Tue Mar 03, 2015 1:58 pm
solyanik wrote:Can the antigovernment people enlighten me on this - vast majority of you is against government involvement in almost anything - because you think the government will screw it up - except for the military - which you think is important enough for a trillion a year spending. How is it that the government is good at military, but cannot be trusted with anything else?
Tue Mar 03, 2015 2:22 pm
solyanik wrote:Can the antigovernment people enlighten me on this - vast majority of you is against government involvement in almost anything - because you think the government will screw it up - except for the military - which you think is important enough for a trillion a year spending. How is it that the government is good at military, but cannot be trusted with anything else?
Tue Mar 03, 2015 2:41 pm
solyanik wrote:Can the antigovernment people enlighten me on this - vast majority of you is against government involvement in almost anything - because you think the government will screw it up - except for the military - which you think is important enough for a trillion a year spending. How is it that the government is good at military, but cannot be trusted with anything else?
Tue Mar 03, 2015 2:55 pm
solyanik wrote:Can the antigovernment people enlighten me on this - vast majority of you is against government involvement in almost anything - because you think the government will screw it up - except for the military - which you think is important enough for a trillion a year spending. How is it that the government is good at military, but cannot be trusted with anything else?
Tue Mar 03, 2015 3:01 pm
TechnoWeenie wrote:solyanik wrote:Can the antigovernment people enlighten me on this - vast majority of you is against government involvement in almost anything - because you think the government will screw it up - except for the military - which you think is important enough for a trillion a year spending. How is it that the government is good at military, but cannot be trusted with anything else?
I think .mil should be scaled back, and focus on our border defenses.
The ONLY thing that clinton did right, IMO.
Tue Mar 03, 2015 3:09 pm
DocNugent wrote:TechnoWeenie wrote:solyanik wrote:Can the antigovernment people enlighten me on this - vast majority of you is against government involvement in almost anything - because you think the government will screw it up - except for the military - which you think is important enough for a trillion a year spending. How is it that the government is good at military, but cannot be trusted with anything else?
I think .mil should be scaled back, and focus on our border defenses.
The ONLY thing that clinton did right, IMO.
Bosnia?
Tue Mar 03, 2015 3:21 pm
Guns4Liberty wrote:solyanik wrote:Can the antigovernment people enlighten me on this - vast majority of you is against government involvement in almost anything - because you think the government will screw it up - except for the military - which you think is important enough for a trillion a year spending. How is it that the government is good at military, but cannot be trusted with anything else?
Throughout history, governments that have grown too powerful and unaccountable have committed the worst human rights atrocities - far worse than any terrorist group or radical religious sect. Is it any wonder, then, that freedom-loving Americans have a healthy skepticism for government's ability to limit itself and not abuse its power?
Guns4Liberty wrote:I think you grossly overstate the sentiment when you say that "the vast majority [of us] are against government involvement in almost anything". I speak for myself, and likely many other members, when I say that it is more anti-over-involvement.
Tue Mar 03, 2015 3:31 pm
DocNugent wrote:solyanik wrote:Can the antigovernment people enlighten me on this - vast majority of you is against government involvement in almost anything - because you think the government will screw it up - except for the military - which you think is important enough for a trillion a year spending. How is it that the government is good at military, but cannot be trusted with anything else?
The distinction for me (only) is that the military has a centuries old code of honor that kept it focused on its job of being ready to defend or beat the snot out of those who trampled one of our friends.
Civilian programs, on the other hand, attract the very worst among us - those who are in it for the cash they could get under the table and those who want personal power to control the lives of others.
Tue Mar 03, 2015 3:35 pm
solyanik wrote:. . . is the military that spends more than the next 10 countries combined - 8 of which are allies - not an over-involvement? And if not, why other branches of government that spend far less, in per-capita terms relative to other developed countries are an example of over-involvement?
Tue Mar 03, 2015 3:59 pm
Tue Mar 03, 2015 5:45 pm
Tue Mar 03, 2015 5:53 pm
solyanik wrote:EPA budget in US, ~$8B/year (http://www2.epa.gov/planandbudget/budget)
Environmental spending in China, ~$160B/year (http://www.theclimategroup.org/what-we- ... stment-in/)
Whatever it is in Russia, I don't give a flying fuck. It's a conservative paradise, so it is probably zero.
Tue Mar 03, 2015 6:07 pm
solyanik wrote:Can the antigovernment people enlighten me on this - vast majority of you is against government involvement in almost anything - because you think the government will screw it up - except for the military - which you think is important enough for a trillion a year spending. How is it that the government is good at military, but cannot be trusted with anything else?
Wed Mar 04, 2015 1:09 am
solyanik wrote:Can the antigovernment people enlighten me on this - vast majority of you is against government involvement in almost anything - because you think the government will screw it up - except for the military - which you think is important enough for a trillion a year spending. How is it that the government is good at military, but cannot be trusted with anything else?
Wed Mar 04, 2015 2:28 pm
Wheeler said the new system includes "only four" hard and fast rules:
1. bans on Internet service providers blocking traffic,
2. bans on Internet service providers throttling traffic,
3. bans on Internet service providers prioritizing traffic in exchange for payment
4. a requirement to be transparent about network practices.
Any other actions by Internet providers will be judged on a case-by-case basis to determine whether it is "just and reasonable,". The FCC will "ask the question 'What's the impact on consumers, what's the impact on edge providers, and is the public interest served?'
The FCC is not imposing any rate regulation or tariff requirements.
"This is not regulating the Internet. Regulating the Internet is rate regulation, which we don't do, tariffing, which we don't do, getting into the details of how you offer your network, what the terms are going to be... We are for an open Internet. That is not regulation of the Internet. That is a very simple statement that says 'no government or private entity will block people's access to use the network as a vehicle for expression and innovation.'" The Internet needs a "referee with a yardstick," he said.
"There are 48 sections in Title II," Wheeler said. "In the wireless environment, the FCC forbeared from, did not use, 19 of those 48. We're not using 27 of those [for broadband]. We're more deregulatory than the Title II program that was so incredibly successful for wireless."