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Ron Paul Suggests Axing 5 U.S. Federal Departments (and Budgets)

sciencehabit writes with this selection from Science: "Presidential hopeful Ron Paul's new proposal to slash federal spending would wipe out large chunks of the government's research portfolio. The congressman from Texas and Republican candidate has unveiled a budget plan to reduce the deficit that would eliminate five federal departments: Energy, Commerce, Interior, Education, and Housing and Urban Development. In one fell swoop, such a step would erase, among other programs, the Energy Department's $5-billion Office of Science, the $4.5-billion National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the $750-million National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the $1.1-billion U.S. Geological Survey."

2,247 comments

  1. I like his IRS plan! by Joe_Dragon · · Score: 5, Funny

    I like his IRS plan!

    1. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Anon-Admin · · Score: 1

      Crud, and I dont have any mod points to mod you up.

      I agree!

    2. Re:I like his IRS plan! by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 5, Informative

      For further reading on his plan to see what else he cuts, here it is. [pdf]

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    3. Re:I like his IRS plan! by jhoegl · · Score: 0

      Might as well, the USA is already brain draining like the Titanic.
      If you think private industry will pick up where these institutions left off, you are dead wrong.
      Private industry typically come from public institutions, and there are plenty of examples to support this.

    4. Re:I like his IRS plan! by interval1066 · · Score: 0

      Yep, he's the only guy that makes any sense. The two entrenched parties can only shoot holes in his ideas, but NEVER can come up with plans or their own. Of course, he won't get elected.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    5. Re:I like his IRS plan! by tbannist · · Score: 1

      So you're saying a Ron Paul presidency would promote bipartisan co-operation in both the house and senate as they unite to destroy him?

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    6. Re:I like his IRS plan! by truthsearch · · Score: 3, Insightful

      but NEVER can come up with plans or their own

      You clearly don't read enough, or simply ignore what you disagree with. Frank, Kucinich, Sanders (independent), and others have alternatives. Each has merits.

    7. Re:I like his IRS plan! by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Yep, he's the only guy that makes any sense. The two entrenched parties can only shoot holes in his ideas, but NEVER can come up with plans or their own. Of course, he won't get elected.

      Ironically, the last president to reduce the size of the federal government was Clinton (he really was a fiscal conservative) -- don't slash entire departments, pare them back, look for redundancy or those pesky things which were created but have now taken on a life of their own because their original directive has passed or become moot.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    8. Re:I like his IRS plan! by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Intel, HP, Apple, Xerox, Edison Electric Light Company, Standard Oil (they reduced the cost of kerosene by 80%), Ford, etc, didn't come from public anything.

      Second, the states can pick up any of these 'profitable' public enterprises that Paul is proposing to be thrown out.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    9. Re:I like his IRS plan! by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      Yep, he's the only guy that makes any sense. The two entrenched parties can only shoot holes in his ideas, but NEVER can come up with plans or their own.

      Rep. Ron Paul (R-TX) is a long-time member, sitting Congressman, and perennial Presidential candidate from one of "the two entrenched parties", not an outsider to them.

      And members, aside from Paul, of those two parties with plans of their own are fairly common. Particularly, Republican incumbents and/or candidates for federal office with plans that involve dismantling large parts of the US federal government are easier to find than those without such plans.

    10. Re:I like his IRS plan! by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Funny you should mention that, as Ron Paul not only is a member of one of the "two entrenched parties", but he is perpetuating their entrenchment.

    11. Re:I like his IRS plan! by EraserMouseMan · · Score: 2

      Yes. Proof of this is California. They don't wait around for the Federal level to solve their problems. Neither should any other state. These agencies should be on the State level not the Federal level. This implies that some states will not need some of these agencies. Which is great.

    12. Re:I like his IRS plan! by andydread · · Score: 0

      Yes the Internet that you are using didn't come from public anything.

    13. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mspohr · · Score: 4, Insightful
      HP, Apple and Xerox were all built on the foundation of US Government financed research and development of semiconductors and computer systems.

      Edison Electric Light Company made extensive use of public owned right of ways.

      The price of kerosene dropped 80% during Standard Oil's reign primarily due to increased supply from drilling on (mostly) public lands. Who knows how much more it would have dropped if there had been a free market rather than a monopoly in charge.

      Ford benefits from massive public investment in road and bridge infrastructure. Ford didn't build any roads or bridges.

      So... tell me again where would we be without the public sector?

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    14. Re:I like his IRS plan! by shoehornjob · · Score: 1

      I like his IRS plan too but why is any of ths news for nerds. I hate to be an "on topic" nazi but seriously there is too much off topic stuff going on here. Perhaps we need a forum for this.

      --
      "We are just a war away from Amerikastan. When god vs god the undoing of man." Dave Mustaine
    15. Re:I like his IRS plan! by John+Bresnahan · · Score: 2

      Ironically, the last president to reduce the size of the federal government was Clinton (he really was a fiscal conservative)

      Ironically, it took the Democrats losing both houses of Congress in 1994 for Clinton to declare that "the era of big government is over."

      There was also the end of the Cold War and the Information Revolution (neither of which he had anything to do with) that had a huge positive impact on the U.S. economy.

      Clinton was smart enough to roll with the punches, but mainly he was lucky.

    16. Re:I like his IRS plan! by EraserMouseMan · · Score: 1

      Paul's plans would surely mean we need fewer politicians in Washington DC. Correct, the self-serving politicians in DC would not be in favor of that.

    17. Re:I like his IRS plan! by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 2

      Ron Paul in fact has one of the most contrarian records in Congress today. He votes against his party constantly, and further has run as a 3rd party candidate in past Presidential elections.

      --
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    18. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      While I agree wholeheartedly with you that this should be handled on the state level, I think it's worth pointing out that some states exhibit stronger leadership than others.Where California leads the nation in many things, smaller states like Idaho and Wyoming might be slower to adopt vehicle emissions laws, if at all. This makes it expensive for some companies to compete in all 50 states. I wouldn't mind a sort of acceptably low minimum for all 50 states, with a sort of federal funding incentive to small businesses for exceeding the minimum by 75, 100, 150% etc. Something just tells me that Mississippi and rural Kentucky just aren't as concerned about vehicle emissions as California, Texas and New York are.

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    19. Re:I like his IRS plan! by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 0

      The government financed research was a slim minority of the market at that time, and the Palo Alto Research Center had not one dime of public investment, and that is where arguably the biggest innovations came from.

      The price of kerosene dropped because John Rockefeller was obsessed with efficiency. He drove prices so low that his competitors would offer to sell their companies to him and he would often accept, even keeping most of the staff and upper management intact.

      Federal investment in public roads in the 1920s was minimal.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    20. Re:I like his IRS plan! by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      I feel the argument that the Internet could not have been created without the federal government is a negative proof fallacy. It offers clear cost reductions as well as services that otherwise would not be possible, thus a clear business case could be argued. Sam Walton, for example, invested heavily such technologies.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    21. Re:I like his IRS plan! by FirstNoel · · Score: 1

      But doesn't California suffer debt crisis every year.

      I wouldn't be so quick to use them as a poster child.

      --
      "Hmm. I am to metaphor cheese as metaphor cheese is to transitive verb crackers!"
    22. Re:I like his IRS plan! by whargoul · · Score: 1

      You do see the irony to your post, don't you?

    23. Re:I like his IRS plan! by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      Funding incentives are a major problem.

      Where does the money come from? The states. The states that are being rewarded, which are often the states with the biggest budgets. A funding incentive amounts to having your pocket picked but having the money handed back to you, minus a couple of bucks.

      What if it's plus a couple of bucks? Those states that are lax on adopting standards have to make the plus. They may have been lax since they couldn't afford it? Rewarding the guy for implementing by punishing the one that hasn't doesn't make it easier to afford implementation, it makes it harder.

      So you start up a program to help them to implement it. The program is staffed by cronies, is expensive and the state you rewarded and the one you punished it paying for it, but it cost more than it should since it's a federal program.

      If we just left the feds out of the process all together and forgot all about incentives we would be much better off.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    24. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 2

      I think you're confused. The EPA is not on the list. Besides, most companies simply make their product meet the strictest standard of all the states, and sell that product everywhere. While that is NOT true of emission standards for cars (California emission standards being currently the strictest), it IS true of most other products, like dishwasher detergent and other consumables.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    25. Re:I like his IRS plan! by operagost · · Score: 1

      We didn't have a Department of Energy when Standard Oil made its first few billion.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    26. Re:I like his IRS plan! by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      You're full of it. The Internet existed for over 20 years before companies started saving and making money with it. You try telling your shareholders you're going to spend billions of dollars of their money that might turn a profit in two decades.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    27. Re:I like his IRS plan! by plopez · · Score: 1

      It only cuts 10% of the workforce! What about the other 90%? That tells me he is not addressing the real problem see:
      http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/17/paul-plan-would-eliminate-cabinet-departments-to-cut-1-trillion/

      --
      putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
    28. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Doctor+Morbius · · Score: 0

      This is the same stupid argument the libertarians always use. If private industry would have done it then why didn't they? I'd rather have something sooner rather than later. Who knows how much longer it would have taken for private industry to invent the internet on its own; 10, 20 years?

      --
      If I disagree with you it's because you are wrong.
    29. Re:I like his IRS plan! by werfele · · Score: 1

      Perhaps we need a forum for this.

      Maybe we should call it politics.slashdot.org? Seriously, if you want to exclude politics stories, you can do that from Options, but you are presently in the forum you describe.

    30. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mspohr · · Score: 5, Interesting
      There was no semiconductor and computer system market until the defense department made one by financing research and buying the output. Ever heard of Fairchild semiconductor? They are one of the foundations of the the semiconductor industry and held most of the early patents on semiconductors. They wouldn't have existed without government paying for the research and buying their early products. HP, Apple and the rest came later.

      You can keep dreaming your fantasy that Rockefeller was a altruistic philanthropist if you want but you really should do some actual reading on the subject.

      Like all corporations, the automobile companies lobbied government at all levels to build infrastructure that was too expensive for them to build but which would make their products more desirable to purchase. That's the way the system works. Without government investment, their business would be quite different. Perhaps they would have invested more in floating cars that could cross rivers without bridges.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    31. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 2

      but NEVER can come up with plans or their own

      You clearly don't read enough, or simply ignore what you disagree with. Frank, Kucinich, Sanders (independent), and others have alternatives. Each has merits.

      Sure, others have plans, and talk a decent talk, but they simply cannot be trusted. Ron Paul has been consistent and honest, one of the very few currently in office that you can say that about (probably Kucinich is another). Frank and Sanders are demonstrated black hearts and liars.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    32. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Doctor+Morbius · · Score: 2

      Roads did not magically appear. Some government entity had them built. Whether it was federal, state or local, roads were built with public money.

      --
      If I disagree with you it's because you are wrong.
    33. Re:I like his IRS plan! by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      Not really. He says the words "libertarian" enough to draw attention to the Libertarian party. He's our #1 advertiser. He joined the Republican party to get votes so he could actually get elected. It's not secret most Republicans don't care for him being there.

      Ron Paul is to Republicans what that one know it all kid nobody wanted to be around was to a youth trip. He's part of the organization rather you like it or not and yes, yes he's right even if you don't want to be told your wrong, he's going to ride in one of the vans on the trip, and it might just be yours.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    34. Re:I like his IRS plan! by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      Xbox?

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    35. Re:I like his IRS plan! by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      There shouldn't be any US gov't financed research and development.

      There shouldn't be any public property and so there shouldn't be any public owned 'right of ways'.

      There shouldn't be any subsidies to any oil drilling, all of it should be private and all land / sea should be private, so all of this drilling would bear full costs.

      There shouldn't be any public infrastructure, including highways and bridges.

      There shouldn't BE a public sector outside of border protection, individual liberties/property protection and criminal/contract law.

    36. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Private industry typically come from public institutions

      Where in the ungodly fuck to you geek filth get this shit?

    37. Re:I like his IRS plan! by davester666 · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul is also advocating the elimination of the mod-point system on SlashDot?

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    38. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And members, aside from Paul, of those two parties with plans of their own are fairly common. Particularly, Republican incumbents and/or candidates for federal office with plans that involve dismantling large parts of the US federal government are easier to find than those without such plans.

      Yes, there are a lot of politicians that will lie about what they will do in office (or make excuses about why they didn't do it before, but after the next election they will). The difference is that Ron Paul's voting record actually matches what he says.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    39. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Mod up. This is pretty much what I would have said if this person had not stated it first.

      As for California emissions, that has been so different from the rest of the country anyway, that many automakers actually found it more profitable to make a specific California package for their cars. In less extreme cases, I agree that the companies would probably adopt the strictest standard, as making their overall manufacturing and distribution cheaper than having multiple different versions.

    40. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like his IRS plan!

      They would be next.

    41. Re:I like his IRS plan! by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      There was no semiconductor market until Intel invented the semiconductor. What about reducing costs to increase market share is philanthropic? Rockefeller's logic behind keeping staff was that they were qualified employees that just needed to be reshaped to a new system. People didn't buy cars because there were roads; roads were built because people were buying cars. The Golden Gate Bridge was a privately funded project.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    42. Re:I like his IRS plan! by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Private invents differently. For instance, the Internet may be one thing. But remember, there were big huge nets before the internet. AOL, Prodigy, CompuServe, GEnie, etc.

      Granted, they were a bit more closed.

    43. Re:I like his IRS plan! by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

      This is the same stupid argument the libertarians always use. If private industry would have done it then why didn't they? I'd rather have something sooner rather than later. Who knows how much longer it would have taken for private industry to invent the internet on its own; 10, 20 years?

      Because the computers capable of really using the Internet didn't really exist? How long after useful privately owned computers were in homes did it take for the first ISPs to show up? A couple of years? You could argue they wouldn't have shown up if the government hadn't put in ARPAnet and such in the first place, but that presumes that no one outside of the government was thinking of how awesome it would be to connect all the computers together or have high speed communications. I'm pretty sure such systems have been a staple of Sci-Fi for decades and it seems logical people would have tried to make those systems with or without the Fed.gov.

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    44. Re:I like his IRS plan! by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

      There was no semiconductor and computer system market until the defense department made one by financing research and buying the output. Ever heard of Fairchild semiconductor? They are one of the foundations of the the semiconductor industry and held most of the early patents on semiconductors. They wouldn't have existed without government paying for the research and buying their early products. HP, Apple and the rest came later.

      You can keep dreaming your fantasy that Rockefeller was a altruistic philanthropist if you want but you really should do some actual reading on the subject.

      Like all corporations, the automobile companies lobbied government at all levels to build infrastructure that was too expensive for them to build but which would make their products more desirable to purchase. That's the way the system works. Without government investment, their business would be quite different. Perhaps they would have invested more in floating cars that could cross rivers without bridges.

      Because lord knows without the Fed.gov no one would ever have bothered to build computers (and all base technologies) and it is only through the guiding light that is the government that such miracles could be wrought.

      Do you really believe that no one would have bothered coming up with semiconductors and all that if there hadn't been a fed.gov market for it? Really? And I don't think he said anything about Rockefeller making things cheap because he was an awesome guy, just that he was obsessed with efficiency.

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    45. Re:I like his IRS plan! by interval1066 · · Score: 4, Informative

      Frank? As in Barney Frank? The man who pretty much SINGLE HANDEDLY caused the real estate fiasco three years ago? You bet I disagree with him. Kucinich will get nothing pushed through that anyone will pay attention to, same with Sanders.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    46. Re:I like his IRS plan! by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      So you're saying a Ron Paul presidency would promote bipartisan co-operation...

      Where in my response did you read that?

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    47. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mspohr · · Score: 1
      But we did have a Department of the Interior which was established in 1849 and among its significant activities were:

      - 1856-1873 Interior's Pacific Wagon Road Office improved the historic western emigrant routes.

      1869 Interior began its geological survey of the western Territories with the Hayden expedition. The Bureau of Education is placed under Interior (later transferred to the Department of Health, Education and Welfare).

      1879 Creation of the U.S. Geological Survey.

      1902 The Bureau of Reclamation is established to construct dams and aqueducts in the west.

      1910 The Bureau of Mines is created to promote mine safety and minerals technology.

      1920 The Mineral Leasing Act establishes the government's right to rental payments and royalties on oil, gas, and minerals production.

      1935 The Bureau of Reclamation completes construction of Hoover Dam.

      I believe that the 1920 Mineral Leasing Act did the most to promote the development of oil and gas. You can believe that Rockefeller did it all on his own if you want.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    48. Re:I like his IRS plan! by gtall · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "There shouldn't be any US gov't financed research and development." Yep, who the hell needs research on drugs for non-profitable disorders.

      "There shouldn't be any public property and so there shouldn't be any public owned 'right of ways'." Yep, the interstate system was a tremendous boondoggle, no one made a dime off using it.

      "There shouldn't be any subsidies to any oil drilling, all of it should be private and all land / sea should be private, so all of this drilling would bear full costs." No shit, we need to fish them damn oceans dry before anyone thinks of conservation. If the free market doesn't value it, it has no value.

      "There shouldn't be any public infrastructure, including highways and bridges." Damn straight, you should pay to drive anywhere.

      "There shouldn't BE a public sector outside of border protection, individual liberties/property protection and criminal/contract law." Yer right, who needs NSTA keeping them planes from falling out of the sky, Business School Product are very able to put a price on how many should die before it starts to crimp profits. And that housing bubble should be allowed to occur over and over again, we still have industries that haven't been decimated yet. Clean air and water? Crap, who needs it except a bunch of poor people, let'em buy their own clean air if they want clean air.

      Jeezes you are a moron.

    49. Re:I like his IRS plan! by tbannist · · Score: 1

      "The two entrenched parties can only shoot holes in his ideas"

      At last! Something they can both agree on.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    50. Re:I like his IRS plan! by darjen · · Score: 1

      You probably aren't aware of this, but there used to be hundreds of private turnpike companies until the government took them all over. They used the mythical excuse of "natural monopolies" to do this. Thus, government is actually the one who created the monopolies where there used to be healthy competition. Same holds true for the telecom and utility industries.

    51. Re:I like his IRS plan! by bberens · · Score: 2

      Ron Paul is really good at getting fringe elements (the more libertarian side) of the Republican Party fired up. He raises a truckload of cash in his "Presidential" campaign, drops out, and any money left over goes straight into the Republican general coffers. Ron Paul is a money maker, not a real candidate.

      --
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    52. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

      It could be the departments that would be closed down per the summary. Office of Science, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the U.S. Geological Survey are all kind of nerd worthy departments.

    53. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      "The government financed research was a slim minority of the market at that time,"

      That is so preposterously and utterly false. Silicon Valley was built on Cold War military & NASA R&D until about 1990.

      "and the Palo Alto Research Center had not one dime of public investment, and that is where arguably the biggest innovations came from."

      Innovations came from a far wider and diverse set of companies, especially in hardware. Almost every fundamental innovation had roots in university basic research (all government funded) and early-stage development was from military R&D (because the products were too expensvie to be acceptable to the consumer).

    54. Re:I like his IRS plan! by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Actually, in many ways they did just that.

      I was just listening to someone talk about the orgins of roads. And how the earliest roads were the hunting trails that followed things like deer paths.

      Then villages established, and trade furthered those paths. Then they'd be paved with gravel. Society found them beneficial and that it had an interest in developing them.

    55. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0

      Actually, they did. They did not invent it, but they built it.

      The Internet was invented (with a bit of help from his friends) by an academic, for use by other academics. He did it more-or-less in his "spare time", in response to a perceived need to transmit free-form information over a network. It wasn't like he was some engineer on the government payroll told to "go build an internet".

      The reason private industry did not invent it is because there was no perceived need at the time. IBM, banks, and other companies already had nationwide data networks. The company I worked for already had email, and that alone was a "good enough" improvement over sending paper on airplanes all over the place. Even with the outrageous cost, at the time, of a dedicated T1 line that stretched across the United States, the dedicated email system saved them more than $4000 a month over the FedEx costs that it replaced. They had no need for web browsing.

      When things finally got to the point that elements of the internet were finally perceived to fill business needs, private industry did jump on board. In droves.

      So while private industry did not invent it, that is no surprise because they saw no need for it at the time. But while the government might have set it up to begin with, make no mistake. The internet you use and enjoy now was built by private industry. These electrons are going over private wires.

    56. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mbkennel · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "Because lord knows without the Fed.gov no one would ever have bothered to build computers (and all base technologies) and it is only through the guiding light that is the government that such miracles could be wrought."

      Government sponsored basic R&D and early-stage development make such miracles much faster. And many miracles depend on lots of other miracles already happening. Some product or idea may have commercial applications but depends on another advance which, in its original stage only had military application.

      "Do you really believe that no one would have bothered coming up with semiconductors and all that if there hadn't been a fed.gov market for it? Really? "

      There wouldn't have been anywhere near the money and intensity of development. Almost all the semiconductor physics advances from 1945 to 1980's were sponsored by Bell Labs, universtities, IBM (who had huge military contracts for the most advanced systems of course) and military funding and military contracts. At that time Bell Labs counted economically as a government agency---in return for being granted the telephone system monopoly, Bell had to spend a large amount of money on R&D.

    57. Re:I like his IRS plan! by shoehornjob · · Score: 1

      Ok I conceed, they are nerd worthy departments.

      --
      "We are just a war away from Amerikastan. When god vs god the undoing of man." Dave Mustaine
    58. Re:I like his IRS plan! by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Mississippi has under 3 million people in an area larger than the four largest counties in California combined - only a little less than a third of the entire state of California. Vehicle emissions aren't a priority because there just aren't enough of them to matter.

    59. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This suggests all the nuts have impractical ideas with merit. That's quite helpful.

    60. Re:I like his IRS plan! by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      Umm one of the *many* reasons Ford's model-T was so successful was it performed very well on poor roads, like existing wagon trails and such.

      --
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    61. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Quila · · Score: 1

      Actually, early roads in the US were privately built. This is especially true in the East, even continuing through the privately built toll road, the Long Island Motor Parkway.

    62. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mspohr · · Score: 2, Informative
      Intel did not invent the semiconductor.

      You probably believe that Apple invented the computer.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    63. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      GP is correct, Rockefeller did in fact improve the efficiency of the market and drive prices down. You can't say that it was the oil by itself that reduced prices, because without Rockefeller virtually creating the industry in the first place, there would have been no demand. So actually that's kind of a ridiculous point to try to make.

      But I don't think anyone is claiming he was a great philanthropist. The benefits he brought to society stemmed entirely from his own profit motive. It wasn't a monopoly market: others did compete with Rockefeller. He outcompeted them. THAT is what brought about oligopoly in the oil markets: successful businessmen.

      And as you can learn in history books by Thomas Woods: during that period it was actually the private businessman who tended to do better than those who were government-subsidized. There are a great many examples.

    64. Re:I like his IRS plan! by truthsearch · · Score: 0

      No single person caused the real estate bubble and terrible investments. That's completely absurd and irrational.

      Kucinich will get nothing pushed through that anyone will pay attention to, same with Sanders.

      Your original claim was no one ever came up with any alternative plans. So now you're agreeing others do have plans, just plans you disagree with and will never pass Congress? So, in other words, no better or worse than Paul.

    65. Re:I like his IRS plan! by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      Frank and Sanders are demonstrated black hearts and liars.

      Examples? That's news to me. Sanders, in particular, has been extremely consistent. They're both very open in stating their opinions.

    66. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 2

      Really? Ever heard of IBM? The Thomas J. Watson Research Center?

      There are a great many things that came out of private industry, rather than government research. Among them: the transistor itself (without which there would be none of your vaunted microchips in the first place), and the laser.

    67. Re:I like his IRS plan! by kenrblan · · Score: 1

      I doubt private industry would have ever invented the internet. Private industry prior to the late 90's had very little or no interest in sharing information. That was a purely military and academic interest. It was only the advertisement angle that got them to adopt any type of internet presence. I suspect at this point in time, if we were depending on private industry, we might have a few separate walled-garden AOL type of sites run by cable companies that have no inter-connectivity - basically like having Microsoft Encarta through cable access instead of a CD as in the early to mid 90's.

      --
      Make everything as simple as possible, but not simpler. - Albert Einstein
    68. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Qzukk · · Score: 0

      The man who pretty much SINGLE HANDEDLY caused the real estate fiasco three years ago?

      Good thing he didn't use both hands, since 50% of the subprime mortgages were created by investment firms and mortgage brokers who weren't banks and weren't regulated. Like General Motors (ditech.com).

      No matter what I say, though, I'm sure you'll keep on pretending that Barney Franks personally held a gun to their head and forced them to get filthy rich.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    69. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      I think you meant toll roads, but that is true at least in part. But the "excuse" of natural monopoly is hardly a myth: it allowed the US to build the greatest telephone system in the world, with fingers in every part of the nation, all of it interoperable. While the European countries that instead left it up to "competition", ended up with a variety of telephone systems, none of which worked with each other. They ran on different voltages, they used different signalling schemes. If your neighbor was on a different telephone system, you couldn't call across the street. Some of them didn't even get that horrendous situation fixed until relatively recently.

      There is such a thing as a "natural monopoly", and if properly managed, in some situations -- in those rare situations where "natural monopoly" actually applies -- (and I don't think roads is one of those), it can be of more benefit to society than competition. It depends on many things. But a "myth"? Hardly. The internet would not exist today if it were not for our early "natural monopoly" telephone system.

    70. Re:I like his IRS plan! by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 2

      But while the government might have set it up to begin with, make no mistake. The internet you use and enjoy now was built by private industry. These electrons are going over private wires.

      You do realize this is exactly what Ron Paul wants to kill. The research and investment of the 'setting it up' part. So yes without the government the internet does NOT exist as it does today.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    71. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Hadlock · · Score: 1

      Which is why I used them as an example. Texas, Louisiana and other surrounding states would be importing awful polluting used cars as a result. For such a tiny state, it seems wasteful for them to have an entire department handling vehicle emissions when the feds are probably a better way to outsource that sort of legislation. Perhaps it would be better if larger states (pick your way of determining what counts as large) could opt out of the federal system, and in turn opt out of funding those federal departments. These days it seems that the federal government needs large states much more than large states need them (discounting the national defense argument).

      --
      moox. for a new generation.
    72. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Aryden · · Score: 1

      Because it has to do with cutting funding for SCIENCE... you know, one of those nerdy topics...

    73. Re:I like his IRS plan! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      none of which could exist without the public infrastructure.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    74. Re:I like his IRS plan! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Clinton would have been a republican if he ran 50 years sooner.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    75. Re:I like his IRS plan! by westlake · · Score: 1

      The price of kerosene dropped 80% during Standard Oil's reign primarily due to increased supply from drilling on (mostly) public lands. Who knows how much more it would have dropped if there had been a free market rather than a monopoly in charge.

      Standard Oil delivered a product that was safe and predictable in use and sold in honest weights and measures.

      Customers stood by the Standard's operating companies even after the trust was broken --- and the independents eulogized by the muckrakers fell by the wayside.

    76. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Dragonslicer · · Score: 1

      Second, the states can pick up any of these 'profitable' public enterprises that Paul is proposing to be thrown out.

      As soon as you can convince the oceans and atmosphere to stay within each state, then we move NOAA's work to the states.

    77. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't have a problem with government prodding advancement, and your examples are valid. I do have a problem with government spending. I also have a problem individual/corporate spending. Public/Corporate/Individual debt is out of control. Now the majority will disagree, but therein lies the problem. The average person believes that this is the way the world should work.

    78. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You missed the whole point. There was no government research involved in "inventing" the Internet. It was invented by an academic, on his own time, for his own purposes. The government just "borrowed" it later.

    79. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0

      "Private industry prior to the late 90's had very little or no interest in sharing information."

      As I have already explained that is simply not true. Numerous companies by then already had nationwide data networks. They just didn't interoperate. My company had nationwide email (with attachments) long before "the internet" went public. It just wasn't an "open" standard.

    80. Re:I like his IRS plan! by westlake · · Score: 1

      Like all corporations, the automobile companies lobbied government at all levels to build infrastructure that was too expensive for them to build but which would make their products more desirable to purchase.
      Without government investment, their business would be quite different. Perhaps they would have invested more in floating cars that could cross rivers without bridges.

      The amphibious car is idiotic.

      Ford built a dirt and gravel tolerant mass market automobile before there were hard-surfaced roads outside the city limits --- before there were gas stations, mechanics, miniature golf, tourist cabins or roadside diners.

      He put 20 millon cars on the road --- and each sale was a vote for a national highway system.

      Evading the toll-booth had been a national pastime since the founding of the Republic. You might make a go of a privately funded bridge - but a road was impossible to police. That is what made government funding essential.

    81. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Politburo · · Score: 1

      You realize you're only supporting GP's point?

      GP:"Private industry prior to the late 90's had very little or no interest in sharing information."

      You: "They just didn't interoperate... It just wasn't an "open" standard."

    82. Re:I like his IRS plan! by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Yep, who the hell needs research on drugs for non-profitable disorders.

      - there ARE NO NON-PROFITABLE DISORDERS! There are only INEFFICIENT MARKETS! These inefficient markets are created by the FDA!

      There is no such thing as a non-profitable disorder. The problem that you are not recognizing is that the federal government mandates, FDA, regulations all cost so much money that most of the common things that a small number of individuals could research on their own are out of their reach simply because the federal government makes it prohibitively expensive!

      FDA is the reason for the drugs being so expensive and Federal government (including THIS White House) is the reason that there is no competition and the patent terms of huge monopolies, who are the only entities that can PAY for all of the FDA nonsense are extended now by another 7 years. Didn't you know that?

      Yep, the interstate system was a tremendous boondoggle, no one made a dime off using it.

      - wait, wait, wait a minute. I NEVER said that nobody profited from it!

      Of-course many profited from it - those who are using something that is payed by the rest. Various entities profited from it. BUT it doesn't mean that it should have been done! I said it long ago - this stuff is destructive to economy, not constructive.

      There should be no subsidies to anybody by federal government, it has no authority and it destroys real markets in process, raises costs and creates moral hazards (like those unmaintainable without subsidies suburbs), it increases pollution, decrease efficiencies, destroys private infrastructure and transport systems.

      Of-course everybody loves FREE stuff, but there lies the problem- it's not actually free and it can't go on forever either.

      No shit, we need to fish them damn oceans dry before anyone thinks of conservation. If the free market doesn't value it, it has no value.

      - you got it backwards.

      It's GOVERNMENT that does NOT value so called 'common' property! Government doesn't value it at all! It doesn't care. Only real owners care. Gov't will create all sorts of moral hazards that will end up destroying this so called 'public' property.

      Here is what I want to do with my own property: I want either to live on it or I want to use it as an income stream. I can even have a park being an income stream, and I can maintain that park if it makes economic sense and I would benefit from it and I would protect my property from anybody trying to destroy it.

      If it's so called 'public' - I don't give a shit. I want to dump my garbage there and I don't want to pay for it.

      But there is the problem - if it's 'public' property, then it's not mine. So I definitely can't benefit from it by living there or making an income stream out of it. So there is no such thing as 'public' property. It's nobody's property and thus there is no value there.

      It's gov't that can't know the value of something, because the value of it is not based on market demand/supply (bid/ask) and it's not depending on the income stream that can be generated from it. Gov't does not know value of anything and it can't in principle and we can't expect it to.

      Damn straight, you should pay to drive anywhere.

      - you DO already, and it's not JUST taxes. It's the wrecked economy. It's the polluted environment. It's the moral hazard. It's the unsustainable infrastructure.

      Yer right, who needs NSTA keeping them planes from falling out of the sky,

      - I am very certain that Wright Brothers didn't need NSTA to create a plane that actually wasn't falling from the sky and that private airlines can hold their planes in the sky just fine.

      And that housing bubble should be allowed to occur over and over again

      - THIS MADE ME CRINGE.

      I

    83. Re:I like his IRS plan! by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      This is just a budget that he released, not his tax plans.

      The budget needs to be balanced, for this he is cutting spending. Once the budget is balanced, the government is already shrinking (because that's his plan), only when the government is shrinking and some of the debts are beginning to be paid, the taxes can be realistically cut.

    84. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mspohr · · Score: 1
      Stockholm syndrome?

      Many of Qaddafi's supporters stood by him until the end, also.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    85. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a good start. Most of the federal Govt. could be eliminated without having any negative effect on most of our lives, and a very positive one on our pocketbook.

      We are broke, in heavy debt. We should only fund things we MUST have, not want, or would like to have.

