Economist Endorses Kerry, Reluctantly 143
An anonymous reader writes "The Economist has picked John Kerry as its preferred presidential candidate, over George W. Bush. Though a British publication, the magazine points out that almost half of its readers are based in the U.S. The Economist leans right on trade issues and supported going to war in Iraq, but has been critical on Bush's policies on tax cuts and the deficit."
Endorsements? (Score:3, Interesting)
I've heard a lot of newspaper endorsements both ways this time around. Does anyone know how much effect endorsements actually have on vote counts?
Not much... (Score:1)
Re:Not much... (Score:5, Insightful)
While surprisingly progressive on social issues (the Economist is against the war on drugs for instance), and other times conservative (they supported the war in Iraq), it's a centrist to center-right magazine, balancing its values against pragmatic considerations. I think this makes the endorsement particularly condemning. A NY Times endorsement for Kerry is expected (anything else would be a sign of the End Times). An Economist endorsement of Kerry means that some very level-headed moderate conservatives and centrists looked at Bush and found him wanting. They say: we like his vision best. But it's clear he lacks the ability to carry it out. They aren't as thrilled by Kerry's vision, but feel he's all in all more capable for the job.
Probably a fair assessment. It's hard to disagree with Bush when he advocates freedom. But turning Iraq into a giant guerilla war and locking people up without due process or trial isn't the way to create that. Perhaps Bush would be more fun on a fishing trip. But John Kerry is clearly the better man to lead the United States.
Re:Not much... (Score:3, Interesting)
The economist is read by investors. To them, it means more than its good for a cause. A recommendation from the economist to them means "do this to get more money". A far more direct effect. Especially when even here in Canada, I here people saying "I hope Kerry doesn't win or my pharma stocks will go down".
d00d! (Score:1)
> I voted the C. Neal / N. Portman write-in ticket this morning in early voting. (Seriously -- I think these two presidential candidates are essentially the same
If you can't tell the difference between Cowboy Neal and Natalie Portman...
Re:Endorsements? (Score:4, Interesting)
Does anyone know how much effect endorsements actually have on vote counts?
Depends.
However, The Economist is probably one of the most highly respected of the weekly news magazines in the English-speaking world. It's read by the heavy movers and shakers (when I had a subscription I used to get bulk mail for services that would make more sense if my net worth were two orders of magnitude higher) and has a lot more detail and depth about international news than you'll typically find in any single U.S. magazine.
In some ways they could be regarded as Libertarian; a few years ago they had some in-depth articles examining the proposition of decriminalizing recreational drugs.
The Economist is thoughtful, detailed, slightly right leaning. A good complement to reading the New York Times, which is thoughtful, detailed, slightly left leaning. Both publications are well-written, too.
Info (Score:1)
Re: Info (Score:5, Insightful)
> The Economist has supported the tax cuts, But not the increase of government spending.
Indeed. The "tax and spend" Democrats have been replaced by "tax cut and spend" Republicans. All the rhetoric about fiscal responsibility is just a facade for the real debate, "pay now or pay later".
It's hard for the party in power to cut spending, because pork is one of the primary ways for legislators to buy votes.
Re: Info (Score:2, Insightful)
Re: Info (Score:4, Informative)
I blame the line item veto (the real reason the budget declined during the Clinton years), which was removed following the impeachment trial.
The line item veto was never actually implemented. As soon as the bill was signed by Clinton it was challenged on constitutional grounds and kept from going into effect. The SCOTUS eventually ruled it unconstitutional, and the OMB afterwards announced that the 40 items that were line item vetoed would have their funds released.
The budget deficit looked good because Clinton was a fiscally responsible president.
Re: Info (Score:2)
Re: Info (Score:2)
>
Also, I'm not convinced that it's fair to lie everything at the president's feet. The Congress has a huge impact on our national spending habits too.
Re: Info (Score:2)
Sure- if you count the DOW hitting 10,000 while the soup kitchens get overcrowded as a BOOM. I consider it to be more of a bust myself- and the harbinger of the process to turn the United States into the third world bananna republic it is today.
Re: Info (Score:2)
Re: Info (Score:2)
Re: Info (Score:2)
Throughout history, poverty is the normal condition of man. Advances which permit this norm to be exceeded -- here and there, now and then -- are the work of an extremely small minority, frequently despised, often condemned, and almost always opposed by all right-thinking people. Whenever this tiny minority is kept from creating, or (as sometimes happens) is driven out of a society, the people slip back into abject poverty.
