S. Senate Banking Committee staffer told me about ten years agothat at least $100 billion in such loans had been made in the first twentyyears of the Act. So-called "communitygroups" like ACORN benefit themselves from theCRA through a process that sounds like legalized extortion. The CRA is enforcedby four federal government bureaucracies: the Fed, the Comptroller of theCurrency, the Office of Thrift Supervision, and the Federal Deposit InsuranceCorporation. The law is set up so that any bank merger, branch expansion, ornew branch creation can be postponed or prohibited by any of these fourbureaucracies if a CRA "protest" is issued by a "communitygroup." This can cost banks great sums of money, and the "communitygroups" understand this perfectly well. It is their leverage. They usethis leverage to get the banks to give them millions of dollars as well as promising to make acertain amount of bad loans in their communities. A mannamed Bruce Marks became quite notorious during the last decade for pressuringbanks to earmark literally billions of dollars to his organization, the"Neighborhood Assistance Corporation of America." He once boasted tothe New York Times that he had "won" loancommitments totaling $3.8billion fromBank of America, First Union Corporation, and the Fleet Financial Group. Andthat is just one "community group" operating in one city — Boston. Bankshave been placed in a Catch 22 situation by the CRA: If they comply, they knowthey will have to suffer from more loan defaults. If they don't comply, theyface financial penalties and, worse yet, their business plans for mergers,branch expansions, etc. can be blocked by CRA protesters, which can cost alarge corporation like Bank of America billions of dollars. Like mostbusinesses, they have largely buckled under and have surrendered to theirbureaucratic masters. Consequently,banks in every community in America have been forced to hold a portfolio of badloans, euphemistically referred to as "subprime" loans. In order tocompensate themselves for the added risk of extending these loans, many lendershave increased the lending fees associated with mortgage loans. This is simplyan indirect way of doing what banks always do — and what they must do to remainsolvent: charging effectively higher rates of interest on riskier loans. Butthis is discriminatory!, complained the "community organizations."Thus, if one browses the ACORN web site, one can read of their boasts of having"predatory lending laws" passed in numerous states which outlaw suchfees, prohibiting banks from protecting themselves from the added risk involvedin making forced loans to "subprime" borrowers. These are price control laws, and price controls alwayscause shortages. Normally, banks would respond to such laws by extending fewerriskier loans. But in this case the banks areforced tocontinue making the marginal loans by their bureaucratic masters at the Fed andthe other three federal bureaucracies mentioned above. So-called predatorylending laws therefore force the banks to "eat" the losses. This isundoubtedly a contributing factor to the bankruptcy of dozens of mortgagelenders over the past year. Thenof course there is the issue of the Fed's monetary policy having created thehousing bubble, characterized by a spectacular escalation of real estate valuesin every American city over the past decade or so. This created a furtherproblem for the financial institutions that are victimized by the CRA. They areforced to make a certain amount of bad loans, but because of the Fed-createdexplosion in housing prices, many thousands of subprime borrowers no longerqualified, by a long stretch, for conventional mortgages based on theirincomes. Theonly way these borrowers could qualify for their mortgage loans (even ignoringtheir bad credit ratings) was to take out adjustable rate mortgages, some ofwhich had astonishingly low first-year rates in the 3 percent range, andsometimes lower. This is what has largely fueled the subprime mortgage meltdown— the inability of thousands of subprime borrowers to afford their mortgagesnow that their rates have adjusted upward. Thus, the combination of the Fed'senforcement of the CRA (with the help of political pressure groups like ACORN)and its post 9/11 monetary policy in general are the reasons for the burstingreal estate bubble and the "subprime" mortgage meltdown. Don'texpect to read about this in the "mainstream media," however, whichgenerally views groups like ACORN as heroic champions of the poor, laws likethe CRA as anti-discrimination laws, and places all of the blame for the subprimemortgage meltdown on greedy capitalists, especially mortgage brokers.Encouraged by such reporting, the odious Senator Charles Schumer of New Yorkhas promised federal legislation that will reign in these miscreants, while theBush administration is proposing an indirect bank bailout by having