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Main Forums => Politics => Topic started by: AZRedhawk44 on September 26, 2011, 12:11:53 PM

Title: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: AZRedhawk44 on September 26, 2011, 12:11:53 PM
http://www.gallup.com/poll/149678/Americans-Express-Historic-Negativity-Toward-Government.aspx

Awesome.  We're waking up, at least.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: roo_ster on September 26, 2011, 12:25:25 PM
http://www.gallup.com/poll/149678/Americans-Express-Historic-Negativity-Toward-Government.aspx

Awesome.  We're waking up, at least.

Yep, almost half of America, it seems.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Viking on September 26, 2011, 12:28:22 PM
It's the other half that is worrying - the half that doesn't see .gov as a threat to liberty.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Balog on September 26, 2011, 01:16:16 PM
It's the other half that is worrying - the half that doesn't see .gov as a threat to liberty.

I winder how that half corresponds to the roughly half that pay no federal income tax?
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: longeyes on September 26, 2011, 01:23:53 PM
As far as governability goes it's a critical mass.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Doggy Daddy on September 26, 2011, 01:25:40 PM
http://www.gallup.com/poll/149678/Americans-Express-Historic-Negativity-Toward-Government.aspx

Awesome.  We're waking up, at least.

I just posted that link on my FB page.  My thinking is that there are more than 49%, but they're leery about admitting it.  Perhaps if they see that they're not alone...

DD
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: longeyes on September 26, 2011, 01:35:06 PM
What it adds up to is that "The System" has run its course.  That doesn't mean our Founding principles, it means perpetual Congressional fiefdoms, lobbyists buying and selling power, obscene cronyism, psychopathic proligacy in spending--all of this is OVER.  It's just a matter of time before this becomes painfully obvious.  We've used the term "gridlock" for a long time; what we have is a seized-up engine that needs re-building or replacement, one hopes in accord with the basic tenets of two centuries ago.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 26, 2011, 01:42:15 PM
It's because we feel so threatened by a black president.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: longeyes on September 26, 2011, 02:48:30 PM
Yes, Freud predicted all this long ago--that it? =D
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 26, 2011, 03:44:25 PM
As a member of the White Straight Christian Male Microsoft-using Right-Handed Patriarchy, it disturbs me that anyone not exactly like me, with my bourgeois values, would have power. Also, I want secretaries to pay higher taxes than me, until they die from a lack of health insurance.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: longeyes on September 26, 2011, 10:46:44 PM
I was with you until you got to Microsoft.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Jamisjockey on September 27, 2011, 01:03:16 PM
It's the other half that is worrying - the half that doesn't see .gov as a threat to liberty.

That would be the 47% that doesn't pay income taxes.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Jamie B on September 27, 2011, 03:08:28 PM
http://www.gallup.com/poll/149678/Americans-Express-Historic-Negativity-Toward-Government.aspx

Awesome.  We're waking up, at least.

If the Fed were a car, it would be an Edsel.

A plane, the Spruce Goose

A high tech lighter, a book of matches.

Sarsaparilla, New Coke

Entertainment, Microsoft Web TV

Fast Food, the Arch Deluxe

Video, Sony Betamax

Glad to see others are waking up to these Federal idiots.





Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 27, 2011, 04:02:58 PM
I was with you until you got to Microsoft.

You are the other, and must be oppressed.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Doggy Daddy on September 27, 2011, 04:09:13 PM

Video, Sony Betamax


Comparison fail.  The Beta was better than VHS.  I blame Disney for sabotaging Beta.

DD
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 27, 2011, 04:14:14 PM
If we're nit-picking, then govt is the Big Mac on the fast food menu. Tastes like crap and money is wasted on bread, but PEOPLE KEEP BUYING IT!
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: TechMan on September 27, 2011, 05:07:27 PM
Comparison fail.  The Beta was better than VHS.  I blame Disney for sabotaging Beta.

DD

DD actually blame the porn industry and Sony's own closed mindedness.

http://www.macworld.com/article/50627/2006/05/pornhd.html (http://www.macworld.com/article/50627/2006/05/pornhd.html)
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: bedlamite on September 27, 2011, 05:17:33 PM
No Beta porn didn't help, but the main reason VHS won was that Beta tapes started out as one hour, not long enough for movie rentals.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Kingcreek on September 27, 2011, 05:35:43 PM
almost half sees DaGubmint as a threat.
but almost no one is willing to do anything about it.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Doggy Daddy on September 27, 2011, 06:43:31 PM
DD actually blame the porn industry and Sony's own closed mindedness.

http://www.macworld.com/article/50627/2006/05/pornhd.html (http://www.macworld.com/article/50627/2006/05/pornhd.html)

Or the lawsuit against Sony by Hollywood (chiefly Disney) that wound up giving VHS an 8 year head start.
http://www.r-vcr.com/betamax.htm (http://www.r-vcr.com/betamax.htm)
Quote
Sony came to market expecting to battle shoddy TV sets, but not the US Supreme Court. This effort took precious time and money out of its marketing plan. Sony eventually was completely vindicated but winning this battle meant that it would lose the war. VHS waited a year to come out in 1976 and was not named in the litigation. (However obviously the film studios could apply any ruling against Betamax to other systems as well.) This gave VHS a protected environment to be nurtured without having to face the full fury of both Sony and Hollywood.