    86. Re:I like his IRS plan! by vajrabum · · Score: 3, Informative

      I like how libertarians and teahadists if that's the particular stripe of know-nothings just boldly stuff up. This is an oversimplification but early on it was mostly funded by ARPA and was looked at least initially as a strategic investment in network technologies that could be used for military command and control. The IMPs (routers) which tied together the early ARPAnet sites were built by BB&N under contract to the federal government and yes the universities were involved from the beginning. That's where the ideas but not the $$ came from. Go read the Wikipedia article on the History of the Internet. It's the 2nd unpaid article that shows up for a google search on Internet.

    87. Re:I like his IRS plan! by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 3, Informative
      From wikipedia

      In October 1962, Licklider was hired by Jack Ruina as Director of the newly established Information Processing Techniques Office (IPTO) within DARPA, with a mandate to interconnect the United States Department of Defense's main computers at Cheyenne Mountain, the Pentagon, and SAC HQ. There he formed an informal group within DARPA to further computer research.

      The 'idea' was published prior to this hiring, but the research into making it happen was decidedly government sponsored.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    88. Re:I like his IRS plan! by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      There shouldn't be any public property

      What? So how does that work, first private entity to file gets to claim the local lake that 10s of thousands of people rely on for drinking water? And since it's private property, if the owner wants to drain the lake and build a golf course, we should all just figure out another way to not die? I realize you believe the free market fairy will come along and solve all problems if government would just stop interfering, but do you have any actual concrete plans for how your ludicrous suggestion would actually play out? In a way that doesn't involve thousands of people dying as a "market correction"?

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    89. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0

      Okay. We are running into terminology problems here. When most people say "internet", they are referring to the WWW. I used that as the definition only because most other people do.

      Technically, the internet itself was developed by DARPA. But the WWW was "invented" by Tim Berners-Lee.

    90. Re:I like his IRS plan! by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      It's actually simpler to do right now than you think - the government needs to auction off all of the properties that it owns. Gov't is the biggest 'owner' of property, which is an oxymoron, gov't can't really own it, nobody owns it, anything 'owned' by gov't is really not owned in any meaningful way. It's not protected by a real owner, it's not developed, it's not used as the market wants it to be used.

      If somebody buys a lake - obviously they are not buying a piece of dry land. They are buying a piece of water property. If they buy the entire property, then it's theirs! Of-course if there is a way that people use that lake for water, then there is a legitimate INCOME STREAM associated with that lake. So this gets priced into the purchase and it becomes an actual business opportunity.

      People don't spend money just to waste it.

    91. Re:I like his IRS plan! by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1
      You want an example of 'natural monopolies'? Take the power grid in Japan. Different companies built two sides of the island's power grid using different systems. From this

      TEPCO’s supply situation would look less grim were it not for a quirky split that divides Japan’s power grids in half: While Tokyo and the rest of eastern Japan run on 50-hertz electricity, the big cities southwest of Tokyo and the rest of the country run on alternating current that cycles at 60 Hz. It’s a historical accident from the 19th century, when Tokyo’s electrical entrepreneurs installed 50-Hz generators mainly from Germany, while their counterparts in Osaka selected 60-Hz equipment from the United States.

      So yes allowing fragmented systems is inherently bad when it comes some monopolistic areas of effect. And in this case it caused significant damage because they couldn't use the power from the west to help the east.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    92. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0
      No, I wasn't. Unless I misinterpreted his words. And I have good reason to believe I didn't.

      "Private industry prior to the late 90's had very little or no interest in sharing information."

      One must ask what GP meant by "sharing information". Sharing information amongst businesses? No, because businesses today have no more interest in sharing information with others than they ever did.

      That leaves only the interpretation of: "Sharing information internally." Which they DID have an interest in, and as I pointed out, actually did do.

      If my interpretation was wrong, fine. But that's what I based my comment on. And it would mean that GP's comment doesn't make much sense, because businesses today are as jealous of their information as they ever were.

    93. Re:I like his IRS plan! by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      WWW is just a protocol running on the internet. How exactly does TBL 'invent' the WWW without the internet in the first place?

      Without the government research and investment that Ron Paul wants to kill, the WWW (and the internet) would simply not exist.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    94. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 0

      "WWW is just a protocol running on the internet. How exactly does TBL 'invent' the WWW without the internet in the first place?"

      Would you care to try reading my comment again? I wrote:

      "When most people say "internet", they are referring to the WWW. I used that as the definition only because most other people do."

      Is there anything about that you find confusing?

    95. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Frank and Sanders are demonstrated black hearts and liars.

      Examples? That's news to me. Sanders, in particular, has been extremely consistent. They're both very open in stating their opinions.

      The most recent example is Sander's treatment of the Audit the Fed bill. Check out Sander's praise for himself regarding it, then go read the real story of the bill. Kind of looks like he's full of it, doesn't it?

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    96. Re:I like his IRS plan! by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      So only currently wealthy private entities will be allowed to control the resources that we all depend on for survival. Awesome. So they can charge me for water they get for free every time it rains. That certainly sounds fair. I don't suppose you'd be in favor of regulation governing this monopoly? Cause in a free market, the sweet point of price vs market means those at the lower end of the spectrum can't afford your product. Which in this case means they die. Or how about some laws saying they can't drain the lake? Sure, there is a financial incentive to sell water to people. Doesn't mean there won't be a greater financial incentive to drain the lake for some other purpose.

      Gov't is the biggest 'owner' of property, which is an oxymoron, gov't can't really own it, nobody owns it, anything 'owned' by gov't is really not owned in any meaningful way.

      And that's your problem right there - collective ownership is meaningless in your worldview b/c it can't be monetized. It isn't meaningless at all, it just acknowledges that the point of society is for people to live together and share resources. Not squeezing the last drop of "efficiency", which has simply become profit in our modern systems, out of every resource. You can't charge me for the air produced by trees, but you can cut them down and sell the wood. So the world would be better off if we chopped down all the trees, right?

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    97. Re:I like his IRS plan! by interval1066 · · Score: 2
      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    98. Re:I like his IRS plan! by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      You didn't follow up with a "nya nya nyaa". In any case, the opposition for these "alternative plans is from both sides of the aisle, which is why I said what I said.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    99. Re:I like his IRS plan! by darjen · · Score: 1

      TEPCO is a direct descendant of Japan's once nationalized industry. So there is nothing natural about it. If the industry was more fragmented, there would be far fewer people affected by one single company's failure.

    100. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, that era is dead and long gone. None of those companies and very few others in the US are innovative or inventing anything at all and have very small R&D budgets compared to what they had just a decade ago. They are mediocre commodity consumer product pushers now. They are rebranding and repackaging to meet short term investor driven quarterly goals.

    101. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Rockoon · · Score: 3, Informative

      Barney Frank blocked reform of Fannie and Freddie in 2003, stating "I think we see entities that are fundamentally sound financially, and will withstand some of the disaster scenarios, and even if there were a problem the federal government doesnt bail them out." - Citation

      Barney Frank then blocked reform of Fannie and Freddie again in 2005, stating "Homes that are occupied may see an ebb and flow in the price at a certain percentage level, but you are not going to see the collapse that you see when people talk about a bubble" - Citation

      While he didnt singlehandedly create the problem, combined with other democrats he made sure that nothing was done it.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    102. Re:I like his IRS plan! by roman_mir · · Score: 0

      control the resources that we all depend on for survival. Awesome. So they can charge me for water they get for free every time it rains.

      1. You can buy part of that lake if you depend on it for survival! If you can't afford it, you don't deserve a single drop of water from it. If you can't afford it individually, you may form a cooperative business with others who depend on that lake for survival, you can form a business, sell bonds, buy equipment, install and operate it, protect the lake and make sure you have dividends as well as water.

      2. Gov't today already 'controls' the resources that you depend on for survival, and where is THAT going exactly? 70 Million dollar liability cap for drilling and what does that kind of moral hazard allow BP to do? All those royalties that are not payed based on political ties, so instead of having REAL ownership and REAL protection and REAL insurance and REAL responsibility, companies are allowed to buy political power because politicians HAVE that power, so companies can then forgo paying the real prices, avoid buying insurance (again, 70 Million dollar cap on deep water drilling while preventing shallow water drilling?)

      Corporations are protected by gov't with limited liability from personal responsibility, then they are protected from financial responsibility with these liability caps and then they are given FREE ACCESS to these so called 'PUBLIC' resources so they can take advantage and destroy them (because of the moral hazard and the cheapness of it all, thanks gov't), and with that track record you are for more of that?

      I don't suppose you'd be in favor of regulation governing this monopoly?

      - I am against all gov't regulations, moral hazards, subsidies, public ownership of property, business/labor regulations, income/payroll/corporate taxes. Just to makes sure that you don't have to ask this again.

      As to something being a "monopoly" - there is no such thing in free market. If there is no gov't franchise on these so called 'public' utilities (which shouldn't be monopolies), then there are alternatives, and then again, who is stopping others from participating in ownership of a business opportunity? Free market is only free because it's free from gov't destruction of it, not because gov't regulates it. Any gov't regulation is power, and it's a power that is immediately for sale and it's bought to FORM a monopoly.

      You HAVE this monopoly right NOW operating your water table wherever you are right now in USA, that's the irony of this, you are complaining that free market would do this to you? NO - gov't is doing it to you NOW. Wake up. Snap out of this brain washed state you are in.

      You can't charge me for the air produced by trees, but you can cut them down and sell the wood. So the world would be better off if we chopped down all the trees, right?

      - only in your world a business is there to destroy.

      A business wants to continue making money, not to drain some important resource and then move on. THAT is only possible with gov't money, because only gov't doesn't care about a valuable resource and only gov't can counterfeit currency to make possible to drain resources completely without actually producing something of value.

      There is always a market price attached to ANYTHING. Anything at all has a price. There are costs associated with any business.

      Yes, I am against ALL public ownership oxymoron ideology, but if gov't owns something (and it does now), at least it shouldn't rape it the way it does now and it should ONLY pay for any maintenance by running the thing like a business would (but this is the problem, gov't can't do that - it's the point, it's not a business, it can't be efficient, it can't have real understanding of value and price discovery). If gov't owns it, the costs of it should always be born by those, who use it directly via user fees, not come from any taxes and subsidies, it should be a completely s

    103. Re:I like his IRS plan! by IDarkISwordI · · Score: 1

      This blog appears to be a tad bit... biased. Have a better source because I'm not persuaded by this individuals rhetoric.

    104. Re:I like his IRS plan! by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      Ironically, the last president to reduce the size of the federal government was Clinton (he really was a fiscal conservative)

      Ironically, it took the Democrats losing both houses of Congress in 1994 for Clinton to declare that "the era of big government is over."

      There was also the end of the Cold War and the Information Revolution (neither of which he had anything to do with) that had a huge positive impact on the U.S. economy.

      Clinton was smart enough to roll with the punches, but mainly he was lucky.

      Clinton was a social liberal, but fiscal conservative. New spending was offset by cuts elsewhere. He pared over 100,000 jobs from the federal government in a rather large housecleaning.

      W. was a social conservative, but fiscal liberal. W. spent without any offsetting cuts or revenue increases, further adding the DHS and all of its payroll in a monstrosity of redundancy, where fixing a little oversight between agencies would have sufficed.

      Simply belonging to on party or another does not mean all views are immediately aligned with the party. The USA would need a lot more parties were that the case.

      "Fiscal conservative, check. Social conservative, check. No gun laws, check. Want to gut farm subsidies?!? Whoa, try the next Party down the hall."

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    105. Re:I like his IRS plan! by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1
      Because you responded to my point that Ron Paul would cut the very research and development that gave us the 'internet', implying that the government wasn't involved.

      You said:

      There was no government research involved in "inventing" the Internet.

      Without the government, clearly, TBL doesn't invent WWW because there's no internet on which it would run.

      That seems a pretty straight path of logic that without the government research and development the internet and WWW do not exist as we know them today.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    106. Re:I like his IRS plan! by David+Greene · · Score: 1

      What are you going to do to replace the revenue?

      --

    107. Re:I like his IRS plan! by chmodman · · Score: 2

      Until Marc Andreessen and Netscape, the internet was limited to geek protocols like ftp, telnet, email and maybe usenet. Private industry had a big part in making the internet accessible to the average joe, which is why it was so successful. Not to mention the advances in search from the likes of Yahoo and Google.

    108. Re:I like his IRS plan! by sehryan · · Score: 1

      NOAA runs a number of satellites that monitor weather conditions for the US. Are you stating that you think it makes more sense for each state to build, launch, and maintain their own weather satellite?

      --
      The world moves for love. It kneels before it in awe.
    109. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mike1210 · · Score: 1

      The transistor (Bell Labs), the integrated circuit (Texas Instruments and Fairchild Semiconductor) and the microprocessor (Intel) were all developed through private initiative. The CPU in my computer is the descendant of the 4004, not the ENIAC.

    110. Re:I like his IRS plan! by TubeSteak · · Score: 1

      The price of kerosene dropped 80% during Standard Oil's reign primarily due to increased supply from drilling on (mostly) public lands.
      Who knows how much more it would have dropped if there had been a free market rather than a monopoly in charge.

      I'm sorry to ruin your point, but the price of oil was so low because Standard Oil was a monopoly.
      They absorbed or destroyed so many competitors that they were able to leverage their size in order to create economies of scale.

      Standard Oil raised prices excessively where it had driven out competition and,
      where it hadn't, would lower its prices to the point where S.O. made little or no profit.
      (And if S.O. was making no profit, it's competition was losing money)

      The railroads were also in S.O.'s back pocket. Where Standard Oil had competition,
      they raised transportation rates. Where Standard oil didn't, rail costs plummeted.

      Standard Oil gave the country cheap oil, but they did it by raping the concept of a competitive market.

      --
      [Fuck Beta]
      o0t!
    111. Re:I like his IRS plan! by AHuxley · · Score: 1

      The 1970's CC networks, class b banks, non agent banks should be a warning and show what networking would have looked like.
      Massive fast networks with you paying for every unit of data used -the Australian internet data costs would be a historical point too.

      --
      Domestic spying is now "Benign Information Gathering"
    112. Re:I like his IRS plan! by TheCouchPotatoFamine · · Score: 1

      oh yes - make a better tomorrow with your xboxes, my benevolent applied-sciences overlord!

      --
      CS majors know the time/space tradeoff, but they never get taught the 3rd, crucial, tradeoff of the set: comprehension!
    113. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mike1210 · · Score: 0

      With Fairchild Semiconductor, the research was done through private initiative, and only after the silicon-based integrated circuit was developed, did the military start buying them.

    114. Re:I like his IRS plan! by treeves · · Score: 1

      I think he was just trying to make a joke, not a better tomorrow, though a good enough joke just might make tomorrow better.

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    115. Re:I like his IRS plan! by chooks · · Score: 1

      Perhaps they would have invested more in floating cars that could cross rivers without bridges.

      I'm a little hazy on your car analogy. Could you put it in terms of text editors or perhaps operating systems?

      --
      -- The Genesis project? What's that?
    116. Re:I like his IRS plan! by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      Second, the states can pick up any of these 'profitable' public enterprises that Paul is proposing to be thrown out.

      NOAA is a uniformed force of the Federal Government. The idea here is that there need be some surveyors who are potentially able to operate in warzones without being arrested and executed as "spies". If they are Uniformed Personnel, then they receive Geneva Convention protections. The several states just cannot really produce the same protections that the Federal Government can on this matter.

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    117. Re:I like his IRS plan! by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      Exactly my point. Private enterprise was able to capitalize on the power of the Internet, But not until 20 years after the multi-billion dollar infrastructure was in place. The robust protocols and physical hardware were already long in place before Netscape and Yahoo found a way to make a buck off of it.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    118. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mspohr · · Score: 1

      Sure. Linux would build a sturdy Jeep that would go anywhere. Apple would build a sleek racer that would only go where Steve wanted. Windows would have lots of stuff patched on the sides and would get stuck a lot.

      --
      I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
    119. Re:I like his IRS plan! by treeves · · Score: 1

      *Before* the internet? Yeah, and I'm younger today then yesterday. Woot!

      --
      ...the future crusty old bastards are already drinking the Kool-Aid.
    120. Re:I like his IRS plan! by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      In this example, the function of the NOAA that applies to a theater of war can be moved to a different department, such as the DoD.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    121. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Man+On+Pink+Corner · · Score: 2

      Great, so we get rid of NIST, and now all fifty states get to maintain their own standard kilogram, current source, and atomic clock. That sounds really efficient.

      Every time Ron Paul says something that makes sense at first, like ditching the Department of Education, it seems that he has to follow it up with something ridiculous, like the idea that public schools should be able to teach creationism. That, in turn, leads me to question my own judgment for giving him a moment's consideration.

    122. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Repeating yourself is not useful; I understood you the first time. I simply explained the context in which I made my comment. You are speaking of a completely different context.

      Within that context, my statement was correct. But I have already conceded that technically, you were correct. So what's the point here?

    123. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Qzukk · · Score: 2

      Yes, yes, very good. I do note that none of the videos addressed Bush's Blueprint for the American Dream.

      Nor did they address the fact that when Bush killed the Blueprint for the American Dream in 2005, he cancelled Clinton's CRA regulations, while the banks continued to invent new ways to give away money with Alt-A and NINJA loans.

      Even so, let's say that ACORN was behind every last subprime and alt-a mortgage written by banks. That amounts to 50% of the crisis.

      Who single handedly forced GM to get into the subprime market with ditech.com (remember, they're not a bank, you can't deposit money there, the CRA and ACORN never had any power over them)? And what about the rest of the investment firms and mortgage brokers and non-bank institutions that made up the other 50% of the crisis?

      Who single handedly forced S&P to rate the shit AAA?

      Who single handedly forced AIG to insure the shit?

      Liberals aren't blameless, but pretending that it's all Jimmys fault what with his CRA forcing banks to make billions of dollars is just plain ignorant.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    124. Re:I like his IRS plan! by aiken_d · · Score: 1

      So DARPA had nothing to do with the Internet?

      --
      If I wanted a sig I would have filled in that stupid box.
    125. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Pseudonym · · Score: 0

      These agencies should be on the State level not the Federal level.

      Does anyone honestly think that it would be better if there were 50 different measurement standards bodies instead of just the NIST? It's bad enough getting a product certified for North America, Europe and China. Imagine having to get it certified by every US state separately.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    126. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Ralph+Spoilsport · · Score: 1

      yeah. Nobody drove to work on federal highways. And nobody flew on company junkets using public airspace that needs traffic control or public airports, and nobody used computers made of precious metals mined in countries that are brutally repressed by corrupt dictators working at the behest of corporations behind the mask of the federal government, and nobody ate food in the cafeteria because there was no FDA to insure the quality of the slaughter of the animals, the processing or packaging of the food, and nobody had to worry about air quality from the unregulated automobile engines, and nobody... oh never mind - just take your Randian bullcrap and stick it.

      --
      Shoes for Industry. Shoes for the Dead.
    127. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Pseudonym · · Score: 2

      Incidentally, the job of the NIST is explicitly authorised in section 8 of the US Constitution. It's not often that Ron Paul makes a proposal that goes against strict constitutionalism, but there you go.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    128. Re:I like his IRS plan! by khallow · · Score: 2

      "Do you really believe that no one would have bothered coming up with semiconductors and all that if there hadn't been a fed.gov market for it? Really? "

      There wouldn't have been anywhere near the money and intensity of development.

      Yes, really. He is making that argument even to the point of rationalizing Bell Labs as a US government agency even though it wasn't. I see he missed Intel and Motorola too.

    129. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Kalriath · · Score: 0

      I cannot believe the blind moronic stupidity in this comment. While we're at it, let's just reinstate slavery too. After all, what else can we do with all the poor people that can't afford to buy water from whatever rich individuals or companies bought their local lake.

      Earth does NOT belong to anyone. Not the rich, not the poor, not the governments. You cannot sell lakes, or oceans, or mountains.

      You sir, are a selfish ass. And Ron Paul is a nutjob that will destroy your entire country to further his own selfish agenda.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    130. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Of course it's biased - it's all politics. This one by Ron Paul is less full of hyperbole, but the major contrast is knowing the whole history of this effort, the people involved, what Sanders did to the bill at the last minute, and then seeing this kind of bullcrap from Sanders totally praising himself and making wild untrue claims about what HIS version of the bill does and failing to mention what he did was basically sell out to the elites.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    131. Re:I like his IRS plan! by innerweb · · Score: 1

      The general public's misuse of that term is just one more example of why the general public fails at so much.

      Technically, the internet itself was developed by DARPA. But the WWW was "invented" by Tim Berners-Lee.

      I will just throw these links out for some light reading on some of the stuff that the *WWW* is based upon.

      --
      Freud might say that Intelligent Design is religion's ID.
    132. Re:I like his IRS plan! by jcr · · Score: 2

      It doesn't take a bureaucracy on the NIST's scale to establish standard weights and measures. Seriously, $1.1 BILLION dollars a bit much.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    133. Re:I like his IRS plan! by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Slavery is here right now - you are a slave of your system, which is going to force you to pay back the debts that are owed to the banks who were gambling with counterfeit money because the banks and governments are one and the same.

      As to 'earth' not belonging - it certainly doesn't belong to 'government', but it does have value and every part of it needs to be privately owned, otherwise it gets destroyed by the government and it is not treated with respect by anybody.

      What do you mean 'you cannot sell lakes or oceans or mountains'? Many people own lakes and oceans and mountains.

      Do you know what mountain strip mining is? That's when gov't "owns" a mountain and gives it to a private entity for FREE to strip mine it, where the top of it is blown off and all of that matter is thrown into some valley or a lake or a river and then whatever they are mining (coal) is taken without drilling for it and without bothering with going underground.

      So now you end up with a completely wrong situation, where nobody actually PAID for any of this property, but a private company gets to destroy it because gov't 'owns' it and it just gives 'right' (license) to that company to destroy that mountain and that valley/river/lake/forest that it never paid for.

      If they are going to strip mine that mountain that should have to pay for it on the market and they definitely should pay for every piece of that valley/river/lake/forest they are going to destroy by dumping millions of tons of rock there.

      THAT would have prevented strip mining, because then they couldn't buy/sell this stuff and still be profitable.

      The selfish asses are people like you, who have no idea what real value/prices are and that are pro-government, which is just a way to own something in a way that doesn't require real evaluation and payment. This is how you destroy everything around yourself - with "public ownership", which simply means that nobody had to pay for it so they DO NOT GIVE A FUCK.

    134. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      The Internet was invented (with a bit of help from his friends) by an academic, for use by other academics. He did it more-or-less in his "spare time", in response to a perceived need to transmit free-form information over a network. It wasn't like he was some engineer on the government payroll told to "go build an internet".

      What on earth are you talking about?

      Who is this "acedemic"?

      Are you perhaps confusing the world wide web with the internet?

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    135. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Okay. We are running into terminology problems here. When most people say "internet", they are referring to the WWW. I used that as the definition only because most other people do.

      Oh, you're an idiot. I see.

      End of conversation.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    136. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      You can buy part of that lake if you depend on it for survival! If you can't afford it, you don't deserve a single drop of water from it.

      Ok, that's water all sorted out.

      What about the air? How am I going to monetize that?

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    137. Re:I like his IRS plan! by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      If you select only that to talk about - air as public property also doesn't work. Gov't subsidizes the highway system, thus destroying all sorts of forests and promoting subsidized suburban sprawl, air pollution, because the highway system subsidizes car manufacturers and car owners, while the fed actually destroyed a working private rail system and taxed airlines to run those projects and printed a bunch of money crippling the economy further.

      There is price attached to owning forests as well as oceans, and that price must include the fact that those forests/oceans are oxygen producers. Separate States can set their zoning laws as well, this is out of federal gov't authority. Without a price attached to all those resources, the gov't ends up giving out licenses and contracts to various private interests who grease the wheel of the politicians' elections, and those resources end up being destroyed FOR FREE - BP oil spill is a good example of how oxygen producing resource - ocean, ends up being destroyed and de-oxygenated, because of gov't moral hazard of liability cap, removal of personal liability via corporate status and absence of actual private owner of that ocean property.

      Mountains/forests/valleys end up being destroyed by coal strip miners, who get basically free access to those resources because they don't have to pay MARKET prices for any of them, so they can strip whatever makes them money, destroy the resources and move on. They didn't have to pay market price for any of that and they don't have to get rid of it, so they don't have to bear ANY costs of their activities - this is a giant subsidy and destruction of AIR producing resources given out by gov't because there is no private owner.

      Dwell on that.

    138. Re:I like his IRS plan! by jahudabudy · · Score: 1

      I was going to post refutations to your arguments that highlighted the logical fallacies and historical counterfactuals that disprove your assertions. However, you would simply ignore them or handwave away the apparent market failures as somehow being attributable to government market distortion (inconveniently failing to elucidate the mechanism by which these failures can be attributed to government). No, you simply don't believe a business would ever do something destructive that had short term benefits they could amass, as long as the long term costs would be spread out amongst everyone, thus giving the business a positive reward/risk scenario. I don't have any idea why you think that won't happen, but I can't argue with that sort of zealous faith in the free market fairy. Instead, I'll focus on this statement:

      If you can't afford it, you don't deserve a single drop of water from it.

      Even if your philosophy wasn't fundamentally flawed in it's assumptions, THIS is why I and most people would still find it repugnant. You place no value on human life. A person's worth is measured only by their bank account. I suppose I shouldn't be surprised by that. In the simple market economics of supply and demand, human life is the cheapest most abundant most infinitely replaceable commodity there is. What makes this particular attitude (which all free market advocates share - I should credit you with being willing to state it aloud, unlike most) even more reprehensible is my near certainty that you exempt yourself and those you care about from this particular calculation. MY life is worth nothing to you unless I can contribute to your economic gain; YOUR life (I assume) is infinitely valuable to you. And yet you wonder why no one seems interested in forming your ideal society.

      --
      ...sometimes, in order to hurt someone very badly, you have to tell that person terrible lies. - PA
    139. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      Also, in addition to what others have pointed out - the argument that it could have been created privately in doesn't change the fact that it was created publicly - as were many of the foundations of modern computing that were necessary for the private institutions mentioned to even exist. Additionally, note that research grants and government contracts weren't rare in the history of any of those institutions.

    140. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      I guess if you limit "the internet" to the WWW - but that's pretty foolish, or very disingenuous.

    141. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      I apologize for reiterating what others have already said; I was reading top-to-bottom, rather than checking all replies - a bad habit.

    142. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      I see you like Neal Stephenson ;-)

    143. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, do you have an argument as to that system being better than the federally funded highway system? Note that "FREE MARKET GETS ME HARD!" is not an argument, it's a fetish.

    144. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Spugglefink · · Score: 1

      How long after useful privately owned computers were in homes did it take for the first ISPs to show up? A couple of years?

      I'd put it at more like seven years. I definitely had a PC by 1986, and the first private ISP to make it onto the scene around here was about 1992. Before that, you had to be or know a university student, etc., to get on the internet, and the rest of us made do with BBSes.

    145. Re:I like his IRS plan! by atriusofbricia · · Score: 1

      How long after useful privately owned computers were in homes did it take for the first ISPs to show up? A couple of years?

      I'd put it at more like seven years. I definitely had a PC by 1986, and the first private ISP to make it onto the scene around here was about 1992. Before that, you had to be or know a university student, etc., to get on the internet, and the rest of us made do with BBSes.

      I suppose that depends on how you define things. Given for most of the period between 1986 - 1990 (around the time of AOL, CompuServe and such) most people didn't even know what the internet was or even that it existed. I know I was able to use telnet to connect from a couple of BBSes to other BBSes around the 1989 time frame, maybe as early as 1988. Point being, by the time there was interest in such connections they were coming online for people. That is how it would make sense, no?

      --
      I was raised on the command line, bitch

      "Nemo me impune lacesset"

    146. Re:I like his IRS plan! by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      1. I have proofs to all my statements, don't worry, I don't run away from an argument, you can bring up anything you see as a logical fallacy, whatever, or are you just lazy?

      2. It's not that I don't BELIEVE that a business wouldn't do something destructive if it was profitable in the short term. I don't believe anything, I only believe that people do things for their benefit. What it is, is that in free market the gov't is not creating the moral hazards like the ones it creates by limiting liability, setting liability caps, giving out free contracts to strip mine mountains to companies who DO NOT PAY THE MARKET PRICE for those lands AND federal gov't obviously doesn't protect private property and doesn't believe in States rights, but zoning laws are a State/municipal/local issue, not a federal one. Federal gov't should not own ANY property, because it cannot. Any property federal gov't 'owns' is property that will be abused, and it is, time after time, and you think that's a logical fallacy. Come on, bring out your so called 'facts'.

      You place no value on human life.

      - NOT TRUE.

      There is clearly a value attached to any human life of any human who participates in the market. Every human is worth something. They are doing something producing something, creating something. If they are not, then they are inconsequential, it is true, they can even be destructive. But most importantly - if somebody isn't creating/producing something, FORCING others to GIVE them stuff is IMMORAL.

      BUT other people CAN give them stuff out of charity. Nobody prevents individual charity more than the government taxation system, which takes away people's money at all points, from production to consumption, to simple ownership and even capitation (head count, just because they are there), so there is obviously so little money left for the average person to spend, he won't be doing much charity. It's good if he makes enough to survive and he doesn't need charity himself.

      You are absolutely blind to facts, but you are also completely misunderstanding the point. The point is that at any moment that you use a gov't to FORCE somebody to so called 'share' their work to feed people who are themselves unproductive, you are turning those people, who are forced to 'share' into basic slaves. THAT is immoral.

      As to individuals doing charity - that's a basic human trait. People do that because they are people, but they can be stopped by government and they can even turn violent against the idea of charity by gov't forcing them to so called 'share'. We know what this 'sharing' is all about - it's all about making government more powerful and rich and turning individuals into a collective of slaves.

    147. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the WWW was "invented" by Tim Berners-Lee.

      At CERN a government funded research laboratory.

    148. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      I do admit that when it goes over the magic $1 billion mark, it sounds like a lot. Last year's budget, 750 million, didn't sound like nearly as much.

      Having said that, the reality is that it is far more expensive to establish weights and measures today than it was 200 years ago, because lots more things have to be measured (e.g. fundamental physical constants, x-ray absorption of pure elements) and to a far higher precision, and the requirements are only getting more demanding as time goes on.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    149. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      Wait, you would RATHER have all of the roads be private toll roads? ...and have a whole bunch of different telecom companies, possibly with incompatible different telephone systems, for example? (Incompatible as in you can't call someone using the other type of telephone -- obviously for example cell phones, we DO have incompatible cell phone technologies.)

      There used to be multiple telephone companies, and even more phone wires around, from different companies.

    150. Re:I like his IRS plan! by mattack2 · · Score: 1

      There is no such thing as a non-profitable disorder. The problem that you are not recognizing is that the federal government mandates, FDA, regulations all cost so much money that most of the common things that a small number of individuals could research on their own are out of their reach simply because the federal government makes it prohibitively expensive!

      Are you serious?

      If there's some horrible disease that 100 people/year get, it's not profitable for a public drug company to research it. (Unless it also happens to only afflict millionaires and above.)

      I think there are a lot of things that can be cut from government spending, but some sorts of basic research (especially when that can often have side effects for other diseases which ARE more common) is one of the kinds of things that public spending makes sense for.

      Also, the "regulations" are things like toxicity testing, making sure that the new drugs won't kill the patients instead of helping them. Also, that they're actually EFFECTIVE for the disease supposedly being treated, or else the "individuals researching on their own" could very well be more snake oil salesmen.

    151. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      I'm an idiot because I used the popular definition of a term? Even though I knew what the actual difference is?

      That's an interesting point of view. Somewhat sociopathic, I would say, but interesting.

    152. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      No, it's very popular. If you ask most people what the internet is, most likely 90% or more of them will describe WWW and email, and that's about it.

      Just as the popular uses of "schizophrenia" and "paranoia" are technically way off the mark, so is the popular use of "internet".

    153. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      Using a popular misconception intentionally when one knows better only makes sense if you're engaged in training or dialogue with someone who holds the misconception, and the misconception is tangential to the discussion. It's not remotely helpful to do so in a dialogue centered on the subject of the misconception, with people who largely don't hold the misconception.

    154. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      "Using a popular misconception intentionally when one knows better only makes sense if you're engaged in training or dialogue with someone who holds the misconception, "

      That's right. This is Slashdot, remember?

