How Tech-Savvy Will the Next President Be? 715
CorinneI writes "We've got our candidates. We know their positions on the major issues of the day — healthcare, the Iraq war, the economy, yada, yada, yada. But Senators McCain and Obama will also have to be concerned with tech issues. Where do they stand on Net neutrality, patent protection, piracy, broadband, privacy, and H1B visas? Do their campaign positions match up with their voting records and public statements? Here's how they stack up on the big five tech issues of the day."
Showing his age... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Showing his age... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Showing his age... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Showing his age... (Score:4, Funny)
McCain IS tech (Score:3, Funny)
lol mccain (Score:5, Insightful)
Also, don't forget that McCain inexplicably supports telecom immunity..
Re:lol mccain (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm sure a reasonably careful analysis of his bank records would render this a good deal more explicable.
This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:4, Informative)
Here are his income tax returns for the last two years. [johnmccain.com] Maybe you can do the analysis yourself and see if there's something that would support your wild and baseless accusation. You know, because claiming McCain is just trading votes for cash and being corrupt does require a bit of evidence and proof.
I'm waiting...
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:5, Interesting)
Oh, when John McCain's egg gets cracked, there's gonna be a huge mess. He can only hide behind the "I'm a hero because I crashed my plane in the jungle and then made videos for the Viet Cong" angle for so long. Sooner or later, some journalist is going to grow a set and actually do more than a cursory glance at McCain's history. Then, there's gonna be much wailing and gnashing of teeth among Republicans and corporate lobbyists.
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:4, Insightful)
Hey now. Go ahead and question how heroic getting shot down really is, at least so far as whether you can base an entire Presidency upon the fact. But "made videos for the VC" is going exactly contrary to that kind of thoughtful analysis. Because in reality he was tortured until he made videos for the VC, and eventually cracking under torture does not in any way diminish his hero status (to whatever extent that may be) because any hero would crack, eventually. The human brain is simply not designed to withstand unlimited pain, and it's a relatively simple matter to inflict enough of it that anyone will say whatever you want.
Which, by the way, is why torture is really not that useful for interrogation, because that's ultimately the result you get: Them saying whatever you want them to say.
Which does bring me to a real issue I have with McCain, and that's that while I have much respect and sympathy for his time spent in the Hanoi Hilton, he lost nearly all of that the moment he allowed the door to be opened even a tiny bit for sanctioned torture by U.S. forces. There's no practical and no moral justification, and he of all people should know that. Seemed to know that and say as much. That he would sacrifice that principle just to fit in with his party and to boost his "tough on terror" cred (as if he needs to) is very, very disappointing.
But that's been the trend since the last election cycle, everything I liked about McCain has been slipping away.
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:5, Insightful)
So.... Why are there only two candidates? (Score:5, Insightful)
Seems amazingly simplistic to me.
Re:So.... Why are there only two candidates? (Score:5, Interesting)
As a result, you must either be for abortion rights, gun control, socialized medicine, gay rights, environmental protection, and non-interventionism, or be against all these things. Either way, you are out of necessity for more government regulation to promote your agenda, because if you don't pass a law on a given issue your opponents will. It's essentially a zero sum legislative proliferation game. If you would rather vote for a party that supports what you truly believe you are told you are throwing your vote away. So most people pick the issue that is most important to them, and ally themselves with the party they that agrees with them on that issue.
But the truth is it's not any better anywhere else, if you ask me. In some ways, the best political situation one can realistically expect is deadlock. Consensus can be a dangerous thing, because more often than not it represents an agreement that the population needs some new additional regulation or control for its own good (see, e.g., the USA PATRIOT Act or the Homeland Security Act, both of which enjoyed an broad bipartisan support).
The question is no longer whether new regulations are necessary, but rather which of two opposing viewpoints you hold as to what that regulation should be.
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, they're all scum. Even the ones you like.
Re:This isn't Insightful.. It's disgusting... (Score:5, Interesting)
And Jay Rockefeller, D (WV), is pushing telecom immunity because he truly believes the Telco's were the innocent victims here?
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't know if McCain does or does not accept cash for votes, but I do know that if finding evidence of bribery were as easy as checking out income tax records, all the lobby groups in Washington would be out of business.