DD

[/threadjack]
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: MicroBalrog on September 27, 2011, 06:53:20 PM
almost half sees DaGubmint as a threat.
but almost no one is willing to do anything about it.

/thread.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: RevDisk on September 27, 2011, 09:44:33 PM
almost half sees DaGubmint as a threat.
but almost no one is willing to do anything about it.

Uhm.   Gee, because not much that can be done, honestly. 

Let me put this first.  I served in the military, have been involved in politics, have done lobbying, have donated funds to groups, have volunteered at groups, have protested, etc.  Admittedly, never did or wanted to do any violent sort of political activity like the anarchist twits that burn something whenever the WIPO or G8 meet, and I don't want to. 

Having done all the stuff you can legally do to make a positive change in government, I came to a sharp realization.  Except to feel good, it's only temporary gains.  You might make headway in one area, but you'll lose it in a dozen other areas.  For every one dollar you can use to buy a politician or bureaucrat, the government has thousands of dollars it can use to bribe itself.

The government is rigged to only allow two parties.  It's nowhere in the Constitution, but that's only sometimes respected anyways.  Throw out one party, you'll get the other one which is just as bad when it's in power.  Good luck getting good candidates, because those are also largely controlled by the parties.  Good luck "working within the system" to reform either party.  It's not a 100% system.  Sure, you can get a Ron Paul or some other wild card not endorsed by their party.  But the point is that the system does not have to be 100%.  Just being even 98% effective means for 50 to 1 odds against the wildcards.  Most of those wildcards get absorbed anyways into corruption, crony capitalism and all the other perks of the job. 

You play by rules stacked against you, don't be surprised when you lose.  Each and every time.  You need to change the rules of the game.  Try to do so with elections and you'll lose.  Try to do so with money, and you'll have ten times as much extorted as you volunteer in bribes/lobbying.  Try to do so with nonviolent protest, and you'll be ignored.  Try to do so with violence, and you'll be curb stomped by police, military, intel folks, etc.  Try to do so with a civil war and you'll be considered (correctly) as a nut.  Even if you were not considered a nut and were successful, you'd be looking at massive piles of bodies.

Ain't worth it.  Just get yourself in the best position possible, build up a good network of folks, and let the situation go as it will.  Try to make a positive change, so that you can sleep at night if nothing else.  But don't be too hard on yourself when you make one mild step forward with freedom, and get kicked a dozen steps back. 

Go ahead and call me a defeatist.  I'm just not dumb enough to throw money, time and resources down a hole unless I'm getting something out of it.  The returns on investment suck, frankly.  Exactly how much money has the 2nd Amendment folks dumped in bribes, propaganda, et al over the last two decades or more?  We got the Supreme Court to admit that the right exists, and we made otherwise modest returns at the federal level.  In exchange for billions of dollars and tens/hundreds of thousands of man-hours.  Plus we LOST numerous other rights at the same time we made modest gains.  That's sorta the point.  We get X dollars taken from us by law, we give up Y dollars to use legalized corruption to not get completely hosed, and we're rewarded with small gains in compensation for major losses.  The entire point is to benefit the political folks.  They created a system where their side automatically wins, nearly every time. 



Disclaimer:  State level is another completely different conversation, I'm just talking federal level.  Sometimes at the state and local level, properly utilized resources can still make an impact.  Due to apathy, more than anything else. 
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Waitone on September 28, 2011, 08:28:29 AM
Could explain why Ron Paul is rising in the polls while establishment candidate Romney, Perry,Gingrich, Huntsman, et al are cratering.  Two nights ago I saw a CNN reports that said Paul was "exploding".
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: TommyGunn on September 28, 2011, 11:56:10 AM
No Beta porn didn't help, but the main reason VHS won was that Beta tapes started out as one hour, not long enough for movie rentals.
The longest Beta tapes, IIRC, were L-830, about five hours in the Beta III mode.  VHS could go eight hours with a T-160.
Originally Betamax was a better, higher quality system.  It was more durable as the tape path had fewer "jinks" in it.  Sony came out with a audio Hi-Fi Beta system which was great (I had one) and considered that VHS couldn't do it, because there wasn't room on the tape for audio tracks.
Uh, not so fast.  Sony was right, there wasn't room -- to do it the same way Betamax had.
VHS decided to multiplex the hi-fi over the video.  That and HQ pretty much brought VHS up to near Betamax quality.
And, Sony rested on it's laurels.
So the VHS format, capable of eight hours of pretty decent quality Hi-Fi recording, won out.
And I wound up duping every Beta tape I had over to VHS. 
And it continues; now I'm making DVDs of the VHS tapes. :facepalm: ;/

The jackwagon that develops the next video recording format is going to be my personal archenemy. :mad: :mad: :mad:
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: AZRedhawk44 on September 28, 2011, 12:00:55 PM
TG: The nice thing about the last 3 dominant media formats is that each player-platform is backwards compatible with old format media.

