The Politics of Exclusion

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George W. Bush summed up the essence of the politics of exclusion when he said the now famous line, "You are either with us or against us." George Soros, the well-known billionaire philanthropist who is currently a prominent supporter of the Democrats, commented that this line quoted by Bush reminds him of the Nazi occupation of his native-born Hungary. Having escaped the anti-semitism of the Nazis as well as the Communists and made his fortune in America, one would expect he knows what he is saying.

In the aftermath of 9/11, it seems, the US entered into a new era of a paranoid "us vs. them" mentality, most noticeably reflected in its political scenario. For Bush, "them" applies to anyone who doesn't support him--anyone who is on the opposite camp. His line, cited above, reflects that fact--"you are either with us or against us"--in other words, you are either a Republican who supports Bush, or a terrorist bent on undermining the United States. The USA Patriot Act is based on this essential assumption--that anyone who isn't explicitly a supporter of the Bush administration constitutes a potential terrorist threat and, as such, has no rights. This is not democracy. This is not America. To call such a repressive piece of legislation the "USA Patriot Act" is a joke, because it resembles the tyranny of Saddam Hussein more than it represents the spirit of American liberty and human rights.

In any case, we are living in an age of "us vs. them" paranoia--a reign of terror, it seems, rivalling the spirit of hatred and fear prevalent during the McCarthy Communist trials, or even that of the Spanish Inquisition, centuries ago. Even Howard Dean, the democratic contender for the "heavyweight title of the world"--i.e. the US Presidency--is not free from such thinking, as his campaign seems to be overwhelmingly centered around bringing down his opposition, mainly Bush, and also the Democratic Leadership Council--what he refers to as the "Republican Wing" of the Democratic Party.

It's sad that politics these days has been reduced to tearing down the opposition and undermining "them"--your enemies--anyone who is not with you--any way you can. It doesn't seem to be focussed on a constructive discussion of the issues, it only seems to thrive on personal hostility. It seems to be about winning popular support by exploiting the baser instincts of the human race--that of arbitrarily targeting an enemy and enjoying the backlash of hatred directed against them--popularity won at the expense of a common enemy. That's a sadly negative approach to politics and, ultimately, only serves to undermine the state as a whole. Bill Clinton, for all his shortcomings, was, at least, a statesman who sought to promote inclusiveness in the American political arena:

Clinton warned of such self-destruction when he accepted the Democratic presidential nomination in 1992: "For too long, politicians have told the most of us that are doing all right that what's really wrong with America is the rest of us: them. … We've nearly them'd ourselves to death. Them, and them, and them. But this is America. There is no them; there is only us."

William Saletan, Tuesday, Dec. 30, 2003
Basically, it looks like we need a radical shift in our thinking--instead of focussing on who our enemy is and how we can bring them down, we need to focus on how we can improve our situation in the world we live in--think positively and constructively instead of thinking negatively and destructively.

The consequences of negative, destructive politics is pretty apparent--the current administration is thriving on exactly these sentiments of seething hatred, vengefulness and resentment. As a result, we have the largest budget deficit in history of $1.3 trillion (immediately after the largest budget surplus in history), 3.3 million jobs lost (the most since the Great Depression) and a nation embroiled in what's looking more and more like a replay of the Vietnam War, with the Iraq War costing thousands of lives and $150 billion of taxpayer money.

Basically, I'd say, we need to quit fostering hatred and divisiveness and start working together for the common good.



The sky is blue, water is wet, and Django contradicts himself. This big ball we call Earth continues to turn.

You gonna leave, or what? Because nobody really wants you here, and if we're all the brainwashed racists you repeatedly say we are, what reason is there for you to stay?

Originally Posted by Django
George W. Bush summed up the essence of the politics of exclusion when he said the now famous line, "You are either with us or against us." George Soros, the well-known billionaire philanthropist who is currently a prominent supporter of the Democrats, commented that this line quoted by Bush reminds him of the Nazi occupation of his native-born Hungary. Having escaped the anti-semitism of the Nazis as well as the Communists and made his fortune in America, one would expect he knows what he is saying.
The point of Bush's quote is to illustrate that there can be no fence-straddling on such a grave issue. He's right. To liken it to Nazis is to paint Bush negatively, but with deniability, as no actual accusation has been made. It wouldn't make much less sense for me to liken you to Stalin because you're both fond of peanuts.

Originally Posted by Django
In the aftermath of 9/11, it seems, the US entered into a new era of a paranoid "us vs. them" mentality, most noticeably reflected in its political scenario. For Bush, "them" applies to anyone who doesn't support him--anyone who is on the opposite camp. His line, cited above, reflects that fact--"you are either with us or against us"--in other words, you are either a Republican who supports Bush, or a terrorist bent on undermining the United States. The USA Patriot Act is based on this essential assumption--that anyone who isn't explicitly a supporter of the Bush administration constitutes a potential terrorist threat and, as such, has no rights.
There is nothing in the Patriot Act which is even remotely akin to "has no rights." You're sensationalizing in lieu of facts.

Originally Posted by Django
This is not democracy. This is not America. To call such a repressive piece of legislation the "USA Patriot Act" is a joke, because it resembles the tyranny of Saddam Hussein more than it represents the spirit of American liberty and human rights.
Spoken exactly like someone who's never lived under that tyranny. You'd do well to abandon such exaggerative jabber. You may think it gets people's attention, but ultimately it only alienates reasonable folks.

Originally Posted by Django
In any case, we are living in an age of "us vs. them" paranoia--a reign of terror, it seems, rivalling the spirit of hatred and fear prevalent during the McCarthy Communist trials, or even that of the Spanish Inquisition, centuries ago. Even Howard Dean, the democratic contender for the "heavyweight title of the world"--i.e. the US Presidency--is not free from such thinking, as his campaign seems to be overwhelmingly centered around bringing down his opposition, mainly Bush, and also the Democratic Leadership Council--what he refers to as the "Republican Wing" of the Democratic Party.
If someone were to randomly walk through the streets today, they'd find no noticable difference between the way it looks now, and the way it looked 3 years ago. To call this a "reign of terror" is a silly thing. Save phrases like that for regimes similar to the one whose supplanting you opposed.