Opensecrets.org (Score:5, Informative)
I suspect the original poster is trying to imply an illegal link between the candidate and industry. I can't comment if one exists. But what I recommend is you go to Center for Responsive Politics [opensecrets.org] which will tell you where the source of campaign contributions of all presidential candidates.
The Web site aggregates company donations by industrial sector. Thus to see which candidate gets the most money from "Telephone Utilities" you can try clicking on this link: Telephone Utility Totals to Candidates [opensecrets.org] As you can see Sen. McCain has received $345,945 from said utilities while Sen. Obama has received $203,546.
Feel free to draw your own conclusions.
N.B. I should note that the last election fund-raising report was due on 20-May-2008 and that was for donations received in April, so the information on this Web site is usually two months old.
Re:Opensecrets.org (Score:4, Insightful)
All of Obama's money comes from individual donators. When you donate you are forced to include your employer, and are limited to $2300. So what you're seeing is the aggregate of all people that work for AT&T. Guess what? They're a big fucking company. That figure includes everyone from people on the board, to bottom level accountants and janitors.
Re:McCain is spot-on (Score:5, Insightful)
And modern socialism works a lot better than you might think. Just look at Europe.
What about the 2nd? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:5, Insightful)
One, that's hardly a geek issue. Two, I've asked on slashdot a bunch of times, but never gotten an answer: Why is the 2nd amendment more important than the 1st, 4th, 5th, 6th, 7th, 8th, 9th, 13th, 14th, 15th, 19th let alone them combined? Third, other than showing respect for the Constitution, why is the 2nd useful? In other words, why not overturn it (assuming you read the preamble to it in the manner the NRA prefers.)? Your handguns aren't really going to allow you to compete with the US military, and every idiot cannot be trusted with a tank, so any forced overthrow arguement is crap. And while I believe in guns for hunting and home protection, there are a lot of restrictions that you can place on weapons that people seem to think violate the 2nd amendement without getting close to either one of those.
I'm really trying to figure out why anyone cares about this issue.
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:5, Insightful)
The other side of the argument is the bumper-sticker slogan "If guns are criminal, only criminals will have guns" which bears a certain amount of truth - criminals aren't going to disarm in America, and disarming those of us who are law-abiding only makes us more vulnerable to attacks on our life, liberty, and property.
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:5, Insightful)
Deperaate people commit crimes, some of them with guns. Removing guns does NOT precipitate more deperate people, therefore, there is no logical support for increases in gun crime. Wether yopu have a gun or not in your house or business, you're still likely 1) to have other weapons at hand, 2) alarms or a hpne for 911 to call cops, who have guns, 3) won't be home when being robbed, and 4) won;t be killed by your robber (less than 1 % of roberies involve a victim being killed by the crook).
What you WILL get, that is STRONGLY supported by statistics, is a sharp drop in sposes shooting each other, kids shooting people accidentally, suicides, and more. In fact, even where gun crime has increased by as much as 20%, the number of deaths from guns dropped as much as 300% at the same time, simply by limiting who can own a gun.
Look into the numbers. There are links in my other posts, or simply use Google.
This is not an argument, FACT: gun control saves an order of magnitude more lives than it places at risk.
This is also not an arguement: It is NOT against the constitution for them to limit guns. The constitution clearly reads: "A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed." It is clearly laid out not as a right to bear arms for all citizens, but as a MEANS to a WELL REGULATED MILITIA. In other words, if you are not PART OF a WELL REGULATED MILITIA, then you DO NOT have a right to bear arms.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Semi-auto firearms hold more bullets, and are easier t
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Because the 2nd Amendment is the one that gives us the ability to throw the reset switch if all else fails. And yes, that's exactly what it's for; all the bullshit reasons about (government-controlled) militias, self-defense, and hunting is just that: bullshit. The guys who wrote the Constitution had just finished violently overthrowing their government, so they wanted to expli
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Every armed resistence in America worthy of the name, including the American Revolution, required stealing munitions from the military; Exception: the Whiskey Rebellion which was beaten into the ground in about as much time as it took to march troops to the battlefield.
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:4, Insightful)
When we have a disagreement with one group of people, why don't we grab a gun and run off to the middle east to start a war with an entirely different group of people?
Duh. Because we're smarter than you.