    155. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      Which means most people have no idea about politics or basic human decency, but have a pretty high likelihood of understanding "the internet" as a concept ;-)

    156. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CompuServe. 1989.

    157. Re:I like his IRS plan! by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      uh no, you're an idiot because when we were talking about the specific 'internet' with absolutely no mention of WWW you decided to use the 'popular' 'laymans' definition of 'internet'.

      *I* said the government was the driving force behind the internet, which you now agree it was. Yet you decided to chime in that "No, the government wasn't involved in the 'internet'" when you meant something entirely different than the 'internet'.

      If you had said, "The government wasn't involved in WWW', I would have agreed, but then it wouldn't have been at all relevant to the point I was making since WWW is not the internet.

      Words matter...you don't get to just change the context and expect everyone else to follow along without actually explaining yourself. Now that you have, you're points are valid, but utterly irrelevant to the discussion of whether Ron Paul would gut the basic research that did, in fact, create the internet.

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    158. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Touché

    159. Re:I like his IRS plan! by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Apparently HTML doesn't like é

    160. Re:I like his IRS plan! by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      He joined the Republican party to get votes so he could actually get elected.

      So he's a huge hypocrite who really only cares about being elected, rather than about changing the system. Got it.

      You are basically agreeing with everything I said. If he truly was for multiple parties, he would have put his money where his mouth is, and ran as one of the 3rd parties. Since he hasn't, that means he cares more about being elected than anything else.

    161. Re:I like his IRS plan! by BasilBrush · · Score: 1

      So while private industry did not invent it, that is no surprise because they saw no need for it at the time. But while the government might have set it up to begin with, make no mistake. The internet you use and enjoy now was built by private industry. These electrons are going over private wires.

      And that is why you need governments to be at the forefront of big, long term projects. Private enterprise is myopic.

  2. Other thing that will erase Government Programs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    1. Re:Other thing that will erase Government Programs by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      What you saying Willis?

      That an American bankruptcy will eliminate those and many more programs?

      Are you saying if we don't do anything. Then those programs will disappear regardless.

      You're crazy Vulcan. Don't use logic. Just pretend that we can print limitless money.

      But seriously, let's not forget that a $14 trillion debt with a $1.5 trillion annual deficit is unsustainable.

    2. Re:Other thing that will erase Government Programs by QuantumLeaper · · Score: 1

      The U.S. should clean up it own house before it tries to clean up others, you know like have two point less wars....

    3. Re:Other thing that will erase Government Programs by tophermeyer · · Score: 1

      So what, we should pull back to a pre WWI isolationist state? Just keep on expanding that American frontier and hoping the rest of the world doesn't bother us?

      The reality is that economic (and to a lesser extent social) issues are global issues. Our national houses are deeply interrelated. What happens elsewhere in the world affects the US, and vice versa.

    4. Re:Other thing that will erase Government Programs by Mike · · Score: 2

      The U.S. has never been isolationist, and neither are any of the presidential candidates, including Ron Paul. While striving for a noninterventionism, he strives for free trade with all.

    5. Re:Other thing that will erase Government Programs by TigerTime · · Score: 1

      There's a HUGE difference between being isolationist and what we are right now. We have troops scattered around the globe in over 150 countries. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_military_deployments

      There's a difference between holding out in joining a global war against a country with missles/planes/bombs (Germany in WWI and WWII), and deploying hundreds of thousands of troops to root out and fight what is essentially a large non-government funded cult with AK-47s and IEDs.

      "Desert Storm" = good
      "War on Terror" = bad

      The Roman Empire didn't falter because their army sucked. It faltered because it decaded internally financially like a cancer until it got so bad that they couldn't defend themselves. This is what's happening with the US. The financials are in such dire straits that we will eventually be unable to afford the best military in the world and we will begin to collapse and there will be nothing we can do to stop it.

    6. Re:Other thing that will erase Government Programs by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      False dichotomy. Our military budget is the largest in the world in order to facilitate the projection of overwhelming force on a global scale. There is a happy medium between that and being impotent. Do we really need a dozen carrier battlegroups? Forward bases on every continent with regional commands to match? Thousands of nuclear warheads and the logistics to field them?

      We've been playing police-of-the-world for nearly a century, and I just don't think we can afford it anymore. We could and should drastically cut the size and expenditure of the DoD by half, and close most overseas bases and operations.

      The Cold War is over, and right now China is beating the US by outmaneuvering us economically, not militarily. While we're pumping money into carriers that never fight anybody, the Chinese are buying everything. They stand a good chance of doing in Africa what the West could not, developing with neither barrier nor constraint, because unlike the West they don't give two shits about government reform or human rights, and every tin-pot African dictatorship is lining up for Chinese cash.

      If we don't cut spending and deregulate we're going to suffocate ourselves. We'll soon look like Greece if we don't stop kidding ourselves about the role government plays in society.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    7. Re:Other thing that will erase Government Programs by fast+turtle · · Score: 1

      I've suggested something a just as radical.

      • Pull our troops back
      • Cut all foriegn aid - That's right All of it
      • Raise tarrifs to bring manufacturing back home
      • Clean up Our own House and tell the world to go to hell for 4 years

      That's what it will take to turn things around. If the world doesn't like it; Eff Em and be done with it.

      --
      Mod me up/Mod me down: I wont frown as I've no crown
    8. Re:Other thing that will erase Government Programs by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      I've suggested something a just as radical.

      Cut all foriegn aid - That's right All of it

      Oh go on then, how much would that save?

      In 2009 it was 47.7 biilion USD. In 2009 the budget deficit was 1.9 trillion USD. So cutting aid ain't going to fix the deficit.

      (Of course 13.7 billion of that "aid" was military assistance (which is almost all spent on US hardware) and loads of the rest is also given on the condition that it is spent in the US. Much of it is really a subsidy of US industry and agriculture).

      And - "pull our troops back". If you want to save cash you don't "pull them back" - you sack them. And selll their shiny toys.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
  3. all the better to rebuild plantation economies by swschrad · · Score: 5, Insightful

    if folks don't know anything, it can't hurt them, right?

    --
    if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
    1. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by rwven · · Score: 1

      We're gonna be rebuilding plantation economies at this point anyway if something isn't done about the present economy and the flimsy standing of the government. It wouldn't take A-bombs to turn the US into a Jericho scenario.

      Just keep going down the road we're going for another decade or two (or less?) and we're looking at a guaranteed complete collapse of the US Govt and us/world economy. A lot more than just "5 government programs" will be axed.

    2. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      What the department of education being axed means no more schools? Why do people think having bureaucrats interfering in a teacher's classroom is a good idea? The people at the Dept. of Education (DE) are not elected and are not accountable to the voters. Washington constantly pushes out unfunded mandates that increase the burden on local schools. Both parties push for these things when they get power, no child left behind, how many potatoes kids should eat during the week.

      As for the task given to the DE, improving the US schools, they have done a poor job. So yes get rid of it and let the states and better yet localities assume more control over the local schools. This ultimately gives parents and voters more control over the schools because local officials are more accountable and removable than people in DC.

    3. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Oxford_Comma_Lover · · Score: 1

      As for the task given to the DE, improving the US schools, they have done a poor job. So yes get rid of it and let the states and better yet localities assume more control over the local schools. This ultimately gives parents and voters more control over the schools because local officials are more accountable and removable than people in DC.

      Right. Because state-based educational priorities and politics always work so well.

      --
      -- IANAL, this isn't legal advice, and definitely isn't legal advice for you. Also, Squee!
    4. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Eliminating the federal department of education would hand education back to the states, localities and municipalities. The Department of Education was founded in 1950, since then cost per student has risen year on year and student performance has dropped. States and localities are aware of local needs and strengths and markets. States and localities have historically provided better education at a lower cost. Most states have a department of education, most localities have a school board, why do we need a federal agency?

    5. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by demonlapin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'd rather have my local affairs run... locally. And by my state rather than the feds. So what if they don't choose perfectly? At least I'm not stuck trying to get 60 votes in the US Senate to overturn ideas that don't work.

    6. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, for the population of the state. I made a conscious decision to leave North Carolina as my kids were entering public school because the schools were so horrible. Why do we HAVE to have national standards? Why not regional differences/choices? We already do with taxes, weather, jobs, traffic, attitudes, language/accents. Don't like the sum of those things? Move. But people in, say NY, are ok with higher taxes, colder weather, more jobs & traffic, harsher attitudes and 'odd' accents. School can just be another part of the choice of where you live. It's not like it isn't already...

    7. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by h4rr4r · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Because otherwise we will have "Teachers" teaching kids about how Jesus rode around on dinosaurs and how the gays are the products of Satan.

    8. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      So yes get rid of it and let the states and better yet localities assume more control over the local schools

      Because Creationism is a valid theory that should be given preference in the classroom over any other "theory".

    9. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by ByOhTek · · Score: 1

      Maybe a better solution would have the upper eschelon(s) of these groups be elected officials then?

      --
      Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
    10. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      I made a conscious decision to leave North Carolina

      Good for you. What about those who can't afford to do so? Should they and their children just "suck it up"?

      That's the problem with any of these "State's Rights" issues: You always claim that someone can just move away, but always forget that moving takes quite a bit of money, which a lot of people don't have right now.

    11. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by sanzibar · · Score: 1

      Sure you don't fall into that category? We moved into a debt based economy a long long time ago...

      http://www.truthinequity.com/video.php?id=1

      ---
      You school clearly spent all your money football team.

    12. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Rob+Riggs · · Score: 1

      He cuts the departments that cost the least and, along with HHS, do the most good for the country. How about axing DHS and the war department? Some of Commerce's functions are mandated by the U.S. Constitution: Patents, Copyrights, Census, NIST (weigths and measures) What happens to them? Ron Paul is a nut job. I love him, but he's still a nut job.

      --
      the growth in cynicism and rebellion has not been without cause
    13. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by OldeTimeGeek · · Score: 3, Interesting

      A good thought, but the elections that place people in position to make decisions on local affairs aren't run completely locally now. If you think so, look at the last "local" election and see how much money or staff came from districts outside of yours. There are groups of all political and social stripes with axes to grind and money to spend.

    14. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      They don't seem to know anything now. How do these plans make things any worse?

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    15. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      If the plurality of people who live around you actually want the schools to do that, one, they should get it, and two, you should move. That is the whole point of making local politics local.

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    16. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point.

      By leaving North Carolina and take their money they "voted" against a crappy educational system by moving to a state with a better one.

      Granted moving takes money if you take all of your possessions with you, but as someone who has moved while broke I know for a fact you can move anywhere in the union with little to no money to your name, it's just a question of motivation and willingness to make sacrifices.

      With a national system the person you're saying "good for you" towards no longer has an option to just pick up and move. Maybe they didn't have a lot of money to begin with, I say it's likely, if they had a lot of money they probably would have opted for a private school instead of moving. With a national system instead of "leaving North Carolina" the entire country becomes North Carolina so moving does no good.

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      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    17. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Otherwise"? Like we don't or something?

      Try walking into a private school sometime, preferably into the first brick wall you can find.

      And if someone can't find a school that teaches their kids to hate gays according to raptor jesus' commands, they can homeschool.

      But yes... you're absolutely right to panic. ALL private schools will immediately add a mandatory, semester-long Sodom & Gomorrah class if government-funded public schools go away.

    18. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Why is it worse than letting the Federal government make the choices? If they implement a choice you don't like, you can't even move away. Also, in the local level, even as a poor citizen, you still have way more power on the local and state level than on the Federal one.

    19. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Mike · · Score: 1

      Paul would favor cutting DHS and is constantly mouthing off about closing all foreign bases and bringing all the troops home.

      Some nut job.

      Seems to me a nut job would think that any of the listed government agencies actually do more good than harm.

    20. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by squizzar · · Score: 2

      So if the plurality of people around you want to own other people, or to decide that some people don't deserve the same rights as others, or any other number of things, then you should put up or up and move? From what I know of US history that's not what always happened...

    21. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by BSDimwit · · Score: 1

      Yes, they should suck it up as your alternative traps everyone in a shitty system instead only the poor. Like it or not, life isn't fair and no amount of federal bureaucracy will fix that. Getting rid of the DOE and other federal departments that truly offer little or no value add for our way of life is a good first step.

      Yes, being poor sucks... tell us something we don't know.

    22. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      People today are lazy. Back in the 19th century people who were broke to the point of near starving would spend their last farthing to hurl their entire families to another continent, and then they would do any number of jobs of any kind of work for any wages until they could finally achieve comfort.

      It's sad that it seems only illegal immigrants, at least some of them, have that kind of spirit anymore. No work ethic exists anymore, people think society owes them everything they want for free. They don't care about the faceless millions who are reduced nearly to subsistence to defray these entitlements.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    23. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by operagost · · Score: 1

      but always forget that moving takes quite a bit of money

      Only if you have lots of stuff. If you have lots of stuff but no money, I don't think that's a failure of the political system.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    24. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by mabhatter654 · · Score: 1

      The list of agencies shows that the upper 10% group really doesn't understand what the government does. Energy makes sure that factories have power now and in the future. Interior makes sure ships that carry your stuff have proper weather maps and that your buildings have good foundations. HUD makes sure the unwashed masses aren't filling up your streets and can show up for work.
      All these departments directly affect the bottom lines of the top 1% and that's why they STAY funded. The information provided is far more valuable than the cost... If just 1 billion dollar skyscraper fell down from bad design a whole department is paid for! Much of this information can only be collected or processed by the government because of property issues and the sheer amount of cash needed up front.

      It's really the 6% - 25% of the income brackets that don't understand all the things the government does "for free" to business.

    25. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      That idea is absolutely horrifying. Please stay far away from public service.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    26. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by operagost · · Score: 1

      Not sure if trolling or really that stupid...

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    27. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      Jesus was pretty clear that His followers should love and respect individuals. He was also pretty clear that His followers shouldn't judge. He was also pretty clear that God did still judge and some things people do were sin and would be judged. For the GP, dinosaurs do have a place in the world's time line, but it wasn't anywhere near Jesus day - you won't find that being taught anywhere, I'd bet. That it is taught by some in a post Adam fashion shows that many haven't read their own Bible very well. Christianity would be better off if we kept those basic concepts straight.

    28. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by kingramon0 · · Score: 1

      Some of the essential programs of the departments being cut get moved to other departments under his plan.

    29. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      Thanks for completely ignoring enumerated rights and going down a path flaunting the flaws in democracy when those rights aren't respected or don't exist. Yes this is what happened with the civil war to some degree, only it's a flawed way of repeating it.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    30. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      Why is making local politics local a horrifying idea?

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    31. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by cyberchondriac · · Score: 1

      Not entirely true. Some places, but not most. My wife was a catholic school teacher, and taught evolution. (we're in the mid-atlantic states). Nonetheless, issues like this, and many others, should be handled at the State level of government, not the federal level. There's too much intervention at the federal level. Seems we're not much of a "united" "states" anymore, it's more like one big monolithic state with 50 satellite jurisdictions.

      --

      Look back up at my post, now look back down, you're on the Internet. Now look back up. I'm a signature.
    32. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Xiver · · Score: 1

      Because otherwise we will have "Teachers" teaching kids about how Jesus rode around on dinosaurs and how the gays are the products of Satan.

      Why do you think the federal government is not capable of this?

      --
      10: PRINT "Everything old is new again."
      20: GOTO 10
    33. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by FunkyELF · · Score: 1

      Screw state-based education. Private is the way to go. I think in FL the education system gets $11k per student. Certainly a private school would be able to do better with the same money.

    34. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      I'm fine with local politics. I'm not fine with local governments using schools as propaganda factories. We have 40% of Americans who disbelieve in evolution without the schools telling them that the earth is only 5000 years old.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    35. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      But only the locals (whether alive or dead, depends on your area) get to vote.

    36. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      What we'd probably see happen is that in some states it would work well (states where education is valued), and other states it wouldn't (states like Arizona where I live!). But is that really a bad thing? By Federalizing this stuff, you're trying to bring up everyone to the same level. But the problem is that the people don't WANT to be at the same level. In many states, people don't want to pay for education, and think it's a waste of money and time. Who are you to tell them they're wrong? If this is a democracy, then their opinion is just as valid as yours, and their vote counts just as much as yours. If you want a society where an elite group of people runs things, then that society can't be democratic, and can't have a popular vote. Why do you think America's Founding Fathers restricted voting to landowners?

      With Federalization, you end up spreading mediocrity; places that want to do better can't because they're held back by the places that don't want to bother. It's just like "mainstreaming" in public schools, where all the smart kids are stuck in the same class as the not-so-smart and not-so-motivated kids, and forced to learn at the same pace as them.

      The problem with eliminating Federalization, however, is that there's certain benefits in economies of scale by having states work together. Our states are rather small, and some are really very small. The answer, as I see it, is to simply eliminate the Federal government altogether, and divide the country into a handful of smaller nations, most composed of several states. Areas like the southeast can join into a single country (they could call it "The Republic of Dixie"), and cut most funding to education since they don't value it, and they can suffer the consequences by themselves. Other regions can join into their own nations and do things the way they want, without Congresspeople from the other areas holding them back.

      The European Union right now is seeing why Federalization doesn't work very well, when there's too much diversity and differences between cultures of the people inside the Federal republic. It only works when the people involved are largely similar and have similar values. A European nation composed of Germany, the Scandinavian countries, Czech Republic, the Netherlands, etc. would probably work really well. Maybe even France. But throw places like Greece and Italy in there and the whole thing falls apart, because there's just too many differences between the people and their cultures. This is exactly the problem we have here in the USA.

    37. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by humphrm · · Score: 2

      Education also provides all the funding for student aid and non-private grants. They also administer all federally backed student loans.

      Now someone like Ron Paul probably wants all that gone anyway. But I for one question where we, as a country, would be today if we didn't provide these services.

      --
      -- "In order to have power, I must be taken seriously." -Mojo Jojo
    38. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by bberens · · Score: 1

      I have a hard time believing that California public schools would do any such thing.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    39. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      And what's wrong with this? Why are your opinions about education any more valid than the opinions of these teachers? Remember, this is a democracy, so everyone gets a vote, including people who think Jesus rode on dinosaurs or whatever, so the only way to keep those people suppressed is by having a large majority that disagrees with them and suppresses them (and the corollary is that people with these opinions need to be an extreme minority). But if you have large parts of the nation where most people actually agree with these opinions, then you have a problem, because you have no way of enforcing your views, however correct they may be.

      There's only one answer to this, and that's to break up the country into a group of smaller countries. That way, the people who go to the Creationist Museum can live in their own country and teach their kids that the earth is 6500 years old, and people who believe in rationalism can live in a different country and not constantly be fighting with the others about what to teach kids in school.

    40. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If the local districts allow it, sure. See, everything should be market based. If a school does something that you dont like, go elsewhere or stfu. How much fail do we have to witness before we realize the federal gvt shouldnt be handling anything other than the military?

    41. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      If that's what the people in that state want, then who are you to say they're wrong? For better or worse, this is a democratic republic, so those people all have the same voting power that you do; the only way to isolate idiocy like this is to put groups of people with incompatible views in a different country than yourself. This means to solve this problem, we need to break up the country.

    42. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      A good thought, but the elections that place people in position to make decisions on local affairs aren't run completely locally now. If you think so, look at the last "local" election and see how much money or staff came from districts outside of yours. There are groups of all political and social stripes with axes to grind and money to spend.

      The difference is that at the state and local level, individual citizens and small, volunteer groups with very little money can actually influence the process. That's not true at the federal level at all, but it is VERY true at the local level.

      If you tried getting involved a little bit you would realize that. I have talked state legislators that told me they changed their vote on a bill after receiving just 5 letters. And that's at the state level. Local is even easier. Show up at the local county board or city council meeting a few times in a row, and the members will generally not only listen and consider your opinion, some will actually seek it out. They want to know what their constituents' views are on issues. Working around the corrupt ones is actually quite easy.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    43. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by ninjazombie · · Score: 1

      If that is the asinine way that a state or local government wants to educate their kids, then so be it. At least parents get more of a say in the matter. Don't think for a second that federal educational planning is immune to corporate-influenced indoctrination too. Who are they do tell everyone what to teach? They are no better qualified than local officials and much farther removed from public influence. Might as well call it the "ministry of truth" out of some Ayn Rand, or George Orwell novel. My 12 year old cousin was just given an assignment to write a paper on Monsanto and the wonders of genetically engineered crops. I wonder where that came from?

    44. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      gays are the products of Satan.

      No. The official Christian Right position is that gay people are actually straight people who give in to that uncontrollable desire to have gay sex that good Christians have. If you're straight and you don't feel compelled to have gay sex, you are abnormal. That's why you'll never be made the Pastor of a megachurch.

    45. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by hedpe2003 · · Score: 1

      Because otherwise we will have "Teachers" teaching kids about how Jesus rode around on dinosaurs and how the gays are the products of Satan.

      Yes there will be... in small, fundamentalist Christian towns. I seriously doubt, even the small town in Florida that I am from, that any of the teachers I had would be spouting off wildly ridiculous and offensive material such as that. I can't argue that no one would *start* teaching pure nonsense (but most who want to teach that probably already are - just in a more underhanded manner), but the fact is - most will not. So the down side to making education more local and specific to the needs of the area... is that some fundamentalist towns will teach their students things that they are probably already getting outside of the classroom? I am more liberal than most, but even I don’t buy that one.

      --
      Comprehensive solutions via a competition of ideas like no other.
    46. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Not in a republic it does not. This is the flaw with democracy

    47. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Curunir_wolf · · Score: 1

      Because otherwise we will have "Teachers" teaching kids about how Jesus rode around on dinosaurs and how the gays are the products of Satan.

      Dude, that's insane hyperbole. We're talking about public schools. Teachers aren't allowed to say "Jesus" at all, and gays have their own club, advocacy group, and pretty much all the literature.

      --
      "Somebody has to do something. It's just incredibly pathetic it has to be us."
      --- Jerry Garcia
    48. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul, still believes the world uses gold for money.

      This is a bad idea. Period.

    49. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by AmiMoJo · · Score: 1

      The difference is that with corporate-run schools a small number of people decide the policy so it is easier to get far away from the general views of society. Because society is made up of so many people it is difficult for a small number of individuals to greatly influence policy (unless they can afford to buy politicians, which is why the US is so fucked up, but that isn't democracy).

      --
      const int one = 65536; (Silvermoon, Texture.cs)
      SJW, n: "Someone I don't like, and by the way I'm a fuckwit" - AC
    50. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by tmosley · · Score: 1

      If we didn't have the DEA, everyone would just start doing heroin! If we didn't have the FBI, everyone would start murdering each other! If we didn't have the Department of Energy, physics would stop working! If we didn't have the Department of Education, we would have "teachers" teaching kids about how Jesus rode around on dinosaurs and how gays are the products of Satan.

      Because we all know that states don't already set the curriculum.

      Raptor Fucking Christ.

    51. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 0

      Actually it is worse. Liberals have ruined education with their Political Correctness run amok. I've seen blatant Leftwing agenda being taught openly in a classroom. Classrooms should be void of politics and religion. But if you're going to allow Islam in the classroom (cultural diversity you know), then making fun of Jesus in the classroom is just Christian Bashing for the sake of Christian bashing.

      You do know that Pedophiliacs are using the same logic (sexual orientation) that gays do. Do you support Pedophilia as an alternate form of Sexual Orientation? Do you support Polygamy and other plural marriages or just "gay" marriage?

      I'm all for getting education straightened out. Lets get back to EDUCATION, and not social engineering. Lets challenge towards excellence rather than excuse failure. Lets open the schools up to competition and allow those that suffer in the worst schools an option for better schools.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    52. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by J-1000 · · Score: 1

      This is a state issue. Or a local issue. The reason we have states is so that we don't have one giant authoritarian hand pushing us around (if you don't like your state's rules you can leave and take your tax money with you, with no immigration issues). If some crazies in Utah want to teach about Jesus riding dinosaurs, let them! If ludicrous stuff like this DOES happen, it will spur people to get off the couch and get involved in local politics. That is a GOOD thing.

    53. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by kanto · · Score: 1

      I think it was Frederic Bastiat who said that if a person doesn't have food his primary goal won't be learning to read; ah, you miserable creatures indeed.

    54. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by compro01 · · Score: 1

      Sure, require that all private schools accept anyone and everyone who applies and see how your vaunted private efficiency works then.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    55. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by StikyPad · · Score: 1

      Bah... that's all in the past. History never repeats itself!

    56. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Jane+Q.+Public · · Score: 1

      Really? Tell that to the Texas board that approves high-school textbooks.

    57. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by tomhudson · · Score: 1

      Granted moving takes money if you take all of your possessions with you, but as someone who has moved while broke I know for a fact you can move anywhere in the union with little to no money to your name, it's just a question of motivation and willingness to make sacrifices.

      ... since this was a question of moving because of schools, you're okay with parents risking their kids going hungry or being without shelter because you "know for a fact you can move anywhere in the union with little or no money to your name"?

      Anyone who tries to move with "little or no money", a.k.a. limited or no resources, risks having their kids end up as wards of the state they move to. Of course, you could also cut back on child protective services, since this is an "obvious disincentive" to people's ability to exercise their mobility rights.

      Why not go all the way - let them stuff the kids in a FedEx box and just ship 'em out? And if they show up dead, just sue FedEx.

      While we're at it, anyone with a pre-existing medical condition should also just "suck it up" and move - even if it risks killing them.

      "Just move" sounds fine in the abstract, but the reality is often much, much more complicated.

    58. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      but thats been done already! http://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/8525
      there clearly is a lizardman and a brontosaurus in the image version
      as for gays being the products of satan, i think thats in the part of the bible of Sodom and Gomorrah... hence the word sodomy

      as for other things the religious teach is (symbolically) eating jesus and drinking his blood. (communion)

    59. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by rwven · · Score: 1

      How long have those depts existed?

    60. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Actually it is worse. Liberals have ruined education with their Political Correctness run amok. I've seen blatant Leftwing agenda being taught openly in a classroom. Classrooms should be void of politics and religion. But if you're going to allow Islam in the classroom (cultural diversity you know), then making fun of Jesus in the classroom is just Christian Bashing for the sake of Christian bashing.
      All religions are equally nonsense.

      You do know that Pedophiliacs(sic) are using the same logic (sexual orientation) that gays do.Do you support Pedophilia as an alternate form of Sexual Orientation?
      Why does that matter even? Children cannot consent.

      Do you support Polygamy and other plural marriages or just "gay" marriage?
      So long as everyone is a consenting adult I see no problem with plural marriages.

      I'm all for getting education straightened out. Lets get back to EDUCATION, and not social engineering. Lets challenge towards excellence rather than excuse failure. Lets open the schools up to competition and allow those that suffer in the worst schools an option for better schools.
      Sure, but then you need to be willing to teach facts, like the world is not 6500 years old and religion is just modern mythology.

    61. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Some may get it right. Better than the Fed forcing all of them to get it wrong.

    62. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Aryden · · Score: 1

      Given preference based on what precisely? Those of us who live in reality want our children to learn scientifically backed up information. The Bible is not a scientific work.

      Here's the result of education being controlled on local levels and not on a higher federal level. You have kids in states like Georgia, that can barely read, write or do arithmetic when they graduate high school. Oh and let's not forget that Georgia attempted to CREATE their own system of mathematics, which failed miserably and all student associated with the program had to be retaught and retested.

      Education should have hardline policy from the top down with the requirements that each student has to meet. Localities deciding what books are used, what kids are allowed to learn, how they learn it, when they learn it etc is a crock and you get kids from one state that can do calculus in their minds while kids from another state can't add 2+2...

    63. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by tomhudson · · Score: 0
      Poster wrote:

      Jesus was pretty clear that His followers should love and respect individuals. He was also pretty clear that His followers shouldn't judge

      Jeebus disagrees with you (Matt.10:34ff)

      10:34 Think not that I am come to send peace on earth: I came not to send peace, but a sword.
      10:35 For I am come to set a man at variance against his father, and the daughter against her mother, and the daughter in law against her mother in law.
      10:36 And a man's foes shall be they of his own household.
      10:37 He that loveth father or mother more than me is not worthy of me: and he that loveth son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me.

      "Love and respect individuals"? Jesus said to do that only if they agreed with his message. Otherwise, they're the enemy. And you had to love him more than your own kids. Same message as Jim Jones and cult that killed their own kids with cyanide-laced flavor-aide before killing themselves.

      You have a right to keep drinking the purple kook-aid. You don't have a right to indoctrinate kids to do the same.

    64. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by h4rr4r · · Score: 1

      Then things have changed since I was in school. Jesus was said a lot and the couple gay kids we knew of were regularly assaulted while adults turned a blind eye. The one science lesson on evolution included a "debate" about creationism which was essentially 99% of the students saying it was wrong because it disagreed with the bible.

    65. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And when that happens you will see evolution banned in lots of lots of southern/rural areas. Public eduction will turn to crap, just reinforcing the local populaces prejudices. Brilliant plan my friend. Now the uber rich can ensure the enslavement of the uneducated lower classes.

    66. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then move to a different different school district, or work to change the local school board. It about your freedoms and the freedoms of those around you. Maybe you want your kid in a program tailored to arts and music but since we are falling behind in math and science our focus has to be there. Should you be forced to give up the classes where your child has interest, talents, just because a bureaucrat thinks they know better?

    67. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by crakbone · · Score: 1

      True, I personally like all my propaganda on a Federal level.

    68. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Washington constantly pushes out unfunded mandates that increase the burden on local schools. Both parties push for these things when they get power, no child left behind, how many potatoes kids should eat during the week.

      Yes, the Republican government certainly liked to do that in the early part of the 2000s.

      And are you seriously arguing against nutritional guidelines? I'll grant that they can be gamed as much as anything can be gamed, but you frame it as the government showing the audacity to suggest that kids should have their dietary needs met. Are you against exercise programs as well?

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    69. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      The difference is when bad policy is on a local level you call people on it, raise a ruckus and you have a pretty good chance of embarrassing people in their own communities over it and getting the momentum to fix the issue. On a national level it's much harder to fight what's wrong.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    70. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by drsquare · · Score: 1

      Or you could just, you know, do the total opposite, and not allow local idiots to run the education system like it's their toy. Like they do in the entire rest of the civilised fucking world, where none of this religious bullshit comes up because we're not totally fucking retarded.

    71. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Plantations are probably why he's left the Dept of Agriculture alone despite it being more useless than those departments he mentioned.

    72. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Soporific · · Score: 1

      Do you really care if a bunch of yokels want to teach their kids the sky is orange?

      ~S

    73. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      Just as well as federal ones. How are federal rules somehow better than state? You think a US Senator is somehow more smarter about internet tubes than a state senator? Not really.

      And if you don't like your state government it is a lot easier to change it than the federal government. There's an order of magnitude fewer citizens to convince.

    74. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      If student loans were all gone, maybe education would actually be affordable. You don't suppose the ease with which students can borrow hundreds of thousands of dollars (not dischargeable in bankruptcy mind you) to get a degree in Underwater Basket Weaving has had anything to do with the fact that we have millions of unemployable college grads, now do you?

    75. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      How about we let the public schools kick out the kids that don't want to learn?

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    76. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      Who do you figure has more influence on federal nutritional guidelines? Scientifically backed nutritional experts or corporate lobbyists? With an all encompassing federal government, a corporation can force their product into every school in the country by greasing the palms of couple of unelected bureaucrats in Washington, while it would take bribes to thousands of school boards across the country if education were handled locally as it should be.

      Federal guidelines yes. Federal mandates no.

    77. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's debatable to say the least whether the US federal Dept. of Education actually drops knowledge on people. At best they help set standards for local school districts (the ones that do the actual teaching) to follow. At worst it's just another layer of bureaucracy and value-subtracting paper pushers who are extremely removed from the facts on the ground.

    78. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by AngryDeuce · · Score: 1

      If you think so, look at the last "local" election and see how much money or staff came from districts outside of yours.

      Here in Wisconsin, during the 2010 midterm elections, $3.75 million was spent on all of the state senate races combined. During our recent recall elections, over $31 million dollars was spent in a 4 month period, the vast majority coming from out of state special interest groups. I can't even imagine how much is going to be spent on the Scott Walker recall; I wouldn't be surprised if it approached $100 million bucks...and this is in Wisconsin. I shudder to think what it costs to campaign in local elections in places like New York City or Los Angeles. It's got to be a ridiculously impenetrable barrier of entry, though.

      Our entire political landscape is so screwed up, even down to a local level, there is so much dirty money and underhanded BS going on it's disgusting. I'm not worried about saving our government, because I honestly think it's beyond that point. Short of open revolution, there is no way that we can separate the disproportionate influence money is having on our elections.