Originally Posted by Django
It's sad that politics these days has been reduced to tearing down the opposition and undermining "them"--your enemies--anyone who is not with you--any way you can. It doesn't seem to be focussed on a constructive discussion of the issues, it only seems to thrive on personal hostility. It seems to be about winning popular support by exploiting the baser instincts of the human race--that of arbitrarily targeting an enemy and enjoying the backlash of hatred directed against them--popularity won at the expense of a common enemy. That's a sadly negative approach to politics and, ultimately, only serves to undermine the state as a whole.
It hasn't even come close to being "reduced" to that. For all the time they spend fighting amongst each other, every major candidate spends just as much, if not far more, talking about their proposed initiatives and ideas to set things right.

Originally Posted by Django
Basically, it looks like we need a radical shift in our thinking--instead of focussing on who our enemy is and how we can bring them down, we need to focus on how we can improve our situation in the world we live in--think positively and constructively instead of thinking negatively and destructively.
That'd only be bad in the other direction. We need both. It is cynical and hopeless to think only of opposition, but it is silly and unrealistic to presume that there will ever be a time in which it is not necessary to attack bad ideas. Case in point: this very post, which you use to both decry negative politics, and extensively criticize the current administration.

Originally Posted by Django
The consequences of negative, destructive politics is pretty apparent--the current administration is thriving on exactly these sentiments of seething hatred, vengefulness and resentment.
What does negative campaigning have to do with our budget situation?

Originally Posted by Django
As a result, we have the largest budget deficit in history of $1.3 trillion (immediately after the largest budget surplus in history)
This sentence demonstrates a complete lack of economic understanding. The amount you're talking about is our debt; it's what we've amassed. The deficit is the amount of debt we're adding to that each year. If you run a business for five years, losing $10,000 each year, your deficit is $10,000, and your debt is $50,000.

That said, you're not just confused about the concepts, but the numbers, too. Our national debt is not $1.3 trillion. It's $6.9 trillion. You presumably got your (faulty) number from the fact that the debt is $1.3 trillion higher than it was around the time Clinton left office.

What you probably don't realize, however, is that the national debt rose every year under Clinton, ending up around $1.6 trillion more when he left than when he first took over. In fact, the national debt's been rising almost invariably each year for over a century now, through both boom and bust.

The moral, in a nutshell, is that a rising debt is not a problem; when the payments come due, we always make them. Debts are paid off, and new debts are issued. Debt is not, in and of itself, an evil thing. It all depends on what it's being used for, and whether or not you can afford to pay it off. If memory serves, Alexander Hamilton understood this, but most Democrats don't seem to.

Originally Posted by Django
3.3 million jobs lost (the most since the Great Depression) and a nation embroiled in what's looking more and more like a replay of the Vietnam War, with the Iraq War costing thousands of lives and $150 billion of taxpayer money.
The difference being that the losses at the time of the Great Depression sent us from bad to worse, whereas these losses have sent us from good to okay. And, of course, there's also the fact that the unemployment rate has been dropping for a couple of months, and the number of jobless claims (as well as virtually all other major indicators) are very clearly indicative of a recovering market.

Originally Posted by Django
Basically, I'd say, we need to quit fostering hatred and divisiveness and start working together for the common good.
We can't work together for the common good if a great many people are wrong about just what is in the common good. Thus, internal conflicts are inevitable and necessary.

For those who'd rather not read the post: more made-up facts drenched in rhetoric.

Now keep your repeated promise and get lost.



You know... next month marks the one year anniversary of when Django first appeared. One year!



Basically, I'd say, we need to quit fostering hatred and divisiveness and start working together for the common good.
Amen brother!

To Yoda,
Your entire post is wrong. You're arguing to win but the problem is Bush sucks. You can't win an argument that's wrong unless you're a lawyer with a dumb jury. Sadly, in America today there are more dumb people than smart.

P.S. I agree with the brainwashed part.



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Originally Posted by Yoda
The point of Bush's quote is to illustrate that there can be no fence-straddling on such a grave issue. He's right. To liken it to Nazis is to paint Bush negatively, but with deniability, as no actual accusation has been made. It wouldn't make much less sense for me to liken you to Stalin because you're both fond of peanuts.
What planet are you from?

Originally Posted by Yoda
There is nothing in the Patriot Act which is even remotely akin to "has no rights." You're sensationalizing in lieu of facts.
Repeat: What planet are you from?

Originally Posted by Yoda
Spoken exactly like someone who's never lived under that tyranny. You'd do well to abandon such exaggerative jabber. You may think it gets people's attention, but ultimately it only alienates reasonable folks.
Repeat: What planet are you from?

Originally Posted by Yoda
If someone were to randomly walk through the streets today, they'd find no noticable difference between the way it looks now, and the way it looked 3 years ago. To call this a "reign of terror" is a silly thing. Save phrases like that for regimes similar to the one whose supplanting you opposed.
Repeat: What planet are you from?

Originally Posted by Yoda
It hasn't even come close to being "reduced" to that. For all the time they spend fighting amongst each other, every major candidate spends just as much, if not far more, talking about their proposed initiatives and ideas to set things right.
Repeat: What planet are you from?

Originally Posted by Yoda
That'd only be bad in the other direction. We need both. It is cynical and hopeless to think only of opposition, but it is silly and unrealistic to presume that there will ever be a time in which it is not necessary to attack bad ideas. Case in point: this very post, which you use to both decry negative politics, and extensively criticize the current administration.
Well, if you read my comments carefully, what I said was that we need to focus more on the issues instead of promoting hatred and divisiveness by tearing the opposition down through personal attacks.

Originally Posted by Yoda
What does negative campaigning have to do with our budget situation?
Not negative campaigning, per se, but, rather, the "us vs. them" thinking--the "you are with us or against us" brand of politics--fear-mongering and hate-mongering. Negative politics

Originally Posted by Yoda
This sentence demonstrates a complete lack of economic understanding. The amount you're talking about is our debt; it's what we've amassed. The deficit is the amount of debt we're adding to that each year. If you run a business for five years, losing $10,000 each year, your deficit is $10,000, and your debt is $50,000.

That said, you're not just confused about the concepts, but the numbers, too. Our national debt is not $1.3 trillion. It's $6.9 trillion. You presumably got your (faulty) number from the fact that the debt is $1.3 trillion higher than it was around the time Clinton left office.

What you probably don't realize, however, is that the national debt rose every year under Clinton, ending up around $1.6 trillion more when he left than when he first took over. In fact, the national debt's been rising almost invariably each year for over a century now, through both boom and bust.

