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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 27, 2012 11:12am
The nature or fact that it's transient doesn't diminish the fact that it exists and defines the manner we function.isadore;1154970 wrote:Actually the Declaration of Independence is more defining of basis for our government, our social contract with it. We had a Constitution before the Constitution, Articles of Confederation, it was transient.
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 27, 2012 11:14am
It is you that said their elimination would not produce monumental suffering.Con_Alma;1154958 wrote:Because you continue to support the argument that they produce dependence and that they are not keeping us from human suffering on a monumental scale. You pay them lip service then consistently work to undervalue them and consider them a threat.
I dont have to read anything into it, just quote. You eliminate those programs and there will be suffering on a monumental scale, you can quote me on that.Con_Alma wrote:I don't believe, however, that there would be suffering on a monumental scale.
????
Why do you think I believe we should have them? Is it maybe because I believe the keep people form suffering? I do. I also think they take people's freedom away and make people dependent on them.
I don't undervalue them. I value them at exactly the benefit they provide. No more. No less.
Your desire to read into my posts as opposed to take for exactly what they state is unfortunate but not surprising.[/QUOTE]
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 27, 2012 11:15am
"A Representative Democracy may or may not be a constitutional republic. For example, "the United States relies on representative democracy, but [its] system of government is much more complex than that. [It is] not a simple representative democracy, but a constitutional republic in which majority rule is tempered by minority rights protected by law."[SUP]
[/SUP]Scheb, John M. An Introduction to the American Legal System. Thomson Delmar Learning 2001. p. 6
[/SUP]Scheb, John M. An Introduction to the American Legal System. Thomson Delmar Learning 2001. p. 6
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 27, 2012 11:17am
And the fact that there is an utimate authority the people that overrules it, makes the definition of us as a representative democracy more descriptive and true.Con_Alma;1154978 wrote:The nature or fact that it's transient doesn't diminish the fact that it exists and defines the manner we function.
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 27, 2012 11:19am
Yes, I did say that. Lol. You just don't get it do you?isadore;1154982 wrote:It is you that said their elimination would not produce monumental suffering. I dont have to read anything into it, just quote. You eliminate those programs and there will be suffering on a monumental scale, you can quote me on that....
Social Safety nets keep people from suffering. If they were not present, however, I still don't think there would be "monumental suffering".
That monumental word is a descriptive choice of yours that I disagree with. It doesn't mean that I don't believe there is benefit in having social safety nets of certain levels to protect people from suffering. Just read what's there. You don't need to add to it.
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 27, 2012 11:19am
do you think scheb is God and has just changed the spelling of his name. Ultimately we live in a nation that is a democracy in which the ultimate power is not vested in a document but in the people themselves.Con_Alma;1154983 wrote:"A Representative Democracy may or may not be a constitutional republic. For example, "the United States relies on representative democracy, but [its] system of government is much more complex than that. [It is] not a simple representative democracy, but a constitutional republic in which majority rule is tempered by minority rights protected by law."Scheb, John M. An Introduction to the American Legal System. Thomson Delmar Learning 2001. p. 6
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 27, 2012 11:21am
Not according to legal authoritarians. By the people putting that constitution in place that limits the majority and their representation we fulfill the definition of a Constitutional Republic. It is a more descriptive type of representative democracy.isadore;1154984 wrote:And the fact that there is an utimate authority the people that overrules it, makes the definition of us as a representative democracy more descriptive and true.
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 27, 2012 11:22am
No I do not. I do, however, believe that where the power exists is not the determining factor in the definition of our form of government.isadore;1154988 wrote:do you think scheb is God and has just changed the spelling of his name. Ultimately we live in a nation that is a democracy in which the ultimate power is not vested in a document but in the people themselves.
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 27, 2012 11:23am
Maybe to you the Great Depression was just a minor irritant for the people of the time. During the Hoover Adminstration with none of those programs the suffering was monumental.Con_Alma;1154986 wrote:Yes, I did say that. Lol. You just don't get it do you?
Social Safety nets keep people from suffering. If they were not present, however, I still don't think there would be "monumental suffering".
That monumental word is a descriptive choice of yours that I disagree with. It doesn't mean that I don't believe there is benefit in having social safety nets of certain levels to protect people from suffering. Just read what's there. You don't need to add to it.
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 27, 2012 11:25am
there is no government without someone having power. That is the ultimate and determining fact of all governments. With USA the people not some document have that ultimate power.Con_Alma;1154993 wrote:No I do not. I do, however, believe that where the power exists is not the determining factor in the definition of our form of government.
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 27, 2012 11:28am
sheb does not know all. Ultimate power defines a state, autocracy, oligarchy, plutocracy, democracy.Con_Alma;1154991 wrote:Not according to legal authoritarians. By the people putting that constitution in place that limits the majority and their representation we fulfill the definition of a Constitutional Republic. It is a more descriptive type of representative democracy.
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 27, 2012 11:28am
I have not once referenced the Great Depression. I have only offered my opinion of today and what my opinion is today if such safety nets did not exist. That opinion contains the belief that such safety nets prevent suffering but without them there would not be a monumental suffering such as that which occurred during the Great Depression.isadore;1154994 wrote:Maybe to you the Great Depression was just a minor irritant for the people of the time. During the Hoover Adminstration with none of those programs the suffering was monumental.