Blu-Ray players will play DVD's and audio CD's.
DVD players will play audio CD's.



However, the winning-est way to deal with media anymore is to rip all your media, sans DRM, to a NAS in your home and have them play on your home theater with the help of a computer-type device that can access them.

That "should" be forever compatible for the foreseeable future.  The "good guys" seem to break DRM quickly enough each time a new methodology comes out for this to remain a viable technique.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: longeyes on September 28, 2011, 12:48:41 PM
Uhm.   Gee, because not much that can be done, honestly. 

Let me put this first.  I served in the military, have been involved in politics, have done lobbying, have donated funds to groups, have volunteered at groups, have protested, etc.  Admittedly, never did or wanted to do any violent sort of political activity like the anarchist twits that burn something whenever the WIPO or G8 meet, and I don't want to. 

Having done all the stuff you can legally do to make a positive change in government, I came to a sharp realization.  Except to feel good, it's only temporary gains.  You might make headway in one area, but you'll lose it in a dozen other areas.  For every one dollar you can use to buy a politician or bureaucrat, the government has thousands of dollars it can use to bribe itself.

The government is rigged to only allow two parties.  It's nowhere in the Constitution, but that's only sometimes respected anyways.  Throw out one party, you'll get the other one which is just as bad when it's in power.  Good luck getting good candidates, because those are also largely controlled by the parties.  Good luck "working within the system" to reform either party.  It's not a 100% system.  Sure, you can get a Ron Paul or some other wild card not endorsed by their party.  But the point is that the system does not have to be 100%.  Just being even 98% effective means for 50 to 1 odds against the wildcards.  Most of those wildcards get absorbed anyways into corruption, crony capitalism and all the other perks of the job. 

You play by rules stacked against you, don't be surprised when you lose.  Each and every time.  You need to change the rules of the game.  Try to do so with elections and you'll lose.  Try to do so with money, and you'll have ten times as much extorted as you volunteer in bribes/lobbying.  Try to do so with nonviolent protest, and you'll be ignored.  Try to do so with violence, and you'll be curb stomped by police, military, intel folks, etc.  Try to do so with a civil war and you'll be considered (correctly) as a nut.  Even if you were not considered a nut and were successful, you'd be looking at massive piles of bodies.

Ain't worth it.  Just get yourself in the best position possible, build up a good network of folks, and let the situation go as it will.  Try to make a positive change, so that you can sleep at night if nothing else.  But don't be too hard on yourself when you make one mild step forward with freedom, and get kicked a dozen steps back. 

Go ahead and call me a defeatist.  I'm just not dumb enough to throw money, time and resources down a hole unless I'm getting something out of it.  The returns on investment suck, frankly.  Exactly how much money has the 2nd Amendment folks dumped in bribes, propaganda, et al over the last two decades or more?  We got the Supreme Court to admit that the right exists, and we made otherwise modest returns at the federal level.  In exchange for billions of dollars and tens/hundreds of thousands of man-hours.  Plus we LOST numerous other rights at the same time we made modest gains.  That's sorta the point.  We get X dollars taken from us by law, we give up Y dollars to use legalized corruption to not get completely hosed, and we're rewarded with small gains in compensation for major losses.  The entire point is to benefit the political folks.  They created a system where their side automatically wins, nearly every time. 



Disclaimer:  State level is another completely different conversation, I'm just talking federal level.  Sometimes at the state and local level, properly utilized resources can still make an impact.  Due to apathy, more than anything else. 

Well, you discarded hard resistance, and you omitted emigration, but overall I can't say your picture's inaccurate (as I see it).  The car's seized up and need a re-build.  Or maybe we just need to buy a new one.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 28, 2011, 01:31:52 PM
So the VHS format, capable of eight hours of pretty decent quality Hi-Fi recording, won out.
And I wound up duping every Beta tape I had over to VHS. 
And it continues; now I'm making DVDs of the VHS tapes. :facepalm: ;/

The jackwagon that develops the next video recording format is going to be my personal archenemy. :mad: :mad: :mad:

Or you could hang on to your VCR and DVD player,  in addition to the new format, and quitcher whinin'.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Tallpine on September 28, 2011, 02:05:46 PM
Well, you discarded hard resistance, and you omitted emigration, but overall I can't say your picture's inaccurate (as I see it).  The car's seized up and need a re-build.  Or maybe we just need to buy a new one.

Or walk or ride horseback  ;)
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: makattak on September 28, 2011, 02:16:20 PM
Uhm.   Gee, because not much that can be done, honestly. 

Let me put this first.  I served in the military, have been involved in politics, have done lobbying, have donated funds to groups, have volunteered at groups, have protested, etc.  Admittedly, never did or wanted to do any violent sort of political activity like the anarchist twits that burn something whenever the WIPO or G8 meet, and I don't want to. 

Having done all the stuff you can legally do to make a positive change in government, I came to a sharp realization.  Except to feel good, it's only temporary gains.  You might make headway in one area, but you'll lose it in a dozen other areas.  For every one dollar you can use to buy a politician or bureaucrat, the government has thousands of dollars it can use to bribe itself.