The moral, in a nutshell, is that a rising debt is not a problem; when the payments come due, we always make them. Debts are paid off, and new debts are issued. Debt is not, in and of itself, an evil thing. It all depends on what it's being used for, and whether or not you can afford to pay it off. If memory serves, Alexander Hamilton understood this, but most Democrats don't seem to.
Let's get this straight... first you say that the $1.3 trillion is not our budget deficit, but, rather, our national debt. Then you say that our national debt is actually $6.9 trillion, and that the margin of increase since Bush took office is $1.3 trillion. Hmm... correct me if I'm wrong but what you are doing here is contradicting yourself--shooting yourself in the foot, even. If the margin of increase of the national debt is $1.3 trillion, then that is the cumulative budget deficit since Bush took office, because every budget deficit adds to the national debt even as every budget surplus subtracts from the national debt. So, in effect, what I said was true--the cumulative budget deficit since Bush took office is $1.3 trillion, which has increased the national debt by that amount. In other words, by 18%. On the other hand, while Clinton was in office, the budget was consistently being balanced, and by the time he left office, we were looking at record-breaking budget surpluses. Thus, it's quite evident that the Bush tax cuts are a notoriously short-termist approach to reviving the economy, because the $1.3 trillion cumulative budget deficit--or increase in the national debt--whatever you want to call it--is directly owing to his tax cuts--40% of which benefit the 1% wealthiest Americans, while the man on the street benefits, on average, by a couple of hundred dollars. So, while the economy is apparently reviving, our nation's debt continues to soar, so that, today, we pay more annually in interest for this debt than we spend for the education of American children.

Originally Posted by Yoda
The difference being that the losses at the time of the Great Depression sent us from bad to worse, whereas these losses have sent us from good to okay. And, of course, there's also the fact that the unemployment rate has been dropping for a couple of months, and the number of jobless claims (as well as virtually all other major indicators) are very clearly indicative of a recovering market.
Yeah, well, let's see what happens in the job market scenario. It's still pretty shabby. 3.3 million jobs lost is not a joke.

Originally Posted by Yoda
We can't work together for the common good if a great many people are wrong about just what is in the common good. Thus, internal conflicts are inevitable and necessary.
Well, an inclusionary attitude is still a goal worth aspiring after. Perhaps it can never be fully realized, but it's still a noble pursuit, and something we should strive for, in my opinion.



Django, since it is pretty obvious you’re not going anywhere, would you please tell me exactly what rights of yours have been taken away by the Patriot Act? And I don’t mean anything you have read somewhere… I mean anything that has happened to you personally that is directly linked to the Patriot Act….
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Originally Posted by Caitlyn
Django, since it is pretty obvious you’re not going anywhere, would you please tell me exactly what rights of yours have been taken away by the Patriot Act? And I don’t mean anything you have read somewhere… I mean anything that has happened to you personally that is directly linked to the Patriot Act….
Well, Caitlyn, so far, nothing that I am aware of. But that isn't the point. The point is what the government can potentially do by virtue of the Patriot Act. Basically, by your argument, if, hypothetically, the government shoud pass a law tomorrow decreeing that all sick people are to be executed to save on medical costs, I shouldn't complain about it until and unless I fall ill myself! That's a pretty hollow argument, with all due respect!



Originally Posted by sunfrog
To Yoda,
Your entire post is wrong. You're arguing to win but the problem is Bush sucks.
It's time to face the fact that you believe what you believe because you want to, and are blissfully unaware of the facts. Please stop posting until you have an actual argument to make. Thanks.

Originally Posted by Django
What planet are you from?


Repeat: What planet are you from?


Repeat: What planet are you from?


Repeat: What planet are you from?


Repeat: What planet are you from?
One in which speculation alone is insufficient for belief, and repetitive one-liners are poor argumentative substitutes.

Originally Posted by Django
Well, if you read my comments carefully, what I said was that we need to focus more on the issues instead of promoting hatred and divisiveness by tearing the opposition down through personal attacks.
I think we do focus more on the issues, and I have the sneaking suspicion that you use the word "divisiveness" more encompassingly than you should. It's not a synonym for disagreement.

Originally Posted by Django
Not negative campaigning, per se, but, rather, the "us vs. them" thinking--the "you are with us or against us" brand of politics--fear-mongering and hate-mongering. Negative politics
Then what do negative politics have to do with our budget situation?

Originally Posted by Django
Let's get this straight... first you say that the $1.3 trillion is not our budget deficit, but, rather, our national debt. Then you say that our national debt is actually $6.9 trillion, and that the margin of increase since Bush took office is $1.3 trillion. Hmm... correct me if I'm wrong but what you are doing here is contradicting yourself--shooting yourself in the foot, even.
I didn't contradict myself in any way, shape, or form, because I did not say the debt was $1.3 trillion; you did. I said that the figure you were referring to was not called the "deficit," but the "debt," and then went on to inform you that both your terminology and your numbers were at fault. I was quite clear on this; pay a bit more attention.

Originally Posted by Django
If the margin of increase of the national debt is $1.3 trillion, then that is the cumulative budget deficit since Bush took office, because every budget deficit adds to the national debt even as every budget surplus subtracts from the national debt. So, in effect, what I said was true--the cumulative budget deficit since Bush took office is $1.3 trillion, which has increased the national debt by that amount.
It wasn't true at all, unless you believe in subjective terminology. You cannot use any term you want and expect those who actually know what they mean to gloss right over it.

Anyway, it sounds to me as if you heard this number mentioned somewhere, decided to repeat it, slipped up in doing so, and are now trying to hide the fact that you're just mouthing what someone else has said. This is par for the course when you try to construct an economic argument.

Originally Posted by Django
In other words, by 18%. On the other hand, while Clinton was in office, the budget was consistently being balanced, and by the time he left office, we were looking at record-breaking budget surpluses.
As I stated before, the national debt rose around $1.6 trillion under Clinton's tenure. How does that translate into the budget "consistently being balanced"? And as I said, the national debt has been rising constantly for over a century, through both economic recessions and explosions, hence any complaint based purely on the fact that the national debt has risen is no complaint at all.

