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Which positions or agendas do you support [U.S.]?
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russ_watters said:Several of those were too vague or too specific (simplistic) to really answer, but depending on the specifics of the proposals, I might support any of the last 5.
fleem said:YES - Abortion made illegal
out of whack said:Ivan, does the [U.S.] clause in the poll question mean that the question is directed only at US citizens? Or is it directed at everyone ABOUT the US?
Math Is Hard said:I support giving maps to all the U.S. Americans who can't afford them.
Math Is Hard said:I support giving maps to all the U.S. Americans who can't afford them.
Moonbear said:Running for Miss...um...I think I need a map to remember what you'd be "Miss" of?![]()
US Americans, as opposed to the South African Americans or the The Iraq Americans.Math Is Hard said:I support giving maps to all the U.S. Americans who can't afford them.
Mischief!Moonbear said:Running for Miss...um...I think I need a map to remember what you'd be "Miss" of?![]()
DaveC426913 said:Huh. Making abortion illegal is more predominant than I would have expected.
DaveC426913 said:Huh. Making abortion illegal is more predominant than I would have expected.
ShawnD said:I'm more surprised about the lack of support to eliminate national debt![]()
Ok, but at one point do you believe the human being comes into existence?GleefulNihilism said:Abortion made illegal -- Hell No, I'm not about to butcher women's rights in exchange for something that may become be a human being one day. At least Two-Thirds of Blastocysts flush away with the next period anyway, so by the logic most
Ivan Seeking said:There are also fundamental economic arguments for having a debt. I would have to look them up but I have read about this before.
Ivan Seeking said:There are also fundamental economic arguments for having a debt. I would have to look them up but I have read about this before.
I'm surprised it's more than zero.Office_Shredder said:Are we looking at the same poll?
Why would you be surprised?DaveC426913 said:I'm surprised it's more than zero.
"Do you think abortion should be legal in all cases, legal in most cases, illegal in most cases, or illegal in all cases?"
Oct '07 %
Legal in All Cases 21
Legal in Most Cases 32
Illegal in Most Cases 24
Illegal in All Cases 14
Unsure 8
In my vision of society people would have as much freedom of choice as makes sense and no more. After all, rapists would not be allowed freedom to choose their victims in your vision of society, right? Why are you against freedom of choice? In my vision, women would still have the right to choose, but not the right to choose murder any more than men would. My ancestors in Europe were at the loosing end of a political debate as to whether they were human or not. I don't want to go through that again.cristo said:Why would you make abortion illegal? To me that is nonsensical-- do people not have the freedom of choice in your vision of society?
I don't know all the ins and outs of this, but I wonder if the economic downturn at the end of the Clinton and beginning of the Bush administrations was not caused by the enormous surpluses in the previous years. Perhaps running the government at a profit is no better than running it at a loss.Ivan Seeking said:There are also fundamental economic arguments for having a debt. I would have to look them up but I have read about this before.
cristo said:Why would you make abortion illegal? To me that is nonsensical-- do people not have the freedom of choice in your vision of society?
It wasn't a lack of understanding. "Increase taxes on the rich", for example, is basically just a meaningless slogan and so unanswerable. There are proposals that I would support and proposals that I wouldn't. For example, I would not generally support the increase of only the top marginal tax bracket. I would, however, support the closing of a number of tax loopholes, such as the use of capital gains as income being taxable as income. Of course, I'd also want to include in that another exception for waiving capital gains for someone selling one house to buy another one.Ivan Seeking said:Could you specify what you didn't understand?
Hurkyl said:You know, none of that is relevant, fleem. Unless this one man, all by himself, makes up a signficant proportion of all abortinists, his testimonial doesn't tell us anything about the general state of things. And the emotional appeal emphasizes that you really don't have a rational argument.
(And, for the record, I am generally against abortions)
This is a strange analogy, since by saying that rapists do not have the freedom to choose victims, then you are implying that rapists' victims are fixed by someone else. What you mean is that rapists should not have the freedom to decide whether they rape someone or not. And, of course they shouldn't, but then rape is detrimental and does not serve any useful purpose.jimmysnyder said:In my vision of society people would have as much freedom of choice as makes sense and no more. After all, rapists would not be allowed freedom to choose their victims in your vision of society, right?