The government is rigged to only allow two parties.  It's nowhere in the Constitution, but that's only sometimes respected anyways.  Throw out one party, you'll get the other one which is just as bad when it's in power.  Good luck getting good candidates, because those are also largely controlled by the parties.  Good luck "working within the system" to reform either party.  It's not a 100% system.  Sure, you can get a Ron Paul or some other wild card not endorsed by their party.  But the point is that the system does not have to be 100%.  Just being even 98% effective means for 50 to 1 odds against the wildcards.  Most of those wildcards get absorbed anyways into corruption, crony capitalism and all the other perks of the job. 

You play by rules stacked against you, don't be surprised when you lose.  Each and every time.  You need to change the rules of the game.  Try to do so with elections and you'll lose.  Try to do so with money, and you'll have ten times as much extorted as you volunteer in bribes/lobbying.  Try to do so with nonviolent protest, and you'll be ignored.  Try to do so with violence, and you'll be curb stomped by police, military, intel folks, etc.  Try to do so with a civil war and you'll be considered (correctly) as a nut.  Even if you were not considered a nut and were successful, you'd be looking at massive piles of bodies.

Ain't worth it.  Just get yourself in the best position possible, build up a good network of folks, and let the situation go as it will.  Try to make a positive change, so that you can sleep at night if nothing else.  But don't be too hard on yourself when you make one mild step forward with freedom, and get kicked a dozen steps back. 

Go ahead and call me a defeatist.  I'm just not dumb enough to throw money, time and resources down a hole unless I'm getting something out of it.  The returns on investment suck, frankly.  Exactly how much money has the 2nd Amendment folks dumped in bribes, propaganda, et al over the last two decades or more?  We got the Supreme Court to admit that the right exists, and we made otherwise modest returns at the federal level.  In exchange for billions of dollars and tens/hundreds of thousands of man-hours.  Plus we LOST numerous other rights at the same time we made modest gains.  That's sorta the point.  We get X dollars taken from us by law, we give up Y dollars to use legalized corruption to not get completely hosed, and we're rewarded with small gains in compensation for major losses.  The entire point is to benefit the political folks.  They created a system where their side automatically wins, nearly every time. 

Disclaimer:  State level is another completely different conversation, I'm just talking federal level.  Sometimes at the state and local level, properly utilized resources can still make an impact.  Due to apathy, more than anything else. 

Hmm... it's almost like, despite having the same Consitution (with a few changes) as 200 years ago, the system no longer works. Almost as though our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people and is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Balog on September 28, 2011, 02:54:34 PM
Hmm... it's almost like, despite having the same Consitution (with a few changes) as 200 years ago, the system no longer works. Almost as though our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people and is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.

(https://armedpolitesociety.com/proxy.php?request=http%3A%2F%2Fknowyourmeme.com%2Fi%2F681%2Foriginal%2Fwhat-you-did-there-i-see-it.thumbnail.jpg&hash=5b1742f5b3dfc4251a211cda3fdf18b8f7c417f7)
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: MicroBalrog on September 28, 2011, 05:15:15 PM
Quote
Hmm... it's almost like, despite having the same Consitution (with a few changes) as 200 years ago, the system no longer works. Almost as though our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people and is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.

Are you implying Americans are an immoral people?

Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: TommyGunn on September 28, 2011, 05:40:19 PM
Quote from: TommyGunn
So the VHS format, capable of eight hours of pretty decent quality Hi-Fi recording, won out.
And I wound up duping every Beta tape I had over to VHS.  
And it continues; now I'm making DVDs of the VHS tapes.  

The jackwagon that develops the next video recording format is going to be my personal archenemy.
Or you could hang on to your VCR and DVD player,  in addition to the new format, and quitcher whinin'.

OK, but when the VCR starts chewing up the tape, it'll be your fault, and given how much you're being held accountable for already, one might think you'd have a BIG enough guilt complex as it is!! >:D >:D [popcorn]
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Balog on September 28, 2011, 09:02:25 PM
Are you implying Americans are an immoral people?



As a society, yes. But then you know you define morality a lot differently than mak or I would...
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: RevDisk on September 28, 2011, 09:08:02 PM
Well, you discarded hard resistance, and you omitted emigration, but overall I can't say your picture's inaccurate (as I see it).  The car's seized up and need a re-build.  Or maybe we just need to buy a new one.

Hard resistance.  Such as?  Not paying your taxes?  Work for cash with no benefits?  Like anyone cares.  You'll get thrown in jail and your stuff seized. 

Emigration?  Sure.  If you have cash, Switzerland, UAE, Monte Carlo and a few other places offer you plenty of freedom.  If you don't have cash, you can try Central or South America.  Standard of living is lower, but 90% of the time you'll at least be ignored by the government.

Neither are great options.


Hmm... it's almost like, despite having the same Consitution (with a few changes) as 200 years ago, the system no longer works. Almost as though our Constitution was made only for a moral and religious people and is wholly inadequate to the government of any other.

BWAHAHAHA, that's awesome.  And wrong. 