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:4, Insightful)
I get your argument, I really do, but I get a bit frustrated when vehement opponents of the war in Iraq who try and attach a "chickenhawk" label and claim it's such an injustice don't think that their cause is worth the ultimate sacrifice.
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:5, Insightful)
Liar (Score:4, Informative)
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:5, Insightful)
OK, I did. I expected the case would be ambiguous, but WOW, get a new example buddy! Based on the first figures I could find, the UKs per-capita murder rate is about one fifth that of the US, and the majority of the murders in the US used guns, whereas almost none in th UK did.
"Quit trying to pick and choose which ones you agree with."
For Gods sake why? This isn't holy scripture, it was written by men who did their best, and did by-and-large a damn fine job. The Second Amendment was muddily written, and is badly obsolete.
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:4, Informative)
Now, if you are somehow saying that I would think that the Black Panthers should have not been allowed to have guns when they were trying to defend themselves against abusive cops, it all boils down to who was breaking the law. The cops were certainly out of line, but I am not convinced the use of deadly force was the correct response there. The time and place to use deadly force is narrowly defined, read "In the Gravest Extreme" for more information. Now, mark me as over-rated and flame bait.
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:4, Insightful)
On the other hand, I am a firm believer that Doom caused violent crime rates to drop in the United States. See, if you graph the release of several major First Person Shooters and the violent crime rate, you find that there's definitely a drop in crime. By your logic, that's proof right? Doom causes fewer crimes. So if we want to reduce crime, just re-release Doom! (It's GPL licensed now so you can go ahead and do that.)
Remember: CORRELATION IS NOT CAUSATION.
Repeat after me: CORRELATION IS NOT CAUSATION.
P.S.: CORRELATION IS NOT CAUSATION.
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:5, Interesting)
What I think would work here, and remain constitutional, would be to limit strictly the TYPE of firearms legaly owned, limit those further to licenced persons, and their carying in public to authorized citizens only. (the constitution provides owning handguns for the efficint creation of a militia, and says nothing about hunting, home security, or any other rights) If you're not active, or in some way military trained, or work for a local molitia (AKA police) or a private and legally licenced militia (private security) then you have no constitutionally protected rights toa firearm.
Beyond limitation of ownership, unless in uniform, and wearing a badge consistent with posession of a loaded gun, police should have loosened rules for being able to shoot at armed suspects. Having a concealed weapon, in any way, unless visibly identified as someone authorised to do so, should allow police leniancy for opening fire on you sooner. A gun in your hand is all they should need to empty their clip at you. If criminals are aware of this increased risk of death, they'll stop carying guns.
The big deal however is not even limiting crime, but limiting accidental deaths and crimes of passion. The bulk of gun releated deaths in the USA fall into these 2 categories. Take a look at statistics in Canada, clearly showing that as household gun ownership increases, so do gun deaths, and in areas where guns in homes are rare, the drop in accidental and other gun related injuries is very low. Homicides do seem to remain consistent. Suicides however are more than 10 times the number of homicides, and keep in mind, 75% of homicides are people that know each other (wives killing husbands, or their lovers, etc)
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously. I'm a liberal. I know a lot of liberals. But I can't think of anyone I know who wants to ban guns. Hell, I'm a supporter of strong 2nd Amendment rights, and a lot of my friends are, also.
Newsflash: different people are different. You'll find anti-gun conservatives and you'll find pro-gun liberals, and vice-versa. If you insist on attempting to group together everyone left-of-center and claim we're all this-and-that-and-the-other, I reserve the right to call everyone right-of-center a violent hate-fulled homophobic racist backwards inbred uneducated dipshit redneck. I know that's not true, but hey, what's good for the goose, right?
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:What about the 2nd? (Score:4, Insightful)
Does the President have to know about this stuff? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh HELL NO! (Score:5, Insightful)
But they'll appear perfectly sincere and trustworthy. And they can fake that as easily as they can fake technical knowledge. It's even EASIER.
There is NO substitute for personal knowledge.
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:5, Insightful)
All executive power stems from the president, and all cabinet members serve at their discretion. The president's views are ultimately what matter.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:4, Insightful)
I believe The Simpsons tackled this very subject in They Saved Lisa's Brain [wikipedia.org]--an episode in which Mensa gains control of Springfield. Horrible legislation ensues.
