thegreekdog wrote:
Actually, I can say the same thing about President Obama. His bailout plans created more government jobs than private sector jobs, at a cost of approximately $250K per job created (and those employees aren't making anywhere close to $250K a year). His bailout plans also bailed out companies and unions that failed, which, in my opinion, will only exacerbate the issue in future years (by rewarding failure, essentially).
I agree with you here. However, I think the real problem goes far deeper than anyone is acknowledging. I know I harp on this, but the real bottom line is that we have not held companies or individuals responsible for their actions. That results in a system that rewards things that might not be considered "failures" in the immediate economic sense, but that wind up destroying future economic potential in many, many ways.
Whenever someone says that we "have to take people over the evironment", I want to scream. We are not seperate from the environment, we are a part of it. When we kill off a species, we kill off any and all potential for it
forever. If we every look at that realistically, the idea that ANY gain for 20, 30, even 50, even 100 years is just not going to stack up against he damage caused by that loss. The fact that we cannot
immediately see and recognize a problem from that loss simply means we know little. Failure to be able to prove something is of value should never be taken as justification for eliminating it.
Similarly, right now, companies are allowed to produce materials with only very minimal testing to prove they won't cause immediate harm. Sometimes not even that. The burden of proof is on the individual then to say "hey, you killed my child!". Again, the whole system is just backwards.
This whole system of doing damage and then, essentially "asking forgiveness" afterward assumes that none of the damage done is going to be truly irreversable. Yet, most damage is irreversable.
OR, try looking at the World Bank and how it operates, the entire US policy of "economic freedom". Haiti is actually a very good example of the problem. Haiti has never been wealthy, but was able to feed itself, though just barely, off rice. In came the World Bank. With its loans came requirements that Haiti "open up" its markets to US and other exports. Well, US rice farmers are highly industrialized and subsidized by our government. Haiti's farmers could not compete. So, rice production went down and millions migrated to the cities, where there was little food, etc, where they often wound up dependent. Of course, this is a simplification, but it is still true..a nd the same truth has happened over and over throughout the world.
Unless and until we create a system that really and truly accounts for damages, we will always and forever be borrowing from our great, great grandchildren. This bit about the debt is only that same ethic laid out in terms of money systems.
thegreekdog wrote:
His healthcare bill has massive amounts of spending, and yet does not mandate the insurance of all Americans; in fact, I heard recently that over 29 million Americans will remain without health insurance.
This was congress. A congress stymied by Republicans who flat out refused to even try to compromise.
thegreekdog wrote:
In sum, while I think he has pursued "real policies" as opposed to "fake wars," it seems pretty apparent to me that his policies in action are a great waste of money that the United States doesn't have. I'm still trying to maintain some sort of reasonableness about his presidency, considering that he indicated in his State of the Union speech that he wants to engage in some federal belt tightening, which I would support. However, that belt tightening plan has not yet been put into effect, and I've heard nothing about it since the State of the Union.
The problem is not the presidency. I am not sure any president can fix the problems here.