Two hundred years ago, women and folks that weren't white were rarely given an ounce of government protection.  We massacred the ever lovin' heck out out of the Natives.  Some had it coming, some did not.  And remember, even the folks that WROTE the Constitution were not lilly white paragons of morality.  It worked because of the disposition of the folks at the time, the limitations of the tech, the expansion of the union (always had a frontier to run to), etc

As much as I love the Constitution, I'm not blind that our current position was partially engineered by some of the folks that wrote the Constitution.  Hamilton wanted what we have today.  Actually, he wanted what we'll likely have in 20 years.  Shame no one was kind enough to put a bullet in him sooner, would have given the US an extra 50 years to whatever lifespan our country has. 

I deeply recommend buying a David Drake book called "Patriots".  It's a fictionalization of Ethan Allen.  It's on webscription for $4-6, worth it.



Are you implying Americans are an immoral people?

Most folks are, always have been and always will be "moral enough".  Not great, but far from bad either. 
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 28, 2011, 10:15:13 PM
Two hundred years ago, women and folks that weren't white were rarely given an ounce of government protection.  We massacred the ever lovin' heck out out of the Natives.  Some had it coming, some did not.  And remember, even the folks that WROTE the Constitution were not lilly white paragons of morality.  It worked because of the disposition of the folks at the time, the limitations of the tech, the expansion of the union (always had a frontier to run to), etc

I think you support mak's (John Adams') point. The Constitution had a Bill of Rights, but those only applied to the degree that people were moral enough to care about blacks, women, etc. Where the Constitution failed for it's first hundred or so years, it failed where people were not moral enough. Isn't that also true today? The Constitution succeeds in protecting the rights of ethnic minorities, for example, because we've become moral on that issue. It is currently failing to protect private property, because we have embraced the immorality of taking from those who work and giving to those who won't.

I suppose that's true of many other forms of government.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: MicroBalrog on September 28, 2011, 10:27:46 PM
Quote
It is currently failing to protect private property, because we have embraced the immorality of taking from those who work and giving to those who won't

Hasn't welfare reform reduced the amount of welfare recipients greatly?
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: RevDisk on September 28, 2011, 11:32:16 PM
I think you support mak's (John Adams') point. The Constitution had a Bill of Rights, but those only applied to the degree that people were moral enough to care about blacks, women, etc. Where the Constitution failed for it's first hundred or so years, it failed where people were not moral enough. Isn't that also true today? The Constitution succeeds in protecting the rights of ethnic minorities, for example, because we've become moral on that issue. It is currently failing to protect private property, because we have embraced the immorality of taking from those who work and giving to those who won't.

I suppose that's true of many other forms of government.

Uh huh.  Except the Bill of Rights did not extent to blacks, women, etc.  The 13th, ending slavery and involuntary servitude, was passed in 1865.  Women's suffrage was 1920.  Poll tax was 1964, plus other civil rights laws due to widespread government abuses. 

We're more moral in some respects now when it comes to not screwing over minorities or women.  But.  One step forward, one step back.  We made strives in voting and very recently the RKBA.  We lost significant ground on the 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th, 9th and 10th.  For all effective purposes, the 9th and 10th amendments do not exist in any form whatsoever.

In fairness, it didn't take long for Constitutional protection to fall by the wayside.  The Federalists showed that with the Alien and Sedition Acts in 1798.  One positive step was Madison breaking with the Federalists after they showed their true colors, bringing Jefferson to the Presidency and breaking the spine of the Federalist Party.  Their ideology remains, of course.  Zombie Hamilton, always ready to crawl from the grave to threaten the nation.  I doubt we'll never be truly free of his shade. 
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 28, 2011, 11:44:27 PM
Uh huh.  Except the Bill of Rights did not extent to blacks, women, etc.  The 13th, ending slavery and involuntary servitude, was passed in 1865.  Women's suffrage was 1920.  Poll tax was 1964, plus other civil rights laws due to widespread government abuses. We're more moral in some respects now when it comes to not screwing over minorities or women.   

 :facepalm:  That is precisely my point. The Constitution works in those areas where the people support it with their moral character. Where it wasn't supported (treatment of blacks), it was ineffective, except as an ideal.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: MicroBalrog on September 29, 2011, 12:13:41 AM
Quote
We lost significant ground on the 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th, 8th, 9th and 10th

Except for where we've gained ground - don't forget that up until recently the 1st has been interpreted far more narrowly.

Quote
Where it wasn't supported (treatment of blacks), it was ineffective, except as an ideal.

The presence of ideals is important. It created a set of moral and political guideposts for the future generations to orient themselves to, and improve on the moral stature on their descendants.

If we are to judge our ancestors by the same moral standard as we judge our contemporaries (not accounting for 'men of their time') anybody who owned a slave was a moral monster (even Jefferson, although in his specific case it's somewhat offset by his work to end or limit slavery).

But here is the thing: a constitution is a technology. Institute the understanding of basic human rights and regular elections in any society, even one so evil that slaveowners are allowed to live, and it will gradually - over many generations - evolve, if it can but retain the technology.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 29, 2011, 12:37:43 AM
The presence of ideals is important.