    79. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Rockoon · · Score: 1
      Which part of this confuses you?

      We are #1 in spending per student, but rank 17th in the world in actual achievement.

      The system we have in place is horribly broken and needs to be gutted from the top. Lets get that down to 17th in the world in spending and then figure out what to do from there.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    80. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      There's only one answer to this, and that's to break up the country into a group of smaller countries.

      We could then call them "states", and set up some kind of federation so that they could work together on matters of common interest, such as defense and national security. We could call the result "United States", and maybe add some label to distinguish it from some other countries with similar arrangement - perhaps something geographic, like the name of the continent. ~

    81. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I don't claim to know what Ron Paul wants, but why student aid and public grants couldn't be implemented by individual states in accordance to how they think it should be done, instead of one-size-right-for-all on the federal level?

    82. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Rockoon · · Score: 1

      but you frame it as the government showing the audacity to suggest that kids should have their dietary needs met.

      Lets be honest about what we are talking about.

      The government is NOT mandating that kids have their dietary needs met. Thats a whole different ball game than mandating that schools follow dietary guidelines.

      You seem to want to attribute the virtues of the former to the later, while ignoring the problems of the later.

      --
      "His name was James Damore."
    83. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As for the task given to the DE, improving the US schools, they have done a poor job. So yes get rid of it and let the states and better yet localities assume more control over the local schools. This ultimately gives parents and voters more control over the schools because local officials are more accountable and removable than people in DC.

      The only problem with this though is that you know the federal government is still going to want that tax money. The burden this will place on the states will be excessive. I'm not sure about the rest of the country but for the west coast the states are already having problems balancing their budgets where education is concerned even with the contribution the federal government makes towards their education problems.

    84. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Sounds good in theory, doesn't work in practice. See 1) The United States of America (tried a limited-power confederation in the late 1700s, went to Constitution with stronger Federal power later which eliminated opt-out), and 2) European Union.

    85. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's pretty interesting that the right-wing (well, compared to before) government of Sweden wants to go the opposite way. They want to transfer the responsibility and control of schools from localities to the state since the opposite didn't turn out too well.

    86. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by ZeeTiger · · Score: 1

      Yes, because we need so many more lawyers, underwater basket weaving, and studies major. I'm not saying their is not a place for them but there doesn't need to be that many of them. If people and companies were not taxed as much then maybe they would be willing to give grants more to majors they are interested in. And believer it not but we really don't need everyone going to college. As for student aid many schools would probably be able to do it themselves if they didn't have the federal government monkey on they back telling them how they should do it. And don't kid you self the money the fed gives doesn't cover all of what the schools have to pay in order to offer said services. It's still the local schools who pay the bulk of the money.

    87. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      Well, US Civil War was more than a century ago - things were kinda different back then. Today, if, say, Texas would have held a referendum to secede, and it was done fair and proper, I don't think many people would object to that. So an opt-in federation may be more viable. We won't know until someone tries.

      European Union was not designed as a true federation - I wouldn't count one as such unless it has a truly common foreign and military policy; the former is not there in practice, and the latter is impossible so long as every state has their own distinct military. Besides, all states in EU are free to leave it at any moment.

    88. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I think you're on to something there. :)

    89. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by imlepid · · Score: 1

      The people at the Dept. of Education (DE) are not elected and are not accountable to the voters.

      Since when does not being elected mean they are not accountable? The wonder of political pressure is, if an appointed bureaucrat screws up then the person who appointed them (the President in the case of the Dept. of Education) either sacks the appointee or looses votes.

      Washington constantly pushes out unfunded mandates that increase the burden on local schools.

      Actually, the real power comes in funded mandates. Which are you most likely to react to: a rule which you get no money to implement or a rule you must implement or they take away $5M from your school? The true problems occur when you're forced to do something or you loose huge piles of cash.

    90. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      Instead you have to get N votes in the *state* senate. Same bullshit, different building.

    91. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by compro01 · · Score: 1

      Because that's a wonderful way to create scores of new criminals and therefore is considered a very stupid idea by anyone who has enough vision to see past their nose?

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    92. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The only reason people want to dissolve the department of education and move power to the states is so 34 or so states can rewrite the first chapter of most biology books with passages from genesis. The whole reason there is a national standard is on the off change one of you wanders away from home and inflicts your "learning" on random unfortunate strangers, or worse, wanders to D.C. I'll tell you what though, I'll let you do it if we can sell you to mexico.

    93. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Paul would favor cutting DHS and is constantly mouthing off about closing all foreign bases and bringing all the troops home.

      He "favors" cutting the DHS but doesn't propose it.

      Seems to me a nut job would think that any of the listed government agencies actually do more good than harm.

      What terrible evil does NOAA do? You got something against weather satellites?

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    94. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      It's a lot easier in the state senate (well, maybe not in California).

    95. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Education also provides all the funding for student aid and non-private grants. They also administer all federally backed student loans.

      Now someone like Ron Paul probably wants all that gone anyway. But I for one question where we, as a country, would be today if we didn't provide these services.

      University education would simply cost less. The cost right now is sky high because there are dollars around to pay for it. Universities charge $50,000/yr because they know you'll borrow, grant, etc your way into coming up with it. Federal grants just cause price inflation.

    96. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Mike · · Score: 1

      He "favors" cutting the DHS but doesn't propose it.

      Then you're not paying attention. He railed against the idea when it was proposed, and has been complaining about it every since its establishment.

      What terrible evil does NOAA do? You got something against weather satellites?

      It doesn't have to be evil to be unconstitutional.

      (Although I think it was a grave mistake) the federal government gave congress the power to operate the post office, but there was no mention of weather satellites.

      And as we all know, the Constitution is what makes our federal government possible, and is the Supreme Law of the Land.

      If you feel that it should be a legitimate function of the federal government, there's a built-in process to amend the Constitution. But of course, since this country was set up as a loose federation of independent states, the states will have to ratify any proposed amendments.

      The agencies Paul is proposing we cut are already illegal simply by existing.

    97. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Remember, everyone, it's the jobless's fault that there are seven people for each open position. There fact that by definition 85% of them can't get a job no matter that they do is irrelevant.

      You know, someone should just start a big list of all the fucking stupid slashdot members, and why they are stupid. We could have a database, with a record of 1171201:Blames the the current unemployment problem on lazy people, is not aware there literally are not enough jobs no matter what people do.

      This discussion is ripe for the picking of stupid people. As was is that climate change discussion.

      And then, when it's done: Targeted advertising to those user ids.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    98. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      You are correct that easy student loans have inflated the price of college education.

      However, I have to point out that's not the reason we have millions of unemployable college grads. The reason college grads are unemployed is that everyone is unemployed, and college grads are the people trying to start employment, so high unemployment hits them first.

      What easy student loans have done is make all those unemployed people get hundreds of thousands of dollars in debt first before they can even enter the job market. Which is, obviously, completely idiotic to encourage, and at this point it's almost a requirement for all sorts of jobs that don't even slightly actually need a college degree.

      But the loans are not, strictly speaking, what is causing them to be unemployed. The fact there are no jobs is what's causing them to be unemployed.

      And I'm not convinced we can solve the college problem before fixing the economy. Right now, idiotic college loan policies are keeping even more young people from being unemployed. We can hardly make things better by dumping high school graduates straight on the job market.

      Wow, our country is really fucked up, isn't it?

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    99. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      I'm a frequent contractor. I've been unemployed at least dozen times (never taken unemployment benefits either), and only twice has it taken me more than two weeks to find a job.

      Only once in my life have I ever seen anybody look for work sincerely and not find it. Every other person I've ever encountered either wants the moon without paying dues, or is too lazy/stupid to put their resume together properly and interview well.

      People put together resumes that are complete shit, with errors and bad design, and then when somebody gives them advice on how to make them look better, they ignore it because, again, they're lazy, or they think they're too good for it. Then they, like you, shift blame to some faceless abstraction instead of the shoddiness of their own so-called effort. The person that makes the best effort usually gets the job, fancy that.

      And while I don't interview people because I've avoided management roles like the plague (as you might guess I'm allergic to being responsible for other people's fuck-ups), my dad has interviewed many a fool in his days and has recounted some of them to me. They show up late and unkempt and comport themselves with ignorant apathy.

      I realize this is the very definition of an unpopular opinion because blame shifting is just so much more comforting. Nonetheless I cannot close my eyes to the realities I've seen.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    100. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Ah, yes, the 'provide for the general Welfare' deniers.

      Now they are apparently at the point of suggesting the US government is not supposed to protect people from hurricanes. Seriously. This is where those people are. The government is not allow to attempt to migrate natural disasters.

      They have passed the point of claiming that certain things are not 'providing for the general welfare'. (Which is at least sometime a reasonable argument. Although hurricane warnings pretty clearly fall under it no matter what..) No, now they're at the point of claiming that the government is not allowed to 'provide for the general Welfare' at all, despite it being listed, right there, in the constitution.

      The person I am replying to is about to respond with the claim that 'provide for the general Welfare' is a summary of the stuff explicitly listed under that, and grants no power in itself.

      Really? Is 'to pay the Debts' also a summary? Because nothing allowing that appears to be listed below, either. Or 'To lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises'. That doesn't appear below either.

      I'm aware that it is entirely possible in your fucked up world-view that the government shouldn't be doing those things either, but the fact is that the government that the founding fathers set up did those things, so clearly they intended for the government to have such power. Those are not summaries of powers listed below (as they are not listed below), yet are clearly powers everyone agrees the government has...because they're listed right there. Along with 'provide for the general Welfare'.

      Section 8 is clearly a list of things 'The Congress shall have Power' to do, and the fact that the first item is on the same line does not magically make it something else. The stuff on the first line is the stuff all governments are supposed to do, it's the other lines that are stuff intended to explain specific things they want the US government to do. The government is supposed to provide for the general Welfare, and it's hard to see how 'Warning people they're about to get hit by a hurricane' is not 'providing for the general Welfare'.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    101. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Why does that matter even? Children cannot consent.

      Depends one to what they are consenting and to whom, and how you define "children". A twelve year old can have sex with a twelve year old, but not with an 18 year old. They can consent. They cannot consent to tatoos or ear piercings, but they can consent to an abortion.

      And ... if you understand what the pedophiles are actually saying, they are claiming it is an "alternate sexual orientation" and perfectly normal and people like you and me are just "ignorant" and "biased" and "haters" against their "sexual orientation".

      They are using the same verbiage as "gay rights" activists. It doesn't matter if children cannot consent, that is their goal, to get that changed.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    102. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Mike · · Score: 1

      So by your logic, the welfare clause and the commerce clause (which, yes, have been abuse to the nth degree) would pretty much cover anything. If that's true, then what, pray tell, would be the purpose of the 9th and 10th amendments? Seriously, if the founders indeed intended for the feds to do pretty much whatever, then why specifically spell out that "all else is the purview of the states and the people"? There would be no "all else". Makes no sense.

      Of course the writings of chief architects of the Constitution (Madison, etc. in the [anti]Federalist Papers, etc) made it quite clear what their intentions were with respect to this debate.

      But you are right, there was a debate even among the founders, with Madison and Jefferson on one side, and Hamilton on the other. And yes, things went off-kilter pretty much right away. The Constitution is by far a perfect document, as it was a compromise between the two camps. But compared to where we are now (rather close to collapse) I'd much rather be back at the point of that awful compromise.

    103. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      But you can apparently close your eyes to the fact that there are literally more job seekers than open positions.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    104. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      If that's true, then what, pray tell, would be the purpose of the 9th and 10th amendments? Seriously, if the founders indeed intended for the feds to do pretty much whatever, then why specifically spell out that "all else is the purview of the states and the people"?

      First of all, the ninth amendment is only relevant to people who think 'rights' have something to do with the government spending money. I know that nonsense is baked pretty deeply into the brain of America, but it is, in fact, complete and utter nonsense. You have no right to not have your money taken from you as taxes (As that is an explicit power of the government.) and spent however the government wants. Rights and money have almost nothing to do with each other. (Except that the government can't take money from you specifically without a trial. That would be a Bill of Attainder if done via legislation, or unlawful seizure if done by the executive.)

      So 'Providing for the general Welfare' has nothing to do with 'rights', enumerated or otherwise. The ninth amendment is utterly irrelevant.

      As for the tenth...I don't know why people pretend there's not explicitly a section stating what the Federal government can't do. It's the very next section, section 9. Let's turn your logic around and ask why on earth section 9 felt like barring the government from issuing titles of nobility when such a power is absolutely nowhere in section 8? (Hint: Such a thing could fall under the general Welfare.)

      Here's a power that the Federal government can't do, but the states can: The privilege of the Writ of Habeas Corpus shall not be suspended, unless when in Cases of Rebellion or Invasion the public Safety may require it.

      The states, of course, can do whatever they want with their own Writ of Habeas Corpus. (Except now they can't, thanks to the 14th.)

      Another one, supposedly removed by the 16th amendment: No capitation, or other direct, Tax shall be laid, unless in Proportion to the Census or Enumeration herein before directed to be taken. (Strictly speaking, the 16th amendment was not required for an income tax. A 'direct tax', as used there, is a property or head tax. Income taxes are taxes on transactions, hence are 'indirect taxes', and have always actually been constitutional. The 16th was because there was a confusion on the part of the supreme court at the time over taxes on rent money. Google for more info.)

      Here's one that's still in effect: No Preference shall be given by any Regulation of Commerce or Revenue to the Ports of one State over those of another: nor shall Vessels bound to, or from, one State, be obliged to enter, clear, or pay Duties in another.

      The Federal government cannot give preference to stuff being shipped from certain ports. The various states can. They are restricted from levying taxes, but California can, for example, let ships leaving their ports bound for Oregon have higher priority than stuff leaving for Washington. Whereas the Federal government absolutely cannot play any favorites at all.

      And of course, I was not attempting to claim that 'provide for the general Welfare' actually covered everything it's been used to cover. Although I think the word 'general' is perhaps the more broken of the two, the government seems to do a lot things that only help specific people.

      But, yes, the Federal government can essentially do whatever it wants as long, as long as it doesn't infringe on state or personal rights, enumerated or otherwise. But 'taxing you and spending that money' is not even vaguely such an infringement, despite decades of pretending otherwise by the right.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    105. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      The problem is that now we have cultivated the mindset that to be employable AT ALL you need a college degree, meaning more people are going back to school, and those who already have degrees are getting their masters or doctorates. Eventually we're going to have the most educated ditch diggers in the world. Society will never recoup the cost of educating them for the first 25-30 years of their life, but it will all be worth it when they can wax philosophically as they work the shovel.

    106. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by nobodie · · Score: 1

      Not only this, but, for example, when I lived in a small southern city of 70,000 residents in an area that had a total of about 135,000 residents and two major industries: General Electric and Babcock and Wilcox Nuclear (where they made da bombz and the reactors). Do you seriously think that the local people had any say at all in local government. That is a big laugh. The only individual in the community who had any political power was a local TV preacher named Jerry Falwell, maybe you've heard of him? Now tell me about the "power" of local government. You might WANT it to be that way, but in reality just open your eyes and see who really controls YOUR local government.

      --
      Subversion of spatial scale luxury decoration ideas.
    107. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      The problem is that now...

      See, that's what I was disagreeing with you about. I believe you mean 'A problem we have now...'...we have so many problems with employment, it's hard to keep track.

      we have cultivated the mindset that to be employable AT ALL you need a college degree,

      That is because, for more than a decade, it has been a 'buyers market' with regard to employment. As jobs have gotten less and less, as more and more offshoring and whatnot has happened, as less and less people were employed, employers started demanding irrational things to distinguish potential employers apart. Because they could.

      If we actually have jobs chasing people, instead of people chasing jobs, these idiotic educational requirements would never have existed. If there was two job openings for every person looking for work, they'd take whatever they could get.

      Instead, there are seven people for every job openings, and employers can make whatever crazy demands they want. Not just with education, but with salary, benefits, whatever. Hey, we'll work you 80 hours a week and pay for 40, and if you don't like it, we'll do that with the guy who comes in right behind you.

      Eventually we're going to have the most educated ditch diggers in the world.

      At the rate we're going, we will have the most educated unemployed ditch diggers in the world. :(

      People jumping straight into unemployment instead of taking out hundreds of thousands of dollars worth of debt and then jumping into unemployment is probably 'better' in some objective sense, but is hardly ideal.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    108. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you want to live in a country where 50% of the voting population believe the sky is orange?

    109. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Yet, you forget that we're talking about moving because of the educational system. Meaning that we're talking about families, with kids. It's not going to be cheap to move a family across country, no matter how you try and spin it.

    110. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      If that's what the people in that state want, then who are you to say they're wrong?

      Somebody who knows science.

    111. Re:all the better to rebuild plantation economies by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Ok, so you're saying that scientists know better than everyone else on issues related to science. That's fine, and I agree with it, but the problem is that view is fundamentally incompatible with a democracy where everyone is equal and gets the same voting power. In a democracy, you can't have elitists, because "regular people" don't like it when people who know better than them tell them how to do things. So everything is limited by the average of all the voters, and since the average person has an IQ of 100, that doesn't exactly bode well for society. Of course, if you have a culture where the average people really look up to intellectuals and follow their advice on issues, then this isn't such a problem; the people listen to the scientists, and then vote the way they're told, unless they collectively decide the scientists are full of it. In our culture, however, we don't look up to intellectuals. Instead, we look up to sports stars, lawyers, soldiers and others who apply violence, and of course drama queens like the Kardashians. A democratic society reflects its population's culture and wishes; our society doesn't care much about science and sensible solutions to problems, so instead we vote movie stars into office; in the end, we get the government we deserve.

      For subsets of the population who don't like the way the voting public is voting, there's only one solution: secede from the larger group so that your votes count much more.

  4. Luap Nor proposes year zero for US science by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

    What a man,

    --
    Watch this Heartland Institute video
  5. Maybe not completely by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But a vast reduction in the scope and purview of each of those departments is probably in order.

    1. Re:Maybe not completely by haystor · · Score: 1

      Not everything in all the departments would be eliminated. Some would be moved to other departments.

      --
      t
  6. In other words, we should give up. by Kenja · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

    --

    "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    1. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      But but... the CORPORATIONS will magically provide this stuff for us! And it will be even better! And ponies! And Unicorns!!!

    2. Re:In other words, we should give up. by vvaduva · · Score: 1, Troll

      Yes...because only the almighty government can do these things...

    3. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      we are trying to kill off public education anyways. cyber school is crushing some districts which for some reason the districts and tax payers have to foot the bill.

    4. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Remember the US is a federation. The states provide for those things as well. And pushing most of this load down to the states is probably a good idea from the point of view of balance of power.

    5. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      By definition, only the government can provide public education. The rest of them have been public for so long that NOBODY else is willing to do them, or (low-income housing) only exists at all because of government rules and oversight. So yeah, it does fall to the government to do those things.

    6. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      I'm not clear here. What private corporation is going to do what the US Geological Survey does?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    7. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, all it takes is some tax breaks, as motivation. And very favourable loans. And some relaxation in legislation. I mean, at the end of the day you're taking things away from the people, and giving things to corporations, but the balance will shift back the other way eventually.

      Right?

    8. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MikeB0Lton · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Most of that is either a function of the state and local governments or privatized.

    9. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mean+pun · · Score: 2

      Yes...because only the almighty government can do these things...

      Do you have any good counter examples?

    10. Re:In other words, we should give up. by garcia · · Score: 2, Insightful

      We're duplicating efforts which are already handled from the (current) federal level all the way down to the very local level at your town's city hall.

      Could the county government handle their own section of a federal highway? They may already be (I have seen survey markers from the state and USGS in the same general area). Can county parks personnel handle national parks? Maybe, maybe not.

      However, what we do know is that duplication of effort is expensive and wasteful. We live in a time when we cannot afford waste and increased spending--something which always seems to happen regardless of what belt-tightening we do.

      Maybe the best way to deal with it is to start axing groups outright. We're definitely in need of a change to how things operate and these changes will hurt--bad. We've been living on borrowed time and we need to cut spending, raise revenues (taxes), and pay off the debts we've incurred due to stupid policy.

      Let's face the facts and fix the fucking problem.

    11. Re:In other words, we should give up. by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 2

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      Are you saying that all of these things are impossible without the Federal Government paying for them? And besides, what do you think is going to happen to all of those things if we keep spending like we have a bottomless pit of money? And when will all of this money that we borrow get paid back? Who will pay it back? Unless we change course it won't be us, but the next generation that is paying for all of the roads, public education, and other stuff that we are using now! And what will happen to that generation? They'll be slaves paying off a debt and they won't even get the benefit of spending the money.

    12. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      But but... the CORPORATIONS will magically provide this stuff for us! And it will be even better! And ponies! And Unicorns!!!

      Not corporations, jackass. States will provide this.

    13. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Yeah, I can't wait to see Kansas science in action.

    14. Re:In other words, we should give up. by COMON$ · · Score: 3, Informative

      Ya because the world just fails unless the Gov't doesnt do everything. I bet this space initiative just goes to hell too since NASA isnt doing it....

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    15. Re:In other words, we should give up. by hierofalcon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Energy research can be done by corporations. Parks can be managed by the states they are located in - all of them have recreation departments of their own. The same is true of monuments. Public education is already managed by states. There is no need for any federal bureaucracy there AT ALL. Low income housing doesn't disappear because a federal government disappears. Let the housing be managed by each state where it resides. Let states fix roads and bridges directly with the gas tax. And so on and so on. There are a few departments that we do need, and they would continue to exist although their direction would be changed by Ron Paul. Many should have disappeared long ago.

    16. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Whether he plans it for us or not doesn't matter, because you won't have those things when the whole country is broke and has no one willing to buy its debt.

      I like helping low income people myself, but only when I'm not low income or broke.

    17. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember the US is a federation. The states provide for those things as well. And pushing most of this load down to the states is probably a good idea from the point of view of balance of power.

      You and your common sense, sir, have no place here.

    18. Re:In other words, we should give up. by defaria · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Have you no faith in the goodness of the American people? Do you serious think that without these cabinet level positions such things are impossible?!? Or have you diluted yourself into thinking that the reason we have say public education is because of the Dept. of Ed? You do know we didn't have that one til relatively recently and yet public education managed just fine without it. And why do you believe that energy is a commodity that only gov can research? We research all kinds of other things without a cabinet level office to "guide" us.

    19. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My take on Ron Paul is that most everything should be state-level. The services would reappear at the state level (as would, I'm sure, the necessary taxes to sustain them). An argument could be made that this would work for parks, roads, and bridges from your list. Not so much for Energy/Office of Science.

    20. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chomsky68 · · Score: 1

      What private corporation is going to do with the US Geological Survey's annual budget?

      FIFY

      --
      I'm Not Antisocial, I'm Just Not User Friendly
    21. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      You hit the nail square on the head! These departments can always use every last penny given to them. A private corporation 1) would make no attempt at dealing with any of these things, and if they did 2) they would fuck it up horribly. Private corporations are all about money. Making people (specifically shareholders and only shareholders) as much money as possible. They would take all of the money, stuff it into their bank accounts (for a luxury yacht or a new house in the Hamptons), and basically do nothing. The government's focus is on people, private interests interests are, private. Any time a private corporation has gone into this kind of thing, the results have been craptacular. Among right-wing blowhards there is the idea that private corporations can do anything. This is a trillion miles from the truth. Any industry or organization where people *must* come before profits, private corporations fuck it up beyond all measure. Non-profit organizations are very effective for niche areas, but for very large scale needs, governments must be involved.

    22. Re:In other words, we should give up. by defaria · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Corporations have already provided you with 1000 times more stuff than government has ever had. Do us all a favor and stop right now from every purchasing another thing that a dirty corporation produced. You'll die within the month!

    23. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Remember the US is a federation. The states provide for those things as well. And pushing most of this load down to the states is probably a good idea from the point of view of balance of power.

      If you think the federal government is inefficient, just wait to you see what fifty state governments working independently on the same things can come up with.

    24. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Megane · · Score: 2

      Right. Because there was no public education before 1980. Nope, we can't do anything unless sugar daddy gummint does it for us.

      --
      #naabhaprzrag, #sverubfr-000, #agi-fcbafberq, negvpyr[pynff*=' negvpyr-ary-'] { qvfcynl: abar !vzcbegnag; }
    25. Re:In other words, we should give up. by jittles · · Score: 5, Informative

      No more weather forecasting either. It's not just the US that depends on NOAA's National Hurricane Center. Many Caribbean countries that would be hard pressed to track hurricanes depend on this service.

    26. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ackthpt · · Score: 1

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      Yeah, with the Chinese or Indians or someone else who cares taking a lead in all these fields.

      Either that, or the unshown card on the table says , "Let Private Industry Do It All"

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    27. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DriedClexler · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I like energy research, plus (non-toll) roads and bridges. Agreed there.

      However:

      Currently-federal parks can go private.

      Local public schools can do the job without federal "assistance". The feds just take money and give it to schools. Um, if a state needs more money for its schools, they can raise it themselves, that's where most of the money comes from. There was a department of education for only a fraction of the history of public schools.

      No more low income housing? GREAT! Section 8ers get into the program as a result of horrible lifestyle choices and ruin any neighborhood that will let them in. People who can't afford those places should move to where they *can* afford, rather than jumping the queue in front of people willing to pay for those spots. There is *always* affordable housing if you're willing to look; federal assistance just crowds out the prime spots.

      I think you're significantly overestimating the damage from these changes. But I agree about the two things above, plus NOAA. And I mostly agree with Ron Paul, but ffs, cut the useless departments first, not f***ing NOAA!

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    28. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Rolgar · · Score: 1

      Significant problems with education have come with the rise of the federal government's involvement in public education. Return control and funding to the local schools with State oversight, and we'd see much better outcomes.

    29. Re:In other words, we should give up. by vvaduva · · Score: 1, Funny

      I homeschool - my kids kick ass and I don't need your fucking State education. Roads have always started private...look at the turnpikes development early last century. There are plenty of private parks all over this country and they are better maintain with lower funds. Energy and geo research will be fine if the government gets the hell out of it and starts leaving people alone to discover the economic incentives. If the economic incentives are not there, then tough shit. I guess the rocks will have to wait to be discovered by some government bureaucrats that gets paid with theft money..

    30. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But but... the CORPORATIONS will magically provide this stuff for us! And it will be even better! And ponies! And Unicorns!!!

      Not corporations, jackass. States will provide this.

      *spit take* HA ha ha ha ha ha ha ha HA ha ha ha HA ha ha ha ha!

      Oh, man. That's hilarious.

      No, seriously, who's going to provide this if not corporations? The states, in general, are in worse financial shape than the federal government.

    31. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that a corporation(s) could not provide the same service as NOAA? That corporations are not capable of launching a weather sat (or buying NOAA's) and providing the service for a fee? The misperception is that your weather info is now free - it is not as taxes and debt pay for NOAA.
       
      NIST will likely survive as some of its functions are in fact enumerated in the Constitution. LIkewise, parts of DOE would end up in DOD or elsewhere.
       
        As to "science" and "research" - maybe it is time for a return to the days of philanthropy and corporate sponsorship? Bell labs was a premier research institution so yes, it can be done. Grants to researchers at universities likewise can come from private donors - individuals such as Gates or Buffet (who never really puts his wallet where his mouth is) - or corporations or industry groups.

    32. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MrRobahtsu · · Score: 1

      No more energy research,

      OMG! No more ethanol boondoggles! No more Solyndra investments! Whatever shall we do!??

      no more low income housing

      Now who will create more slums and ghettos?!?!

      no more parks, no more public education, , no more roads & bridges.

      Ron Paul called for abolsihing all state, county and city governments! Lynch him right now!!

      So, are you actually a Ron Paul supporter, or did you think listing mostly craptacular failures of fedzilla and responsibilities of local governments would actually scare people into throwing away the constitution?

    33. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Qzukk · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Are you saying that all of these things are impossible without the Federal Government paying for them?

      Yes. You can pretend that capitalism can provide exactly what the government provides now, but capitalism cannot magically make non-profitable things profitable. If it isn't profitable, it won't happen.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    34. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MightyYar · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Corporations are a creation of the government. They are like copyrights and patents - they only exist in law. Separating the two is impossible.

      The conversation would be much more constructive if the conversation were: "What do we want corporations to do/be?"

      But then we wouldn't be able to join the red team or the blue team.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    35. Re:In other words, we should give up. by alvinrod · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The Department of Education was created in 1979. Are you seriously suggesting that we wouldn't have public education anymore if it were removed? Only the Department of the Interior has been around for nearly the entirety of the nation. Somehow things managed to get done before they were put in place.

      Personally, I wish that he'd go a step farther and get rid of the abomination that is Homeland Security. That should be the first one on the chopping block and then we can worry about working backwards.

    36. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      He never claimed it would be a utopia.

    37. Re:In other words, we should give up. by boristdog · · Score: 1

      Could the county government handle their own section of a federal highway?

      Yes, zipping across the country with your free-market goods in your bootstrap trucking company and...looks like Watosha County decided not to fix those huge potholes in the freeway. You'll have to slow down to 25 mph for the next 50 miles.

    38. Re:In other words, we should give up. by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Or....

      Not as much money sucked up by the Fed. States can still suck up money.

      Seriously, imagine how few states would be having problems if their income taxes were 10%-30% like the Federal income tax. Maybe the Fed wouldn't have to give grants to states anymore?

    39. Re:In other words, we should give up. by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Uh, not sure if you know this but private schools suck about as bad but just get richer parents who, despite hiring tutors in addition to paying for private school, do not increase scores any more than their public counterparts.

    40. Re:In other words, we should give up. by roccomaglio · · Score: 1

      The federal education department does not provide public education, that is provided on the school district level. It funds some initiatives and sets some standards. You say no more roads and bridges, but it is more of a no more interstates. Most of the roads and bridges are maintained by local and state government. If we are to have rational discussions we need to make sure we are accurately portraying the facts.

    41. Re:In other words, we should give up. by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      I imagine that Ron Paul's ultra-libertarian ideology would also require he axe the national park program too.

    42. Re:In other words, we should give up. by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      Your right, of course, I like what we have now better; all kinds of crap, give aways, and plain waste, payed for with credit and when the bill comes due the democraps and the republicons come to me with thier hands out. Yeah, that's a much better system.

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    43. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The dept of Education doesn't teach kids, the local school systems, funded by local taxes do. Let them do their job!!!

    44. Re:In other words, we should give up. by IMightB · · Score: 1

      You mean like how the states did roads before Eisenhower gave us the modern Highway system?

    45. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Life2Short · · Score: 1

      "Or have you diluted yourself into thinking that the reason we have say public education is because of the Dept. of Ed?"

      Are you trying to suggest that homeopathy is the answer to our problems?

      Or are you trying to say the Dept. of Ed. might need to focus more effort on helping people understand the difference between dilution and delusion?

    46. Re:In other words, we should give up. by uniquename72 · · Score: 2

      My state can't even be bothered to provide a decent university, which I guess is fine since the high schools have a 30% dropout rate and those who do graduate can't read.

      I'm sure the states will all do a fine job continuing the upward trajectory of American scientific greatness, though. After all, you don't need educated people for that, right?

    47. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      No more energy research: The private sector can handle this just fine.

      no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges: These can, and are handled at a state level more efficiently and more responsive to the public's need than their federal program counterparts.

      So don't say that there will be "no more" of any of this stuff as it will be handled via the states or industries that will profit from it anyway.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    48. Re:In other words, we should give up. by interval1066 · · Score: 1

      Becuase corporations are in the business of providing YOU with what YOU, specifically, need. What kind of drugs are you on?

      --
      Python: 'And then suddenly you have a language which says "we're all stuck with whatever the whiniest coder wants".'
    49. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just curious, but how do you push stuff like NIST down to the state level, considering what the S stands for? I'm too lazy to RTFA, but from the summary, that one stood out to me as one that would be good to keep in some form. I'm sure the $750m could be pared down significantly, but some of the things that NIST does are legitimately useful and difficult to accomplish at the state or corporate level.

      Also, I know it's still Republican primary season, so he can't propose it yet, but how about some military/defense spending cuts? The listed items combined amount to less than half of what we pay annually in air conditioning alone for our two wars, and that's just a small percentage of the overall costs. It's really the elephant in the room (full of elephants...it is the GOP after all) that no one talks about.

    50. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      You are seriously misguided if you believe the listed federal agencies are providing these things.