The president should represent the average person of the United States of America. Someone who compiles Linux is not your average person.
We should really pay attention to how they vote, who their delegate these issues to, who they listen to and--most importantly--how willing they are to bow to the companies for an extra buck.
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:5, Insightful)
If the president is to have so much power, shouldn't he be knowledgeable about what he has power over? I don't want some average Joe coding my software. A president should be someone "special", if he is to be elected, he should be the role model of the average person, not the average person himself.
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:5, Insightful)
"Doesn't "elite" mean "the best"? You applying for a position that, if you do a good enough job, people may carve your face into the side of a mountain. If you don't think you're better than us, why are you running?"
The C students will rule the world (Score:4, Insightful)
Unfortunately, what Harry Truman said is true: people with median skills and intelligence are more likely to be elected than geniuses. The median voter is afraid of geniuses.
However, this doesn't mean a person with average intelligence would make a better president than someone more intelligent. The ideal president would be intelligent, well informed, and have good advisors. After all, if the president isn't intelligent and well informed, how will he know which advice to follow?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
So you're saying GWB was a good representative?
I'm being serious. If the President should represent the average person, I'd say Bush was a good candidate. I don't happen to think he has done this country any service, much less good service, but he does qualify as "average" in most aspects other than wealth.
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Intelligence has absolutely nothing to do with the quality of laws we create. Common sense sometimes has something to do with the quality of laws and, unfortunately, common sense isn't.
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:5, Insightful)
We see how that turned out.
Having excellent advisors is an absolute requirement. It is necessary, but not sufficient, for a good presidency. You definitely need someone at the top who is able to digest all the inputs and provide the guidance and accountability.
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:5, Insightful)
Bush picked cronies and yes-men above all else. Haven't we heard a number of stories of Bush refusing to listen to those who disagree, simply because they disagree?
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:4, Insightful)
JFK's advisors didn't suggest putting a man on the moon. [space.com] They were quite resistant to the idea. On the other hand, Iraq was a "slam dunk" according to Bush's advisors...
How can you identify a "well informed" advisor if you have no knowledge on the subject yourself?
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:5, Interesting)
On the other hand, I think McCain grew up with Alan Turing's Dad so...
I mean, is there really any doubt on which one is more "tech savvy"? If their ages don't make it completely obvious, look at Obama's website, his government transparency (available online), and his simple familiarity with the issues.
A 47 year old recent Constitutional law professor (universities tend to have a couple uses for the inter-tubes) whose campaign uses the Internet as its central tool vs a 72 year old guy who has been in the Legislature since 640K was enough for anyone?
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:5, Insightful)
Spoken like a truly ignorant kid. Guys in their twenties come to me [kuro5hin.org] for advice on computers, kid. Can you write a battle tanks game in assembly and then hand-assemble it (without an assembler) and have it run, bug-free? I did.
And there are guys twenty and thirty years my senior, now retired, who used hollerith cards in their programming and make me look ignorant about computers.
You need to educate yourself. Your hatred of those with more experience than you limits your horizons and should be a great personal embarrassment to you.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Is it fair to have different speeds for different sites based if they paid _your_ ISP for faster speed.
How do we get faster internet connections to the rural comunites.
Should software be patented if so should there be different rules.
Is outsourcing tech workers best for America.
The issues are really people and policy issue (stuff that a president should be able to make decisions on themselfs) It is not as much on the details like what routers they should use
Re:Does the President have to know about this stuf (Score:3, Funny)
Ultimaitely... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Ultimaitely... (Score:4, Funny)
But can they locate it on a map?
Re:Ultimaitely... (Score:5, Funny)
Leave that to the future (Score:3, Interesting)
summary (Score:5, Informative)
McCain - let the markets handle it
Obama - legislate it
Broadband Availability:
McCain - increased access via competition
Obama - re-define 'broadband', move toward universal service, increase availability at schools & libraries
H1B visas:
McCain - increase the number of them
Obama - full immigration overhaul, produce more American-born tech workers, make workers less dependent on their employers
Intellectual Property Protection:
McCain - gov't handles blatant abuses, works against protectionism
Obama - increase cooperation on international standards
Privacy:
McCain - immunity for companies that cooperated with warrentless wiretapping
Obama - expand the FTC to cooperate with international agencies to track cyber-criminals
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Overall, it's pretty predictable: The democrat wants more government regulation, the Republican wants less government involvement. Shockers all around. (Though the wiretapping issue is the one thing that's not so obvious.)