That's why I mentioned it.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: MicroBalrog on September 29, 2011, 12:59:54 AM
I'm sorry if I misunderstand:

Do you think it is necessary for people to be personally 'moral' - i.e. be hard-working family men who don't cheat on their spouses and maintain a Protestant ethic - though not necessarily being protestant per se - to maintain the American Republic?

Or do you think long-haired polygamous Satanists can also help maintain the Republic if they believe in the ideals of freedom? What sort of morality are we talking about here?
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 29, 2011, 01:47:38 AM
There is civic virtue that promotes liberty, justice, equality under law, etc.

There are things like business ethics, and a work ethic, which keeps nations, individuals and families honest and economically healthy.

There is the morality of one's personal life, which prevents broken families, along with the crime, poverty, and burdensome govt that people vote for to combat the latter two.

I'm just putting this together on the fly, and maybe I'm skipping some important category or four. But all of these areas are important to the health of the nation, and we could probably think of ways in which each one supports the other two. So I guess the answer is that your polygamous long-hairs could help maintain the Republic in some ways, although they might hurt it in others. Of course, hard-working Christian family men could also vote for Barack Obama, so...

That help?
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: longeyes on September 29, 2011, 02:15:02 AM
At last...we get to the point.  Thank you, makattak.  To wit: A culture that has lapsed into immorality, that is either ignorant of or despises virtue.  Not everyone but too many.

Which is why all of the dancing around our economics issues, our cries for "jobs, jobs!" and "lower taxes!," are futile without recognizing that economics alone cannot solve our existential problems. 

***

Sometimes there are no "good options," just available ones.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: makattak on September 29, 2011, 09:11:53 AM
Are you implying Americans are an immoral people?

Immoral and irreligious, in fact.

I see much of this was already fleshed out last night.

However, I do not believe that the whole of the United States finds itself in that situation. As a whole, the country is less moral than 200 years ago. Not everyone 200 years ago owned slaves or supported slavery. MANY were working to end it. The constitution itself, unamended, recognizes the evil of slavery (otherwise why did it place a date for the end of the slave trade?)

Today, we have a significant portion of the country that believes people only have the rights government grants to them. They also believe the Constitution doesn't mean what it says, but means whatever we can twist it to mean. They also believe that right and wrong are merely constructs and not absolutes. These are ideas incompatible with a Constitutional Republic.

I will refer to a previous signature I've had:

"Can the liberties of a nation be thought secure when we have removed their only firm basis, a conviction in the minds of the people that these liberties are the gift of God? That they are not to be violated but with his wrath? Indeed I tremble for my country when I reflect that God is just: that his justice cannot sleep for ever."

(Although he was specifically speaking about the evil of slavery here, this applies far beyond.)
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: MicroBalrog on September 29, 2011, 10:08:17 AM

That help?

Do you think the Republic is doomed unless the driving majority of the American people not only adopt conservative/libertarian political values, but also the work and family ethic in question?

Because if the answer is 'yes' I can't help but think freedom isn't really attractive like that.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: longeyes on September 29, 2011, 10:19:58 AM
Don't worry, there will also be outliers who dance on the margins.  The problem is when the margins start to overtake the core.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: roo_ster on September 29, 2011, 11:25:52 AM
BWAHAHAHA, that's awesome.  And wrong. 

Two hundred years ago, women and folks that weren't white were rarely given an ounce of government protection.  We massacred the ever lovin' heck out out of the Natives.  Some had it coming, some did not.  And remember, even the folks that WROTE the Constitution were not lilly white paragons of morality.  It worked because of the disposition of the folks at the time, the limitations of the tech, the expansion of the union (always had a frontier to run to), etc

As much as I love the Constitution, I'm not blind that our current position was partially engineered by some of the folks that wrote the Constitution.  Hamilton wanted what we have today.  Actually, he wanted what we'll likely have in 20 years.  Shame no one was kind enough to put a bullet in him sooner, would have given the US an extra 50 years to whatever lifespan our country has. 

What ahistorical tiddlybunk.

Let me run through it real quick-like:
1. Most non-voters & non-whites & women who were citizens were given the protection of gov't.  One example: laws against rape.  Yes, mostly applied to women, one of your Litany of the Uh-pressed.
2. Most indians on the N American continent were not citizens and did not reside within America's borders.  Vilent conflict with those residing outside one's borders who answer to a differnt polity is "warfare," and explicitly accounted for in the COTUS, which was not a pacifist document or suicide pact.

Uh huh.  Except the Bill of Rights did not extent to blacks, women, etc.  The 13th, ending slavery and involuntary servitude, was passed in 1865.  Women's suffrage was 1920.  Poll tax was 1964, plus other civil rights laws due to widespread government abuses. 

More ahistorical nonsense, some of it objectively incorrect.
1. Women were voting in the USA before 1920.  Look it up.
2. The Bill of Rights was extended to those blacks who happened to be citizens.  Generally, it was a particular state that imposed restrictions on liberty: some more, some less or no restrictions at all.
3. We can not claim, "We're #1!" when it comes to ending slavery.  But, we can claim to be #2 or so after the Brits.  We can also claim to have stomped out slave trade via the world's oceans with the Brits.
4. Which brings us to the rest of the world, much of which did not abolish slavery until the 20th century and still practices it in places, even where "outlawed."