      It's OK though. Stick your head and the sand and wait for bigger government to save you from big government.

      --
      This post comes with a double-your-money-back guarantee!
      Any offense taken to this post is at your sole discretion.
    51. Re:In other words, we should give up. by sanzibar · · Score: 1

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      Education is handled at the state/ local level. Can you really justify the massive budget of the Dept of Ed? What service do they actually provide? Why do we pay twice for the same services?

    52. Re:In other words, we should give up. by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that all of these things are impossible without the Federal Government paying for them?

      Yes. You can pretend that capitalism can provide exactly what the government provides now, but capitalism cannot magically make non-profitable things profitable. If it isn't profitable, it won't happen.

      There are other options you aren't considering: State Governments, County Governments, City Government.... I really like the idea of letting more local governments handle a lot of the things that the Federal Government is currently handling. It gives us a country more room to try out different things and see what works. It also allows the people in Texas and California to each do things their own ways and for everyone watching to see which way is really better.

    53. Re:In other words, we should give up. by stevegee58 · · Score: 1

      Nope.
      The US DOE did not invent energy research. Valuable research was going on long before the DOE was created.
      Public education has traditionally been a local endeavor. A Federal Dept of Education is a clear overstepping of Federal authority into local matters. Good riddance. Public education will continue in all districts of all 50 states with or without the Dept of Education.

    54. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Its certainly a plan. A great one to put the USA to the back of the queue for innovation, education and so on. The private sector doesn't do it all, and much of the private sector's work is publicly funded. Its very much in the tradition of other Republicans before him - vision so great that he can see just about to the end of his nose.

    55. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People want those and are already paying for those. What makes you think they will stop paying and not ask someone else than the government to provide those?

      All those services can be provided by the private sector efficiently.

    56. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, I'm sure that will work out for all of us. What a load of crap. California for example.

    57. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So in order to combat duplication of effort you propose to replace a single federal organization with a hodgepodge of 50 state government ones plus scores of local and private ones??

      There's a reason why companies merge and eliminate duplicated positions when they want to run things more efficiently...

      On top of that, certain national treasures like national parks belong to ALL Americans. No one state should have full control over them, because they cannot be trusted to do what the majority wants. ANWR would cease to exist instantly if Sarah Palin's Alaska types had full unaccountable control of it.

    58. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mx+b · · Score: 2

      If you think the federal government is inefficient, just wait to you see what fifty state governments working independently on the same things can come up with.

      I don't know, competition can do wonders. All it takes is a couple states doing awesome things, and every other state will start to ask "Well why can't we have that too?". Keeping up with -- and trying to smash and overpower -- the Joneses. Will it work out that way? Not sure, but I can hope so -- and it sure is nice to think that your local government and local taxes hold more water. Live in a community that is set up the way you like it, and pay only the things important to you. Rather than having the federal government take so much of your money and decide to give it to other states that need money but don't want to raise taxes on the "job creators" to pay for their own stuff. Seems much more fair, and quite possibly a way to touch off enough competition to improve the quality for everyone.

    59. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2

      How is Nebraska going to get weather data for the entire US? Are Florida, Georgia, the Carolinas, Texas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Alabama all going to have hurricane hunter aircraft?

      Who is getting control of NOAA's satellite fleet?

    60. Re:In other words, we should give up. by PortHaven · · Score: 1

      Really, so California might expend funds on tidal power. Mid-southwest on geothermal. Pennsylvania on cleaner uses of coal.

    61. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      Are you really so foolish as to think those things can only exist if some government schmuck dictates that it be so?

    62. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      And the road net was crappy, which is why the Federal Government started planning a national road system as early as the 1920s, the Depression and World War II delayed it until the 50s.

    63. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 0

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      But we'd save like $12 Billion a year!!!!1! That's $40 a person. Surely I can build my own park for my family with that $120 and have money to spare to forge my own standards for nuts, bolts, lumber, electrical equipment, buy a fording kit for my car and pay for private school.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    64. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      Just ask Russia to nuke you (it will cost you less than going through this crazy's man plan).
      There, you start from a clean slate and the market afterwards will take care of itself.
      Go go Ron Paul, we want you for president. ^_^

    65. Re:In other words, we should give up. by garcia · · Score: 2

      I don't see your point. The Federal Government doesn't always fix the potholes either. Just because it's the Fed doesn't mean that it operates any better or faster than local government does.

      Now that's not to say I fully agree with Paul's decision here. I am far more interested in governance at the city and county levels than I am at the federal and thus I am not as well versed in their necessity and overlap as I am at the lower levels. That said, my final comments stand:

      We need to make some very painful decisions here and politicians and The People need to understand that we cannot do this from spending cuts and/or tax increases alone. We need to do both and suffer the consequences we've created for ourselves by living mostly on credit for the last 30 years.

    66. Re:In other words, we should give up. by uniquename72 · · Score: 1

      Return control and funding to the local schools with State oversight, and we'd see much better outcomes.

      There is zero evidence for this, and significant evidence to the contrary. State politicians are even less capable and less qualified to govern, and have less stake in the success of their governance (it's a lot easier to move to a better state than it is to move to a better country). See my previous comment.

      I live in a state of religious nutcases, alcoholic gamblers, and illegals (Nevada). The last thing any of these people want is education.

    67. Re:In other words, we should give up. by LehiNephi · · Score: 1

      You're making an assumption that the Federal Government is the only entity out there which funds schools, parks, urban development, and infrastructure. In the process, you're forgetting the several layers of government which could arguably do a more effective, efficient, and accountable job of administering those same functions: states, counties and municipalities. I, for one, would welcome the elimination of the Department of Education on the Federal level--I don't see it causing any actual improvement in our education system for the billions we spend on it, and it only insulates decisions from the voters it affects.

      The same goes for HUD. Why must this kind of issue be managed on the federal level? Wouldn't the state and local governments be better informed and more invested in having an effective outcome?

      --
      Help find a cure for cancer. Join the [H]orde
    68. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And centralized planning is worse. There is no reason why states cannot coordinate together where it makes sense. It could well be the voters of certain states decide to drop certain services. Freedom means they get to choose. Ron Paul also is a strong supporter of property rights so if you are harming someone else's property then you must make amends. This means one state can't pollute another and get away with it.

      Paul basis all of his policy on the Constitution, which is the basis for federal law. Abortion is a great example. Ron Paul is very opposed to it, but refuses to pass laws expanding it or banning it on a federal level. He wants to leave it up to the states. So if CA. wants to keep it legal and expand it he will let them even though he is morally opposed.

      It is what freedom is all about.

    69. Re:In other words, we should give up. by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Cool story bro.

    70. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Rolgar · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, much better to see the effects of these policies in Federal politics.

      I'm a Catholic (non-Creationist) from Kansas, and we choose to home school because we believe we will be able to give our children the best character and education ourselves.

      The old controversy over evolution in Kansas never required students to be taught creationism. It only prohibited testing evolution on standardized tests. Schools were still free to teach what the parents wanted. That said, it was never an issue that I heard of that any schools stopped teaching evolution or started teaching Creationism. I think most of the Creationists who care about this issue probably home school or send their children to private schools. School districts in rural areas are prone to being of like minded people, so maybe there are some areas where they teach Creationism, but there is nothing preventing anybody being taught the truth at home which is where most good students are going to learn anyway.

    71. Re:In other words, we should give up. by panikfan · · Score: 0

      Right, because the private sector has never participated in research, recreation, education, housing, or infrastructure. Try thinking for yourself for a change, instead of living within the confines of what the government and television feeds you.

    72. Re:In other words, we should give up. by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      You know what the public in "public education" refers to right? Even without the Dept of Education, public education will still come from "sugar daddy gummint".

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    73. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea, West Virginia's space program is highly productive and comes up with great research year after year.

    74. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NOAA? You mean Halliburton Weather Services?

    75. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 2

      You are both wrong.

      Corporations don't need a government to create them, but they are now legally formed within a legal framework.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_corporations

      The Governments of the US provide more than corporations, the governments set quality and safety standards, food inspections, air and water quality, national defense, protect air, land and sea trade routes, provide an education.

      Corporations provide the means to produce goods and services.

    76. Re:In other words, we should give up. by AshtangiMan · · Score: 1

      He is not saying (for instance) no more public education (the mods must be smoking meth today). The federal department of education does absolutely nothing helpful for public schools (to include funding), they are state run institutions. Getting rid of the department of education is a very good idea. Ron Paul is a federalist (which interestingly means he is for state rights vs federal rule). The rest of your list is similarly dismissed, but keep on fear mongering while the dems and repups facilitate the financial ruin of the country.

    77. Re:In other words, we should give up. by uniquename72 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I'm not clear here. What private corporation is going to do what the US Geological Survey does?

      The same ones that invented the internet, lasers, microchips, GPSs, and microwave ovens, went to the moon, built the largest highway system in the world, created our clean water infrastructure, and electrified most of a continent.

    78. Re:In other words, we should give up. by garcia · · Score: 1

      There's a reason why companies merge and eliminate duplicated positions when they want to run things more efficiently...

      As many people who are employed after a merger/layoff know, companies reduce duplicate effort to make more money for their investors, not because the organization runs more smoothly when the "streamlining" occurs.

      The public sector cannot be compared 1:1 to the private sector. Just because you're saving money for your investors (in this case the taxpayers) doesn't mean that operations of the bureaucracy will operate any better. In fact, it's likely that the due to many factors which may not exist in the private sector, that the investors/customers are not as happy when that merger takes place and thus aren't getting their monies worth when it does.

      By leaving decisions up to the very local levels people can and do have a more active say in the happenings of their money.

    79. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chrb · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Put in standardized units:
      • Energy Department's $5-billion Office of Science = 2.5 days of the military
      • $4.5-billion National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration = 2.25 days of the military
      • $750-million National Institute of Standards and Technology = 9 hours of the military
      • $1.1-billion U.S. Geological Survey = 13 hours of the military

      (Based on Forbe's estimate of the cost of being U.S. military policy being $2 billion per day If you want units solely in terms of the war in Afghanistan, that figure is $300 million per day. Adjust for other wars etc. War: it isn't cheap.)

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

    80. Re:In other words, we should give up. by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      Some of these things do fall to government to do - but it doesn't have to be the federal government. Why should a taxpayer in Florida help pay for a bridge in Alaska? Leave things to the states where stuff is located wherever possible and leave the federal government managing the constitutionally mandated functions. Lets leave federal government doing jobs that the majority of Americans would say fell under a particular mandate as well instead of stretching the commerce clause to its breaking point to find cover there for a new desired federal function. If something is really necessary for the federal government to do, there will be broad agreement as to what department it belongs in and why - from the constitution - the government should be doing it in the first place. If an agency makes you scratch your head, either to what department it should be in or why the government should be involved, then it should go away.

      Browse through http://www.usa.gov/directory/federal/index.shtml sometime and see just what all is out there that they list. Most of them would find a constitutional mandate, but some are very questionable and all that do need to exist could find a home in other existing departments and cut down on the bureaucracy (and politics) if they were in a department that Ron Paul was looking to axe.

    81. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      why is this comment modded so high?

      Defunding a federal department of education is not the same as defunding public education. All it does it cut out an unnecessary federal bureaucracy.

      Do you honestly believe that cutting out a bunch of bureaucrats is going to bring public education to a hault? Do we need central planning at every level? Why can't states and local communities handle these issues where it's closer to home and common people can have more of a say in the way their children's education is handled.

    82. Re:In other words, we should give up. by jo_ham · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Well, they could take off tiny, tiny sliver of the defence budget. That would pay off all the money borrowed to fund parks, energy research, public education and roads.

      Just a thought.

      "We must tighten our belts! We must slash spending! No more waste!"

      "Ok, how about we cut this thing that has doubled in cost since 9/11 for no real tangible benefits...."

      "No! Cutting defence spending is unamerican! Slashing Planned Parenthood's spending will solve the problem once and for all!"

      "But they only account for 0.01% of the budg....."

      "I said once and for all!"

    83. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember the US is a federation. The states provide for those things as well. And pushing most of this load down to the states is probably a good idea from the point of view of balance of power.

      Exactly. The federal Government has become a monster, and the amount owed is huge. Once the market loses confidence that this is going to paid back (like is happening in Greece and Europe now), to quote the original post, there will be "No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges".

      Public education can be provided by the state Government (as is the case in Australia's federated system). The same can be said regarding roads and bridges, etc.

      The United States has been running deficits for a very long time. It has been spending more than its earning. The worse thing about this situation is that the United States has been incapable of running a surplus during the good times, lol, well before the financial crisis and during a time before baby boomers retired...

    84. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since free ice cream is non-profitable, I think the government should provide it to me!

    85. Re:In other words, we should give up. by pspahn · · Score: 1

      States will provide this.

      So the states where those organizations are based get to continue things as (somewhat) normal? I live in Denver. So we get to keep the USGS, NOAA, and the rest of the federal offices here?

      Sweet. Because, honestly, I'm kinda not liking losing the awesome updated topo maps provided by the USGS... not to mention the NWS/NOAA offices that provide weather, avalanche info, etc. I'm not ready to lose those, so it's a good thing the experienced employees already live here.... just waiting to be hired by Colorado.

      --
      Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
    86. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MightyYar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      From your own link:

      Originally, corporations were solely able to be established through an act of the state, for example through royal charter or an act of Parliament.

      It was only in the mid nineteenth century, the first being through the Joint Stock Companies Act 1856 in the United Kingdom, that private individuals could through a simple registration procedure be considered to have established a corporation with limited liability.

      How in the world are corporations not a creation of government?

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    87. Re:In other words, we should give up. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      Here here!

      The "education" department educates no one. It is the definition of bureaucracy, existing for the sole purpose of inflicting reporting requirements on schools and doling out money according to the political winds.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    88. Re:In other words, we should give up. by panikfan · · Score: 0

      Yeah, I can't wait to see Kansas science in action.

      With a brainless statement like that, it will be good for you to remain an anonymous coward. You must not be aware that Overland Park, Kansas is the rated as the second highest educated city in America, right behind Irvine, CA. The real difference between the coasts and the rest of America is that the ignorant masses crowd the shorelines, and most of us don't want to live near most of you.

    89. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So, if the Federal government does not do it, the only other choice is for the private sector to do it? You mean the states can't do any of this stuff?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    90. Re:In other words, we should give up. by guttentag · · Score: 2
      By giving the money back to the people, they will invest it in things that are important to them, which will spur innovation. That's the Republican Dream. Just think... we'll have an HP in a garage on every block! Millions of companies that had big plans and... oh wait... gave up on them.

      When Paul was running for president, I saw an attractive woman in dark sunglasses standing on the median of a busy expressway during rush hour holding a sign that simply said, "Ron Paul for President." She was apparently enjoying herself, swaying back and forth a bit, and as I sat in traffic I thought this was a perfect representation of Ron Paul:
      • Looks good at first glance, but doesn't go any deeper than that
      • Screams "look at me" and really says nothing else
      • Middle of the road but not going anywhere or doing anything
      • Distracting people to disrupt the productive flow of things

      Whenever I hear another ridiculous idea of Ron Paul's that plays to people's general discontent without offering any actual solutions, I think of that woman. He should really be on Wall Street leading the OWS protesters. He appeals to their message: "The only thing we agree on is that we're pissed off, and we have no solutions." He won't go, though, because then when he fails it would finally become apparent that it's not because people didn't understand what he was about... it's because they did.

    91. Re:In other words, we should give up. by gfxguy · · Score: 3, Informative

      Most people don't seem capable of grasping that... the D.O. Education didn't even exist until 1979, and it's been downhill ever since it's inception.

      Also, as others have pointed out, there certainly are some programs that could be considered best done by the federal government... and those would be moved to other departments.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    92. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FTFY:

      These Government departments always use every last penny given to them whether they needed it or not so they get the same or more next year.

    93. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tbannist · · Score: 1

      I highly doubt Bell labs could be created today by any American corporation. Well maybe Google, but that's about it. Investment in basic research would be seen as a drag on corporate profits and there'd be shareholder pressure to "cut the waste". After all, it's much cheaper to simply use the research someone else did. It's the Microsoft model of business: buy what you can, steal what you can't and abuse your power for profit.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    94. Re:In other words, we should give up. by jo_ham · · Score: 2

      If your spelling and grammar are anything to go by, then yes indeed you've proved we're doomed!

    95. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      No, a corporation could not provide the same service as NOAA. They could not afford to provide free weather, weather alerts and climate data for the northern Western Hemisphere.

    96. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Thelasko · · Score: 1

      No more energy research, no more parks

      True, and True for national parks.

      no more public education

      Public education is entirely the responsibility of the states. Which is why federal efforts to reform it never work.

      no more low income housing

      Maybe, but states have a role in that too.

      no more roads & bridges

      Once again, the responsibility of the states. However, the federal government is needed to organize roads throughout states, and is firmly within the realm of the interstate commerce clause.

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    97. Re:In other words, we should give up. by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      Damn, and here I am, no mod points to give. Slashdot needs a way for everybody but AC to thumbs up any given post, points or no points.

      Bring me my ponies, sirrah! I want to ride on the open range, enjoying the breathtaking view of oil drills and strip mines right there in the middle of the Grand Canyon!

      Raising my lonely dental floss for a living, of course. Because alas, scientists like myself will be out of work and the church will once again be in charge of people's minds, the way God clearly intended they should be.

      rgb

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    98. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      with the axing of those groups state could raise taxes themselves to provide those services, which some already have due to federal incompetence

    99. Re:In other words, we should give up. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Yes, because states are magically not government. Either that, or you really think that it is more cost effective to have 50 different state institutions replicate the same exact organization than have it just be done at the federal level.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    100. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chill · · Score: 1

      Bell Labs was a premier research institution when their largest customer was the U.S. Government, and specifically the War Department -- which is what it was called back in the day.

      It could be done, but the culture of corporations is "show me the money". They're interested in immediate profits and short-term ROI. They are NOT interested in fundamental research and long-term roadmaps.

      Bell Labs being a specific example of that. When Lucent merged with Alcatel the CEO of Lucent said basically, "if you can't productize it within 7 years, shelve it. We don't do basic research like that any more."

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    101. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      What private park can compete with Yellowstone, Denali, Yosemite, Grand Canyon or Hawaii Volcano National Parts?

    102. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, it would be terrible! All the schools run by the department of education would be shut down!

    103. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      WOW what are you smoking? Pass me some...

      Energy research by corporations?? Like BP? Or Exxon? Yeah, right... They'll spend 10x on marketing to convince you how green they are before they do anything scientific. People think climate change research is biased now, just wait when it's sponsored by corporations whose stock fluctuates depending on the outcome of the research..

      National parks belong to all Americans, not just the states. Frankly places like Texas or Alaska can't be trusted not to destroy the environment going after oil. Oh but the corporate science labs will determine that doesn't cause environmental damage, so I guess that might be ok...

      Public education? Kansas Board of Education... enough said. If anything we need more federal standards for education not less. Maybe then we might crack the top 10 of countries with good math skills.

      I understand that Ron Paul views government as inherently inefficient and bad, and we DO need to work to improve the efficiency through transparency and accountability, not by scrapping everything in favor of state control. Look at how much even the Federal government is beholden to each state's corporate interests. Now imagine there's no counter to that from other Senators or Representatives. You think West Virgina will have any legislation that hurts the mining industry even if it improves the environment if there's no EPA? Yeah right... This is exactly where I get off the Ron Paul Kool-aid Express.

    104. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The states provide for those things as well.

      No, they really don't. The states provide some research funding, but they lack the muscle to work really large projects like what happens at the federal level. When was the last time a state funded a project like the Tevatron at Fermilab?

      And pushing most of this load down to the states is probably a good idea from the point of view of balance of power.

      And it's a terrible idea from the point of view of American scientific achievement.

    105. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it ain't profitable and it ain't charity then we shouldn't have it at all.

    106. Re:In other words, we should give up. by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Which is fine. There's 50 states, those who don't want education can live in one which doesn't bother with an education system. Those that do want their children to have one can pick a state that does bother (or go private).

      of course schools are already run by the states (by smaller localities usually).

    107. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      State and local government, as opposed to Federal.

      This is what really pisses me off about the anarcho-libertarians - they're very much in the 'No government at ALL!!! WOOHOO!!!', when in reality, it's more about devolving the powers that have been subsumed by the Fed back to the states (IOW - actually enforcing the 9th and 10th amendments instead of looking at them and going "oh you're so cuuuuute" as is currently done).

      I have no problem with local and state funding and control of education standards. I have a LOT of issue with the Fed having say/sway/de facto control.

    108. Re:In other words, we should give up. by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Right... so people avoid driving through that county and spend their money in neighboring counties, including buying gasoline - the taxes for which go to maintain the roads they've been using... looks like Watosha needs to step it up... meanwhile, under the control of the federal government, you give them taxes for gasoline no matter what crappy roads you use.

      Do you see how, while in "theory," libertarians say everything can be done privately, the realists understand some things are better done by government - like public roads. Nobody wants to stop and pay a toll every mile. But people are often good at conflating what can be done at state and more local levels... as if if the federal government doesn't do it, no one will.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    109. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chill · · Score: 3, Informative

      And thus, his point is proved.

      NOAA services are not free, they are paid for by taxes. TANSTAAFL. The fact that you call them "free" means you've stopped associating government services with the costs incurred through taxation.

      This is one of the big problems. Too many people think of government services as "free" because there is no direct association with the taxes required to pay for them. The true costs are hidden, so people make foolish decisions because they don't see a cost.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    110. Re:In other words, we should give up. by boristdog · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm saying that local entities are only responsible to their local constituents. If a local entity is 100% in charge, they can let their section of the road go 100% to ruin if they don't want it there. And everyone else can just go suck eggs because anything else would be socialism!

      My county has about 25 miles of an interstate through the northern section where almost NO ONE in the county lives. Maybe 1% of the county population regularly uses that road. If the county residents were suddenly tasked with the cost of the maintenance on that section of interstate our county taxes would probably double. Do you think most people in the county would vote for that? Nope, hardly any of us ever use that road. Goodbye freeway system.

    111. Re:In other words, we should give up. by gfxguy · · Score: 2

      Long live the state park systems!

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    112. Re:In other words, we should give up. by siride · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The spending problem isn't NOAA or NIST, it's "entitlements" and defense. TFA mentions NOAA's $4.5 billion budget. For the services it provides, that's a pretty damn good bang for your buck. Axing NOAA would do about nothing for the national debt, but would cost us dearly in terms of weather data and services. You could axe every single non-defense discretionary spending agency and still end up with a decent deficit. Why go after the parts of the government that actually do a good job and provide useful services? What a fucking dumb idea. Seriously.

    113. Re:In other words, we should give up. by poetmatt · · Score: 1

      yet in a none less than hilarious fashion, no mention of the wasteful military spending which would continue.

      I like his premise of "cutting spending", but this is attacking a fly with a sledgehammer and the collateral damage here would be astounding.

    114. Re:In other words, we should give up. by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      The ability to see 50 differnt ideas put into place and hence which of them actually works? Yeah that'd suck!

    115. Re:In other words, we should give up. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      In other words, because economies of scale disappear, people will on aggregate pay more than before. Nice.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    116. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DragonWriter · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Corporations don't need a government to create them, but they are now legally formed within a legal framework.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_corporations

      Actually, your link makes it clear that corporations are creatures of government, specifically, that their defining characteristic is the fact that they are recognized by government through law as having distinct legal personality.

      Corporations provide the means to produce goods and services.

      No, they don't. Corporations are a legal structure created by government which provide special benefits (particularly, in the modern form, limits on liability) to their investors to encourage investment. Some investors make use of the availability of those incentives to use the corporate form to organize business that provide goods and services, others use them to set up tax dodges that serve their own interests without providing goods and services to others.

      To the extent that there is a benefir from the existence of corporations (or other government-created business forms like the Limited Liability Company or Limited Liability Partnership) these benefits are ultimately benefits of government.

    117. Re:In other words, we should give up. by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Most of the Interstate system is already maintained at a county or township level. At best, it is maintained by the states. You should see what happens when there is freezing rain in Ohio and one township doesn't salt the road. Yes, I am talking about the 270 ring around the city.

      We are there already. Interstate highways and bridges are funded by the states with federal grants and matching funds. If the state doesn't have the money to start with, there is no maintenance because the federal government matches their zero with another zero.

      Sure, the federal government could take over the Interstate highway system and just push the states out of the way. Except for a little thing like the 10th Amendment and the whole concept of sovereignty of the states. So unless all that changes, what we have today is going to stand. And that does mean the counties are maintaining the highways in their county and hiring the contractors to do the work.

    118. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hear of state, county and city government?

    119. Re:In other words, we should give up. by siride · · Score: 1

      State governments can't pool the resources of the whole country as well as the federal government can. And now instead of 1 good implementation, you have 50 crappy implementations subject to the mood swings of local populations. It's great for some things like implementing education, social services and local roads, but I'd rather have the weather monitoring and research funding come from a single entity that can leverage the power and resources of the federal government.

    120. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Freddybear · · Score: 1

      Because city, county, and state government don't ever do anything unless the Feds dish out the dough, right?

    121. Re:In other words, we should give up. by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Which ones? Most states are in even worse financial shape than the Federal Government. I don't know about you, but I really don't want to live in a country where education funding waxes and wanes with the phases of recession.

    122. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      Also - "Entities which carried on business and were the subjects of legal rights were found in ancient Rome, and the Maurya Empire in ancient India. In medieval Europe, churches became incorporated, as did local governments, such as the Pope and the City of London Corporation."

      "In medieval times traders would do business through common law constructs, such as partnerships. Whenever people acted together with a view to profit, the law deemed that a partnership arose. Early guilds and livery companies were also often involved in the regulation of competition between traders."

      A common law construct is not a creation of the government.

    123. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      Even more doubtful that R&D can be done by the government.

      --
      This post comes with a double-your-money-back guarantee!
      Any offense taken to this post is at your sole discretion.
    124. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      Because America is doing so well in implementing advanced renewable energy technology, it's public education system is effective, the poor have places to live, and its' roads and bridges are in good shape.

      Oh wait.

      Get out

    125. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mx+b · · Score: 1

      According to his plan for America, he intends on cutting a lot of the war budgets, ending rebuilding programs in Iraq, and stopping foreign aid. He seems to be addressing a lot of the budget. Now, whether it is a good plan or not is another story. One thing I am disappointed in is all of the cuts to departments that aid the poor the most (or general public, like USGS and NOAA), but it specifically says in his plan document that he will fight to keep the Bush tax cuts in effect. I suppose he's trying to remain ideologically pure, and getting rid of the tax break is "equivalent to a tax increase". But I'm not sure that's the best decision.

    126. Re:In other words, we should give up. by firewrought · · Score: 1

      We're duplicating efforts which are already handled from the (current) federal level all the way down to the very local level at your town's city hall.

      Duplication is an interesting way to look at this, but you're reaching the wrong conclusion. Take NIST for instance... would it really be better to have 50 standards bureaus instead of one? What about NOAA? Doesn't it just make more economic sense to have ONE agency handling ONE network of observatories, sensors, satellites instead of having 50+ agencies? I'd argue that we're getting good value for our tax dollars out of such consolidation.

      Budget cuts would be good if they target the right sacred cows (defense, entitlements, farm subsidies), but blindly swinging the ax around will cost us civilization, not save it. Unfortunately, those sacred cows aren't going to be touched because there's too much political disincentive to do so.

      --
      -1, Too Many Layers Of Abstraction
    127. Re:In other words, we should give up. by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      The problem is going to come a lot sooner than the next generation. China is going to be running the US budget shortly.

      Have you seen what happens when a startup business gets venture capital funding? The VC group brings in their own accountant to oversee things and make sure the money isn't being spent frivously. Well, think of China as the VC group that is supporting the US today. It is only a matter of time until they want a seat on the board and their accountants overseeing and approving everything.

      Will the US go to war to stop that? Almost certainly not. We will become a chattle state of China if we don't get our financial house in order real soon now.

    128. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MikeB0Lton · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I am of the opinion that many federal departments are formed to manipulate state functions through legal wrangling and finance, like threatening to pull funding of highways if the state doesn't prohibit alcohol to people under the age of 21. While I agree with that example in principal, it was a shady way to implement it. I'm now a big fan of small federal government, and large state.

    129. Re:In other words, we should give up. by SkimTony · · Score: 1

      In the global, out-sourcing, speculative economy we have now, Bell Labs is an impossibility. Basic Research has too many steps between it and "Profit" to make shareholders happy; no publicly-traded company would be able to keep funding research for more than a few years before the money-men (and -women) demanded bigger profits.

      Wall Street makes it impossible for anyone that isn't government-funded to do real research.

    130. Re:In other words, we should give up. by lptport1 · · Score: 1

      A faster way to balance the budget and promote small government would be to prune back social security and national healthcare (including Medicare and Medicaid). Throw in a reduction in defense spending and you could easily redirect 30% of the budget toward paying off our debt.

      Political suicide, true, but probably the right long term solution. We're screwed, as far as I can tell.

    131. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      If you think the federal government is inefficient, just wait to you see what fifty state governments working independently on the same things can come up with.

      It's worth stating the obvious here, that the 50 states cannot be working on the same thing because their judisdictions do not overlap. The only truly redundant entity in the current state of things is the federal government, when it does stuff that the states do anyway.

    132. Re:In other words, we should give up. by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      There is no reason why states cannot coordinate together where it makes sense.

      Of course... this is part of the "real" meaning of regulating interstate commerce (as opposed to requiring purchase of insurance because some companies operate in multiple states... or... whatever). The federal government works with the states on standards so that we all drive on the same side of the road, and roads are certain widths (within some variance), and rail gauges are consistent across the country, and televisions all work with the same signals, etc. I don't know why this bothers people so much... we have roads connecting with Mexico and Canada without some higher authority dictating how they'd work; Europeans enjoyed traveling around the continent before the EU formed... the US is supposed to be much like the EU in some ways, with each state largely independent.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    133. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously, how the fuck is that our problem?

      They've lived without it for centuries, they can live without it for centuries to come.

    134. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you saying that all of these things are impossible without the Federal Government paying for them?

      Yes. You can pretend that capitalism can provide exactly what the government provides now, but capitalism cannot magically make non-profitable things profitable. If it isn't profitable, it won't happen.

      That's a false dichotomy. As previously pointed out, the states do or can handle much of that so it's not just 'leave it to the private market.' When I was in school there was no Department of Education. And, I have yet to see any proof that it has improved education in this country.
      So, while I agree with ridding us of the useless DoE, I am completely opposed to everything else he proposed as written in the article. To rid of us government dollars for science is completely idiotic.
      Luckily, his chances of getting elected are extremely slim. Like Newt Gingrich, he's in it for the face-time.

    135. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      For those of you reading this without critical thinking skills: No private corporation did any of those things.

    136. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      Private industry has had sixty years to get into space and they're just now taking the first steps. Why is that? Also, anyone aiming higher than suborbital flights is doing it for... government contracts.

    137. Re:In other words, we should give up. by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      He does talk about slashing the military budget. All the freaking time. Here's just one of many examples:

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpedybOR2oY

      And here's his spending plan, 15% reduction in DoD funding:
      http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf

    138. Re:In other words, we should give up. by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      Yes, but who is going to buy the service provided by these "corporations"? The states? A government. The Feds? A government. Local municipalities? A government. All, in the end, supported by taxes. No, I know -- we'll each and every one of us get to pay market rates for the weather tomorrow, if and only if it is worth it to us. If a hurricane hits and you're not paying for your feed, well, tough titties, ain't it. Next time fork over the fees we charge.

      Let's see if we can figure out a way of doing things that clearly belong in the commons as inefficiently as humanly possible by eliminating all economies of scale and rely on personal and corporate ethics to ensure that the common resources are not exploited to destruction and that services are delivered to everybody that needs them.

      I swear, sometimes I wonder what the hell people smoke that let's them imagine that we could privatize all public services and end up in some sort of utopia. In Ron Paul's case, it probably isn't anything good. Old sweatsocks. Geese. Mustache hairs.

      rgb

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    139. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tbannist · · Score: 1

      That didn't work out so well in Ontario when the provincial conservative party downloaded a lot of services to the cities. Mostly it left the cities with the choice between massive tax increases to cover the costs and subsequent unemployment for the local politicians or massive service cuts because they couldn't fund the services. Most cities came up with a three part solution:

      1) Big tax increase blamed on the province.
      2) Big service cuts, also blamed on the province.
      3) Elimination of maintenance budgets to try and reduce the impact of 1 and 2.