Originally Posted by Django
Thus, it's quite evident that the Bush tax cuts are a notoriously short-termist approach to reviving the economy, because the $1.3 trillion cumulative budget deficit--or increase in the national debt--whatever you want to call it--is directly owing to his tax cuts--40% of which benefit the 1% wealthiest Americans, while the man on the street benefits, on average, by a couple of hundred dollars. So, while the economy is apparently reviving, our nation's debt continues to soar, so that, today, we pay more annually in interest for this debt than we spend for the education of American children.
There's nothing short-termist about it. The CBO budget forecast (which was too pessimistic in its predictions for 2003, by the way) has the deficit rising next year, and then decreasing each year after to the point at which we'll be running surpluses again...and that's with the tax cuts.

Here's something else to chew on: governmental tax revenues went up in the first two months of this fiscal year compared to the same period of time the year before, despite the fact that these cuts were made. Thus, there's no reasonable way to try to pin the deficit (which I assure you you cannot show to be a detriment in the first place) on the tax cuts. It's the Laffer Curve in action, and shows us that we were overtaxing.

As for the top 1%; we've been over this before, though you generally duck out of such discussions, only to return again with the same hollow gripe. Summary: the middle and poor got their tax cuts in 2001. Bush gave the wealthy their end of the same cut (which was going to be delayed several years after the first phase) in May of this year. Directly following the latter was the largest period of growth in two decades. The wealthy, arguably the key component in a proper tax reduction/growth stimulus plan, were and are overtaxed. If their reduction seems ridiculous, then their level of taxation does, too.

As I've stated in the past, you contradict yourself when you whine about the job market, yet simultaneously decry giving more financial freedom to many of those who provide those jobs in the first place.

Originally Posted by Django
Yeah, well, let's see what happens in the job market scenario. It's still pretty shabby. 3.3 million jobs lost is not a joke.
No, it's not a joke. And 5.9% unemployment isn't bad.

The job market is notoriously laggy, and as such is the last refuge of those opposing Bush's economic policies. The Bush-haters are really clinging to a sinking ship on this one.

Originally Posted by Django
Well, an inclusionary attitude is still a goal worth aspiring after. Perhaps it can never be fully realized, but it's still a noble pursuit, and something we should strive for, in my opinion.
How is it a noble pursuit to advocate that we have no internal conflict? Unless you mean to say that it is noble to strive for a world in which every single person advocates the best and correct idea, in which case the post's primary message is just a truism.

Didn't you say you were going to leave? Don't you think it says something that you ignored this question the last several times it was posed to you?



Originally Posted by Django
Well, Caitlyn, so far, nothing that I am aware of. But that isn't the point. The point is what the government can potentially do by virtue of the Patriot Act. Basically, by your argument, if, hypothetically, the government shoud pass a law tomorrow decreeing that all sick people are to be executed to save on medical costs, I shouldn't complain about it until and unless I fall ill myself! That's a pretty hollow argument, with all due respect!
She didn't make that argument, though. She just asked the question, presumably to demonstrate (quite well, I think) that for all your shrieking about injustice, you haven't witnessed any at all.



Originally Posted by Yoda
She didn't make that argument, though. She just asked the question, presumably to demonstrate (quite well, I think) that for all your shrieking about injustice, you haven't witnessed any at all.

Thank you, and yes, that was my purpose for asking… thus far, the majority of people I have encountered who are shrieking injustice over the Patriot Act have exhibited a gross ignorance of not only the Patriot Act, but the law period… Basically the only people who even need worry about the Patriot Act are in fact the terrorists/criminals themselves…



A system of cells interlinked
Originally Posted by sunfrog
Amen brother!

To Yoda,
Your entire post is wrong. You're arguing to win but the problem is Bush sucks. You can't win an argument that's wrong unless you're a lawyer with a dumb jury. Sadly, in America today there are more dumb people than smart.

P.S. I agree with the brainwashed part.
I'll say one thing. I don't like Bush. I'll also say that according to the research I have just done on some of these facts in this argument, Yoda's numbers check out. This doesn't mean our little beady eyed pres doesn't need replacing, but the post speaks true. I am also having a little trouble seeing a correlation between Bush and a man who tried to roast an entire race in the oven.
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Originally Posted by Sedai
I'll say one thing. I don't like Bush. I'll also say that according to the research I have just done on some of these facts in this argument, Yoda's numbers check out. This doesn't mean our little beady eyed pres doesn't need replacing, but the post speaks true. I am also having a little trouble seeing a correlation between Bush and a man who tried to roast an entire race in the oven.
Well, the similarity comes from the divisive attitude that Bush is promoting, by such statements as "you are either with us or against us." You may interpret the statement as you choose, but I think I speak for most of us when I say that a statement like that in a time of crisis serves, essentially, to exploit fear for political advantage. However you may choose to rationalize that statement, how it comes across as sounding to most people, in America and the world over, is: "either you support George W. Bush and his Republican administration, or you will be treated as a potential terrorist suspect with no rights." That is the essence of totalitarianism. Democracy is founded on the right to question our government. Take away that right, and what you have left is a dictatorship--like that of Adolf Hitler or Saddam Hussein. George W. Bush, through his statements and legislation (i.e. the Patriot Act, which I will get to in greater detail subsequently) seems to be doing just that.



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Originally Posted by Yoda
One in which speculation alone is insufficient for belief, and repetitive one-liners are poor argumentative substitutes.
Well, when I asked you what planet you come from, what I was getting at is that you live in a world of theory and fantasy. My words are based in practical reality and experience. What I was trying to say was that your words may check out in theory, but you happen to be out of touch with reality--practical, experiential reality.

Originally Posted by Yoda
I think we do focus more on the issues, and I have the sneaking suspicion that you use the word "divisiveness" more encompassingly than you should. It's not a synonym for disagreement.
That's mere speculation on your part. When I say divisiveness, what I am referring to is the tendency to make derisive personal attacks and ignore the substance of issues raised. That pretty much sums up your debating style, for the most part.

Originally Posted by Yoda
Then what do negative politics have to do with our budget situation?
Well, negative politics tends to promote fear and divisiveness in society, which, in turn, adversely affects the condition of our society as a whole, one of the repurcussions of which is the budget crisis.