Do you think the Republic is doomed unless the driving majority of the American people not only adopt conservative/libertarian political values, but also the work and family ethic in question?

Because if the answer is 'yes' I can't help but think freedom isn't really attractive like that.

Yes, pretty much.  Utopian libertarian masturbatory literature aside coughfreeholdcough, there are no accounts of actual societies that a mange to combine liberty with wholesale lettin' the freak flag fly for long. 

For a society to prosper and last requires discipline.  Self-imposed or imposed from without.  Self-imposed discipline requires less gov't, of course.

Don't worry, there will also be outliers who dance on the margins.  The problem is when the margins start to overtake the core.

Yep, once the bents start making rules for the straights, it starts circling the drain.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: MicroBalrog on September 29, 2011, 12:14:46 PM
Quote
For a society to prosper and last requires discipline.  Self-imposed or imposed from without.  Self-imposed discipline requires less gov't, of course.

Enjoy that.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: RevDisk on September 29, 2011, 12:32:03 PM
:facepalm:  That is precisely my point. The Constitution works in those areas where the people support it with their moral character. Where it wasn't supported (treatment of blacks), it was ineffective, except as an ideal.

My apology, I misunderstood.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 29, 2011, 01:03:56 PM
Do you think the Republic is doomed unless the driving majority of the American people not only adopt conservative/libertarian political values, but also the work and family ethic in question?

Because if the answer is 'yes' I can't help but think freedom isn't really attractive like that.

Why not? It doesn't mean you're going to get a government-issued wife and be commanded to procreate. It just means that you're not likely to have freedom in a nation chock-full of absentee fathers and chemical dependency.

So where's the down-side to that sort of virtuous and free society?

Don't worry, there will also be outliers who dance on the margins.  The problem is when the margins start to overtake the core.

Exactly this.

Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: brimic on September 29, 2011, 01:32:00 PM
Quote
The government is rigged to only allow two parties.  It's nowhere in the Constitution, but that's only sometimes respected anyways.  Throw out one party, you'll get the other one which is just as bad when it's in power.  Good luck getting good candidates, because those are also largely controlled by the parties.  Good luck "working within the system" to reform either party.  It's not a 100% system.  Sure, you can get a Ron Paul or some other wild card not endorsed by their party.  But the point is that the system does not have to be 100%.  Just being even 98% effective means for 50 to 1 odds against the wildcards.  Most of those wildcards get absorbed anyways into corruption, crony capitalism and all the other perks of the job. 

You play by rules stacked against you, don't be surprised when you lose.  Each and every time.  You need to change the rules of the game.  Try to do so with elections and you'll lose.  Try to do so with money, and you'll have ten times as much extorted as you volunteer in bribes/lobbying.  Try to do so with nonviolent protest, and you'll be ignored.  Try to do so with violence, and you'll be curb stomped by police, military, intel folks, etc.  Try to do so with a civil war and you'll be considered (correctly) as a nut.  Even if you were not considered a nut and were successful, you'd be looking at massive piles of bodies.

Ain't worth it.  Just get yourself in the best position possible, build up a good network of folks, and let the situation go as it will.  Try to make a positive change, so that you can sleep at night if nothing else.  But don't be too hard on yourself when you make one mild step forward with freedom, and get kicked a dozen steps back. 

Go ahead and call me a defeatist.  I'm just not dumb enough to throw money, time and resources down a hole unless I'm getting something out of it.  The returns on investment suck, frankly.  Exactly how much money has the 2nd Amendment folks dumped in bribes, propaganda, et al over the last two decades or more?  We got the Supreme Court to admit that the right exists, and we made otherwise modest returns at the federal level.  In exchange for billions of dollars and tens/hundreds of thousands of man-hours.  Plus we LOST numerous other rights at the same time we made modest gains.  That's sorta the point.  We get X dollars taken from us by law, we give up Y dollars to use legalized corruption to not get completely hosed, and we're rewarded with small gains in compensation for major losses.  The entire point is to benefit the political folks.  They created a system where their side automatically wins, nearly every time. 


I like the upbeat Disk who speaks of shooting hippies from a helicopter while blaring Slayer over a loudspeaker a lot better :laugh:
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Tallpine on September 29, 2011, 04:02:17 PM
The most basic ethic or morality is to not harm others.

As far as a "work ethic" - well, if you are not providing for yourself and your personal brand of family, then there is harm taking place: both those who are neglected and those who are having to step in and pay the bill that you should be paying.  Of course, no one is required to live a certain lifestyle - maybe the whole family is happy living in a teepee.  =)

If the long-haired pagan is managing to provide for his nine wives and 39 children without stealing either individually or collectively, what is the problem for a "free" society  ???
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: RevDisk on September 29, 2011, 08:43:52 PM
I like the upbeat Disk who speaks of shooting hippies from a helicopter while blaring Slayer over a loudspeaker a lot better :laugh:

It's the same Disk.  Sorry if I sound depressing, I'm honestly not "all is lost, toss in the towel".  I'm just putting my resources into what can be changed, and that's AFTER the rules change so that things can be done.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on September 29, 2011, 10:07:01 PM
If the long-haired pagan is managing to provide for his nine wives and 39 children without stealing either individually or collectively, what is the problem for a "free" society  ???