      Essentially, everything got worse when this was done in the late 90s. And you'll have a pretty hard time figuring out which way is really better as long as your country is divided between Republicans and Democrats because each side will say it's people are doing better than the other side.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    140. Re:In other words, we should give up. by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that sounds terrible.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    141. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol, I was gonna say... "not sure if trolling or just really stupid...."

    142. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I for one do not trust corporations (many of which are now multi-National) with virtually 100% of the R&D that helps protect our country.

      The primary goal of corporations is to make money for themselves and their share holders. Their loyalty begins and ends there. That isn't a bad thing; but it does mean that certain National objectives do not align with private industry and shouldn't be put wholly in the hands of private industry.

    143. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Kraftwerk · · Score: 0

      You mean like how the states did roads before Eisenhower gave us the modern Highway system?

      Yes all the great things Eisenhower gave us, remember installing that shah, what a brilliant idea.

    144. Re:In other words, we should give up. by yurtinus · · Score: 1

      Here's the grunt of the problem with a blanket axing of these departments - You say "not the NOAA, though" I say "Not the Interior" - BLM, Nat'l Forests, Nat'l Parks... They do a lot more than manage the crowds at Yosemite. Everybody will have a reason that to them is very good for keeping one of these departments around.

      You (and Ron) are right, though. We really do need a close look at what programs done at the Federal level are repeats of programs done at the State level (education, housing...), as well as what Federal departments are duplicating jobs done by other Federal departments (homeland security...)

      --
      +1 Disagree
    145. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Forbman · · Score: 2

      No, actually, the big thing corporations provide is legal absolution for the investors in the corporation to not be held personally responsible for any negative things done in behalf of the corporation.

      People working make goods and provide services, whether they're bound up in a corporation or not.

      The means to make those and get (commodities and products) to and from corporations and markets is infrastructure, and that is mostly provided and/or maintained by or was initially provided by (land grants to railroads, airports and harbors, eminent domain laws, etc) governments...

      Corporations are a convenient abstraction. Remember that the Brooklyn Bridge was financed by a corporation (the Brooklyn Bridge Corporation), that had private investors, and dissolved after some period of time after the bridge was built and moneys returned back to the investors with some measure of profit IIRC (but not a windfall...)? Too bad corporations can't go back to a more symbiotic instead of parasitic (profit maximizing) relationship with society, and that corporate and financial laws and regulations really won't allow this to happen, either (shareholder "rights", etc).

    146. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean the internet which originated from ARPANET from DARPA, the IC from the Royal Radar Establishment from the UK's MoD, GPS whose satellites are run by the DoD, clean water infrastructure that only exists because of clean water standards created and enforced by government, highway infrastructure funded by the Federal-Aid Highway Act and electricity infrastructure funded by the Federal New Deal which helped expand electricity into underserved areas?

    147. Re:In other words, we should give up. by sarhjinian · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Butbutbut, all the little things add up! (Yes, they do. To a rounding error in the budgets of Defense or Medicare/Medicaid).

      So, if this privatization stuff is such hot shit, let's privatize the military as well. I'm sure that'll work out just fine! I mean, if it's evil socialism to heal, feed and clothe people, it must be worse to publicly fund killing them, right?

      Hell, on a related (hypocritical) note, Ron Paul, bastion of freedom, independence and libertarian wankery, seems to have no problem shilling for Federal public funds to deal with coastal damage in his own district. I'm sure, though, that he'd refuse funds to keep rising coastal waters from washing Galevston out to sea.

      Typical libertarian nonsense: it's all waste and graft, unless it's my pet interest, then it's an essential part of the social contract. It's a movement that's just as delusional as Communism.

      --
      --srj/mmv
    148. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Hotweed+Music · · Score: 0

      Cutting costs on energy consumption isn't profitable?
      Fostering an intelligent, productive middle class isn't profitable?
      Who built most of the US road system?

      Low Income Housing and parks I don't have anything for.

    149. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of that was a government program and or government funding of university.
      Dill weed.

    150. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tbannist · · Score: 1

      Interestingly enough, in Toronto the opposite was found. When affordable housing was interspersed with regular residential areas they found that the people in the affordable house improved their economic performance. A long term study found that it was pretty effective way to get people out of poverty, I'm a little fuzzy on the details but the mixed housing program had a high success rate of people leaving the affordable housing program because they no longer needed it.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    151. Re:In other words, we should give up. by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      It wouldn't be more cost effective if the federal government wasted less resources, but it does. It's inefficient, and allocates resources poorly. The states know better which things need a higher priority than the federal government. Or are you trying to say that the guy that oversees all 50 states knows each state better than the one guy in each state that is only responsible for their own state?

    152. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How is NIST duplicative? Should each county define its own system of weights and measures? And who pays for weather forecasting? The fucking problem is idiots that don't understand the value of government, common security, and a viable social contract. The fucking problem is you.

    153. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Chris+Burke · · Score: 1

      I homeschool - my kids kick ass and I don't need your fucking State education.

      Energy and geo research will be fine if the government gets the hell out of it and starts leaving people alone to discover the economic incentives. If the economic incentives are not there, then tough shit.

      So, I take it your kids aren't learning about the concept of externalities.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    154. Re:In other words, we should give up. by YojimboJango · · Score: 1

      In order from ggp, State funded energy research, every state park we currently have, state/county/city public education boards, all the housing assistance programs that are not federally based (ie most), and every road and bridge in this country that is not on an interstate. Oh you wanted private company examples? Maybe you should've paid attention to what he was actually saying instead of the trollish article summary.

      Not that I'm agreeing with him on this on everything, but the fact is that he's pointing out that we can cut out a lot of useless redundancy here. No need to go all herp-de-derp.

    155. Re:In other words, we should give up. by langelgjm · · Score: 1

      Bell labs was a premier research institution so yes, it can be done.

      While true, Bell also had a massive government granted-monopoly ensuring that it did not necessarily have to worry about every project turning a profit or being competitive. So yes, it can be done, but maybe only if you outlaw competition.

      Gates is great. However, private donors are driven by their own motivations and are not democratically accountable, unlike (in theory) a government. This would be less of a problem if there were many Gates, with competing visions, but in many areas that's not the case. Talk to anyone in public education... Gates is far and away the biggest private funder, and the priorities that the BMGF sets shape the entire policy trajectory of the country, for better or worse.

      --
      "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
    156. Re:In other words, we should give up. by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      Bell Labs was a premier research institution when their largest customer was the U.S. Government, and specifically the War Department -- which is what it was called back in the day. It could be done, but the culture of corporations is "show me the money". They're interested in immediate profits and short-term ROI. They are NOT interested in fundamental research and long-term roadmaps.

      I've seen it claimed that Bell Labs was also something that AT&T did to help keep federal regulators at bay.

      Regardless, there are really only a handful of companies in the world that have both the money and the interest to pursue more-or-less undirected basic research. Google, Microsoft (yes, really), IBM, Genentech, and Novartis are the big ones that spring to mind. I'm a biochemist by training, so I'm most familiar with the latter two (and I know people who work in both places). Being a scientist at Genentech is almost like being on the faculty at a major research university, except the pay is better. But even they have to get the legal department to sign off on anything they want to publish.

      For less established companies, it would be just plain stupid to spend large amounts of time (and money) on something that has no obvious and relatively immediate commercial value, i.e. the great majority of bioscience research. A friend of mine works at a (flourishing) biotech startup, and was initially placed on a project that turned out to be of great intrinsic scientific interest, and potentially a major publication. After a year or so, management said "fuck this, we need products", stopped work on this project, and transferred him to a different team. He's totally cool with this - it's an eminently sensible business decision, and he's being paid well for his work. But if basic research is the goal, it's a shitty way to do science.

      The claims of "the private sector will take up the slack" simply have no basis in fact, and anyone who has worked in R&D (academic or corporate) knows this. To whatever limited extent public-funded science does the "development" part, yes, I expect the private sector will do much of that. But there's just so much serendipity involved in transferring basic research to marketable products, that they'll surely miss something. And they're not going to do undirected basic research, because why the hell would they? So ultimately, you're going to have to rely almost entirely on either private donations or state governments. I take no stance on the ethics or morality of such a change, let alone its long-term effectiveness as policy - I'm just annoyed at some of the claims I hear.

      I can think of some immediate impacts that shutting down the DOE would have. One is that protein crystallography research, both academic and corporate, would screech to a halt, because the DOE runs most of the synchrotrons used to generate high-intensity X-rays. (The exception is at Cornell, and it's not as advanced as most of the DOE's machines.) So crystallographers would have to fly to Japan, Canada, or Europe to do most of their data collection, until someone coughs up the several billion dollars to replace these machines (which would take several years to build, anyway). I think it's safe to say that the US would permanently lose leadership in the field (it currently has the largest output of any country); Big Pharma is all multinational anyway, and I'm sure China will be happy to build more synchrotrons. Again, whether this is going to happen anyway due to soaring debt, or whether it's better to adhere to a limited-government creed than have flourishing biomedical research, is a separate argument. Let's just not pretend that the magical free market will make everything better.

    157. Re:In other words, we should give up. by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that a corporation(s) could not provide the same service as NOAA?

      Are you saying they would provide it anywhere near as well? And with as few restrictions? Do you honestly think that they would not lock that data up so damn tight that if you were to even dare look at it without having thousands of licenses that you would be sued into oblivion? Whereas I can use NOAA data to do whatever I wish.

      As to "science" and "research" - maybe it is time for a return to the days of philanthropy and corporate sponsorship?

      No, not a chance. Science done by corporate sponsorship would likely be incredibly locked down, and patented to all hell. Meaning that the regular people would not be able to benefit from that science, as they can today.

    158. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      But corporations do exist without any need for government. I can think of one that has been around for a very long time, is very well managed and highly profitable. Millions of dollars worth of goods and services move through this organization every year, and many of the consumers of the products would not have access to these products without this organization. The Mafia.

    159. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And how exactly would they build that highway system across the land safely despite earthquake, landslide and river flood risks? Who will find the metals and other materials necessary to build computers, lasers, GPS systems, and microwave ovens? How would they map the moon and find the resources needed for activities there without a geological survey? (Check who made the maps of the moon: the USGS) Who would determine dam sites and the expected implications for ground and surface water resources? Yes, of course all these things could be done privately, but how exactly would you ensure that money didn't determine the results rather than actual safety or resource security, and what guarantees are there that it would be any cheaper?

      The short political answer is: nobody knows that the hell the US geological survey does anyway, so it's a natural thing to cut regardless of its actual importance.

    160. Re:In other words, we should give up. by writeRight · · Score: 1

      Actually, government can't make utopia. The government running deficits to spend money to pay off campaign contributors is not working. Private people forming groups to fund their interests can have a positive impact.

    161. Re:In other words, we should give up. by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      What makes you say he doesn't? You're only allowed to do one thing in your world?

      http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/national-defense/ - "Revitalize the military for the 21st century by eliminating waste in a trillion-dollar military budget."
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpedybOR2oY
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0RXWcKOYeeg

      Clearly the military is a domain of the Federal Government so you can't expect him to say to junk the Department of Defense - he's reasonably consistant in having the Federal Government do the things the consitution says are its roles and nothing else. But he's always said the military budget needs to be cut dramatically because it is bankrupting the country.

    162. Re:In other words, we should give up. by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      And you'll have a pretty hard time figuring out which way is really better as long as your country is divided between Republicans and Democrats because each side will say it's people are doing better than the other side.

      Which is exactly why many of this things should not be happening at the Federal level. I think things mentioned in the constitution should be handled at the Federal level. I think for everything else states should be left to decide how they want to manage it. If one state comes up with a system that is really slick you can bet that many other states will give it a shot. But with the one-size-fits-all approach that we currently have we may never know what actually works because we can't convince our Federal government to try it out.

    163. Re:In other words, we should give up. by KingMotley · · Score: 1

      If you think the government trying to decide what's best for everyone is inefficient, just wait to(sic) you see what 5 billion people with their own thoughts, working independently on the same things can come up with.

    164. Re:In other words, we should give up. by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      State governments can't pool the resources of the whole country as well as the federal government can..

      Why can't they?

    165. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MightyYar · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The ancient examples of "corporations" are churches and governments - a far cry from a modern corporation. Some would even say that the church and the government were the same thing at the time. Partnerships and guilds also do little to insulate the members from liability, make ownership difficult, and differ in many other ways. Google, Apple, Microsoft, GM... none could exist in anything like their current form as a partnership.

      A "corporation" is only whatever the government says it is.

      In short, I wasn't talking about when a town or church "incorporates" in the ancient sense, I'm talking about when I give the state of Nevada $1500 bucks to found an LLC.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    166. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      It's OK though. Stick your head and the sand and wait for bigger government to save you from big government.

      It can't be worse than you insulting people that disagree with you instead of contributing to a civil dialog with people who don't necessarily share your point of view.

      I find the "big government" argument from the right very questionable since when it comes to budget cuts they only promote cuts in areas favored by the left. Yet the programs they favor continue at previous or even more generous spending levels. For example, what makes ensuring continued domestic oil and exploration with generous subsidies an important national issue and not diversifying our energy portfolio by spending money on research and development by government laboratories?

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    167. Re:In other words, we should give up. by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      Uhhh, how exactly would private industry get into space when they were not allowed up there. I think the x-prize showed that the private industry did in a year what the private sector can do when they have incentive.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    168. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      Comments like that are exactly why we keep getting the same crap over and over. Have you never looked at your state budget? Heck, the single largest line item for the California STATE budget is public education. The Federal Highway funds are a classic example of the Federal Government taking money from the states, and holding it hostage, only to be given back if the states relinquish control in other areas.

      I'm not going to deny that I like my internet, pictures from Mars, GPS, and a wealth of other benefits the Feds have supplied us, but to claim that the states will stop offering services that they currently offer if the feds stop taking money from them to run their own program, show a complete misunderstanding of where resources come from, and complete support for our current Federal corruption.

      Citations for my state:
      http://www.energy.ca.gov/research/
      http://www.energy.ca.gov/research/
      http://www.cde.ca.gov/eo/
      http://www.hcd.ca.gov/fa/
      http://www.dot.ca.gov/

    169. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Fair enough, but in the context of this discussion it is clear that we are talking about legal entities.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    170. Re:In other words, we should give up. by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      Currently-federal parks can go private.

      What guarantees that they'll continue to be parks? There's lots of old-growth timber and valuable minerals just waiting to be exploited. I'm sure you could find companies which genuinely believe in keeping them parks, but what happens when they get bought by far-away investors who decide to make a quick buck? This isn't some random hypothetical - read up on what happened to the privately owned Northern California redwood forests.

    171. Re:In other words, we should give up. by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Excluding evolution from standardized tests is boneheaded, so it's hard to see how we should be satisfied that Kansas "only" did that.

    172. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Mike · · Score: 3, Informative

      Hello clueless Mr. Anonymous.

      For all the pissing and moaning about evil corporations (much of which I agree with), you seem to miss the fact that these wouldn't have the power you abhor in a free market. They only have all these magical, mystical and evil powers over us because the government allows (and encourages) it. Without the guns of government behind them, the largest corporations in the world would be inert.

    173. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Gilmoure · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but WalDellAmazExonCo would make sure there's nice stuff left for everyone else.

      --
      I drank what? -- Socrates
    174. Re:In other words, we should give up. by LandDolphin · · Score: 1

      Governments create and uphold law.

      --
      Spelling and Grammar errors have been added to this post for your enjoyment
    175. Re:In other words, we should give up. by TonyXL · · Score: 1

      How about paying for what you use?

    176. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're duplicating efforts which are already handled from the (current) federal level all the way down to the very local level at your town's city hall.

      Hugely overstated with no citations or facts to back it up.

      Could the county government handle their own section of a federal highway?

      In most cases no. The Federal highway system benefits extend well beyond local or state borders. Some states do not have the tax base to support the Federal highway within their borders and while they would lose some benefit with the deterioration of the highway there would also be a loss of benefit to other states who benefit through trade and commerce enabled by the highway system. States could try working together and would have some success but it would be exceedingly more inefficient with all the cross border disputes, corruption and pandering. To get an understanding of the level of failure this would induce just look at the history of state and local battles over water rights and infrastructure and read James Madison's letters to Jefferson explaining his thoughts on why the strong central government formed by the Constitutional Convention came about due to the failure of the exact concept Ron Paul and his ardent supporters are proposing.

      And I suspect there would be a great deal more corruption. The Libertarian position is that they will have more control over local representatives, the reality is that the infection of corruption will no longer have outside scrutiny by an impartial Federal agency that will result in stuffing of local pockets with no investigations. I know this for a fact as I have watched $20+ million stolen from local coffers to pay for corrupt transportation project bidding and the loss of local tax dollars to a zero benefit scam was offset by cutting $20 million from local public schools. There were cries of corruption that were met with minimal local investigation that ended with silence and no justice.

      Can county parks personnel handle national parks?

      Perhaps in some cases but for the most part no. First it is important to point out that national parks and the land they include belong to every citizen of the United States and thus every citizen has an interest and a stake in how the lands are managed. In the state where I currently reside the Libertarian leanings have them continuously wailing on and on how they should have the right to manage their own lands without interference of the Federal government. But everyone ignores the reality that the local people don't own the land they want to manage themselves as the most recent transaction that could be used to designate ownership is the purchase of the lands by the Federal government using tax dollars from United States citizens. So the local people don't own the national parks land.

      Second, the local people in some states have disparate interests in how the land is managed compared to the rest of the citizens in the United States who own the land. In my area the wailing about Federal managed lands has less to do with Federal agencies and Federal taxes and more to do with corporations who want to extract and sell resources from the land or develop real estate for personal profit. And I'm not necessarily saying there should be no exploitation of the resources, what I'm saying is that the people who actually own the land will have no say in how the resources are extracted, whether the environmental impact of extraction is acceptable, or even what percentage of profits from the resources will go back to the people who own the land or how those profits will be apportioned.

      We're definitely in need of a change to how things operate and these changes will hurt--bad. We've been living on borrowed time and we need to cut spending, raise revenues (taxes), and pay off the debts we've incurred due to stupid policy.

      Absolutely, but that is not what Ron Paul is providing. R

    177. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But only pay for what they need, based on location. I don't need hurricane hunter airplanes in Idaho.

    178. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Lothsahn · · Score: 1

      The same ones that invented the internet, lasers, microchips, GPSs, and microwave ovens, went to the moon, built the largest highway system in the world, created our clean water infrastructure, and electrified most of a continent.

      How about the state governments do those things? Pretty sure the state governments can figure out how to build roads, clean water, and manage electrical grids. The only item on the list that I see as problematic would be "went to the moon".

      I'm very supportive of minimizing the federal government. That doesn't mean I don't want government services at all--we have state and local governments, after all...

      --
      -=Lothsahn=-
    179. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chrb · · Score: 1

      Good points! I was actually aware of his general position against military interventionism. What I meant is, he seems to be quite radical about completely dropping spending for various Departments but his DoD and DHS cuts are a conservative 15%-20% (restore to 2006 levels) and I don't see anything about cutting funding for NSA, CIA etc. and expenditure on these dwarfs the departments that he proposes cutting completely. The 15%-20% reduction only returns military spending to its 2006 levels, which is still way higher than any other nation. So, given the potential massive savings, why doesn't he propose slashing the military budget, eliminating entire programs and departments in the same way as he wants to do with other areas of the government?

    180. Re:In other words, we should give up. by schnell · · Score: 1

      I think what people - and maybe Ron Paul - are missing is axing these programs at a Federal level and devolving their responsibilities to the states will just be robbing Peter to pay Paul (no pun intended). The states can't afford to do the things they're responsible for already today!

      Say you cut Federal taxes, axe those departments and hand some or all of those duties back to the states. What are the states going to do? Raise your taxes to pay for all the new unfunded mandates they just got handed. Now you're back to square one except with even more inefficiencies... imagine that each state had to run its own equivalent of the CDC, or the FDA, or the FAA... incredible redundancy and it might end up costing even more than it does at the Federal level.

      --
      "95% of all Slashdot .sig quotes are incorrect or completely fabricated." -Benjamin Franklin
    181. Re:In other words, we should give up. by cjb658 · · Score: 1

      And thanks to our stellar legal system, it's damn-near impossible to go into business without incorporating or getting sued and losing everything you have.

    182. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, absolutely. I'm confident Missouri is going to become the leader in ion trap atomic clock technology because people here are totally into that shit.

    183. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, if you get rid of NIST, each state gets to decide on its own standards for time, power grid, wireless, etc? That doesn't sound like the best of ideas.

    184. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Jawnn · · Score: 1

      Do we need any more discussion in order to affix the crackpot label to Ron Paul once and for all? 30 seconds of contemplation about the effects of his proposed cuts should be more than enough to make it plain that the result would be ruinous. Not that there isn't room for cuts, but Paul's approach is, to be charitable, ham-handed and overly simplistic. And no, "pushing these things down to the state and local level" is not an answer. First of all, the states don't have the revenue either, so unless you want your state to raise taxes so that it can create it's own inherently redundant (all the other states will have to do likewise) agencies for the maintenance of the commons, Paul's proposal is a bad, bad bet. Seriously? Do away with the National Bureau of Standards? The net cost to the nation's economy of not having that body, not to mention the need for cobbling together "local" replacements and all the costly chaos that will involve, is likely to be far higher than that body's current budget.

    185. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Put in standardized units:

      • Energy Department's $5-billion Office of Science = 2.5 days of the military
      • $4.5-billion National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration = 2.25 days of the military
      • $750-million National Institute of Standards and Technology = 9 hours of the military
      • $1.1-billion U.S. Geological Survey = 13 hours of the military

      (Based on Forbe's estimate of the cost of being U.S. military policy being $2 billion per day If you want units solely in terms of the war in Afghanistan, that figure is $300 million per day. Adjust for other wars etc. War: it isn't cheap.)

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      Actually, he does talk about the military and reducing our overseas presence.. which is exactly why everyone was pissing all over him LAST time someone wrote a slanted news article about him. But hey, what's long term memory for, anyways? Is that a bagel? Omg I love bagels. What were we talking about again?

    186. Re:In other words, we should give up. by dr2chase · · Score: 2

      And if some states decide to test out driving on the left-hand side of the road?

      That's a joke and an exaggeration, but one of the annoying things about driving in New England, where much of the infrastructure predates federal standards, is bizarro signs and light standards. WTF does a combined red-yellow light mean? WTF does a blinking green light mean? I never saw this weird stuff in Texas, Florida, or California.

      Or, more recently "Left lane for left turn". Apparently this does not mean "Left lane must turn left". Perhaps they are informing us that left turns are not allowed from the right lane?

      I think there are also federal standards (not yet learned by the Massachusetts highway departments) for proper sign placement, to ensure that (1) you can see the sign and (2) you can read it soon enough to do something useful with the information.

      Federal standards are boring, conservative, and UNIFORM.

    187. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Endovior · · Score: 1

      And... why is it the US's responsibility to provide weather forecasting for foreign nations? Better yet, why is it the responsibility of the American taxpayer to pay for such forecasting?

    188. Re:In other words, we should give up. by alphatel · · Score: 1

      You should never prohibit the truth. Evolution is not a mind game, it is an accepted scientific method not designed specifically to piss off Kansas folk.

      --
      When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
    189. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Darth+Snowshoe · · Score: 1

      You know, our federal parks are some of America's great treasures. I'm not about to sell Yosemite, Yellowstone, the Grand Canyon, Acadia, Arches, etc to a bunch of corporations. Prior generations entrusted them to us - we don't really own them either, we are simply stewards unto the next generation. Also, the amount of money coming out of your individual income to support these things is laughably small. And once you sell them, you can never get them back. The fact that so many people from Europe and Asia make the effort to visit them is a hint as to their true value.

    190. Re:In other words, we should give up. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      If it isn't profitable, it won't happen.

      - and it should NOT happen if it is not profitable.

      Profit is the only measuring stick that truly tells us whether something needs to be done or not. Profit is the only real measurement, the only true democracy.

    191. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Dept. of Education has nothing to do with providing public education. They gather data on educational performance and enforce equality laws relating to student loans. The next time somebody blames this department for a poorly performing school, advise them that Dept. of Education has nothing to do with that performance other than they gathered the data to show just how poorly that school performed.

    192. Re:In other words, we should give up. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      The states know better which things need a higher priority than the federal government.

      Bald assertion with no supporting evidence. I thought all government was bad?

      Or are you trying to say that the guy that oversees all 50 states knows each state better than the one guy in each state that is only responsible for their own state?

      In a nutshell, yes. The guy overseeing all 50 states is able to understand that what might look useless in one state is actually of great benefit to the overall health of the entire US. As an example: North Dakota benefits from funding tsunami warnings because it is also hurt when California gets hit by an unpredicted Tsunami. Someone only administering North Dakota wouldn't get that.

      Not to mention that for some reason, people who used to argue that all government was bad are arguing that only federal government is bad; the state governments are actually models of efficiency. What the fuck? A black guy gets elected to the federal presidency, and suddenly people think state governments are the shit? Man, you guys crack me up.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    193. Re:In other words, we should give up. by alphatel · · Score: 1

      And Anti-capitalism is not the erasure of capital markets, just the disenfranchisement of the public with corporate control over all facets of government.

      --
      When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
    194. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Nithin+Philips · · Score: 1

      In Michigan there is (almost) no funding for the state parks system from the legislature, and they have to rely exclusively on the admission fees. While it's holding together for now, it sorta like a Dinghy in a hurricane, ready to fall apart at the first sign of trouble. Yeah, long live the state parks indeed.

      --
      Einmal ist Keinmal. What happens but once might as well not have happened at all.
    195. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Belial6 · · Score: 1

      I homeschool too, and my kid also kicks ass. That being said, Ron Paul is not suggesting that the States get out of education. He is suggesting that the FEDS stop taking our money, and then redistributing it back to the States in exchange for giving up state rights. He is saying that education at the state level is a states issue, and the Feds should not be involved in that. It isn't their job.

    196. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?"

      Which is just your way of saying that you didn't listen to the last debate.

      Ron Paul bluntly said that the military would need to be cut as well as all of these other departments. What you see here is the wholesale elimination of departments that are in many ways redundant. Yes, important things would be lost. They would quickly be replaced with private market alternatives, or rolled into other departments that provide similar services already. What would happen is that a large chunk of overhead would be eradicated.

    197. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MightyYar · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Too bad corporations can't go back to a more symbiotic instead of parasitic (profit maximizing) relationship with society, and that corporate and financial laws and regulations really won't allow this to happen, either (shareholder "rights", etc).

      This is exactly the discussion we should be having. What do we want a corporation to be, and what rights should we grant them?

      A lot of people disagree with the Citizens United decision, but have more trouble vocalizing how you would restrict them but not the New York Times. If the discussion were framed differently, people wouldn't just dismiss the court as a bunch of conservative kooks. Even the dissent (Stevens) focuses more on how it's just a bad idea to let corporations buy unlimited air time near elections than it talks about points of law.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    198. Re:In other words, we should give up. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Competition among States is a good thing, not a bad one. Without competition among States and only with one Central Planner in Chief you end up without any choices.

      Ron Paul.

      Because everybody should have the right to choose and not to be forced into once central government system.

    199. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DisKurzion · · Score: 1

      Perhaps because the military spending can't actually be cut until military operations have curtailed. His platform has always been very consistent: Stop warmongering, shut down the numerous overseas US bases, and slash the size of the military.

      Link:
      http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/national-defense/

    200. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apparently, you don't know Ron Paul very well. He most definitely is for slashing the military budget. He is an isolationist and would love to stop wasting money on "useless, very damaging wars." But I guess because he has an "R" by his name you already had some preconceived notions about him. Google it.

    201. Re:In other words, we should give up. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Yes, you do. Because you benefit in Idaho when Louisiana doesn't get destroyed anytime a hurricane hits.

      No man is an island, no matter what your mythology says.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    202. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chrb · · Score: 1

      See my other reply. I worded the original post badly... I did understand he wants to "cut" military adventurism but not "slash" the budget, the difference being his budget returns the military to 2006 levels, whereas if he slashed it by dropping entire divisions and programs the country could save a fortune. It seems his proposals are much harsher on the other Departments than on the Department of Defense, and he doesn't appear to have any policy on budget cuts to the "black budget" CIA, NSA etc.

    203. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The parent is the only intelligent post in this thread. The fact is, the Federal government has effectively usurped control away from the states. The federal federal government loves that because it means they largely don't have to give a shit about you. That's they way they love it. Not giving a shit about you is a good day for the life of federal politicians.

      Ron Paul's effort is to RESTORE POWER TO THE STATES. Unlike most people and professional politicians, Ron Paul actually has read and understands the US Constitution AND has interest in following it. His intention is to allow states to make decisions for themselves again. If you seriously believe your state represents you, you are completely out of touch with reality and dramatically uninformed. Consistently, every time states make moves for themselves, the feds come in and literally say, do what we say, fuck you and your population, else we will withhold funds which YOUR OWN STATE paid us. States then comply. States no longer have any power which is completely contrary to our Forefather's wishes, the US Constitution, and the well being of every US Citizen. Which is, of course, why the feds have wrestled control away from the states.

      So contrary to the bullshit you see on TV and entrenched political parties, restoring power back to the states is actually in your own interest. To be against state empowerment is to loudly proclaim you are dumb and what to be told how to live you life. Furthermore, to be against state power is anti-American and anti-Constitution.

      So please, stop being scared of change. Obama was elected on the lies of "Change." Sadly, when someone actually offers real change, everyone's gut reaction is to rail against it. Do you want change from legalized money laundering and bribery in Washington or do you want the status quo? It really is that simple.

    204. Re:In other words, we should give up. by grep_rocks · · Score: 1

      I may be dense here - you mean the government right? Since the govt was the driving force behind almost all of those innovations (moon, internet/DARPA, highway system etc...)

    205. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      Have you ever heard Ron Paul speak? Next to auditing the federal reserve, slashing military spending practically all he talks about... and it makes him quite unpopular among neo-conservative folks.

    206. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously? You wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget? Is this sarcasm?

      You have apparently never bothered to listen to his speeches, watch the debates, or visit his web site.

    207. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tbannist · · Score: 1

      You seem to have forgotten that most, if not all, of the states are also divided along the same lines. In each state you'll get the partisan arguments from each side over whether things are great or terrible. If one state comes up with a system that is really slick you can bet that no other states will give it a shot unless they modify so they can claim credit for it, and of course the plan will have to match the states ideological purity tests.

      In a well-designed Federal system you would actually have trial programs that would allow for some measure of objective evaluation. When you have 50 state systems, the government of each state will always claim their system is working best. They want to get re-elected you know. I'm not saying the current system works, just that expecting 50 separate systems to work better seems to involve and unrealistic evaluation of the self-interest of the people in charge of those systems.

      The system will need someone removed from state and inter-state politics to objectively evaluate them. That will likely end up being educational non-profits who will, of course, be accused of being "socialists" or "fascists" depending on which states get top ratings.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    208. Re:In other words, we should give up. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Corporations as creatures of gov't shouldn't exist. You described the exact problem - moral hazard in all of these limited liability laws.

      There should be no moral hazard of gov't limiting liability for anyone's actions, because you get BP and oil all over you when liability is limited and there is a 70Million USD cap on drilling.

      Of-course the other side of it is that Federal gov't shouldn't be allowed to regulate businesses or individuals in terms of business at all and it shouldn't be allowed to impose ANY income related taxes.

    209. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You didn't even read his plan, I take it? He completely de-funds all overseas personnel and all of our wars and brings the troops home, not enormous enough for you?

    210. Re:In other words, we should give up. by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      People in Michigan pay state/local taxes; imagine if federal taxes were reduced by 50% and the state could increase their taxation by 50% (which is still much less than what people are saving from federal taxes, as they're much higher). Then might Michigan be able to afford to take care of it's state parks?

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    211. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

      Congratulations, you're next in line to get a new sarcasm detector.

    212. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Can't be any worse than the space hobby that the US has going through NASA.

      That deserves some elaboration. As I see it, a hobby is something you do a few times for kicks while a business is something you do a lot of for profit. NASA has a single manned space station. They have a single space telescope (which they'll eventually replace with another single space telescope). They have only a single rover mission (the two Mars Expedition Rovers) and a single replacement for that mission (Mars Science Laboratory). So many of their missions are singletons.