Nothing to see here folks (Score:4, Insightful)
Q: What would {Obama,McCain} do about $TECH_ISSUE?
Obama: Emphasises coming up with solution that works for ALL Americans by making impossible tradeoff. Says soundbite taken from Lawrence Lessig.
McCain: Emphasises coming up with solution that works for ALL Americans by making impossible tradeoff. Says soundbite taken from corporate lobbyist.
Does that about sum it up?
Re:Nothing to see here folks (Score:5, Informative)
Not quite. You forgot to add the vast sums of money to the equation.
Obama [opensecrets.org]: $4,022,006 (TV/Movies/Music) + $3,060,630 (Computers/Internet) = $7,082,636
McCain [opensecrets.org]: $636,046 (TV/Movies/Music) + $629,315 (Computers/Internet) = $1,265,361
Gee, I wonder who's going to be listening harder to what the RIAA, telcos and other technology sector players have to say...
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
I found this interesting:
The quote is from a Washington Post Article [washingtonpost.com]. I am not an Obama supporter, but on Tech issues, he is vastly superior to the other two. His answers in T
Re:Nothing to see here folks (Score:4, Informative)
McCain: 88 M total raised
calculated from opensecrets.org
Obama : 1.5% (TV/Movies/Music) + 1.1% (Computers/Internet) = 2.6%
McCain : 0.7% (TV/Movies/Music) + 0.7% (Computers/Internet) = 1.5%
I think the percentages kinda make your FUD lose a little steam
Re:Nothing to see here folks (Score:4, Insightful)
The larger point is that all three major candidates have taken in over half a billion dollars, and while Obama may tout his plethora of tiny donations, it still only amounts to a fraction of the total he has received. Campaign finance is nothing more than open, legal bribery. There is a reason why corporations and the wealthy have far more influence in the government than workers, and why corporate interests trump public interests.
As I noted in my other reply to one of your posts, what you call a "fraction" of the total he has received being small is actually about half (where "small" is defined as $200 or less). Now, one half is technically a fraction, so I can't say that you're incorrect.
Obama is a case in point. One of his top contributors is Exelon, one of the US's largest nuclear power corporations. In exchange for hundreds of thousands of dollars in campaign contributions, Obama successfully watered down legislation that would hold nuclear power plant operators accountable to local governments in the case of leaks or other accidents. Quid pro quo, pure and simple.
You neglected to mention that the bill Obama "watered down" was his own. Politicians water down their own bills all the time in order to get them to pass, especially when the minority party is against it and you cannot overturn a filibuster.
Look at the $4 million he's raked in from the health care industry and you begin to understand why he opposes single-payer healthcare, an issue supported by over 60% of Americans. Obama's no different from other politicians--he just talks a better game.
This is the third time I've seen you repeat the mantra that because an industry is listed as having given donations on OpenSecrets, a candidate is bought and paid for. The simple fact is that when you donate to a candidate, you are required to list your employer. Everyone's donations, from the janitor to the executive, are lumped in the same category. Your $4 million figure includes everyone in the entire ****ing health care industry! Every doctor, nurse, dentist, and medical assistant is included as a "health care professional." Give me a break, and stop repeating that nonsense.
Re:Nothing to see here folks (Score:4, Interesting)
Realize, though, that not every donation is an attempt to curry favor. I donated a few hundred to Obama, and I develop a website for an online travel company, but that doesn't mean Obama is in the pocket of Big Travel or Big Internet. Similarly, if 1000 gas station attendants donate $20 to McCain, that will be logged as $20,000 coming from the oil industry, but don't tell me those attendants are buying influence.
$7 million from the entertainment and computer industries sounds suspicious, but it's not like the RIAA just cut him a seven-figure check. Obama is an inspiring liberal (as opposed to Kerry in '04 and Gore in '00), and he has really strong support amongst Democrats with higher education. This translates to affluent Hollywood actors and Silicon Valley professionals donating and fund-raising on Obama's behalf.