Originally Posted by Yoda
I didn't contradict myself in any way, shape, or form, because I did not say the debt was $1.3 trillion; you did. I said that the figure you were referring to was not called the "deficit," but the "debt," and then went on to inform you that both your terminology and your numbers were at fault. I was quite clear on this; pay a bit more attention.
Oh yes you did, and don't try to deny it! You first tell me that the $1.3 trillion is not the deficit, but, rather, the national debt. Then you tell me that the national debt is $6.9 trillion. Well... I never said that the national debt wasn't $6.9 trillion. If you can't see how absurd your self-contradiction is, you need to look again. What I said stands--the cumulative budget deficit since Bush took office is $1.3 trillion, which amounts to the rise in the national debt.

Originally Posted by Yoda
It wasn't true at all, unless you believe in subjective terminology. You cannot use any term you want and expect those who actually know what they mean to gloss right over it.
What I said is completely accurate and concurs with what you yourself said. So please, no more confused self-contradiction!

Originally Posted by Yoda
Anyway, it sounds to me as if you heard this number mentioned somewhere, decided to repeat it, slipped up in doing so, and are now trying to hide the fact that you're just mouthing what someone else has said. This is par for the course when you try to construct an economic argument.
Well, what's your point?

Originally Posted by Yoda
As I stated before, the national debt rose around $1.6 trillion under Clinton's tenure. How does that translate into the budget "consistently being balanced"? And as I said, the national debt has been rising constantly for over a century, through both economic recessions and explosions, hence any complaint based purely on the fact that the national debt has risen is no complaint at all.
If the national debt rose by $1.6 trillion in the 8 years that Clinton was in office, that is because of the debt inherited from the 8 years of Reaganomics and 4 years of Bush tax cuts preceding it--irresponsible Republican deficit spending. Clinton's policies consistently reduced annual budget deficits, until he was balancing the budget and, towards the end of his term in office, had turned the budget to a surplus. On the other hand, Bush's tax cuts have produced a $1.3 trillion increase in national debt in the 3 years he has been in office--compare it with the 8 years Clinton was in office.

Originally Posted by Yoda
There's nothing short-termist about it. The CBO budget forecast (which was too pessimistic in its predictions for 2003, by the way) has the deficit rising next year, and then decreasing each year after to the point at which we'll be running surpluses again...and that's with the tax cuts.
Well, again, that's pure speculation on your part. Speculative projection. It doesn't say very much about a fiscal policy based on hopes and dreams and speculative projections.

Originally Posted by Yoda
Here's something else to chew on: governmental tax revenues went up in the first two months of this fiscal year compared to the same period of time the year before, despite the fact that these cuts were made. Thus, there's no reasonable way to try to pin the deficit (which I assure you you cannot show to be a detriment in the first place) on the tax cuts. It's the Laffer Curve in action, and shows us that we were overtaxing.
Well, that's because of the fact that the economy was in recession last fiscal year, whereas it has experienced noticeable improvement of late.

Originally Posted by Yoda
As for the top 1%; we've been over this before, though you generally duck out of such discussions, only to return again with the same hollow gripe. Summary: the middle and poor got their tax cuts in 2001. Bush gave the wealthy their end of the same cut (which was going to be delayed several years after the first phase) in May of this year. Directly following the latter was the largest period of growth in two decades. The wealthy, arguably the key component in a proper tax reduction/growth stimulus plan, were and are overtaxed. If their reduction seems ridiculous, then their level of taxation does, too.
Okay, first of all, who got their tax cuts first is irrelevant--the fact is that the poor benefitted by a few hundred dollars on average--hardly a significant amount--whereas the rich have benefitted enormously. This is hardly equitable. Secondly, the fact that the Dow rose sharply following the huge tax breaks afforded to the wealthy is hardly a coincidence. Reflecting on this course of events it is inevitable--with the substantial increase in cash on hand, the wealthy naturally had more cash to invest. Point is, how does this increase in stock market activity translate to a rise in production and more jobs. A 6 % unemployment rate may not look too bad on paper, but it does translate to 3.3 million jobs lost in 3 years. In human terms the cost is horrific. Ultimately, it seems that the stock market jump resulting from tax breaks is a travesty, because these tax breaks came at the expense of a huge budget deficit, which seems to be slowly bankrupting the nation, especially by virtue of interests accumulated on the national debt. Question is--will deficit spending save the day? All it did in the past was rack up a steadily increasing national debt. Clinton was the only president in recent history to have actually balanced the budget and even produce budget surpluses, putting a dent on the national debt. This has been completely overturned by Bush's deficit spending. His tax cuts are completely short-termist. Will this short-term spurt in stock market activity resulting from tax breaks bring about the huge increase in production that will offset the giant budget deficits created by Bush's tax cuts? Remains to be seen.

Originally Posted by Yoda
As I've stated in the past, you contradict yourself when you whine about the job market, yet simultaneously decry giving more financial freedom to many of those who provide those jobs in the first place.
Question is--is there a correlation between tax cuts and an increase in the job market? Remains to be seen.

Originally Posted by Yoda
No, it's not a joke. And 5.9% unemployment isn't bad.
Like I said, it may not look bad on paper, but the cost in human terms is what it is.

Originally Posted by Yoda
The job market is notoriously laggy, and as such is the last refuge of those opposing Bush's economic policies. The Bush-haters are really clinging to a sinking ship on this one.
No... I think they are voicing their concern that tax breaks for the rich do not necessarily translate to more jobs. The fact is that Bush has a history of caring more about his corporate funders and CEO buddies than the average man on the street. His long-time association with Enron CEO Ken Lay speaks for itself.

Originally Posted by Yoda
How is it a noble pursuit to advocate that we have no internal conflict? Unless you mean to say that it is noble to strive for a world in which every single person advocates the best and correct idea, in which case the post's primary message is just a truism.
Well, if we debate and discuss the issues, there doesn't have to be internal conflict. Internal conflict translates to civil war. Is that how you would like our political situation to be? An ongoing civil war? Basically, this is America--one nation. What's the point of promoting divisiveness through exclusion? My point is that the policies of the Bush administration amount to equating any criticism of the government--one of the fundamental precepts of democracy--with collaboration with the terrorists. This essentially amounts to unscrupulously milking a national tragedy for political advantage.

Originally Posted by Yoda
Didn't you say you were going to leave? Don't you think it says something that you ignored this question the last several times it was posed to you?
Well, the reason I keep coming back is to answer to all the back-biting that goes on while my back is turned.