So, what about a woman who was raped. She should not be allowed to terminate the child? If you make abortion illegal on the grounds that no one should be allowed to murder, then you can't allow abortions in some cases and not others. What about the 15, or younger, year old girl who made a naive mistake? Should she have to ruin her life, throw away her education, and bring up a child that she doesn't really want?Why are you against freedom of choice? In my vision, women would still have the right to choose, but not the right to choose murder any more than men would.
fleem said:Why is it that abortion defenders always dwell on that .2% of special cases of rape and health? Because they do not wish to discuss the 99.8% of the cases, which are abortions used as a form of birth control by those too lazy and stupid to use something profoundly more convenient and profoundly more accepted by the majority.
But those are not my grounds. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justifiable_homicide"cristo said:If you make abortion illegal on the grounds that no one should be allowed to murder, then you can't allow abortions in some cases and not others.
By all means.cristo said:What about the 15, or younger, year old girl who made a naive mistake? Should she have to ruin her life, throw away her education, and bring up a child that she doesn't really want?
I didn't say that. It's an example of the vagueness of the poll questions.cristo said:It's not as simple as just saying "ban all abortions."
And what you mean is that women should have the freedom to decide whether to abort or not. Why did you bring up the issue of freedom of choice at all then. As far as I know, freedom of choice is not a legal right, it's a slogan for selling hamburger sandwiches.cristo said:What you mean is that rapists should not have the freedom to decide whether they rape someone or not
cristo said:I'm not dwelling on what seems to be some random percentage you've plucked out of the air. I'm simply saying that, if you make abortion illegal, then you can have no excpetions. So, the statistics don't matter in this case, since there are lives that will be ruined by the fact that they could not abort the baby. It doesn't matter what proportion of these make up the total.
Note, I'm not condoning abortions used as contraception. I'm just saying that it would be foolish to make abortions illegal.
It seems that we don't actually disagree at all! Sorry for misinterpreting your comments.jimmysnyder said:But those are not my grounds. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Justifiable_homicide"
fleem said:Yes, I guess having a law with certain execeptions would be an unreasonable request of our lawmakers.
cristo said:My point is, where do you draw the line? You can't possibly put every clause of exception into such a law.
Wouldn't this hurt the middle class more than it hurts the rich? For most middle class people like myself, and probably you, our retirement depends entirely on how we invest our money. People think a 401k (US) or RRSP (Canada) is tax free, but it's only tax free until you sell it. Once you start selling that off, you'll find the government is taking a significant chunk of your retirement. From what I can find on wiki, the tax rate on stock for the lowest 2 income brackets in the US is 5%, or 15% past 30k per individual, which would be 60k per couple. That seems fairly reasonable. In Canada you pay 50% of your normal rate; so if your regular tax rate was 30% for that income bracket, the tax on capital gains would be 15%. That's a bit higher, but still manageable.russ_watters said:I would, however, support the closing of a number of tax loopholes, such as the use of capital gains as income being taxable as income. Of course, I'd also want to include in that another exception for waiving capital gains for someone selling one house to buy another one.
Withdrawals from a 401k are treated as regular income, not capital gains.ShawnD said:Wouldn't this hurt the middle class more than it hurts the rich? For most middle class people like myself, and probably you, our retirement depends entirely on how we invest our money. People think a 401k (US) or RRSP (Canada) is tax free, but it's only tax free until you sell it. Once you start selling that off, you'll find the government is taking a significant chunk of your retirement. From what I can find on wiki, the tax rate on stock for the lowest 2 income brackets in the US is 5%, or 15% past 30k per individual, which would be 60k per couple. That seems fairly reasonable. In Canada you pay 50% of your normal rate; so if your regular tax rate was 30% for that income bracket, the tax on capital gains would be 15%. That's a bit higher, but still manageable.
If you remove the capital gains tax loophole, you're talking about literally doubling the tax rate on every middle class person.
Also, I didn't vote for higher tax on rich people because that wouldn't accomplish anything. Politicians would just piss it away like they do now.
Ivan Seeking said:Which positions or agendas do you support [U.S.]?
cristo said:My point is, where do you draw the line? You can't possibly put every clause of exception into such a law.