      Another sign of a hobby is lack of concrete return on investment. For the non-hobby business, that comes in the form of profit. NASA has a vast number of intangibles, human knowledge, international cooperation, inspiration for the next generation, and spinoffs. But fundamentally, they do it because a big nation keeps giving them almost $20 billion a year to do so. Hence, no concrete return on investment.

    213. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mx+b · · Score: 1

      I think its more that he's trying to say: we can continue doing what we're doing now, but without the bureaucratic overhead of a cabinet level office and all of the secretaries and administrators that go along with it.

    214. Re:In other words, we should give up. by dr2chase · · Score: 2

      I have no particular faith in the goodness of the American people. Consider health care as an example. We spend more than any other country per capita or as a percentage of GDP. We leave many people uninsured, medical expenses are a common cause of personal bankruptcy, our infant mortality rate is high, our life expectancy is low.

      If governments were as bad as you seem to think, and the American people so fundamentally good, if we looked at the 20-some OECD countries with government funded/run/heavily-regulated healthcare, we should NOT see the following:

      - their life expectancies are longer than ours
      - their infant mortality is lower than ours.
      - everyone gets medical care
      - no bankruptcies caused by cost of medical care

      However, that is precisely what we do see. Based on this evidence, I MUST have more faith in government (at least, government in all those other countries) than I do in the "goodness of the American people", because government-run health care is better and cheaper and covers everyone.

      (And if you want to quibble about "better", my two metrics are "fewer dead babies" and "longer lives".)

    215. Re:In other words, we should give up. by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Why should Pennsylvania care about cleaner coal? The wind just carries the smoke away to "somewhere else".

    216. Re:In other words, we should give up. by lahvak · · Score: 1

      I like energy research, plus (non-toll) roads and bridges. Agreed there.

      Actually, I don't see any reason why roads and bridges should not be private and collect toll. The reason highways are maintained by federal government is that for example people in NY or DC seriously care about and depend on a freeway that goes through a backmountain county in PA or WV. The people who actually live in the county couldn't care less, they are all used to driving pickup trucks on mountain roads, so if you leave the maintenance to them, they will just let the roads to ruin. What would really make sense would be make the people who actually use the road to pay for it. Which means private toll road.

      However:

      Currently-federal parks can go private.

      That would require them start making profit. How many national parks actually make profit? I believe the whole idea of national parks is to preserve some of the truly spectacular nature that we have in this country for our kids and grandkids. That is actually one of the few thing that I will gladly pay taxes for.

      Local public schools can do the job without federal "assistance". The feds just take money and give it to schools. Um, if a state needs more money for its schools, they can raise it themselves, that's where most of the money comes from. There was a department of education for only a fraction of the history of public schools.

      On this one I am in complete agreement. The bureaucracy in our school system is mind boggling, and stripping of several layers can only help.

      No more low income housing? GREAT! Section 8ers get into the program as a result of horrible lifestyle choices and ruin any neighborhood that will let them in.

      I do have a problem with this, mostly because I actually know something about the situation in this layer of society. It is true that there are number of cases in which people are where they are because of poor choices, but in overwhelming majority of cases these are people who are poor because of lack of qualification, or because of the background from which they came. It is very rarely because of choices, and in the case it is due to bad choices, many times people made these choices simply because they did not know any better. For example, I just encountered a high school student who wants to be an engineer and study at a top engineering school, and in order to pursue this dream, he takes bunch of welding, engine repair and similar classes at a local community college. He really does not know any better, has no idea what to do, how to go about getting himself to a top college, etc, and there is nobody in his environment who can help him with it. And this guy is actually one of he better cases, he at least figured out that he has to take classes at a local college because his school will not give him the education he needs. He is just taking all the wrong classes. Most kids from these neighborhoods have absolutely no clue what to do to be successful. They can work extremely hard once they figure it out, but unfortunately, most of them never do.

      People who can't afford those places should move to where they *can* afford, rather than jumping the queue in front of people willing to pay for those spots. There is *always* affordable housing if you're willing to look; federal assistance just crowds out the prime spots.

      Yes, because concentrating poor clueless people in large ghettos has proved so successful all over the word, right? If there is one thing we really do not want, it is bunch of large ghettos with bunch of people desperate enough to start serious rioting and burning your beautiful pristine neighborhoods in your prime spots down.

      There are plenty of areas for cutting federal spending down, but national parks and housing assistance are not among them.

      --
      AccountKiller
    217. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ElectricTurtle · · Score: 1

      I doubt the Grand Canyon is as majestic as your absurd hyperbole, or as deep as my disdain for it.

      --
      I support the Slashcott and will not be reading or commenting from 2/10/14 to 2/17/14. Beta is steaming pile of dog shit
    218. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember the US is a federation. The states provide for those things as well. And pushing most of this load down to the states is probably a good idea from the point of view of balance of power.

      In what universe? Ron Paul is heralded as some kind of modern-day messiah because he campaigns vigorously for "states' rights". Unfortunately, the reality of it is that the only states that have legislators that really worry about such a topic are the ones for whom those pesky government regulations about human rights and gender/racial equality are a real crimp in their hallowed traditions of lynching black people and stoning gays.

      Getting rid of these federal-level programs is a perfect plan if that plan is to introduce even more knee-jerk regression-based politics to American government and for the more right-wing states to have their perfect utopia of Creatonism-oriented science education, abstinence-oriented sex education, and regressive political education. Glory, glory, hallelujah!

    219. Re:In other words, we should give up. by operagost · · Score: 1

      Yup... we never had any of those things before those departments existed. Wait... YES WE DID.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    220. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DragonWriter · · Score: 5, Informative

      But corporations do exist without any need for government.

      False.

      I can think of one that has been around for a very long time, is very well managed and highly profitable. Millions of dollars worth of goods and services move through this organization every year, and many of the consumers of the products would not have access to these products without this organization. The Mafia.

      The Mafia is not a corporation. A corporation is defined as an entity with separate legal personality from its individual participants. It is purely a creation of law; the Mafia is just a collective label given to a number of different groups of people.

      When legal action is taken against the Mafia, its not in the form of "The People of the State of New York v. La Cosa Nostra, Inc."; its individual actions against individual members because the Mafia isn't a corporation and therefore doesn't have distinct legal personality.

      Sure, if you redefine corporation to just mean "group of people", a corporation wouldn't require government, just like if you redefine "water" to mean "any compound containing hydrogen" then water wouldn't require oxygen atoms. But words have meanings.

    221. Re:In other words, we should give up. by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      To be fair, Ron Paul does advocate removing all troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, and I suspect would be fine with pulling them out of other foreign countries as well (Do we really need troops ready to defend West Germany from the USSR?). He's also probably a lot more comfortable with slashing defense spending than just about every other candidate in the race right now.

      And I say this as someone who's probably not going to vote for him.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    222. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      I hold the opinion that as the government regulation of corporations decreases the tendency of corporations to operate more like the Mafia increases. Enron and Madoff are good examples of what happens when regulations slacken just a little. I would hate to see what a nation would look like if it were run by corporations without any democratic government oversight.

    223. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      That's exactly what he has planned, squash all foreign aid and wars. Otherwise he would not be able to reach his target, 1 trillion USD of savings. Read his PDF.

    224. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Flavio · · Score: 1

      The Department of Education was created in 1979. Are you seriously suggesting that we wouldn't have public education anymore if it were removed?

      Most people refuse to think quantitatively. The general population doesn't even realise that Ron Paul's "radical" $1 trillion in budget cuts are actually insufficient.

    225. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DeathPenguin · · Score: 1

      Actually, Ron Paul is *the* strongest advocate of any candidate D or R for cutting military budget. He is also the strongest proponent of bringing a swift end to middle east occupation and closing many bases in the over countries we have 'em in.

      Search for Ron Paul's response on defense spending during the Oct. 18 debate in Las Vegas. Or, check out http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/national-defense/ :
      Today, however, hundreds of thousands of our fighting men and women have been stretched thin all across the globe in over 135 countries – often without a clear mission, any sense of what defines victory, or the knowledge of when they’ll be permanently reunited with their families.

      Acting as the world’s policeman and nation-building weakens our country, puts our troops in harm’s way, and sends precious resources to other nations in the midst of an historic economic crisis.

      Taxpayers are forced to spend billions of dollars each year to protect the borders of other countries, while Washington refuses to deal with our own border security needs.

    226. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      No, they really don't. The states provide some research funding, but they lack the muscle to work really large projects like what happens at the federal level. When was the last time a state funded a project like the Tevatron at Fermilab?

      You have the private world as well. They frequently fund non-profit projects in the hundred million dollar range. That's well within the range of Tevatron.

      Plus, it provides incentive for the private world to do its own research. The big business laboratories of the past century are more or less dead due to government funding of research. There's little incentive to do your own research when you can get paid by government to do it.

      And it's a terrible idea from the point of view of American scientific achievement.

      You have to demonstrate first that government funded research has been a net benefit. Given the huge absence of business research, I think that's been shown to cause great harm.

    227. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul does talk about slashing the military budget. It starts with ending the wars.

    228. Re:In other words, we should give up. by OldeTimeGeek · · Score: 1

      Wonderful. I'm going to get to pay every picayune city and township to use their roads because roads don't fix themselves and the locals don't feel like giving their services away for free...

    229. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bckrispi · · Score: 1

      Right...

      Because government R&D never did anything like invent the Internet or put a man on the fucking moon, or anything.

      --
      Xenon, where's my money? -Borno
    230. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Vaphell · · Score: 1

      Libertarian or not, he represents his constituents. Constituents pay federal taxes and expect that their man in Congress will get some of that tax money back. He wants to limit the scope of the government and shrink the budget, but that pool of money that is already there will be spent either way, with or without Ron Paul. Not trying to redirect some of that money to the home district would be sheer stupidity.

    231. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

      You forgot communications satellites, supersonic jets, atomic and nuclear bombs....

    232. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Doesn't your conclusion bother you, given that there was energy research, parks, public education, low income housing, roads, and bridges LONG BEFORE all of these departments were created? I suppose you think we're safer because we started the massive bureaucracy that is the Department of Homeland Security about 10 years ago. Would you then argue that we had no homeland security before 2001? Ridiculous. Study please.

    233. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      You miss the point. Government is the only entity allowed in our society to use force. If you're society doesn't want education, energy research, parks etc, then who are you to FORCE it on them.

    234. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed: I'm glad I don't have to use 270 to go to work. Only a small stretch of 315, and even then it's optional. Zipping along on the Wilson Bridge Rd and seeing 315 northbound packed solid due to an accident on 270 is just cool (not the accident, but not being stuck!).

    235. Re:In other words, we should give up. by vvaduva · · Score: 1

      Yeah...they are unsocialized triglodytes. And we love it.

    236. Re:In other words, we should give up. by SkimTony · · Score: 1

      Space initiatives are being funded because some people are crazy billionaires and want to get to space, so they're paying for it. Not all government programs will get a patron to fund them, especially the ones that will never turn even an imaginary profit.

    237. Re:In other words, we should give up. by NetNed · · Score: 1

      The Federal Department of Education didn't come around until 1979. We still had public education before that. The cost for it, even adjusted for inflation, has gone up widely, while test score have fallen.

      You seem to be reading the short clip from above, then making a judgement based on your own conclusion as to what his plan would mean. Just because a department is gone doesn't mean the agencies under it would be gone also. To suggest such is being obtuse to the fact that something has to change in this country for it to be sustainable going forward.

    238. Re:In other words, we should give up. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      No it is not the right solution. It would kill 100s of thousands of jobs, which will reduce tax revenues by more then we would cut.

      Repeal bush tax cuts
      Continue lowering are troop level from foreign wars
      Put a .07% tax on trade made on wall street
      Remove the child tax credit
      remove the corporate tax loopholes that have been out in place over the last 15 years

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    239. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Yeah, absolutely. I'm confident Missouri is going to become the leader in ion trap atomic clock technology because people here are totally into that shit.

      Or private businesses or non-profits. Government is not the only party that can provide this.

    240. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or perhaps if the federal gov't would stop sucking every last penny out of the private sector and the citizens then we will be able to afford most of the things we like in life. Almost every federal agency also has a local and/or state agency that does the same thing. So instead of paying taxes to fund the federal agency which then subsidizes the local, why not just cut out the middle-man?

    241. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      The interstate highway system is deeply flawed. If it was regulated on a local, and state level, and had actual stoplights, the local economy would boom. Instead, we're forced to subsidize the economic habits of total strangers.

    242. Re:In other words, we should give up. by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1

      My county has about 25 miles of an interstate through the northern section where almost NO ONE in the county lives. Maybe 1% of the county population regularly uses that road. If the county residents were suddenly tasked with the cost of the maintenance on that section of interstate our county taxes would probably double. Do you think most people in the county would vote for that? Nope, hardly any of us ever use that road. Goodbye freeway system.

      Luckily the Interstate system is actually paid for and maintained at the State level, not the local level.

      --

      "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
    243. Re:In other words, we should give up. by vvaduva · · Score: 1

      Are you talking about the private ownership of land or about how mountains look from the distance? I imagine if a private entity would buy Yellowstone, the pictures you'd take from the side of the road would look identical.

    244. Re:In other words, we should give up. by llZENll · · Score: 1

      Competition between states programs would make things cheaper overall, it would also vastly increase the security and robustness of our nation. It is much easier to deal with a few states programs going bankrupt, being fraudulent, or having problems than to deal with one system covering the entire country. It would also allow much greater choice for citizens, don't like social security, move to a state that doesn't have it, don't like the way drugs and agriculture is regulated in your state, move to another. What is likely to yield a better program, one nationally planned monopoly that is ripe with fraud, capital cronyism, and centrally planned. Or 50 individual programs constantly trying different rules, regulations, and management styles.

    245. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Narnie · · Score: 1

      It depends on the state. Remarkably Indiana is reportedly doing pretty good. However states like California... they're fighting a war against the poor or something.

      --
      greed@All_Evils:~#
    246. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      What unfunded mandates? What to do about these issues should be decided at the state level, by the individual states. The three examples you listed (CDC, FDA, FAA) were on the list of things that would "go away" if the federal government did not pay for them that OP posted.
      The OP said, "No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges." Those are all things that are already done by the states to one degree or another. Of that list, I happen to think that the Federal government should only be involved in two of them, energy research and parks (National Parks). Of course what the OP missed is that just because you get rid of these Departments, it does not mean that you get rid of all of the programs that are currently under these Departments. Some of the programs that are currently in the Departments that Ron Paul wants to get rid of could very easily be put into another Department.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    247. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Narnie · · Score: 1

      nice... I like the red vs blue slip you put in there.

      --
      greed@All_Evils:~#
    248. Re:In other words, we should give up. by gtall · · Score: 1

      Would these be the same corporations that are hollowing out the jobs in the U.S.? Them corporations? Or are they the ones who helped inflate the housing bubble that took the entire U.S. economy down along with a good chunk of Europe? Could they be the same corporations that have given us dirty air and bad water? Are they the corporations that have no problem extracting corporate welfare from the government? Wow! Yer right, we should just learn to trust them.

    249. Re:In other words, we should give up. by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      I think its because for all of the accusations of being an idealist, he's got a realist streak in him too. He understands that it might not be possible to do everything at once and if you're going to err somewhere it's probably safer to go a bit slower on the military side. This being said, he is still cutting the military budget more than any other candidate in the race.

    250. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He talks about slashing the military budget all the time. Ending the wars, stop policing the world, etc., etc. Just no one listens, apparently.

    251. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      You know what organizations exists even farther outside the control of and with less support support from government than the mafia? Governments do!

      At this point we're just talking about degrees of sovereignty, not whether corporations require a government structure to exist. Of course they goddamn do. If they're independent from an external legal structure, they are a government.

      I'd further take issue with the assertion that he mafie exists "without any need for government". I don't think I need to articulate the reasons that this is a silly statement, especially when it's considered alongside what I've typed above.

      I think you need to spend some more time considering your views on this matter. Maybe read a book or three on the topic. A couple of classics in political philosophy and economics (or even political economy) wouldn't hurt. I'm frankly not even sure you understand what a government is, beyond some vague understanding of what they seem to do, at a glance, from your perspective, with emphasis on seem, at a glance, and your perspective.

      Don't feel too bad, though; lots of people haven't put a much thought (let alone study time) in to these topics, but are opinionated about them anyway.

    252. Re:In other words, we should give up. by FunkyELF · · Score: 1

      Only because they can't print their own state money like the feds can.

    253. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Palshife · · Score: 1

      Cool. You teach your own kids. If your neighbors choose not to they'll be too stupid to do what you want most, which is to leave you alone.

      Libertarianism breaks down as soon as you interact with other people. Like you're doing right now. On the Internet. Which was invented and paid for by the United States government.

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    254. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 1

      Quite simply put, because the military doesn't keep his capitalist overlords from polluting, exploiting, betraying and indoctrinating, doesn't take their god-given right to be racist and otherwise discriminatory asswipes from them. You see, that's the part of gubbermint that is actually fine, only the evil regulators, them are socialism.

      --
      Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
    255. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      The eurozone is giving us a simply fabulous demonstration of what happens when devolve most of the power to member states.

      Maybe, this wasn't a problem when the member states were less integrated than they currently are. As I see it, the problem is that the EU created some public goods, for example, a currency with value, and it's been partly looted in a tragedy of commons situation. The creation of the public good requires regulation to prevent abuse.

    256. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does. He wants to end the wars. RTFA

    257. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?"

      Have you not been listening to Ron Paul lately? He wants to greatly downsize the military. He wants to close hundreds of bases around the world and bring the troops home.

    258. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does. A lot.

      http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/national-defense/

      * Avoid long and expensive land wars that bankrupt our country by using constitutional means to capture or kill terrorist leaders who helped attack the U.S. and continue to plot further attacks.

    259. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Mardak · · Score: 1

      How does cutting the Department of Education mean "no more public education?" Ron Paul just wants each state to be free to handle education without programs like No Child Left Behind waste teacher's and children's time and taxpayer money.

    260. Re:In other words, we should give up. by OldeTimeGeek · · Score: 1

      Oh, yes. I have. And they are even more disfunctional than the Federal Government.

      I'm a Californian. California, like Congress, has two factions that are completely unwilling to let the other do anything that would be viewed in a positive light. As for local government, San Francisco, where I live, is only governable when the various factions within city and county are equally balanced against each other.

    261. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      He has, do you not watch the debates or check into all of a candidates positions before posting stupid comments? BTW, what are the numbers when compared to the social obligations (SS, medicare, medicaid)? If you are going to put something in "standardized units" you should post all the numbers.

    262. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe because it actually is the Federal government's job to defend and protect the US.
      I know no one reads the Constitution any more...

    263. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Xiver · · Score: 1

      You already pay for it. You already pay for it. You already pay for it.

      Do you think think that since someone else pays for it then its not a problem? Why do you believe it is acceptable to waste other people's money for crap that nobody uses, but not yours?

      --
      10: PRINT "Everything old is new again."
      20: GOTO 10
    264. Re:In other words, we should give up. by KmhrVv · · Score: 1

      The biggest savings would come from ending funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and holding steady spending across the entire Department of Defense.

      Please RTFA

    265. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um actually HE DOES.

      15% reduction (returned to 2006 spending levels) and ending the current wars, including funding, and bringing troops home from germany,korea,japan etc.

    266. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does talk about it to the tune of 15%

    267. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you really need a Federal park, when you could have one created at the State/ Town/City level?

      These cuts are about redundancy elimination, not just a dick move as you imply it to be.

    268. Re:In other words, we should give up. by vvaduva · · Score: 1

      Bad analogy. Just because the Internet was created by Government, it doesn't mean the economic need was not there to develop faster, better and more efficient means of communication. The Internet was built on the work of people like Bell and others who created the early telegraph and telephone systems. All private individuals motivated by personal and economic reasons. If the State did not do it, someone else would have...it's the nature of human achievement. The only difference between the two is this: The State does it with money they steal from me; the individuals do it with their own funds, which allows them to manage risk and expense much more effectively, introducing efficiencies that you will never find in government research labs.

    269. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Xiver · · Score: 1

      You know what the public in "public education" refers to right? Even without the Dept of Education, public education will still come from "sugar daddy gummint".

      I'd much rather my local government make educational decisions that my federal government, because I have much more influence in my local politicians.

      --
      10: PRINT "Everything old is new again."
      20: GOTO 10
    270. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      War can be cheap if you cut out all the handouts and start getting real bids for it's outsourcing. It's cheaper to have a soldier stay at a motel 6 than stay in the barracks (furnished and maintained by KBR).

    271. Re:In other words, we should give up. by JayWilmont · · Score: 1

      Why should the taxpayer pay? Because taxpayers benefit - a hurricane that destroys an unprepared business in Florida is one that reduces orders from its supplier in Georgia and increases unemployment, reducing demand for goods and services from the rest of the country.

      Why do we let tiny Caribbean countries use data we are already collecting for ourselves? Because we are far richer than they are and it would be cruel to not share it with them just because they are poor. (The discussion would be different if this were something that say, Canada or Europe would benefit from, that can full well afford to split costs or do it themselves.)

    272. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bberens · · Score: 1

      You only need government intervention where it's either impossible or unprofitable for private enterprise to create such a system. The USPS is a good example that was essentially impossible for private companies to create at the time. I definitely support government protected parks, but do you really think there's not a huge market incentive already for energy companies to improve efficiency?

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    273. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DrXym · · Score: 1

      Your points are absurd. States can compete already.

    274. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bberens · · Score: 1

      As a corporation looking at the balance sheet there's essentially no difference between the government cutting me a check and the government giving me a tax break. Talking about them as if they're meaningfully different is a psychological trap that the two entrenched parties like to make you argue about when really it doesn't matter.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    275. Re:In other words, we should give up. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Because the military serve a purpose was well. Both and a driver for people to innovate, and as an employer.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    276. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does talk about slashing the military budget. He doesn't want to cut defense, but would surely hack away at all the funding for our militarism and policing the world.

    277. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you serious? He is the only one talking about it.

      "The biggest savings would come from ending funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and holding steady spending across the entire Department of Defense." Read the article.

    278. Re:In other words, we should give up. by zill · · Score: 1

      The Department of Defense would see $832 billion disappear from its budget during Paul’s first term in office, most of which would stem from Paul’s plan to end all foreign wars and foreign aid.

      I wonder why you didn't just google the reason.

      To put $832 billion in perspective, that's roughly 83% of of Dr. Paul proposed $1T cuts.

    279. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess you are not listening because he does talk about cutting the part of the military budget that is used for empire building and limiting it to defense.

    280. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, is that supposed to be modded Funny? Most of those things were government-funded, i.e., not developed by the free market but by a military-industrial or space-industrial complex. (The laser and microchips, I don't know how the original funding works out, but GPS, the space program, and the Eisenhower Interstate System were all military programs or mostly military at their outset, and a lot of the water and electrification were either publicly funded over the course of time or during the TVA or other New Deal programs. Likewise, we footed most of the bill for the nation's rail infrastructure (critical to westward expansion).

      Is Paul proposing something other than what I understood? I thought he wanted to axe the programs, not privatize them with gov't funding. If that was your story, you'd say were are already there - USGS and most gov't agencies employ private contractors for most things, don't they? They don't build their own test equipment, or do all their own logistics. Even the military contracts as much logistics as they possibly can.

      Where do you think defense and even DOE research dollars go? DOE does a lot of research in-house, and there's JPL, etc., but big primes and contractors get most of the money.

      (I am personally against some of those projects you list and for some of the axing proposed, but that doesn't change the fact that most big infrastructure programs are not remotely privately funded. The free market is not magic that would ever get us to the moon or to nuclear power. There are projects we need to invest in collectively or they won't get off the ground, and anything that resembles large scale scientific research or benefits poor areas of the country is in that boat.)

    281. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      Thanks for driving home my point that actual "corporations" DO need a government to create them, contrary to what was posted higher up in this discussion. Courts refer to corporations as legal fiction, as in "let's pretend this piece of paper owns these assets and is liable for them." Without government all you have is a mob of people working together in an organized structure to make a profit. Maybe that's why the term MOB is synonymous with MAFIA.

    282. Re:In other words, we should give up. by cervesaebraciator · · Score: 1
      I'm confused. One guy makes this exaggerated and inaccurate statement:

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      As of the moment, he gets ranked Score:4, Insightful.

      On the other hand, some other guys makes the exaggerated and sarcastic statement:

      Yes...because only the almighty government can do these things...

      But this guy gets ranked Score:2, Troll.

      Neither statement is doing anything more than attacking a straw man. On the one hand, ditching the Federal Department of Education is hardly going to lead to no more public education. You'd almost think that people didn't realize that public schooling was around long before the Federal Department of Education started up in 1980.

      On the other hand, the other statement is just as guilty (but no more guilty, and this is my point) of attacking a straw man. It is certainly true that many of these functions can be performed by means other than the Federal government. But reducing to a simple government vs. market dichotomy creates its own problems. Some things could be done well by government on the state level with local knowledge of local conditions (low income housing, for example). Some things are best pursued within a free market system (energy research, for example, might benefit a great deal if we had a free market, i.e. if we didn't subsidize oil corporations and corn based ethanol). Some things, for example interstate highways (roads & bridges) are of common benefit to the States and are best coordinated on the Federal level.

    283. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The biggest savings would come from ending funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and holding steady spending across the entire Department of Defense."
      RTFA.

    284. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bberens · · Score: 1

      I don't see why I (living in Orlando) should pay for your avalanche reports any more than I think it makes sense for you to pay for my hurricane alerts. Muddying the water and abstracting out the *real* cost of living somewhere is poor resource management.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    285. Re:In other words, we should give up. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      I t exists to help ensure everyone is educated.
      It's current skyrocketing costs are do yo NCLB.
        Oddly, even though every expert wants to get rid of the useless NCLB program, no republican ever talks about removing it.

      RP would have gained more point if he just said to cut that program; which costs more then all the program he suggested cutting.

      the budget went from 14B to now over 50B.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    286. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

      That works great on the East Coast, but there are a lot of areas in the West that taking the road in the next County isn't an option. One county not doing their share of road upkeep will cause massive disruption to the road system in the West. I suppose we can go back to using trains. They pay their own costs for upkeep.

    287. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bberens · · Score: 1

      The VAST majority of education funding already comes from local taxes and already waxes and wanes with the phases of recession.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    288. Re:In other words, we should give up. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      A) Thy are NOT the same services.
      B) The increase in there budget is NCLB. Cut that program.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    289. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Department of the Interior is the only one I'd hesitate to abolish completely. There are a few thing worthwhile in the Dept. of Commerce, but not enough to justify a cabinet level department. HUD has been a failure since it was established, Education was a reward for the Teacher's Unions support, and Energy's been a corrupt failure since the get go.

      Take BATFE's arson and explosives forensics laboratory, and combine it with the FBI's forensics lab, fire everyone else in the BATFE (they're incompetent), and abolish it.

      By the way, the military is only about 20% of the total budget.

    290. Re:In other words, we should give up. by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1

      Right. Corporations have provided people with things. Therefore, whatever they do is good! Anyone who says otherwise must stop buying things that corporations made (because I said so).

      --
      Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
    291. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you missed the portion of the plan where he talks about drastically reducing the military budget?

    292. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He actually would greatly decrease military spending. He wants to stop ALL of the non-declared wars, bring home all of our overseas troops and close our very expensive overseas bases (do we really need Okinawa?).

    293. Re:In other words, we should give up. by siride · · Score: 1

      Because they don't have as many resources? Even given that some have more than others, that means that the gap between the wealthy parts of America and the poor parts will only get wider. Poorer states will be unable to provide even basic services effectively, while the rich states can afford more expansive programs.

    294. Re:In other words, we should give up. by NetNed · · Score: 1

      Actually Michigan's state park system has weathered the storm quite well considering the economic climate of the state. Things need repair, but it's a wonder thing are even open considering their funding.

    295. Re:In other words, we should give up. by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      You seem to have forgotten that most, if not all, of the states are also divided along the same lines. In each state you'll get the partisan arguments from each side over whether things are great or terrible. If one state comes up with a system that is really slick you can bet that no other states will give it a shot unless they modify so they can claim credit for it, and of course the plan will have to match the states ideological purity tests.

      I think there are plenty of states right now that always swing left and plenty of other states that always swing right. Certainly enough that we could have several implementations of different conservative and liberal forms of government.

      I see no problems with other states modifying something they think is working in another state before they give it a shot. Maybe their modification is best for their own state? If it works well maybe the original state can start using that idea in the future if it is applicable. If nothing else it will serve as evidence about what works and what doesn't work.

    296. Re:In other words, we should give up. by hedpe2003 · · Score: 1

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      I'm no liberterian... but it appears to me, as president, slashing the military budget would be easy. He's made the point that "on day one" he would bring all of our troop’s home. He's talked a lot about the cost of the military overseas. These things, as president, are a lot easier to do than cutting government programs.

      --
      Comprehensive solutions via a competition of ideas like no other.
    297. Re:In other words, we should give up. by lptport1 · · Score: 1

      How would it kill 100's of thousands of jobs?

      I like your suggestions.

    298. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Quila · · Score: 1

      others use them to set up tax dodges that serve their own interests without providing goods and services to others

      And yet others use them to set up organizations dedicated to charity (Red Cross), to labor (any union), to pursue a specific social agenda (Planned Parenthood, NOW, Christian Coalition), for the protection of specific rights (NRA, ACLU), or any number of other purposes.

      A corporation isn't necessarily about money. It's just a legal entity organized for a purpose, recognized by the government.

    299. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So? We have to borrow to pay for those programs. It's time others stepped up to the plate...

    300. Re:In other words, we should give up. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "No more energy research: The private sector can handle this just fine.
      NO it can't. it's expensive and the only people with that money has the short term vested interest in NOT discovering new energy technologies.

      Parks, even state parks, are protected be the feds.
      So, yes they will go away. The first time somebody say 'lumber means jobs. And when they are gone, they are gone.
      What happens to parks that span state borders? If on state decides to do away with it,. then it is likely the forest will die.

      Public education (DoE) Is about ensuring everyone has an opportunity for education,. so a state doesn't make it hard o impossible for , say black people to get an education. Bush;s NCLB is why it has become so expensive. Kill that.

      " These can, and are handled at a state level more efficiently and more responsive to the public's need than their federal program counterparts."
      I think that's your opinion because you have no idea what the feds role is, or just repeat what your echo chambers says.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    301. Re:In other words, we should give up. by BassMan449 · · Score: 1

      Look at Paul's actual plan and you will see he calls for approximately 200 billion cut from the DoD in the first year alone.

    302. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you should read something on Paul, He would end both wars and close military bases around the world.

    303. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bberens · · Score: 1

      The push to move things from the federal level to the state level is a migration towards a more direct democracy. That's how our country was initially and I don't mean to support one way or the other in this post.. but it has its benefits and its drawbacks.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    304. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bondsbw · · Score: 1

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget...?

      Perhaps because the military is a natural common-good of the entire nation, but these others are not so much and can be moved to a more local level.

      Now, I've answered your question from my guess of his point of view. But my point of view is that some of those other departments provide some common-good, and the remainder can and should be localized. And also, a decent chunk of the military budget is some kind of waste (whether in inefficiency or in idealogy).

      So I don't agree with all of what Ron Paul is saying, but there is some truth to it. There's truth to what you are implying as well.

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    305. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      War: it isn't cheap

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      I think he does:

      http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/national-defense/
      http://www.ronpaul.com/2010-07-08/ron-paul-and-barney-frank-cut-military-spending/
      http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2011/06/ron-paul-joins-house-lawmakers-in-push-for-military-spending-cuts/

    306. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DarkOx · · Score: 1

      Profit is what you get when people decide something of value is worth paying for.

      If it isn't profitable, it won't happen.

      Has it occurred to you that if its not profitable that maybe it should not happen? I mean the some posts up the thread were talking about Tsunami warnings.

      My guess is the local cities and towns and large business in California, would probably decide to pay for that service and there are private entities who could provide it.

      If market can't support an activity then why should humans engage in it?

      --
      Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
    307. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Zaphod+The+42nd · · Score: 1

      The biggest savings would come from ending funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and holding steady spending across the entire Department of Defense.
      RTFA

      --
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    308. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because Libertarian nutjobs have an Agenda born from a discarded model of our government.
      Big Military, tiny useless government. It's mostly a facade so that the rich can still have their property protected.

    309. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      I think one of the big problems is people deliberately taking the word "free" out of context in order to beat up a straw-man.

      But that's just me.

    310. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chrb · · Score: 1

      "Holding steady" is not the same as "slashing"

    311. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh... huge draw downs of the military are a major part of his plan. It's listed in the same paragraph of his plan as the departmental cuts.