Django's Avatar
BANNED
Originally Posted by Yoda
She didn't make that argument, though. She just asked the question, presumably to demonstrate (quite well, I think) that for all your shrieking about injustice, you haven't witnessed any at all.
Patriot Act: What it is

On October 26, 2001, just six weeks after the devastation on September 11, Congress passed the USA Patriot Act. Ashcroft and his cronies wasted no time in attempting to further their agenda at the expense of a traumatized nation. USA Patriot is an acronym for "Uniting and Strengthening America by Providing Appropriate Tools Required to Intercept and Obstruct Terrorism", but all that elaborate language does not succeed in hiding the dangerous nature of the document.

So just what does the Patriot Act give the Bush administration the right to do? Well, for starters, it allows the FBI to monitor everything from e-mail to medical records to library accounts, providing frightening access to once private information. They can now legally wiretap phones, break into homes and offices, and access financial records without probable cause.

The Patriot Act broadens terrorism to include "domestic terrorism" which could potentially be used to target activist groups within the country speaking out against Bush's treacherous deeds.

The Patriot Act also disregards attorney-client privilege and authorizes government surveillance of previously confidential discussions.

Immigrants can be detained indefinitely based on suspicion alone, and the Patriot Act aids the excessive amounts of deportations that are taking place.

Calling this the Patriot Act is quite a dangerous action within itself, because the implication follows: if you speak against the Patriot Act, well, you sure aren't being a good citizen in our country's time of need. When Bush labels his actions as the model of patriotism, he then classifies all dissent as un-American. While this may be comforting to him, it is actually an insult to patriotism. Protecting the Constitution and the Bill of Rights demonstrates a great respect for the government of this country and the rights of its citizens, and that sounds downright patriotic.

Read the text of the Patriot Act here.

Patriot II: What it is

It's not over yet. Currently, the Justice Department is working on the Domestic Security Enhancement Act, an extension of the Patriot Act that has been dubbed "Patriot II". Perhaps one of the most dangerous aspects of this bill would grant the government the right to detain someone indefinitely without ever disclosing their identity, allowing the person to ultimately disappear. It would also broaden local police's ability to spy on "terrorist" groups, including domestic religious and political organizations. The government could take sweeping "anti-terrorist" action, like obtaining an individual's financial and library records without a warrant and allowing wiretaps without a court order. How else could this affect you? Well, if you engage in civil disobedience, the government would have the right to strip you of your citizenship! Had enough? Stop this act before it starts!

You can read more about Patriot Act II, and the text of the proposed act at the Center for Public Integrity or through the ACLU.

Take Action!

Representative [url=http://bernie.house.gov/publications/index.asp?issue=Civil+Liberties]Bernie Sanders, a Vermont Independent, has proposed a bill that would revoke the sections of the Patriot Act that allow the government to invade your privacy at bookstores and libraries. The bill is currently stuck in committee, despite having 141 co-sponsors. For an explanation of the bill, visit the ACLU. E-mail the Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Crime, Terrorism, and Homeland Security and put pressure on them to push this bill forward. Also, contact your Representatives and tell them to sign on as co-sponsors to the bill if they have not already. For a list and description of all pending anti-Patriot Act legislation, check here.

Check here for information on how to stop the NEW Patriot Act before it gets off the ground. Demand an end to the elimination of civil liberties masked as anti-terror legislation!

courtesy of www.michaelmoore.com



Wow! Look at all these posts!
Here some I like:
It's time to face the fact that you believe what you believe because you want to, and are blissfully unaware of the facts. Please stop posting until you have an actual argument to make. Thanks.
See, this is exactly the us vs them mentality. When I was against the war everyone said shut up you traitor. Now I am against re-election and you tell me to shut up again. There should not be a shut up anywhere. Where's does the hatred come from? I'm ok you're ok. Let's hug like we did on Christmas.

Thank you, and yes, that was my purpose for asking… thus far, the majority of people I have encountered who are shrieking injustice over the Patriot Act have exhibited a gross ignorance of not only the Patriot Act, but the law period… Basically the only people who even need worry about the Patriot Act are in fact the terrorists/criminals themselves…
The Partiot Act is horrible and goes against everything America stands for. The only people who have to worry about it is every citizen who doesn't want to live in a big brother society.

I don't like Bush. I'll also say that according to the research I have just done on some of these facts in this argument, Yoda's numbers check out.
It's his logic that's faulty. Look here "Our national debt is not $1.3 trillion. It's $6.9 trillion." He says that's a good thing. "The moral, in a nutshell, is that a rising debt is not a problem;" But he uses it against Clinton "What you probably don't realize, however, is that the national debt rose every year under Clinton," So is it a problem or not? If it's bad for one it's bad for the other, and worse for Bush. If it's not bad then all you can say is "Hmm, isn't it amazing how much the national debt has risen under Bushlite?" What kind of weird logic do you need to apply to get Bush to look good in this argument?

P.S. I haven't read this whole thread yet. I have to go to work. BBT



Originally Posted by sunfrog
If it's bad for one it's bad for the other,
same thing can be said for a lot of things that society overlooks
such as the word n*g*er
it's amazing how black people are ok when they say it but if a white person should say it....they'll have his/her head on a stick by noon

don't use that argument unless you're willing to use it for everything else

war is bad...but guess what...so are you hippies who go after our own people who go to fight for the simple freedoms that you take advantage of
__________________
The wold is full of kings and queens
Who blind our eyes and steal our dreams
it's heaven and hell



Django's Avatar
BANNED
lol! I'm not a hippie by any standard! Neither, I suspect, is sunfrog.



Originally Posted by Django
Well, the similarity comes from the divisive attitude that Bush is promoting, by such statements as "you are either with us or against us." You may interpret the statement as you choose, but I think I speak for most of us when I say that a statement like that in a time of crisis serves, essentially, to exploit fear for political advantage. However you may choose to rationalize that statement, how it comes across as sounding to most people, in America and the world over, is: "either you support George W. Bush and his Republican administration, or you will be treated as a potential terrorist suspect with no rights." That is the essence of totalitarianism. Democracy is founded on the right to question our government. Take away that right, and what you have left is a dictatorship--like that of Adolf Hitler or Saddam Hussein. George W. Bush, through his statements and legislation (i.e. the Patriot Act, which I will get to in greater detail subsequently) seems to be doing just that.
You don't have anywhere near the authority to try to tell Sedai (or anyone else here) what "most people, in America and the world over" think. I don't believe for a moment that most people take Bush's words to mean that anyone who is not fighting directly alongside us is a terrorist without rights. That's your own personal, paranoid interpretation.