This is known as "bad luck."
Re: Info (Score:2)
Re: Info (Score:2)
What you're saying has a few valid points, but isn't at all relevant to what we were discussing.
Re: Info (Score:2)
Sure- if you count the DOW hitting 10,000 while the soup kitchens get overcrowded as a BOOM.
What are you talking about? Poverty went down massively under the Clinton administration. In 1999 the poverty rate was 11.9%, the lowest rate since 1979, child porverty went down by amazing amounts, median incomes were up, unemployment was down, and more people had health care than ever before.
No matter how you measure it, the Clinton years were great for Americans of all income levels. This was due to a combinati
Re: Info (Score:2)
Re: Info (Score:1, Insightful)
But Gingrich represents a completely diffe
Re: Info (Score:2)
Re: Info (Score:2)
Re: Info (Score:2)
Well, maybe they could implement the line item veto differently than the regular veto.
Let's say to override the veto of the entire bill still requires 2/3 majority, but to override a line item veto only requires a simple majority.
If it is really pork that is being killed with the line item veto, the politicians will be less likely to support an override, because then next election time people can look at
Re: Info (Score:2)
Also, 1 person's pork is another key deal. If its 5 billion to welfare- is it pork or not? Depends on your political beliefs.
Re: Info (Score:5, Informative)
Nixon/Ford: 6.8% per year
Carter: 2.0% per year
Reagan: -1.3% per year
Bush 1: 4.0% per year
Clinton: 2.5% per year
Bush Jr: 8.2% per year
Source [washingtonmonthly.com]
And here [house.gov] is a nice graph.
Re: Info (Score:2)
Re: Info (Score:1)
Re: Info (Score:2)
The rationale is that defense is (a) vital and (b) not an accurate reflection of policy, because it depends heavily on the behaiours of the rest of the world. There's a lot to that, and a lot to the observation that it should be included, as Bush's foreign policy shows, because it actually is "discretionary spending".
But, there you go, that's the reasoning.
Re: Info (Score:2)
I recall hearing that the tax cuts were so large that many of the large banks and other financial drivers became more cautious (though the cuts would cause huge deficits that would be long term burdens on the economy) and played real conservative, slowing down the recovery.
Personally (nobody can prove anything in this fight, as there is no control economy available) I think the tax cuts have had no benificial effect on the economy...
Re: Info (Score:1)
Re: Info (Score:3, Insightful)
What amazes me is that the "down home" americans, the 50% or so that make up the "working class" rural vote, believe that they somehow benefit from backing the party that spends in deficit and supports smaller government oversight in business alone, since in personal matters, we have abortion fights, patriots acts, and DCMA/internet nonsense.
These people end up the victims of
Re: Info (Score:2)
> They're the party of "government growing at a slower rate than the Democrats would."
No, just as with spending the biggest difference between Republicans and Democrats is who gets the advantage out of it. The current government claims to be big on states' rights, but watch what happens when a state wants to legalize marijuana, import medicine from Canada, allow gay marriage or euthanasia, etc.
Also, if the newscast I heard a couple of nights ago was correct, the federal government has hired 800,000 p
Re: Info (Score:4, Funny)
Re: Info (Score:2)
And don't forget that when you "pay later" you pay with interest.
That is why I believe that the Republican party, and especially GWB are no longer conservative.
More Information: "The Economist" is Moderate. (Score:1)
So, the journal supports both extremely liberal positions and extremely conservative positions.
By contrast, the Fox News Channel is moderate in a pervas
Great quote (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Great quote (Score:4, Interesting)
However, you need to adjust your RDF. (when did rove steal that from Jobs?)
for insulting our allies
- got a reference? Link? Anything but an accusation?
falsely calling them the coalition of the coerced and the bribed
Many of the nations in the coalition formed for the 2003 invasion of Iraq stand to receive substantial aid packages and trade benefits from the United States in return for their support. The administration is provided billions of dollars in "aid packages" to coalition members [arabicnews.com]. Of the 30+ original coalition "members', 19 countries offering only political and/or moral support, one was named without it's knowledge (Solomon Islands), and one was Afganistain. Nine were/are seeking membership into NATO. An Institute for Policy Studies report found that "most were recruited through coercion, bullying, and bribery."
or by calling our action unilateral.
