hands11 wrote:fishercob wrote:President Clinton on Morning Joe today: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/3036789/ns/ ... /#45205500
He's still smart.
Government/Private partnership.
I tried pitching that idea 20 pages ago when we were talking about solar and infrastructure.
It made to much common sense to be excepted to some here. We need lower taxes, less regulation and pure private industry capitalism. That seems to be their only solution. Never mind that other countries will continue to outpace us if we do it that way because they are doing government and private industry partnerships.
- you said the government should make work investing in specific industries. clinton is pushing for an infrastructure bank who holds money that will be specifically be invested in infrastructure and funded voluntarily and still operated under free-market principles (North Dakota oil drilling, energy grid upgrades, broadband/cell tower upgrades, light rail, etc) and not specifically "going green" ideals.
- it's accepted, not excepted.
- lower taxes, less regulation, pure private industry capitalism is THE rallying cry of tea partiers - the party that you've denounced repeatedly.
- what I think clinton disingenuously glossed over when discussing other nations like Germany is that America is freakin huge compared to those countries, does not have a parliamentary system, and does not have as ingrained a welfare-state culture.
re: dobro about election reform:
Obama was definitely the best choice in '08 and looks like to be the best choice in '12 again. I just wish that there's a higher caliber of candidate willing to throw their hat in the ring. I'd much rather have a governor with a proven track record of running the executive - and being held accountable for their actions than a never-ending parade of senators with questionable/brief/and-or muddled voting histories.
Chris Christie is an intriguing candidate for '16 if he can remain relevant for the next 5 years.



