If Bush practices the "politics of exclusion," then you routinely practice the "politics of association," wherein you make some poor attempt to discredit someone by finding some insignificant or imagined parallel between them and some notorious historical figure. It's transparent and dishonest. The fact that Sedai sees this, despite also disapproving of Bush, says quite a lot.

Originally Posted by Django
Well, when I asked you what planet you come from, what I was getting at is that you live in a world of theory and fantasy. My words are based in practical reality and experience. What I was trying to say was that your words may check out in theory, but you happen to be out of touch with reality--practical, experiential reality.
It's quite easy to insist that your words are practical and realistic, and that your opponents are merely fantasizing, but it amounts to little more than trash talk. You've yet to back it up.

Originally Posted by Django
That's mere speculation on your part.
Your entire post is almost wholly speculation. It's either some twisted, caricaturized interpretation of Bush's words, or else some subjective apparaisal as to the level of negative campaigning present in modern politics.

Originally Posted by Django
When I say divisiveness, what I am referring to is the tendency to make derisive personal attacks and ignore the substance of issues raised. That pretty much sums up your debating style, for the most part.
Right. Which is why I'm answering virtually everything you've said, chunk by chunk. THAT's my debating style, bud. My tendency to point out your personal shortcomings is almost always supplementary to point-by-point contentions on pretty much every issue raised.

Originally Posted by Django
Well, negative politics tends to promote fear and divisiveness in society, which, in turn, adversely affects the condition of our society as a whole, one of the repurcussions of which is the budget crisis.
How is it one of the repercussions? Do you have anything to substantiate this beyond the "mere speculation" you dismissed earlier?

Originally Posted by Django
Oh yes you did, and don't try to deny it! You first tell me that the $1.3 trillion is not the deficit, but, rather, the national debt. Then you tell me that the national debt is $6.9 trillion. Well... I never said that the national debt wasn't $6.9 trillion. If you can't see how absurd your self-contradiction is, you need to look again.
Yes, why don't we both look again. I referred to it as the "amount you're talking about" -- meaning the concept you were referring to. There's a reason I didn't refer to the number itself. I then said "you're not just confused about the concepts, but the numbers, too." In other words, I corrected your terminology first, and your data second. This isn't complicated.

Moreover, if what you say is true, then I said something knowing it to be false, then purposely contradicted and exposed myself several sentences later. So, according to you, I've got both a credibility death wish, and the memory span of a goldfish.

Originally Posted by Django
What I said stands--the cumulative budget deficit since Bush took office is $1.3 trillion, which amounts to the rise in the national debt.
What you said was that the "deficit" was $1.3 trillion. You used faulty terminology, I corrected it, and you're trying to brush it off. This happens all the time, and I think it speaks volumes as to your dedication (or lack thereof) to truth.

Also, if what you say is true, then you compared a cumulative debt to a single-year one, making it abundantly clear that you didn't understand the concepts you were talking about. And if that's not enough, you also called it the "largest budget deficit in history." Now, we've already established that you (apparently) were really talking about the national debt, and not the budget deficit...but if so, how would you reconcile the claim that, at $1.3 trillion, it was the "largest in history"? It can't be the largest debt itself, because it's been larger than that for some time. It can't be the largest increase, either, because out very last President saw a larger one. So what do you claim to be referring to, and why did you phrase it the way you did?

Originally Posted by Django
What I said is completely accurate and concurs with what you yourself said. So please, no more confused self-contradiction!
Perhaps what you were trying to say is correct, but what you actually said was certainly not.

Originally Posted by Django
Well, what's your point?
That you have no real knowledge of these issues, and that your highly opinionated commentary is pretentious and uninformed.

Originally Posted by Django
If the national debt rose by $1.6 trillion in the 8 years that Clinton was in office, that is because of the debt inherited from the 8 years of Reaganomics and 4 years of Bush tax cuts preceding it--irresponsible Republican deficit spending. Clinton's policies consistently reduced annual budget deficits, until he was balancing the budget and, towards the end of his term in office, had turned the budget to a surplus. On the other hand, Bush's tax cuts have produced a $1.3 trillion increase in national debt in the 3 years he has been in office--compare it with the 8 years Clinton was in office.
Since you're so fond of tossing out articles to make your case, have a look at "No, Bill Clinton Didn't Balance the Budget" by Stephen Moore.

That said, this is all moot unless you can demonstrate that these increases are at all harmful. Which I assure you you cannot.

Originally Posted by Django
Well, again, that's pure speculation on your part. Speculative projection. It doesn't say very much about a fiscal policy based on hopes and dreams and speculative projections.
Seeing as how I am no way affiliated with the organization which makes these projections, it's not speculation on my part at all. But it is a projection, yes. To call the CBO budget forecasting model "hopes and dreams," however, is downright stupid. It's a complex economic formula based on actual statistics, not a "here's what we hope to accomplish" pep talk.

Originally Posted by Django
Well, that's because of the fact that the economy was in recession last fiscal year, whereas it has experienced noticeable improvement of late.
Exactly. And why has it experienced that improvement? Could it have anything to do with the (gasp!) tax cuts which, coincidentally (gee, what're the odds?), proceeded each improvement?

Originally Posted by Django
Okay, first of all, who got their tax cuts first is irrelevant--the fact is that the poor benefitted by a few hundred dollars on average--hardly a significant amount--whereas the rich have benefitted enormously. This is hardly equitable.
We've discussed this before; the wealthy got a larger cut because they pay a whole helluva lot more to begin with. The fact that growth skyrocketed immediately after they received their end of the cut is a testament to how crucial the wealthy are in an effective economic stimulus plan.

Originally Posted by Django
Secondly, the fact that the Dow rose sharply following the huge tax breaks afforded to the wealthy is hardly a coincidence. Reflecting on this course of events it is inevitable--with the substantial increase in cash on hand, the wealthy naturally had more cash to invest. Point is, how does this increase in stock market activity translate to a rise in production and more jobs.
Production refers to the amount produced in relation to the number of hours worked. Production is up. Learn the terminology, or else stop trying to use it.

How does investment translate into new jobs? Is that supposed to be a joke? Where the hell do you think jobs come from, anyway?

