Medfarmer54
Member
You must be joking dude! You ever looked at all the old white fools that comprise the republican party? For every 1000 of 'em,they have 1 or two token blacks. Better watch out,your RACISM is showing!!!!
I don't know who these people are or how they got into the conversation. You suggested that most college professors are Liberals because they are more intelligent than most people and that this stands to reason. I referred you to the book Thomas Sowell just wrote dealing with this very issue. Again, I don't know who these people are that you are mentioning or how they entered the conversation.
Try to keep up.
No you haven't. Just saying that he has does not make it true.
What is this disproportionate number you speak of? It should be simple since this is your cross, not mine.
You take the number of cabinet seats that have been appointed by Obama, and then find the amount of white people and then the amount of black people.
Simple. You are the one saying there is some discrepancy, so show us it.
It should be simple for you to find a accurate number since you seem to know the news sources that are reflecting this right? Get us some numbers of cabinet people man.
And I am glad you can cut and paste other peoples opinions. But I am curious, if Obama appointed Sowell, you don't think he would be attacked by you guys on the right just like jones for being black appointee and having previously said he was a communist?
Actually, that is exactly what is happening.
About the only place you find Conservative professors is in the sciences. And BTW, Conservative does not mean religious zealot - don't conflate the two.
Many intellectuals agree that the university is a perfect isolated bubble from which Liberal Professors can espouse their views unchallenged and to a captive audience with no chance of failure, and that is why liberals gravitate toward that environment.
Starting a business or entering the rat race is the polar opposite where one succeeds or fails based on their performance.
PS he is a senior fellow at Stanford (before a professor at UCLA) and black.
So if Obama appointed him, would he then be another liberal affirmative action appointee?
There is always unemployment.... (there's always a percentage of folks who REFUSE to work)
Buying stuff does affect store inventories and what they stock in the future (what's selling) ... yes?
Anything else?
Your taking the long way round the barn ... for nothing. make ur point.... not that it will help you, but go ahead.
Ur making assumptions not in evidence.
keyes was wrong.... even he knew it.
Friedman is the correct model...I don't know where you got "classic' from......
1. Classical economics (prior to the great depression) is built on them assuming that demand does not alter supply.
You realize how silly you come off when you try to sound like you know all about economics, but you fail to even know what the name of what you believe so strongly is? (ps attack neo to it and boom you get your personal jesus' theories).Friedman is the correct model...I don't know where you got "classic' from......
PJ: One of the ideas that have become very popular as a result of your writings is the school voucher. I wonder how you would respond to the accusation that the voucher plan would forge a greater distinction between the rich and the poor?
MF: Well [laughter], it would have exactly the opposite effect.
PJ: That seems counter-intuitive...
MF: That it would have the opposite effect? Sure, what happens now is that those who are well off have the choice to school their children wherever they'd like and they can afford to pay twice—once through taxes and once through tuition. Whereas most of the population is not in that position. The vouchers would allow the lower classes to have nearly the same opportunity as the upper classes. So it would tend to reduce the difference between the rich and the poor.
The only reason it has been argued the other way is... well, I don't know. I don't see how it could be argued the other way... What is the argument?
Alan Greenspan
PJ: In a Boston Globe article, in 1981, you spoke about the one federal job that you would have accepted—chairman of the Federal Reserve. At the time, you wrote that there were others who would be fine for the job. One of the people you mentioned was Alan Greenspan.
In a 1998 Forbes interview, you mentioned that the U.S. has "had very good monetary policy ever since Alan Greenspan has been chairman—the best of any period since the Federal Reserve was established in 1913." Then you continued on to worry about what will happen after Greenspan's departure. What are your current thoughts?
MF: Now, as you may know, my general position is straightforward—I would prefer to abolish the federal reserve system altogether. That is my ideal position. My utopian position would be to have a much more mechanical monetary system which would not involve having people like Alan in charge. But you do have a federal reserve system and, as a result, it does make a difference who is chairman of the fed and how it conducts itself.
My opinion of Alan Greenspan is very high. I think he has done an absolutely first-rate job relative to any other period in federal reserve history. As to the future, I think the likelihood is that we will return to the unsatisfactory experience of the past. I think the common expectations of very low rates of inflation indefinitely are going to be proved wrong.
PJ: Many labels have been used to apply to you—off the top of my head, you've been called a libertarian, a neo-conservative, a conservative, a neo-liberal, that's a popular term right now, a classical liberal and so on. I'm curious how you would describe yourself and whether the label has any value.
MF: I regard myself as a libertarian. But I think the term classical liberal is also equally applicable. I don't really care very much what I'm called. I'm much more interested in having people thinking about the ideas, rather than the person.
lmao, you really have an outstanding grasp on history! The fact that Keynes did not first talk to Roosevelt until the mid to late 1930's and then took a while to really start to become much of a influence until about 1940. Just adds so much credibility to your argument.
And that followed after the war was a generally very good and stable economy where the government followed pretty much Keynes. Until in the 70's they started to try to experiment with super high employment and it failed and caused not only super high inflation (due to going against economic reasoning with things like gas price ceilings) and lead to high unemployment.
Then Regan came in swinging the newly rebirthed Neo-classical economic model "Reagonomics" and we boom busted from then on out with the republican presidents. Because it is based on supply side economics (that consumers don't affect the market), which is pre-depression era economics.
And Friedman was a great economist, a lot of the things he modeled are fully accepted by economists, and they are brilliant. But
And those assumptions that you disagree with? Yeah they are corner stones of the classical model, regardless of what the current creation is.
I wonder how you feel about Milton's views on some things (MF is milton friedman):
Government spending? Wasn't that something Obama wanted to do, but was called a commi for it?
Milton was a genius for sure. But to somehow think that the craziness that spun off from his work is somehow 'better' is just plain silly, since you and many like you don't actually know what the differences are, much less the similarities. And how they diverge.
No matter when Keynes officially influenced Roosevelt (if at all). It was that basic model Roosevelt was already using.... moniker excluded. There's ur history sonny.
It is used to GAIN power....not fix the economy.
Ur easily fooled.