popper wrote:pancakes3 wrote:popper wrote:Sorry I lost my temper, but a man can only take so much.
Pancakes - You're a lawyer, aren't you? I spent years working with very powerful lawyers in DC. I had a big corner office overlooking the White House on the short part of Connecticut Avenue. Like you, they were very smart. Unfortunately, I found that a legal education in many instances comes at the expense of common sense. IOW, I couldn't trust them to manage their way out of a paper bag. They had me to do that work and I had them to do what they were good at.
You and I had a discussion some months ago. I stated what I thought was a universally understood concept. Something like, "an open border policy within a welfare state can't work." You argued the point. All good, but that's an example of your "common sense out the window" on the subject (IMO).
You're concerned about climate change. Me too. Have you noticed that China and India are building coal burning plants faster than we and other countries in the west are closing them down? In today's WSJ there's an article about Indonesia's push for nickel processing plants to take advantage of their nickel resources. New Chinese-built smelters dot the archipelago. As you know, nickel is used extensively in EV batteries. Climate Rights International said "a single nickel-focused industrial park on the Maluku islands will burn more coal than Spain or Brazil when it is fully operational." Think about that for minute.
I''ve mentioned several times on this thread over the past 5-10 years that the D party is pursuing the Cloward-Piven strategy. Crickets. No one had an opinion. I hope you and others can see it clearly now with Biden's open border policies.
Cloward–Piven strategy
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Cloward–Piven strategy is a political strategy outlined in 1966 by American sociologists and political activists Richard Cloward and Frances Fox Piven. It is the strategy of forcing political change leading to societal collapse through orchestrated crises. The "Cloward-Piven Strategy" seeks to hasten the fall of capitalism by overloading the government bureaucracy with a flood of impossible demands, amassing massive unpayable national debt, and other methods such as unfettered immigration thus pushing society into crisis and economic collapse by overwhelming the United States
Care to elaborate on the "common sense" between the incompatability between an open border and a welfare state? I have to imagine, much of the dispute is due to (1) it not having anything to do with the current political agenda/discussion; and (2) even in speaking in the abstract, an inability to define what "open border" and "welfare state" even means. I can assure you, we do not live in a welfare state. And this is why it's not "all good." There's no depth of thought, and you cling to your ideation of "common sense" without there being any sort of meaningful debate, especially with respect to practical outcomes. The instant debate over immigration, to the extent there is one, is that there are undocumented workers. The solution is to document them, not to erect barriers, not to kick over water cans, not to demonize them, etc.
With regard to climate change, I don't think you're concerned at all. I think you're concerned about deflection, playing a game of gotcha, and sprinkling in elements of xenophobia. If you're actually concerned about climate change, how are you able to continually support a political party that denies its existence? Do you actually want solutions to climate change?
In your research about Chinese pollution, have you actually done any research into how or why China built more coal plants in 2023? Did you realize that (1) China has also massively outpaced the United States in renewable energy infrastructure; (2) at least paid lip service, which the US has refused to do, to be in adherence to the Paris Accords by 2030, and carbon neutrality by 2060; and (3) are also subject to the whims of political convenience and recently re-opened coal licensing after refusing to permit coal plants for several years due to concerns about "energy security" - the same line that the GOP is pushing, and much more successfully in the United States?
Every country needs to do better re: climate change. I can only vote in the US, I don't know about you. I don't know how other nations' failures would somehow dictate my personal policy preferences in America. Unless you don't actually care about climate change, and just like using convenient scapegoats to ignore the issue, so you can support the anti-climate party based on other grounds.