Originally Posted by Django
A 6 % unemployment rate may not look too bad on paper, but it does translate to 3.3 million jobs lost in 3 years. In human terms the cost is horrific.
The only thing "horrific" here is your overstatement. Every indicator we have tells us that the job market never got particularly bad, and that it's been getting better steadily for months.

Originally Posted by Django
Ultimately, it seems that the stock market jump resulting from tax breaks is a travesty, because these tax breaks came at the expense of a huge budget deficit, which seems to be slowly bankrupting the nation, especially by virtue of interests accumulated on the national debt.
It's not bankrupting the nation in any way. It's a loan, plain and simple, and one that we've always been able to pay off when it comes due.

I'm starting to suspect you do not know how this system works. Can you tell me, without looking into the matter, how we pay off this debt, and to whom? Can you tell me how it is going to bankrupt us? Can you explain to me why it hasn't yet?

Originally Posted by Django
Question is--will deficit spending save the day? All it did in the past was rack up a steadily increasing national debt.
You've conveniently ignored the twice-mentioned fact that the national debt has been rising steadily for a very, very long time now. Does that mean, then, that you believe things have been getting worse since, oh, the 19th century?

Here's an analogy I've heard which illustrates things quite well: Man 1 skips college and works at a convenience store. Man 2 goes to Harvard. After a few years, Man 1 hasn't saved any money, but doesn't owe any to anyone, either. Man 2, by way of his student loans, is in debt, but he also has a Harvard Law Degree. Man 1 has a "balanced budget," but Man 2 has a debt. Which one is better off?

The moral of the story is that debt is a tool. How you use it is what matters. If debt were evil in and of itself people would not attend college or buy houses. Our economic growth is like that law degree; it's going to pay for itself in a very short period of time, and then some.

Originally Posted by Django
Will this short-term spurt in stock market activity resulting from tax breaks...
"In any case, the stock market going up due to tax breaks--it just doesn't happen."
-- Django, December 8th, 2003.


Originally Posted by Django
...bring about the huge increase in production that will offset the giant budget deficits created by Bush's tax cuts? Remains to be seen.
Oh, I think it's already been seen. Production has already shot up. GDP is growing by leaps and bounds, unemployment is dropping, and virtually every economist expects both of these trends to continue through all of next year, at least. "We'll see" is the closest thing to a counter-argument you can find in response to our current economic picture.

Originally Posted by Django
Question is--is there a correlation between tax cuts and an increase in the job market? Remains to be seen.
It depends on where the tax cuts are aimed. Employers, obviously, are the ones who provide employment, and thus less pressure on them will facilitate an improvement in the job market.

Originally Posted by Django
Like I said, it may not look bad on paper, but the cost in human terms is what it is.
The cost of what? Of which action? What do you blame for the original rish in unemployment?

Originally Posted by Django
No... I think they are voicing their concern that tax breaks for the rich do not necessarily translate to more jobs. The fact is that Bush has a history of caring more about his corporate funders and CEO buddies than the average man on the street. His long-time association with Enron CEO Ken Lay speaks for itself.
No, it doesn't, for the reasons I've detailed several times in the past. Maybe it speaks for itself, but it does not speak for you. And it sure as hell doesn't argue for you.

Originally Posted by Django
Well, if we debate and discuss the issues, there doesn't have to be internal conflict. Internal conflict translates to civil war. Is that how you would like our political situation to be? An ongoing civil war? Basically, this is America--one nation. What's the point of promoting divisiveness through exclusion? My point is that the policies of the Bush administration amount to equating any criticism of the government--one of the fundamental precepts of democracy--with collaboration with the terrorists. This essentially amounts to unscrupulously milking a national tragedy for political advantage.
Internal conflict is not a synonym for civil war. War involves conflict, but conflict does not always involve war.

Show me one policy which genuinely "equates any criticism of the government with collaboration with the terrorists."

Originally Posted by Django
Well, the reason I keep coming back is to answer to all the back-biting that goes on while my back is turned.
First off, you said you were leaving...not that you were leaving so long as no one said anything you didn't like. Second, you "left" while taking any number of parting shots. Expecting no response to them was silly and naive. Third, this thread is not an answer to back-biting...it is a new discussion unto itself, with only vague ties to other discussions here.



OMFG! You two really deserve each other...
__________________
"Today, war is too important to be left to politicians. They have neither the time, the training, nor the inclination for strategic thought. I can no longer sit back and allow Communist infiltration, Communist indoctrination, Communist subversion and the international Communist conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids."



Originally Posted by sunfrog
See, this is exactly the us vs them mentality.
It's no more "us vs them" than any other disagreement.

Originally Posted by sunfrog
When I was against the war everyone said shut up you traitor. Now I am against re-election and you tell me to shut up again. There should not be a shut up anywhere. Where's does the hatred come from? I'm ok you're ok. Let's hug like we did on Christmas.
There are plenty of people here who dislike Bush whose contributions I welcome. I suggested that you stop posting because you do nothing but insist that you're right.

Methinks you spend too much time at MoVa engaging in back-patting with other like-minded individuals who never call your claims into question.

Originally Posted by sunfrog
The Partiot Act is horrible and goes against everything America stands for. The only people who have to worry about it is every citizen who doesn't want to live in a big brother society.
It's this kind of exaggeration which actually works against the opponents of the Patriot Act. No one's going to take such extreme claims seriously; nor should they.

Originally Posted by sunfrog
It's his logic that's faulty. Look here "Our national debt is not $1.3 trillion. It's $6.9 trillion." He says that's a good thing. "The moral, in a nutshell, is that a rising debt is not a problem;" But he uses it against Clinton "What you probably don't realize, however, is that the national debt rose every year under Clinton," So is it a problem or not?
You're operating without answers and filling in the blanks yourself; I didn't use it "against" Clinton at all. I cited it to demonstrate that even Presidents who presided over prosperous times contributed to the national debt, thus complaints based solely on its increase are hollow.

Originally Posted by sunfrog
If it's bad for one it's bad for the other, and worse for Bush. If it's not bad then all you can say is "Hmm, isn't it amazing how much the national debt has risen under Bushlite?" What kind of weird logic do you need to apply to get Bush to look good in this argument?
Uh, real logic. The kind that shows us that the national debt is not a detriment to prosperity.