Now I have referenced it.
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 27, 2012 11:30am
None of that statement negates the greater description of the US being a Constitutional Republic.isadore;1154998 wrote:sheb does not know all. Ultimate power defines a state, autocracy, oligarchy, plutocracy, democracy.
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 27, 2012 11:34am
And this statement is based on what. Private charity and state welfrar failed to provided during the Great Depression. And they both cut back when the Great Recession hit. There seems to be no basis for thinking the suffering would be at as great a scale. Early Depression effects were cut by the fact that the majority lived on farms and could feed themselves. With the Great Depression that was no longer true and it is less true today.Con_Alma;1154999 wrote:I have not once referenced the Great Depression. I have only offered my opinion of today and what my opinion is today if such safety nets did not exist. That opinion contains the belief that such safety nets prevent suffering but without them there would not be a monumental suffering such as that which occurred during the Great Depression.
Now I have referenced it.
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 27, 2012 11:37am
What it's based on isn't nearly as important as the fact that we won't have to see such a thing because of the existing safety nets I believe we need and have. Isn't that what's important?isadore;1155006 wrote:And this statement is based on what. Private charity and state welfrar failed to provided during the Great Depression. And they both cut back when the Great Recession hit. There seems to be no basis for thinking the suffering would be at as great a scale. Early Depression effects were cut by the fact that the majority lived on farms and could feed themselves. With the Great Depression that was no longer true and it is less true today.
It's my opinion based on seeing the manner people rally around those in crisis.
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 27, 2012 5:37pm
It negates it completely. Declaration of Independence describe government as being based on the will of the people. It is the people who ordain and establish the Constitution. Where the people are sovereign you have a democracy.Con_Alma;1155002 wrote:None of that statement negates the greater description of the US being a Constitutional Republic.
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 27, 2012 6:07pm
Really end the safety net and what happens with an economic turn downCon_Alma;1155009 wrote:What it's based on isn't nearly as important as the fact that we won't have to see such a thing because of the existing safety nets I believe we need and have. Isn't that what's important?
It's my opinion based on seeing the manner people rally around those in crisis.
They dropped with the Great Depression and when the Great Recession happened.
“
A new ranking of the nation's 400 biggest charities shows donations dropped by 11 percent overall last year as the Great Recession ended — the worst decline in 20 years since the Chronicle of Philanthropy began keeping a tally.”
http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2010/10/donations_to_us_charities_drop.html
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 28, 2012 5:56am
The ordination and establishment of that constitution makes the nation a Constitutional Republic.isadore;1155346 wrote:It negates it completely. Declaration of Independence describe government as being based on the will of the people. It is the people who ordain and establish the Constitution. Where the people are sovereign you have a democracy.
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 28, 2012 5:57am
That's just foolishness. I respectfully decline. I can't see a reason to end the safety net.isadore;1155357 wrote:Really end the safety net and what happens with an economic turn down
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dwccrew
Posts: 7,817
Apr 28, 2012 6:35am
Who's winning?
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 28, 2012 8:14am
Representatives of the people acting for them in a representative democracy created a transient document. Ultimately before at least since the Declaration of Independence, during and even after that document is altered or abolished the people remain the ultimate power. And that power is exercised through their elected representatives, a representative democracy.Con_Alma;1155918 wrote:The ordination and establishment of that constitution makes the nation a Constitutional Republic.
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 28, 2012 8:27am
you continously support the arguments of the people who want to destroy the safety net. 1. the claim safety produces dependency 2. on another thread that it kills ambition 3. that its demise would not cause monumental suffering. Along with that you claim that there will be a non governmental rallying around of the people that would prevent it. This was not seen in the period from 1929 to 1933 or at the beginning of the Great Recession. You stab and stab at the programs then you say oh lets keep them. Et tu Brute at least take credit for the crime.Con_Alma;1155919 wrote:That's just foolishness. I respectfully decline. I can't see a reason to end the safety net.
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isadore
Posts: 7,762
Apr 28, 2012 8:28am
anyone who does not read my torture of the English language. Foot wedge should be protesting it.dwccrew;1155923 wrote:Who's winning?
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 28, 2012 6:39pm
isadore;1155934 wrote:you continously support the arguments of the people who want to destroy the safety net. 1. the claim safety produces dependency 2. on another thread that it kills ambition 3. that its demise would not cause monumental suffering. Along with that you claim that there will be a non governmental rallying around of the people that would prevent it. This was not seen in the period from 1929 to 1933 or at the beginning of the Great Recession. You stab and stab at the programs then you say oh lets keep them. Et tu Brute at least take credit for the crime.
More exaggeration for effect.
I do not want the safety nets destroyed. I want them changed. If they are not, they won't last. See the difference? Probabl ynot.
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Con_Alma
Posts: 12,198
Apr 28, 2012 6:41pm
...such power is carried out through the channels of a Constitution the people put in place making our country a Constitutional Republic.isadore;1155930 wrote:Representatives of the people acting for them in a representative democracy created a transient document. Ultimately before at least since the Declaration of Independence, during and even after that document is altered or abolished the people remain the ultimate power. And that power is exercised through their elected representatives, a representative democracy.