Unilateral [reference.com] means something much different than you must perceive. England, Australia, and the US have stood together on international issues for decades. If you do not consider these three countries to be on the same side, then you have a very myopic view of world politics.
In March of 2003, Ari Fleischer said that the adminstration has "all along said, in terms of actual active combat, there will be very, very few countries."
The original invasion forces consisted of troops from only six countries. Nearly 99.9% of these troops were from the US, UK, or Australia.
The countries sending troops and the amount of troops were:
Albania: 70
Australia: 2000
Romania: 278
UK: 45,000
US: 300,000
oh, and let's not forget
Poland: 200
Without the US's politicing, would the coalition have been created? Did any nations besides the US and UK present evidence insisting immediate action? The coalition was a huge sham, created only for political purposes.
"A universe whose only claim to be believed in rests on the validity of inference must not start telling us the inference is invalid..." -- C.S. Lewis
Newspapers voting for Kerry? (Score:2)
Re:Newspapers voting for Kerry? (Score:2)
Re:Newspapers voting for Kerry? (Score:2)
Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:3, Insightful)
Is this a division between the more intellectual America reading and writing newspapers, and the popular opinion?
More of a reflection that newspaper editorials only have a limited impact. There is far more of an impact from the previously mentioned propaganda networ
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:1)
Wouldn't you think that those two radio networks are carrying those particular shows because they have a large listening audience and therefore garners larger ad revenues for the stations. I don't believe that the station owners are in the business of losing money. If there was not a market out in this country for political talk shows then
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:2)
I don't believe that the station owners are in the business of losing money. If there was not a market out in this country for political talk shows then those shows would go out of business.
What's good for their bottom line is not necessarily good for the republic, and in fact in this case I would argue that it is specifically damaging to the republic.
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:1)
They feel that they are not getting the whole truth and have to turn to alternative sources to here the whole truth of what is going on in the world. For example you never here a single story about the good that is being done in Irag (like the many public works projects that the US and its allies have started and completed). You never here the
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:2)
Fox News is a major network. Rupert Murdoch, News Corp and Fox are a gigantic global media empire that is unabashedly right wing. The "liberal" networks usually try to maintain a pretense of neutrality whether true or not. Murdoch is blatant about his political bias and it shows in his networks, newspapers, etc.
Fox News is the #1 cable net
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:1)
I think this is the pot calling the kettle black. The left/liberal/progressive side also tends toward extremism, censorship and suppression of free speech.
They tend to demonize anything that does not fit their opinion of the way the world should be.
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:3, Interesting)
This isn't really a right versus left thing either. Libertarians and true conservatives are a shining light in this regard from the right. Unfortunately they've been buried under the extremism that is the new Republican party. I'm not really interested in framing this as left or right, my problem is almost entirely with the new Republican party and the fact its completely abandoned its civil libert
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:2)
Uh, Reagan is the patriarch and role model for the current ilk of the Republican party. They all idolize him, especially George W. All indications are Reagan and George H.W. Bush didn't actually like each other but George W. is not his fathers son in his politics.
Reagan is the one that started the ball rolling for the Republican return to power, after the disgrace of McCarthyism and Nixon, and made George W. and todays Republi
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:2)
Utter crap. Any half-decent psychologist could tell you that most (probably all) people simply need (psychological imperative) their opinions to be reinforced rather than questioned. And that's what we do.
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:2)
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:1)
(1) Air America is a new left-leaning radio network; seems to be doing well for itself.
(2) In this left-vs-right radio survey, I'd venture to say that most moderate-to-left folks tend to support public radio, the avenue that rightists refer to as among the "liberal media".
(3) Left-leaners simply may listen to the radio less, or differently, on the whole, than right-leaners. Consider a recent theory that telephone-based surveys skew to the right because survey
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:1)
Is this do to inflation?
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:3, Insightful)
The right wing has also become way more adept at demonizing the democrats and liberals and this again makes for good enter
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:1)
All I ever here from the left is how stupid/racist/ignorant anyone is who does not agree with them and their opinions. It's just one ad-hominem attack after another.
Some things really are black and white. Moral relativism is more a sign of societal decay than enlightenment.