I'm not saying Obama is going to turn a blind eye to his financial backers; nobody is ignorant of where their support is coming from. But when both candidates are refusing money from federal lobbyists (I know Obama is, pretty sure McCain is) and taking it in small amounts from individual contributors, this kind of tallying isn't damning.
Millions of people [huffingtonpost.com] have donated to Barack's campaign, mostly in small denominations. How much more legit can hard-money donations from private individuals get? What, should only people who don't have employment be able to donate?
Put another way (Score:4, Funny)
NSFW... (Score:3, Funny)
No wait! That's Lewinsky...
Dumb Question (Score:3, Funny)
At least we'll have a President (Score:5, Funny)
The difference (Score:3, Funny)
Lessig (Score:5, Interesting)
Obama at Google (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4RRi_ntQc8 [youtube.com]
Now, if he could just get some decent web developers.
http://news.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/05/31/2341201&from=rss [slashdot.org]
Get to the real issues (Score:5, Interesting)
I think we are getting very close to the time when the government as it has become will need to be reset. Right now we have a two party system where we get pretty much the same no matter who is in power. They treat the population as a huge wallet that they extract money from. Then that money is paid to the lobbies and others that paid to get the officials elected. Sure there is some it spent to placate the masses, but bread and circuses only last so long.
The problem is we have no one to blame but ourselves. We created a system that has systematically evolved politicians into the sub-species that they have become. They are able to spew sound bites without ever doing anything concrete and are able to promise everyone exactly what they want to hear. At this point we are unable to elect someone that has the actual skills that are needed to lead this country the way it should be led. Once in power they will tax and spend just like they always have no matter who is in power.
Personally I think our only hope at the moment is to keep any single party from getting both congress and the White House at the same time. At least when they are held by different parties it prevents massive sweeping changes from being enacted. If a single party does control everything then it will be a sign that things are going to get really bad. There will be no stopping them from doing whatever they hell they want.
Regardless get ready for $10.00 a gallon gasoline and rampant inflation over the next four years. And I suspect we will start to see massive famines across the world and possibly in this country. And the endless debate that the other party caused all this.
Why? (Score:4, Insightful)
Obama invented electricity (Score:4, Informative)
Re:does it really matter (Score:4, Interesting)
To be closer to your analogy, one might say "Look at my new Desert Eagle", and McCain would say: "naw, I'm going to the beach today."
Re:Broadband Access (Score:5, Insightful)
It costs $10,000 to run a cable or fiber to my house. If we're waiting for "market competition" to make it happen, then it will NEVER happen, because there is no way Comcast or Verizon would ever recoupe their investment. "Whiz to Coho" says they can't get a wireless signal at my house 'cause of all the trees, and HughesNet satellite internet sucks! My only hope is some sort of universal access initiative. But then, I was going to vote for Obama anyway.
I see... You want ME to pay for YOUR broadband. No thanks dude. You want to live in the woods? Great -- sometimes I want to as well. But I don't expect to get 3 megabits down out there, and I certainly don't expect other people to have to pay to make that happen.
Re:Broadband Access (Score:4, Insightful)
Which is a pretty hypocritical attitude, considering that one way or the other, taxpayers and shareholders (ie. other people) have paid for your broadband.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Which is a pretty hypocritical attitude, considering that one way or the other, taxpayers and shareholders (ie. other people) have paid for your broadband.
I seem to pay a bill each month... If it's being subsidized, I didn't ask for that. Tell me where to vote so that it's not subsidized, and I'll do it. If that makes it too expensive, then it's too expensive.
Re:Broadband Access (Score:4, Insightful)
In other words, get others to pay for it? (Score:5, Insightful)
You people suck.
Specifically, its people like you that give reason for this government to run us all over.
So, since you won't or cannot pay 10 grand its okay to let to government expend that money to connect your residence?
worse, you probably don't see the problem with it from the wording of your post.
The corporations are right not doing it, the government would be wrong to do so. When people put themselves into situations they should be responsible to get themselves out.
Selfish. Let me guess, I should pay for other people being fat, lazy, and drinking too?
Karma is good when you have so much to burn, but damn your type really pisses me off.
Re:In other words, get others to pay for it? (Score:4, Insightful)