You'll notice it was Micro the Balrog who mentioned polygamy, probably because he was going for something obviously anathema to traditional American Protestantism. I don't think polygamy would do our country any favors, but I'm more worried about people without enough parents, rather than too many.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: longeyes on September 30, 2011, 11:25:06 AM
There are good arguments to be made for extended families rather than "nuclear" ones--absent the xenophobia that often accompanies tribalism--but polygamy is just a combination of a fertility cult and masculine autocracy.  It was exactly these elements that the Founding Fathers, who might better be described as the Founding Brothers, broke away from.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: freakazoid on October 01, 2011, 01:50:43 AM
Quote
Except the Bill of Rights did not extent to blacks, women, etc.

It didn't not extend to them either.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: KD5NRH on October 01, 2011, 07:36:08 AM
DVD players will play audio CD's.

So will LaserDisc players.  I still want the LaserDisc form factor to come back with BluRay information density.  That way I'll only need four or five discs to make the reinstall media for the next version of Windows.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: freakazoid on October 01, 2011, 06:53:19 PM
 :laugh: I've wondered how much information one of those Laser disks could hold if it was a BluRay disk.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: KD5NRH on October 02, 2011, 03:02:31 AM
:laugh: I've wondered how much information one of those Laser disks could hold if it was a BluRay disk.

DVD: 120mm diameter, 452 sq cm area.
LaserDisc: 300mm diameter, 2827 sq cm area.

A quad-layer BluRay holds 128GB, so, disregarding the center hole and any unused edge margin, call it about 283MB/sqcm.  That would make the LaserDisc about 800GB assuming the center hole and edge margin use up the same proportion of its area.  They're actually proportionally smaller, but probably not more than ~1-2GB worth.  LDs were also typically double-sided, so 1.6TB overall.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: TechMan on October 02, 2011, 08:52:08 AM
DVD: 120mm diameter, 452 sq cm area.
LaserDisc: 300mm diameter, 2827 sq cm area.

A quad-layer BluRay holds 128GB, so, disregarding the center hole and any unused edge margin, call it about 283MB/sqcm.  That would make the LaserDisc about 800GB assuming the center hole and edge margin use up the same proportion of its area.  They're actually proportionally smaller, but probably not more than ~1-2GB worth.  LDs were also typically double-sided, so 1.6TB overall.

Yep, that might just cover the code bloat in the next Micro$oft OS version.  :laugh:  :laugh:
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: doczinn on October 04, 2011, 11:38:39 AM
Quote
the anarchist twits that burn something whenever the WIPO or G8 meet
Not anarchists. Nihilists, perhaps, socialists usually. Anarchists, no.

Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: longeyes on October 04, 2011, 04:33:14 PM
Good distinction.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Balog on October 04, 2011, 06:33:53 PM
Not anarchists. Nihilists, perhaps, socialists usually. Anarchists, no.



This reminds me of the "But the Soviet Union and China aren't/weren't real Communist states!" argument. Those are the folks in the anarchist movement, even if they don't match the fantasy anarchists have of themselves.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: RevDisk on October 04, 2011, 06:38:27 PM
This reminds me of the "But the Soviet Union and China aren't/weren't real Communist states!" argument. Those are the folks in the anarchist movement, even if they don't match the fantasy anarchists have of themselves.

This. 

At least the Soviet Union was more or less honest about being evil commie bastards.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: longeyes on October 04, 2011, 06:47:24 PM
Totalitarians aren't anarchists.  It's moot, though.  Unreason usually leads to the same grim place.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: freakazoid on October 07, 2011, 01:00:34 PM
So all "Republicans" that call themselves that must be, never mind there actual actions.  ;/
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: roo_ster on October 07, 2011, 01:15:17 PM
So all "Republicans" that call themselves that must be, never mind there actual actions.  ;/

Two words:
Olympia Snowe

(AKA, "RINO")
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Perd Hapley on October 08, 2011, 12:27:01 AM
So all "Republicans" that call themselves that must be, never mind there actual actions.  ;/

Republicans are a political party, not an ideological movement. So I'd say that anyone who self-identifies as Republican and has a strong tendency to vote that way is a real, honest-to-goodness Republican.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: Tallpine on October 08, 2011, 11:45:17 AM
Considering that the Republicans started out as the mercantilist and central-government party, I'd say that they really haven't strayed all that far from their roots.
Title: Re: Gallup: Almost half of America sees Government as an Immediate Threat to Liberty
Post by: freakazoid on October 08, 2011, 12:09:00 PM
Quote
Republicans are a political party, not an ideological movement. So I'd say that anyone who self-identifies as Republican and has a strong tendency to vote that way is a real, honest-to-goodness Republican.

It's both. There is a generally understood ideology that people who say they are Republicans posses.