To say that Bush/Cheney have lied more than Clinton/Gore seems a little bit like sticking your head in the sand. They lied or covered up many, many
Re:Yes, Kerry has more endorsements (Score:3, Interesting)
Please list some of these lies? I can't wait. We can do a head to head comparison of the gravity and magnitude. Again Clinton/Gore were savaged for theirs including impeachment which as serious an accounting as our Constitution allows.
As nearly as anyone can tell no one in Bush/Cheney have paid in any way for theirs and constantly deny they've ever lied or done anything wrong or made a mist
Re:Newspapers voting for Kerry? (Score:3, Informative)
They are all disenchanted with him because his actual record in office has run counter to everything th
Re:Newspapers voting for Kerry? (Score:2)
Re:Newspapers voting for Kerry? (Score:2)
Reagan did so for correct reasons though: to bankrupt the Soviet Union and end the Cold War and to bring the country out of Carter era stagflation (via tax cuts). Reagan was actually very fiscally responsible in non-defense discretionary spending. As someone else pointed out, he actually shrank it during his term. The d
Economist endorsements (Score:2)
Seriously (Score:1)
Kerry Republicans (Score:5, Interesting)
I believe history won't be kind on the 43rd president of the USA. He had the support of the entire world post-9/11, plus the largest fiscal surplus ever and he blew away both of them in less than three years.
Re:Kerry Republicans (Score:2)
That post-9/11 sympathy was a blip in a sea of anti-Americanism. It evaporated long before the runup to the Iraq war.
And when the economy goes down, golly gee, tax revenues go down too! Who'da thunk it?
American Conservative endorses Kerry (Score:2)
No they don't (Score:2)
From the cover [amconmag.com] of the series:
They go on to endorse [amconmag.com] the Constitution Party candidate, Michael Peroutka - not John Kerry.
Re:No they don't (Score:2)
The real endorsement is for the Republican party to wake the hell up and kick out the neo-cons who have caused unbelievable damage to the country.
additional media endorsements (Score:2)
What's really funny is... (Score:2)
This from a magazine that prides itself in being the in-flight magazine of Air Force One.
Stolen Honor (Score:2)
Boo hoo wah wah cry to mommy (Score:2, Funny)
Is it obvious much that michael is a Kerry supporter? Is it any surprise that anyone critical of this blatant astroturfing is modded down? I didn't realise Slashdot was a forum in which to impose your political views on others, I thought it was a bookmark collator for IT news. How stupid of me.
Wahh wahh wahh whine whine whine. Look I'm a Republican! Media bias! It's not FAIR! MOMMY! MOMMY! Wah wah wah!
How many stories has the token Republican editor Pudge posted here? Would it be not a million miles fro
Wow.. you memorized the RNC talking points to the (Score:2)
Now can you come up with something that is actually truthfull and isn't political rhetoric BS?
Besides "dogging the other side" can you actually show why we should consider voting for Bush?
Re:Wow.. you memorized the RNC talking points to t (Score:2)
Okay, let's talk about reasons to vote for Bush:
Treats the War on Terrorism as a War, not a law enforcement problem (as Kerry has repeate
Re:Wow.. you memorized the RNC talking points to t (Score:1)
Personally I belive that we could quench the flow of terrorism a lot if we could deal with sucky economies in other countries and get Saudi Arabia to end the welfare-state additude common there. People need something to live for, and while there will always be crazies, people wh
Re:Wow.. you memorized the RNC talking points to t (Score:2)
I absolutely agree. However, how do you propose we do this when all money flowing into or out of a country goes through a single, corrupt, dictatorial ruler? Or, rather(since I suppose each dinar didn't cross Hussein's hand), the money flow is directly controlled by him? It can't be done. That's one of the pro
Re:Wow.. you memorized the RNC talking points to t (Score:1)
Which is why we've been searching for WMD's in Iraq, at the cost of over 100,000 civilian casualties + 200 billion some odd dollars, and 1,000 lives of US forces.
Treats the Poles, Italians, British, Australians and the 28 other nations allied to us in our fight against terrorism as valued friends
Friends, yea, but 28 nations that constitute about 10% of the total resources being used to invade, I mean, remove Sadam from power.