the FederalHousing Administration cover many of the bad "subprime" loans. Thiswill create what economists call a "moral hazard" by encouraging evenmore bad loans to be extended in the future. Every banker in America will beglad to extend loans (at high rates of interest) to the most uncreditworthyborrowers if he thinks there is no possibility of default with the FHAeffectively guaranteeing the loan. And then the incentiveto work hard is what? If you know you aren't going to lose anything if you loseyour job, why worry about it. Eh, I'll find a job eventually. Negative. The whole "personalresponsibility" argument, is based on what that stands for and represents. Iwas just watching America Live with Megyn Kelly and she had some left wing guyon who was on the same premise as you that it's all the banks fault, but hefinally acted like an adult and said someof the blame is on the bank, but the majority has to be with the person whotook out the loan they couldn't afford. And as I've stated before, if I had thechoice of not being in my union, I would, as would many of my coworkers. But ifI choose to opt out guess what? The union still take $92 a month from me. How ridiculousis that? I'm all for the poor andmiddle class getting richer, but why must the rich get poorer? Can you explainthat to me? Well quite simply if wedidn't have SS we would have 32% of our annual budget freed up to use, whichplays into the phase out of SS being a good idea. Why, in these timeswould their power or political clout have been enhanced? Times are bad, notgood. Things don't usually enhance during bad times. Unfortunately youtypically need money to make money, so the wealthy don't usually lose a wholelot, which is why many strive to get there. Again why should the "playing field"be level? Why shouldn't some have more than others? Those who work harderdeserve more. If you want everyone to be equal, try some communist country, butthat's not how it works in a capitalist one. If it were easy to get rich,everyone would be, and it would mean nothing. It shouldn't, however beimpossible to get rich, which because of our capitalist nation it's not. It canbe done with hard work, determination, and sometimes a little bit of luck. Entitlements make up themajority of our national budget, so one could deduce that if they wereeliminated or restricted, that we would then have much more money to spend. Of course they ship jobsoverseas, America has(thanks to unions) largely priced itself out ofmanufacturing of goods. Why pay an American worker $20 an hour and have thembitch and moan all day long about it and only want more from you, when you canpay someone in another country $3 or $4 an hour and they are just thankful tohave a job. Companies are in the business of making money, not supporting youor me. If I own a business and I pay you $15 an hour to do your job and youcome to me and demand $25 and tell me you won't work for any less, I'll fireyou, because guess what there is 100 people in line behind you who would loveto have that job. It's time EVERYONEstarted acting responsibly. Starting with living within your means, that goesnot only for people but for governments especially, local, city, state, and thetrainwreck money spending national government we have.
  23. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Classy, even for you. As I stated before, the point of that was not to say thats what people should have to do, but it's what one family chose to do in order to not take handouts from the government, because they were determined to make it on their own. If not everyone is willing to go to those extremes I understand. However if you choose to not try at all and immediately to turn suckle on the teet of government handouts, screw you.
  24. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    Why are you trying to convince me that the bail out was unfair? I didn't want it. I would have much rather let them suffer the consequences of their actions. But nooo, they were "too big to fail" what a bunch of crap. They should have failed, because they DID fail. Letting them fall apart would have been a great example for us to put in the history books so we don't make the same mistakes again, which we will because we now the government will just bail us out of it. Who cares if we can afford and what we're doing to the economy of not only the nation but the whole world. Here is an article written in January listing the top 4 reasons for foreclosures:
  25. ariscus99

    Democrat COWARDS

    The war cry of the left: "It's everyone else's fault!!!!!!!!!!!!!" I took out a huge loan I couldn't afford, damn you banker's, and Bush....damn you Bush. I got a second on my home to by a mercedes and a flat screen, but I lost my job and have two mortgages to pay now, damn you wall street, and damn you Bush, I deserved that car and those tv's.

PatchAid Vitamin Patches

×