With regard to Cloward-Piven - what is there to say? It's a relic conspiracy theory from the Tea Party days when proto-MAGA thought leaders were coming up with ways to demonize Obama and universal healthcare. The original study came out in the 70's as a journal article, where 2 sociologists observed that a full throated adherence to the civil rights advancements of the '60s as applied to all Americans, not just white Americans, would require a much more robust social safety net than what was available at the time (in other words, social security, welfare, and other New Deal programs only considered poor whites, and in a post-Civil-Rights-Act world, would require much more governmental resources). It was an observation, not a strategy. It was coined as a strategy by Conservative operatives decades later, trying to spin the narrative that civil rights in general was some sort of trojan horse to poison the status quo and collapse the system. I believe it was David Horowitz who first characterized it as a "strategy" and then picked up by Glenn Beck as a mainstream talking point. The goulish part is the insinuation that the failure is deliberate, that affording American citizens civil rights was part of the ploy to collapse the American welfare system, foment political outcry by the poor people, so as to gain popular support for even MORE social programs. That's an insane characterization. It's also an easy one to pull out because the major rallying cry by conservatives is that "we can't afford it" and that any governmental spending, when extrapolated would "collapse the system."
And what exactly is your beef with "Biden's open border" policy? Because that just reads as hollow, outright racism. 1) there is no open border. 2) even if there was, what has happened that has been so bad? Republicans keep saying that there's an immigration crisis, to the point of legally classifying it as a military invasion. Really? How? Where? Unemployment has gone down, so they're not taking our jobs. What exactly should we be so concerned about? What is the crisis, other than the mere presence of undocumented people? Just nonspecific, often anecdotal cites of crime, disease, and other dehumanizing attributes.
Do you know how many people have suffered under the American immigration system, be it Biden's, Trump's, Obama's, or anyone else? Do you know how many lawful, degree-holding foreigners who are desperate to stay and contribute to society have been forced to leave due to the H1B cap? Do you understand how difficult it is to emigrate to another country? Do you know how many white immigrants were allowed into this country, even TO THIS DAY, completely undocumented, but when it comes to POC, it's an invasion? The Irish are the #1 most populous undocumented population in the DMV. And yet, there are people campaigning on MS13.
And in typing all this out, re: Chinese scapegoating, re: Cloward-piven, re: immigration, it all sort of indicates that you're a bigot. Or at least have bigoted beliefs. Maybe you should think about that for a minute.
You're obviously a depressed and angry person pancakes. I was in that same place about 10 years ago. I hope you find a way out of it. It took me a year or two. If I can help, or tell how I did it, I'd be happy to. There's no need for me to elaborate on why an open border coupled with a welfare state doesn't work. It's just common sense. If one has a financial incentive, without fear of repercussions, to violate our immigration laws, then of course that is the course they would take (given the means to pay off the cartels). Sadly, it's a different calculation for women, many of whom are raped during the journey. Somehow, an education in law strips students of the natural ability to exercise common sense. Maybe there should be a course in that before graduation in order to reseed in law students that essential human instinct.
Edit - I meant that comment about depression and my offer of help sincerely pancakes. I don't wish that misery on anyone and I know how fortunate I was to get through it. If not me, reach out to someone else. You have a bright future ahead of you once you overcome whatever it is that's pulling you down.
Two things.
That someone posts an angry post ≠ a depressed individual. This is a logical fallacy. In fact, it can be a very positive outlet depending on how it is done.
This is a very good means to discredit the post. They are angry, therefore have a problem, therefore I don't need to respond to their argument(s) - simply dismiss them.
Thing two - you equated the current border policy = open boarders = Biden's border policy. That of course is a fallacy and very difficult one to unwind given the history of our racist immigration policies and how immigration was driven by Republican farmers (for one).
Then you cleverly worked in "a welfare state doesn't work". Newsflash. It has been working. Our economy continues to grow and immigrants are one of the solid reasons. Like your healthcare, thank that immigrant nurse. Like your house, thank that immigrant construction worker. Like your food, thank that immigrant that is putting food on your table. Newsflash II - if it wasn't for the forever wars and Trump and Bush tax cuts we would be the envy of the west. I am laying that right at your feet.











