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A warning from Scots Historian Professor Alexander Tyler, circa 1787, Re: The Fall of the Athenian Republic. "A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse (generous gifts) from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, (which is) always followed by a dictatorship." "The average age of the world's greatest civilization has been two hundred years. These nations have progressed through this sequence. From: bondage to spiritual faith; from: spiritual faith to great courage; from: courage to liberty; from: liberty to abundance, from: abundance to complacency; from: complacency to apathy, from: apathy to dependence, from: dependence back into bondage." Professor Joseph Olson of Hamline University of Law, St. Paul, MN passed on that gem & provides the following 2000 election facts for consideration. Population of counties won by Gore 127 million, won by Bush 143 million Sq. miles of country won by Gore 580,000, won by Bush 2,427,000 States won by Gore 19, by Bush 29 Murder per 100,000 residents in counties won by Gore 13.2 by Bush 2.1 (not a typo) Professor Olson adds, "And may I add that the map of the territory Bush won was (mostly) the land owned by the people of this great country. Not the citizens living in cities owned by the government and living off the government.... </font> |
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If you want answers to that Rokenn...yer gonna have to ask the guy who said it. [img]smile.gif[/img] I just posted the article. I think if you look at the Cities though more land is held/owned by the state and feds than is by the general populace...in the country where multi-acre homes are not rare, would account for the comment and makes sense....Bush won all the large rural states. As for elections being won by republicans...theres a VERY minor majority of republicans in federal office at the moment...its in no way skewed far to one side or the other. Edit: Cause I spelled Rokenn wrong *sigh*</font> [ 08-28-2003, 02:45 PM: Message edited by: MagiK ] |
Looks like Bush has no serious worries for the upcoming elections then.
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Interesting points.
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The dems are screwed for keeps if they don't turn their backs on the extreme left wing nut jobs that are being courted by most of their presidential candidates. The only one coming close to making sense is Joe Lieberman.
Maybe you didn't notice Rokken, but promising goodies to anyone and everyone is how the dems stayed in power so long. And it's time registered repubs put a stop to this recent rash of spending the GOP is engaged in. They are starting to spend like dems. |
Khazadman, while Lieberman is up there on the "makes some sense" list, Howard Dean is at the top in my book. Check his deanforamerica website and tell me if you think he's a left wingnut. He was very good for business in VT -- and did it without pissing off the enviros. He actually took a state in debt and now it has a "rainy day fund." How many politicians exhibit that much common sense?
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Well, give me a good Democrat to run the economy right, and as far as I'm concerned he can keep whatever he wants under his desk. :D I don't even care what flavored cigar he likes. [img]graemlins/biglaugh.gif[/img]
[ 08-28-2003, 04:59 PM: Message edited by: Timber Loftis ] |
"From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury, with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, (which is) always followed by a dictatorship."
I think we are all aware that just because a politician promises something, doesn't mean that they will deliver. That is the reason that a democracy can exist. :D |
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I'm curious though - has anyone ever sued a politician for "Breach of (election) promise"? When a politician promises on TV to do x,y, and Z, isn't that a verbal contract that he has undertaken? |
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John D, I'm a believer that microeconomic issues translate just fine to macroeconomics. VT is generally a poor state. Folks there make a low salary comparatively. Yet, housing is not cheap. And, goods cost as much. Yet, the people there generally enjoy a better quality of life ("QOL"). I think being able to adequately manage such a small state and its concerns, and do it so well, can very well prepare someone to run the country. VT's 600,000 folks divided into three distinct geographic regions, with some heavy pockets of money/new-wave academes and Yuppies (Burlington environs) as well as heavy pockets of abject poverty, present a full panopoly of issues and concerns.
Besides, I really don't want D.C. micromanaging Alabama or Kentucky's affairs. I don't need a President who tells Mayor Daley how to run Chicago -- I want one who is able to allow Mayor Daley to do his job for himself (as disgruntled as I am with the Mayor these days). |
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The problem I have is the business friendly part. Business friendly compared to what? N.Y., N.H. , or Mass. "Hale" the old USSR was Damn near business Friendly compared to Mass. ;) |
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I'm curious though - has anyone ever sued a politician for "Breach of (election) promise"? When a politician promises on TV to do x,y, and Z, isn't that a verbal contract that he has undertaken? </font>[/QUOTE]Interresting question, i don't know if it ever happened. But i don't think such a case would have a reasonable chance of succes, situations in a country keep changing, and the politicians act on these changes. If during his campaign Balkenende would have said he was going to do what he is doing now, he wouldn't be prime minister as we speak. But i assume he didn't know the country's financial status back then. [ 09-03-2003, 10:08 PM: Message edited by: johnny ] |
Well, speaking specifically about the law in the Netherlands - a verbal contract is not invalidated by changing environment but can only be invalidated/changed/cancelled if the other party agrees to a change or acts outside the terms of the contract.
That means that if I promise to paint your house by the end of the week and but fail to do so because I was involved in an accident, you can still sue me for any damages (emotional, physical, financial) etc that you incurred as a result of my failure to live up to the contract. As far as the law is concerned, I should have had a contingency plan in place for just such an eventuality... The classic mistake that many expatriates make in the Netherlands is when buying a house. Now all Dutch people know that you that when you make a verbal offer for a property that it is important to make the caveat 'subject to raising the neccessary funds' - if you don't, you get stung. Quite a large number of expats have made offers on properties before getting a mortage approved - and when they failed to get a high enough mortage, they were still hit with a bill from the house vendor: "Sorry, but your inability to raise a mortgage is not my problem - let's discuss damages... [ 09-04-2003, 04:54 AM: Message edited by: Skunk ] |
Well, personally, I've been living in Vermont for over 14 years and my wife and I were doing a heck of a lot better when Clinton was President and Dean was Governer. Dean ran a "small state" pretty damn well in my opinion. It is a micrcosm. He balanced evironment with business, gave health care to all children and most of the poor, balanced the budget every year, etc. That sounds like something this country could use right now. I'd stack Dean's record as Governer against Bush in Texas any day.
Mark |
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<font color = lightgreen>I thought the death of democracy would be when voting blocks, from a demographic point of view, care only about increasing their own political power base and not on trying to bring about positive results. In short, the blocks will simply want political power without accomplishing anything else simply to have the political power, then demand benefits from a politician or they might vote for someone else--this is sometimes called extortion.
Skunk, I don't think anyone will ever try suing a politician, nor would they win. The politician may always claim "the other guys stopped me, but I was trying my best to fulfill my promises--it's not my fault". I still think a random lottery will breathe new life into the representative democracy, but I shudder at how many nutcases would gain temporary power with that method. Back on topic...yes, I agree with Professor Tyler. It is only a matter of time before our democracy collapses into itself; the lessons of history prove that it eventually will.</font> |
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