Ac
Re:Another great magazine loses its way (Score:2)
2. On the one hand you have a country with death squads and the world's best military equipment and training, and on the other you have poor people throwing stones and blowing themselves up to kill civilians. Morally equivalent, perhaps not exactly, but they are not so far apart. It sounds like Sharon is chillin
Re:Another great magazine loses its way (Score:2)
Re:Another great magazine loses its way (Score:1, Flamebait)
Because he is a political opportunist, and his advisors told him it would help his poll numbers. It was also a big factor in him winning the Democratic nomination. He's trying to beat Bush at his own game, playing the tough guy. I personaly don't think it's working.
Kerry's present-day bullshit PR stunts have no relation to whether or not Vietnam was a just
Re:Another great magazine loses its way (Score:3)
Just because he spoke out on the war, he shouldn't be able to take credit for actually doing his duty like thousands of others (but not Bush) did?
Re:Another great magazine loses its way (Score:2)
Re:Another great magazine loses its way (Score:2)
Re:Another great magazine loses its way (Score:2, Interesting)
Understand that the Gaza plan (which is what I assume you are reffering to) is designed to halt negotiations. Read the Haaretz interview [haaretz.com] with Sharon advisor Weisglass to understand what's really going on here.
A brief excerpt:
Re:Another great magazine loses its way (Score:1, Flamebait)
Re:Another great magazine loses its way (Score:2)
Re:The Economist calls Kerry a fiscal conservative (Score:1, Interesting)
I think the touchstone of TRUE conservatism is emboddied in the Boy Scout's policy on camp ground cleanup: Always leave the place better than when you came. That means, that if you want to pull off a big operation like such as invading a random country while you are already have your hands full in a war on terror, you pay for it. You don't leave your dirty dishes in the sink for the next guy to wash. The fact is, you can c
Re:The Economist calls Kerry a fiscal conservative (Score:2)
That's easy to shoot down. (Score:2)
So, you'd have to have a continuing increase in tax revenue that would at least match the increase in the interest upon the debt. And just matching it would mean that you're not improving the situation.
Re:The Economist calls Kerry a fiscal conservative (Score:2)
History of the Debt
http://www.publicdebt.treas.gov/opd/opd.htm
History of Depressions
http://www.lexisnexis.com/academic/2
Check it out, It's really true.
Re:The Economist calls Kerry a fiscal conservative (Score:2)
Re:The Economist calls Kerry a fiscal conservative (Score:2)
Re:The Economist calls Kerry a fiscal conservative (Score:2)
On the other hand, since he has 5 recent posts modded at -1, the more reasonable explanation is that he's a stupid political troll.
Re:The Economist calls Kerry a fiscal conservative (Score:2)
What is stupid is the AC calling me a communist for wanting to cut taxes and cut spending.
Re:The Economist calls Kerry a fiscal conservative (Score:2)
Compulsory taxation is not earning money. Borrowing money is voluntary. The government doesn't earn very much money from voluntary exchange for goods and services. (that would be socialism) The budget is nothing close to balanced in a business sense, nor should it be. Why the libertarian party is debt-phobic and would rather fund the government with
Re:The Economist calls Kerry a fiscal conservative (Score:2)
Re:The Economist calls Kerry a fiscal conservative (Score:2)
If you want to raise the domestic income and prosperity, you absolutely need to put money where it will be spent. Its an economic law that increased spending raises income, and sa
Well rebuked (Score:2)
Without regulations, businesses tend to collude and merge. And even with regulations, some [microsoft.com] find it more profitable to ignore anti-competitive measures and destroy opposition alongside the fundamental nessecities of an open market.
The minimum wage law does impact certain markets, but let me provide a counter example. I recently attended a local state University, and part of this education included a rudimentary course in macroeconomics. While discussing the elementary models of
Re:Slashdot One-Sideness (Score:1, Interesting)
a vote for bush is an accessory to murder
His hometown paper? (Score:1)
The paper is published by a individual that lives in another town and is the mayor of that town. This individual set up shop in Crawford while Bush was running for President. The large majority of the town does not agree with this "outsider."
Article [harktheherald.com]Re:Slashdot One-Sideness (Score:2)
The Wall Street Journal has not endorsed anyone for President, yet. They normally abstain from endorsements.
The Financial Times did endorse Kerry for what its worth.
Re:Slashdot One-Sideness (Score:2)