Rhode Irish
Semi-retired
- Messages
- 7,057
- Reaction score
- 900
.
Last edited:
So let's drag everyone down to the lowest common denominator? Talk about American Exceptionalism.
So let's drag everyone down to the lowest common denominator? Talk about American Exceptionalism.
I actually think that is the opposite of what he is saying. The point is to bring the floor up. Doing that requires the pooling of resources. If you're unwilling to pool resources or allow the federal government to serve any role, then you can't talk about "American" exceptionalism. Good luck with your Indiana exceptionalism or Mississippi exceptionalism or whatever. A nation isn't a nation if the only thing its people share is a flag.
I don't know where you guys get all your confidence in your state governments from. I haven't seen any evidence that they are any more capable or any less corrupt than the federal government.
State and county governments are just as bad as the federal government. I do agree there.
OK, on the margin I think government on pretty much every level is too big and invasive in my life. Are you saying it needs to get bigger and more involved on all levels?
My first proposal to Washington, repeal 3 pages of legislation for every 1 new one that is put in place. Do that for a few decades and we might be on to something.
...I don't know where you guys get all your confidence in your state governments from...
They are not even close.
Counties and states have to balance budgets and people can much more easily replace who is making bad calls.
It's a lot easier to change what is going on in Ottawa County than Washington, and it's a lot easier to change what's going on in Columbus than Washington. And even if things aren't changed, the scope of the damage isn't as great because counties and states don't do as much--if Ottawa County f*cks up, tens of thousands are effected. If the Feds mess up (par for the course), millions of jobs disappear.
When you let states develop their own plans, we get the chance to see what works and what doesn't and states' advantage in flexibility allows them to correct errors and/or learn of successes/failures in other states. It's called competition. This is all very simple Macroeconomics; simple economies of scale tells us that the Federal government simply can't do things as efficiently as states because it is too massive and involved in too many things.
Honestly...what does the federal government do really really well?
...When you let states develop their own plans, we get the chance to see what works and what doesn't and states' advantage in flexibility allows them to correct errors and/or learn of successes/failures in other states. It's called competition...
Move to Mexico, then in a year or so, come back and answer your own question.
That's the best you can do?
Honestly...what does the federal government do really really well?
Its all I needed to say. I find most people that make such negative comments about our government haven't experienced living anywhere else.
Didn't NASA just land a robot that can send images, soil and atmospheric data back to us on earth? On that note the Fed is pretty good at developing new technologies. Anyhow, I worked on a creek restoration project for the NPS over the last two years. It looks great and the salmonid count has jumped exponentialy in large part due to the newly constructed lagoon and restored channel.
Not sure how you get here from there. Is Mexico's government less centralized than ours? Personally, I think our federalism has been part of our country's success. The idea would be not to give it up in emulation of other nations that aren't as successful. (Interestingly, one of the least centralized in Europe is also the most successful: Switzerland.)
Why is this conversation all or nothing? Either you love the federal governement and want it to control everything, or you hate it and want it to disappear...
Speaking in defense of the middle-ground, Federalism, I'd first say that whenever you take some political position as indisputably true, it is easy to go the next step and assume that it would be better for the central government to impose it. But there are other considerations:
First, people obviously differ on a lot of issues. To assume that there is one right answer to everything shows that you either believe in a clearly discernable natural law, or don't get out enough. One of the reasons to have a constituion is because sometimes even majority positions have to be restrained. Sometimes consensus needs to build slowly and forcing it is counter-productive and oppressive, right or wrong.
Second, the American system presupposes (similar to Catholic thought) that there there is something inherently important about self-government. The ends do not always justify the means. Stripping, say, the State Mississippi of its authority to control its education system in the name of benevolent care for the State's citizens undermines democracy and personal-responsbility. You see that happening in Europe all the time. Political elites constantly impose their vision of the good on an increasing frustrated but politically uninvolved populace. They know better, so in the end of the day, the people need to get in line. A "represntative" government of 500 legislators representing 300,000,000 is a little far-fetched. That may be fine for issues of national scope (national defense, interstate infrastructure, international trade and treaties), but may not be fine for issues liek education, domestic law, zoning, etc.
Subsidiarity is not anti-centralization of some things, but it is against centralization of all things. Centralize only when necessary, despite the temptation of expediency.
I don't have great writing skills, so I try to keep things short.
We have much we can improve. The government is not the answer for most things, but
anyone who has never lived without reliable electricity, clean drinking water, public schools, roads, phones, internet or a weather forcast shouldn't be so critical of our government. IMHO
I don't have great writing skills, so I try to keep things short.
We have much we can improve. The government is not the answer for most things, but
someone who has never lived without reliable electricity, clean drinking water, public schools, roads, phones, internet or a weather forcast shouldn't be so critical of our government. IMHO
A ha, but I didn't say "what good things does the Federal government do?"
I asked what they do well. i.e. they do them efficiently, and in particular more efficiently than states or the market could.
A good politician develops a policy in which the government gets the job done, a great politician develops a policy in which the free market gets the job done. I just worded that now, in the middle of a GIS class haha but it's the thesis of my belief on government.
For example, NASA, while so totally neat, can subcontract a fair amount of what it does. And of course, state's shouldn't and couldn't have space programs...so it obviously falls under the umbrella of the federal government.
The feds didn't build that. State and local governments "made that happen".
Public schools are a state matter. Federal involvement has been 1) a failure, and 2) a handout to teachers unions (e.g. headstart).
Roads are a state matter. While the feds via Eisenhower's plan paid for 90% of interstate construction, the cost overruns are killing local governments because the upkeep is ridiculous. The construction--and development afterward--was based on an artificial boost and not market principles. Make no mistake, federal involvement in roads is starting to be a net negative (and liberal planners say this, not the GOP).
Phones...huh?
I will give you weather forecast. But let's not act like even that couldn't be privatized. The NWS could be a public-private deal like so many other things.
No sh!t Sherlocks!
Like I said, I suck at explaining myself in writing.
I'm just tired of hearing American kids complain about sh!t and fire off solutions like they have some real world experience.
Ahhh the "you can't know anything because you're so young" angle. Now, that's the best you can do?
What if my solutions are only a reiteration of men who lived centuries ago? What if my ideas are merely Thomas Jefferson's, or George Washington's, or even Ron Paul's?
Surely your age discrimination wouldn't work on them would it?
Ahhh the "you can't know anything because you're so young" angle. Now, that's the best you can do?
What if my solutions are only a reiteration of men who lived centuries ago? What if my ideas are merely Thomas Jefferson's, or George Washington's, or even Ron Paul's?
Surely your age discrimination wouldn't work on them would it?
(dshans, I apologize for the possible incorrect grammar issue.)