    312. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The demand for energy reserch, parks, education, low income housing, roads, and bridges wouldn't be eliminated. People would still need these things. Only under this plan, these things would be provided by the private sector much more efficiently. The current ditch of debt the federal government is digging is unsustainable. This plan is the only real solution to the nation's fiscal problems.

    313. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tko13 · · Score: 1

      He DOES talk about slashing the military budget, much to the chagrin of many of the neoconservatives in the party. It's a big part of this plan. His plan calls for not only an immediate withdrawal of troops from Iraq and Afghanistan, but it would cap military spending at $500 billion. He is also a strong supports bringing our troops home from nearly all of the 130+ countries they are stationed in. He is very much against the military-industrial complex and our imperial foreign policy.

    314. Re:In other words, we should give up. by J-1000 · · Score: 1

      TFA is strictly about science. If you read Ron's actual proposed budget you'll see that the VAST majority of his budget savings will come from the military.

    315. Re:In other words, we should give up. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      "Now who will create more slums and ghettos?!?!"
      They will spring up on there own. They will be called shanty towns. Crime will go up everywhere, disease will start to spread, and education will plummet.

      The vast majority of public housing is NOT slums or ghettos.

      "OMG! No more ethanol boondoggles! No more Solyndra investments! Whatever shall we do!??"
      yes. cherry pick the very few problems and ignore the fact that for the vast majority of projects, the feds are very successful.

      How many research appears have you read? studies? ever compare agency's waste to corporate waste? inefficiency? no? STFU.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    316. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Then someone opens up a bypass for Watosha County, and they lose out on vast sums of revenue from said highway, forcing them to get their act together and fix the damn road.

      Funny how market forces work, isn't it?

    317. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read his plan, he wants to end foreign wars

      http://www.ronpaul2012.com/2011/10/17/ron-paul-announces-ambitious-%E2%80%98plan-to-restore-america%E2%80%99/

    318. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Um, where have you been this whole time?

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IZg0ZYYgSWo
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpedybOR2oY
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=S7bZu4CCZdA
      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KirQwPliszQ

    319. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      If they don't want it, they can sell it to a private company to run, and they can turn it into a toll road. Problem solved.

    320. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      Ron Paul does talk about ending foreign wars, though.

    321. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's worse: local entities can build toll booths on any roads they're in charge of, and charge astronomical tolls to anyone driving through. The Federal Interstate Highway system was designed the way it was to facilitate interstate commerce without tolls (which are effective a tax on transportation, but not a uniform one like a Federal-level tax) and without localities getting in there and routing the highways in an inefficient manner hoping to drive more business to certain towns. Even with Interstates, it hasn't been perfect; many cities have strongly resisted allowing any bypasses to be built, or trying to force the highway to be built right through downtown, in the hopes that long-distance truckers would all stop downtown and go shopping.

    322. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      Actually, in the debate the other night, he said he does want to cut military spending. He wants us out of Afcrapistan, Iraq, Africa and even S Korea.

    323. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chrb · · Score: 1

      "holding steady" is not the same as "slashing".

    324. Re:In other words, we should give up. by geekoid · · Score: 1

      I would suggest we would have equitable public education.

      Yes, chop homeland security, also chop NCLB. Together that would save about 100 billion.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    325. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      If there is no money, and no prospect of money, then it is a waste of taxpayer dollars, and shouldn't have been done in the first place. Ever think of that?

    326. Re:In other words, we should give up. by sjames · · Score: 1

      That would mean the states will no longer recieve federal subsidies for those things. In turn, that means the states will have to RAISE TAXES to make ends meet. Either the federal government will correspondingly lower taxes (and so no help for balancing the budget) or it's a stealth tax hike with the states as the scape goat.

      I have an alternative plan. Pull the U.S. military back inside the U.S. If anyone "out there" wants our military support, show them a rate card. Because we don't need to deepen the unemployment problem, keep the people, just quit expending million dollar bombs and other non-personnel costs. Offer everyone on stop loss the opportunity to leave if they want. Surely that could save us $100 billion a year and not require the states to puck up any slack. It might also cut back on the reasons for people to hate us.

    327. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      It can't be worse than you insulting people that disagree with you instead of contributing to a civil dialog with people who don't necessarily share your point of view.

      I find the "big government" argument from the right very questionable since when it comes to budget cuts they only promote cuts in areas favored by the left. Yet the programs they favor continue at previous or even more generous spending levels. For example, what makes ensuring continued domestic oil and exploration with generous subsidies an important national issue and not diversifying our energy portfolio by spending money on research and development by government laboratories?

      Which can't be worse than making generalities based on where you perceive someone may stand.

      I am in favor of cutting subsidies on both domestic oil and and alternative energy exploration.

      Here is an example of how things work for you. The argument that companies do not do R&D is false because it is incomplete. Companies do considerable R&D. How it is done now is that companies vie for government grants to do research. So now there is a reduced R&D line but an increased revenue line. The R&D is still there, just not reflected in the financials. The cost is there, but a as a cost of sales rather than an R&D expense. The bad part is that government takes in tax dollars at 100%, squanders a significant portion to administer the redistribution of wealth, and then funds actual research at 40%-50% of what was taken in in taxes. Even worse, the research is now not funded by the applicability or merit of the work, but by the whim of the bureaucrat administering the program. Pet projects get funded while other, more useful projects that could be commercialized die.

      And while we are here, saying you are stupid and making fun of you for being slow is an insult. Stating you are waiting for bigger government to save you from big government is an accurate reflection on the fallacy of your approach.

      --
      This post comes with a double-your-money-back guarantee!
      Any offense taken to this post is at your sole discretion.
    328. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yep, what you're describing is really a failure of the Federal system as it's implemented here. In theory, the Federal government should push the states out of the way, because the highways are vital for interstate commerce, as well as for military use (that's part of the reason they were built).

    329. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      We need to resurrect Teddy Roosevelt and put him in charge again. He was a pretty conservative guy too, but he also saw the need for conservation and national parks.

    330. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      FYI, his budget called for an immediate cut of 15% to the DOD, and an immediate halt to all war funding (ie bring the troops home). Cutting the DOD budget by 100% wouldn't get us to treading water. We have to make sacrifices to bridge this budget deficit, or everything shuts down at once in the most catastrophic way possible. Do you really want a second Civil War to break out over this crap?

    331. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes... because I'm sure the states that have little money for what they are currently providing will just pick up the slack for what the federal government is currently providing. Ron Paul is advocating getting rid of those departments and their funding. Everything those departments provide will simply disappear if no one picks up the slack, and none of the states can afford to.

    332. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MachineShedFred · · Score: 1

      Two weeks ago, I drove from Washington DC to Cincinnati, OH. Here's roughly the route I took, because I-70 in Pennsylvania is perpetually under construction:

      495 beltway north to I-270 "west" (it actually runs north-northwest)
      I-270 West to I-70 West
      I-70 West to I-68 West
      I-68 West to I-79 South
      I-79 South to US Highway 50, which runs all the way to Cincinnati.

      US Highway 50, through West Virginia, was a ribbon of pristine pavement, with beautiful scenery and light traffic. It was a fantastic drive. However, immediately after crossing the Ohio River, the pavement became rutted and potholed, and was miserable in comparison.

      If the Feds aren't maintaining the Federal Highway System, why would it be any different under some other scheme? Besides, he hasn't put the Department of Transportation on the chopping block...

      --
      Slashdot still doesnâ(TM)t support Unicode after it was added to the HTML standard in 1997.
    333. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul does talk about the military budget, he talks about cutting all foreign aid and pulling all of our troops back home to save the money spent having them over seas. Do a little more research if you are interested. He wants to get out of the business of being the worlds police and get back to protecting our nation and bringing our troops home. He understands, how much money is spent on the military, he isn't going to cut their budget rather reduce their costs by having them come home.

      from his site: http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/national-defense/
      * Revitalize the military for the 21st century by eliminating waste in a trillion-dollar military budget.
      * Prevent the TSA from forcing Americans to either be groped or ogled just to travel on an airplane and ultimately abolish the unconstitutional agency.
      * Stop taking money from the middle class and the poor to give to rich dictators through foreign aid.

    334. Re:In other words, we should give up. by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      I suspect the reason is that they have a strong constitutional basis for existence, even though they are expensive.

    335. Re:In other words, we should give up. by jfrelinger · · Score: 1

      Why do we let tiny Caribbean countries use data we are already collecting for ourselves? Because we are far richer than they are and it would be cruel to not share it with them just because they are poor. (The discussion would be different if this were something that say, Canada or Europe would benefit from, that can full well afford to split costs or do it themselves.)

      also, we ship a lot of goods between the US and Caribbean, and knowing the weather effects those shipping routes.

    336. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Department of Defense [spending freeze]. (15% total reduction, all war funding ended)"

      Source: http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf

    337. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Paul has been extremely critical of the recent conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan. His plan is to stop fighting overseas conflicts, which in turn should eliminate much of the spending you mention. Here is the overview from his plan:

      SPENDING:

      Cuts $1 trillion in spending during the rst year
      of Ron Paul’s presidency, eliminating ve cabinet
      departments (Energy, HUD, Commerce, Interior, and
      Education), abolishing the Transportation Security
      Administration and returning responsibility for security
      to private property owners, abolishing corporate
      subsidies, stopping foreign aid, ending foreign wars, and
      returning most other spending to 2006 levels.

    338. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Archangel+Michael · · Score: 1

      Great, then lets vote on what are priorities for our government. Yes we need Interstate Highways, and Federal Government is good at BUILDING them. However, once built, they should be handed back to the State or Local governments for local control (and Maintenance).

      But take a long look at the Departments that are listed. How many have out lived their usefulness and utility? Energy? We can't do ANYTHING with regard to Energy because of EPA (different Dept). You can't drill or mine for because of BLM (Interior) rules. We have inter agency squabbling that just prevents progress and doesn't help any problems. Take a look at what happened after the Oil Spill in the gulf. Or Katrina.

      YES, there are some things government can do better than private sector. Lets identify EXACTLY what they are, and kill everything else.

      --
      Agent K: A *person* is smart. People are dumb, stupid, panicky animals, and you know it.
    339. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul is the only one with a sane view of the military. He would end the wars, if elected.

    340. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't tell if you're trolling or not... If not, I feel sorry for your children.

    341. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Yep, imagine what axing NOAA would do to private aviation. While big commercial carriers would buy information from for-profit weather companies, small guys simply won't bother because it'll cost too much. As a result, expect more aviation accidents. If one of them falls on your house, and you voted for axing the NOAA, you'll basically have shot yourself in the foot.

    342. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul wants to slash the military budget by 15% and also end foreign aid which mostly gets used to buy weapons anyways.

    343. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does. You're obviously not familiar with Ron Paul.

    344. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Your town could pool that money and build you a much nicer park that you would actually use, and that doesn't consist of endless thousands of square miles of non-utilized resources, or worse, resources gobbled up by well connected corporations on a no bid, possibly no-pay basis.

    345. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Clearly you don't know anything about Ron Paul. He most certainly would cut military budgets. He's also the only candidate that would bring the troops home right away.

    346. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      @chrb: While Ron Paul wants to maintain a strong DEFENSE (as opposed to militarism-there is a difference!), he's the ONLY candidate who is calling for an IMMEDIATE closure to military bases on FOREIGN soil, the IMMEDIATE end to the 'police actions' in Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya & Yemen. In regards to sending our troops into harms way, Obama has proven to be no better than Bush, McCain, Romney, Bachmann or any of the other chickenhawks.

    347. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Uhhh, you didn't pay attention. The DoD saw the largest cut, losing some $200 billion of it's budget. Further, this budget stops war funding.

    348. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Put in standardized units: ...

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      He does, but at times it isn't popular to sound like an isolationist.

    349. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's especially good for states like Arkansas who don't have enough tax income to maintain their highways. Since poor highways means you can't get more companies to setup shop in your area it should guarantee they never make it out of poverty.

    350. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you no faith in the goodness of the American people? Do you serious think that without these cabinet level positions such things are impossible?!? Or have you diluted yourself into thinking that the reason we have say public education is because of the Dept. of Ed? You do know we didn't have that one til relatively recently and yet public education managed just fine without it. And why do you believe that energy is a commodity that only gov can research? We research all kinds of other things without a cabinet level office to "guide" us.

      I just hate when I dilute myself in public...

    351. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Tupper · · Score: 1

      Uhm, according to Paul we can, must and should "Roll Back the Empire". He's about as dove-like as they come.

      He's about a mile left of Obama on defense.

    352. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      He does. That is one of the reasons traditional republicans don't take him serious, because he opposes the afganistan, iraq, and libya conflicts. That doesn't go over well with (many) veterans. When he says we wants to cut back on federal power, he isn't kidding. I'm sure he would cut back our involvement with united nations and NATO. Of course he wouldn't get rid of the military all together, because that is explicitly in the constitution.

    353. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      And where are YOUR solutions, Mr. Fancy-pants?

      You seem to be naught but ad hominem and irrational hatred.

    354. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

      Oh thank god. A scrap of reason in a storm of stupid. The point about economies of scale really needed to be brought to this discussion.

      Many of these efficiency-obsessed small-government types haven't thought their cunning plan all the way through. Actually, in many cases, I'd say you could end that sentence after the word "thought".

    355. Re:In other words, we should give up. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The 1993 version of the Internet didn't look like this. Trust me on that one.

    356. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except he does oppose all the wars we're in, and wants us to pull out of our military bases in every other country. That certainly will lower military spending.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Political_positions_of_Ron_Paul#Non-intervention

    357. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He constantly talks about pulling out of our ridiculously expensive wars. You could at least do 10s of research before you spout bullshit.

    358. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ironjaw33 · · Score: 1

      I'm saying that local entities are only responsible to their local constituents. If a local entity is 100% in charge, they can let their section of the road go 100% to ruin if they don't want it there.

      This is exactly what is happening where I live in Virginia. Funding for rural secondary roads comes entirely from state revenue, and where I live, many of those roads are being churned up into gravel because there isn't enough money to go around. Virginia is known for its balanced budgets and fiscal responsibility but it comes at the expense of stuff like road maintenance. If there wasn't federal highway funding, the interstates in Virginia would suffer the same fate -- admittedly some of them are getting quite close to gravel as it is.

    359. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Indeed. Especially since we all know that the various states are rolling in dough.

    360. Re:In other words, we should give up. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The Eurozone has been around since 1999 as an accounting entity. Twelve years later, it's about to explode. The United States has been around, under its current government, since 1787, and under its current federal relationship since 1865. Obviously, there's something different here.

    361. Re:In other words, we should give up. by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      But combine budget cuts with pullling out of Iraq and Afghanistan overnight, and your actual spending of "defense" drops considerably.

    362. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Dasher42 · · Score: 1

      And remember, since he doesn't believe in redistributing wealth, those who've profited over all the shenanigans to date and concentrated the wealth will have an open season on the rest of us the robber barons could only dream of!

    363. Re:In other words, we should give up. by rahvin112 · · Score: 4, Informative

      In response you you list of inventions. DOD, DOD, NASA, DOD, DOD, NASA, DOT (Interior), EPA (Interior). Electrical was a mix of the rural electric loan program and state and local investment including eminent domain purchases.

      Nothing you listed would have happened without federal involvement, either in providing the research money or planning the result.

    364. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://tinyurl.com/3fwsbg6
      It really says something to see that his biggest supporters are the armed forces. They want to end all the overseas bullshit too.

      I can't believe I have to do this for slashdot. this place used to be the last bastion of intelligence _

    365. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In his plan (http://ronpaul2012.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5fe6ba5e2c7e9376850ed45ac&id=bfc0992023&e=8c0ac983f9) , he plans to freeze all defense spending, and reduce funds by 15%.

    366. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      Go read the actual article. He specifically discusses slashing military budgets by ending all foreign wars and foreign aid.

    367. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does, actually. He says the one of the first things he'd do in office is bring all the troops home immediately -- from Iraq, Afghanistan, Germany, Japan, South Korea etc. and eliminate all the spending that goes along with it.

    368. Re:In other words, we should give up. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      the CDC

      So far as I know, every state already has a Department of Health, and they are indeed responsible for tracking epidemics within their own borders.

    369. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The race, gender, and sexual orientation of the current president has absolutely nothing to do with this discussion.

      The forefathers knew that a small federal government with limited powers was best. I agree with that. The federal government has gotten bigger and the efficiency of our tax money has gone down over the past 30 years. I don't believe this is a coincidence, but if you ask me for proof, I'll ask you to prove otherwise. Show me how the governments increase in size and power has improved efficiency.

    370. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul's budget addresses the military spending on foreign wars in the exact same sentence as the cuts to these cabinet departments. His outlined budget below that has the Department of Defense listed first amongst the departments whose discretionary spending would be frozen. While your point is well made, Ron Paul already agrees with your premise, and always mentions military spending as the number one thing that needs to stop to help fix the budget. Perhaps you should take a look at the actual document that this article is mentioning as you may realize that Ron Paul is on your side and is the only one that isn't peddling a bunch of half-truths and lies about the economy, budgets and politics in general. Ron Paul's Budget Plan

      SPENDING:
      "Cuts $1 trillion in spending during the first year
      of Ron Paul’s presidency, eliminating five cabinet
      departments (Energy, HUD, Commerce, Interior, and
      Education), abolishing the Transportation Security
      Administration and returning responsibility for security
      to private property owners, abolishing corporate
      subsidies, stopping foreign aid, ending foreign wars, and
      returning most other spending to 2006 levels."

    371. Re:In other words, we should give up. by libertymatters · · Score: 1

      "I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?"

      You obviously are not paying any attention. "Johnny shoes up to class but does not listen during the lesson"
      As Commander-in-chief he will close down all the military bases outside the US. He will bring the troops home. He will stop all foreign aid.
      Stop the spending!
      End the FED
      Ron Paul 2012

    372. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Aryden · · Score: 1

      TVA?

    373. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His proposal does indeed slash over 500 billion (with a B) dollars from military spending, including ending ALL foreign wars and nation building, and bringing our troops home from the 125 countries they are currently stationed in. He talks about this all the time, and included it very prominently in his budget plan, which I can only assume you haven't read.

      "No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us."

      - What a poor understanding of how government works on state and local levels, along with how private industry works. Energy is a HUGE private industry that will continue to invest in research and produce results well after these cuts were made. See, there is a rather large market for low cost and green energies right now (from the people who buy these energies, certainly not from the federal government), and thus there is huge potential for profits - something everyone is willing to invest in. Parks, education, low income housing, roads, bridges - these are local and state jurisdictions (excepting of course our national parks, which don't just turn into Arakkis because the bureaucracies behind them left). You will end up with more direct say in how these things are managed, and they will almost certainly be better off for it.

    374. Re:In other words, we should give up. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      You have to start somewhere.

    375. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Then why the hell doesn't Ron Paul suggest cuttng out the DEA, ATF, DHS, FBI, CIA and TSA and replace them with something else. There is no reason the ATF should still exist. The DEA shouldn't either. The FBI, CIA, DHS, and TSA may as well be one institution. If there is any duplication of effort, thats where it is.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    376. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know, I know, I must be new here. But did you read the article?
      "The biggest savings would come from ending funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and holding steady spending across the entire Department of Defense."

      Ron Paul is /all about/ cutting military spending. It's kind of his thing. It's perhaps the biggest part of his whole platform.

    377. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He talks about slashing the military budget all the time. You ever heard him talk about the 700 military bases in 150 countries? I only know those figures because he mentions them in every single debate.

    378. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul is a worse snake than most of the rest of them for this reason, he is still ALL about what is politically pleasant (talking about military reductions, no matter how absurdly large the military gets, will be bad for one's career in Washington), but he has convinced people that he isn't.

      Fortunately most of the GOP 2012 Presidential field seems to be aiming for one of those handsomely rewarded Fox News talking-head positions, instead of the actual Presidency.

    379. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does mention slashing the military budget.

      I kinda don't like the slashdot summary, because pauls' plan also calls for canceling all current wars and bringing our troops home.
      The problem is, even massive cuts to our militarism (not cuts to defense, just militarism) isn't enough to balance the budget. you have to cut some domestic spending as well.

      Dr. Paul should be applauded for proposing a plan that balances the budget without axing Social Security or Medicaid/Medicare. I would rather give up the DOE and DO Education than give up the social nets.

    380. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      No one can possibly be that ignorant about his positions and proposed changes can they?

    381. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No more weather forecasting either. It's not just the US that depends on NOAA's National Hurricane Center. Many Caribbean countries that would be hard pressed to track hurricanes depend on this service.

      If these Caribbean countries depend on this service, perhaps its time they contributed to funding this service. If there is truly a need for these services being axed, why not let the market determine which ones and their true value?

    382. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know, competition can do wonders.

      Except they won't be in competition with each other.

    383. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It was downhill LONG before this.
      check out:
      http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/underground/index.htm

    384. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...

      • Energy Department's $5-billion Office of Science = 2.5 days of the military
      • $4.5-billion National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration = 2.25 days of the military
      • $750-million National Institute of Standards and Technology = 9 hours of the military
      • $1.1-billion U.S. Geological Survey = 13 hours of the military

      (Based on Forbe's estimate of the cost of being U.S. military policy being $2 billion per day If you want units solely in terms of the war in Afghanistan, that figure is $300 million per day. Adjust for other wars etc. War: it isn't cheap.)...

      Yikes! Are those numbers correct? If they are, then I've lost all respect for American people. Yes, even the poor and middle-class.

      YOU REAP WHAT YOU SOW!! If you people haven't figured that out yet and voted accordingly, then I don't even want to know you let alone help you. I know you Americans are bad at math but jeez guys - FIGURE IT OUT!!

    385. Re:In other words, we should give up. by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      It's not just county's, though, it's the state level, too. While it may seem like less densely populated states would suffer, those through roads would pay for themselves with taxes generated from the sales of gasoline/food/hotel rooms. Yes, I've driven across country several times... every state got something from me. It may be the case that the state needs to charge higher taxes - but that's fine, if people find the road useful, they'll pay it rather than go around for the same reason people pay higher hotel taxes to visit Florida.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    386. Re:In other words, we should give up. by asher09 · · Score: 1

      I am an organic chemist whose salary comes entirely from federal research grants (mainly from NIH). However, the same kind of money can come from many different federal depts. I do development of new cancer drugs. Believe it or not, I could get money for that from DoD (don't ask me why DoD have grant money for cancer drugs), NFS, or the state and not just from NIH. There are so much redundancy in the fed govt that just because DoE goes, it doesn't mean all of the research activities done through them will cease. Stuff done through USGS, etc could be done through DoD or other depts in place.

      Less redundancy will mean less bureaucracy and less money wasted. Also it will mean that researches won't have to submit different forms of grant applications to different depts (this sucks up so much time!) and their research may become more efficient! These are the important details that average nay-sayers won't understand. Go Ron Paul!

      --
      Some were yelling one thing, some another. Most of them had no idea what was going on or why they were there. Acts19:32
    387. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Mab_Mass · · Score: 1

      First of all, I agree with what you said.

      On the flip side, though, there are a lot people labeling taxation as theft without recognizing the benefit (ie, roads, schools, safe food, etc.) that are purchased through taxes.

    388. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bullhockey I say!

      the problem with "declining test scores" comes from programs to include as many people as possible in the education process. (the inclusion principle)

      before this was a part of the agenda, disabled/retarded/socially inept /agressive/pregnant minors were either pushed out the door, or never allowed in, as a general rule.

      This is also why the "private schools do better" idea is a sham.

      Look at it this way....I get to take my pick of all comers for a baseball team and you get stuck with what's left, including amputees...then I extoll how much better a coach I am when my team gets more runs.

      When everyone who wants (or even does not want) is included, as opposed to a select few who can pass a standard, the average will go down.

      It doesn't mean education is worse, it means we educate even the ones who won't look good on test scores.

      See "St Elsewhere"

    389. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Actually Ron Paul has mentioned on a few occasions that the States should have no obligation to pay for peoples damages or to bail them out if they live in the Gulf near the ocean, as its expected there will be hurricanes. Nice try though. Hes also on record for saying he wants both wars to end, and he wants to slash a bunch of government agencies out of the picture. Frankly, this is a good idea. What pisses me off is his choice of agencies, as if it will make even a dent in the problem. I don't see anything wrong with the Fed's monitoring weather and earthquakes if not simply just to warn people about it. Earthquakes and weather go across state borders and affect multiple states. However, I do find it ridiculous that the Feds get involved in State matters like whether or not drugs are legal, what the drinking age is, and forcing people to wear seat belts. Why the hell wouldn't you slash the ATF? Theres no more gangsters and alcohol prohibition, and firearms are fucking legal in the US. What about the DEA? Isn't their responsibility better left to the local police and the States? We don't need them. Why do we need the DHS, TSA, FBI, and CIA all doing the same shit? Cut them and make it a different agency responsible for all 4 jobs. Why do we need 4 branches of Military, being the Coast Guard, the Navy, the Army and the Airforce? Marines are technically Navy (oh boy the marines are gonna get pissed!). Why not just make it all the same group? Lets cut out redundancy.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    390. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

      Its not to late to come back I am sure the nicer bits could join Canada or Rejoin the UK (as you all love Liz II so much)

      I will now run and Hide :-)

    391. Re:In other words, we should give up. by teg · · Score: 1

      For all the pissing and moaning about evil corporations (much of which I agree with), you seem to miss the fact that these wouldn't have the power you abhor in a free market. They only have all these magical, mystical and evil powers over us because the government allows (and encourages) it. Without the guns of government behind them, the largest corporations in the world would be inert.

      Actually, the only free market is a regulated market. Merging and raising barriers to entry is far more profitable to corporations than competition - competition is why the free market is beneficial to society.

    392. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you an idiot?

      Internet, GPS, microwave, space program incl. going to the Moon, the highway system were implemented by the government.

      5, Insightful... Oh, the humanity, how many morons are on /.

    393. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mjwalshe · · Score: 1

      Bell labs was funded by a Monopoly provider.

    394. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, he's getting rid of NIST, you cant you standardized units.

    395. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First off, the Department of Education in various forms has been around since 1867 either as a department, an "Office of Education," part of the "Department of the Interior," and in 1953 it was a full Department again under a different name, "Department of Health, Education, and Welfare."

      The only thing that happened in 1979 was that it became a cabinet level department. And its functions, such as advancing adult education and education for the homeless, along with (trying) to help homeless people with education, and helping student aid would be taken over by nobody. The fact that utterly uninformed posts like the parent get modded up as "informative" is one of the reasons I don't post here much anymore (that and forcing me to format my posts in html -- who does that anymore?)

    396. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does.

      Note: He does distinguish between defense spending and spending on militarism.

    397. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      dream on
      http://www.sltrib.com/sltrib/politics/52745427-90/state-park-parks-county.html.csp
      states are cutting funds also

    398. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Military is one of the few roles that is clearly defined for as the federal government's responsibility.

    399. Re:In other words, we should give up. by fnj · · Score: 1

      Bullshit. You don't think weather and hurricanes were being forecast before 1970? That was when a bloke name of Nixon decided he wasn't spending enough money already and proposed creating NOAA.

      You'd be wrong. The first dedicated weather reconnaissance squadron was created in 1944. Hurricane hunter aircraft were active in the 40's, 50's, and 60's. The first weather satellite was orbited in 1960, and many others followed. All without NOAA.

      NOAA is a layer of bureaucracy which somehow we did without prior to 1970. You remember, the entire period when the US was booming. NOAA is currently busy wiping out some long established fishing industries. Paul has studied the whole system of bureaucracies and concluded this is one which it would improve efficiency to do without. If you have other information, by all means produce it. It's going to be a tough sell to analytical thinking people, though. It's well known that larger bureaucracies pyramid waste and always find more and more things to stick their nose into.

    400. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MrRobahtsu · · Score: 1

      Crime will go up everywhere, disease will start to spread, and education will plummet.

      The quality of education has declined every year since Carter created the Dept. of Education. It started declining before that, but the Dept. obviously has done very little good, and likely, more harm.

      The vast majority of public housing is NOT slums or ghettos.

      Even if that is true (and I don't think it is), almost all slums and getthos are public housing, and federal intrusion virtually always ruins the neighborhood.

      How many research appears have you read? studies? ever compare agency's waste to corporate waste? inefficiency? no?

      Actually, I've never read a research appear, whatever that is. Corporations don't spend my money or force me at gunpoint to donate to them. I don't care how private individuals spend their money, it's none of my business. Your analogy has no validity.

      STFU

      Well, there it is. I bow to your impeccable logic and persuasive prose. How could I possibly disagree with such eloquence and rational discourse.

    401. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess ending two wars is not a military spending cut?

      A quick Google search kicked up his general position on military spending cuts. Turns out he's not big on military waste.
      http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rep-barney-frank/why-we-must-reduce-milita_b_636051.html
      http://www.ronpaul.com/2010-05-28/press-conference-cut-wasteful-military-spending/

      He is incredibly anti-war and believes that having bases around the world is detrimental to foreign relations. As such he would ultimately close those bases so they no longer need funding. He does not believe that having a military industrial complex is a good idea (nor an education industrial complex apparently). Your statement implies that he is typical of neo-con's and their nonsense of ever expanding militarism, he is flatly not.

    402. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His plan is to end the wars, not cut the department of defense. I'm guessing that's why it wasn't included in the summary, as it's not removing a department.

    403. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'd start with the theory that one mouth gets one voice, and no more.

      A corporation, ideally, should not get to speak in that sense - the people within it can (and do) already speak. Allowing the corporation to "speak" gives the people within it a 2nd mouth.

      Of course, this falls flat on its face when applied to the NYT.

      Perhaps a way around it, though, is to define what "speaking" is. A person giving money - sure. A corporation giving money... I'd say not. Otherwise, you'd be giving the people within that corporation a 2nd mouth.

      A corporation can not be allowed the same rights as a person until we can slam it up against a wall and blow it's head off, rape its wife in front of it, or throw it in jail for 900 years. Until that day - it is NOT a person. People are hostage to the most primitive levels of accountability. If we resist the law, we get tased, beaten, and eventually killed if we persist. Corporations are allowed to settle with giving you a pair of iTunes gift certificates and... uh, well, that's it.

    404. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      he does.

    405. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Zaphod+The+42nd · · Score: 1

      "ending funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan"

      --
      GCS/MU/P d- s:- a-- C++++$ UL++ P+ L++ E+ W++ N o K- w--- O M+ V- PS+++ PE Y+ PGP t+ 5- X R++ tv+ b++ DI++ D++ G+ e++ h-
    406. Re:In other words, we should give up. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      How can States compete at all, if 35% of income is stolen by the federal government and then 'distributed' (stolen further) to all the special interests?

      How can States compete in anything with all the federal mandates? All the federal spending? All the federal regulations? All the federal subsidies? All the federal taxes?

      There is a huge monopoly and it's seated in the only place in USA where there is still a "housing boom" and where the mean salary is still 121000USD/year - Washington DC.

    407. Re:In other words, we should give up. by AnotherVBDude · · Score: 1

      You obviously missed the part in his plan about the half a trillion or so dollars in defense department cuts, including bringing our troops home from Afghanistan, Iraq, Korea, Germany, and the 100+ other countries where we have them stationed.

    408. Re:In other words, we should give up. by jvkjvk · · Score: 1

      Until they sold it to a geothermal power generation company, which put caps on all the geysers.

      Regards.

    409. Re:In other words, we should give up. by doug · · Score: 1

      I do like the idea of doing more stuff at the State level, and a century ago much of that would have been done at the State level. So I'm all for moving in that direction.

      But this discussion is about financing, and isn't this proposal just shifting the burden of paying for them from one layer of Government to another? That isn't really a savings, which is most likely Ron Paul's objective. Since most States already have balanced budget requirements, that would be good for the long term. But don't just dump it in the lap of the States as part of some knee-jerk reaction. A budgetary shell game is not in the best interests of the Nation, and since most States are broke right now, robbing Peter to pay Paul ain't going to work.

      - doug

      BTW: I'm just focusing on the funding issue. I know that this is actually more complicated than just funding.

    410. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Mike · · Score: 1

      ...the only free market is a regulated market

      I can't grok this. You've managed to contradict yourself in just 8 words.

    411. Re:In other words, we should give up. by cjc25 · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul talks endlessly about ending all wars and bringing the US into a militarily isolationist stance. You can dish on him for all sorts of things, but not this one, since he talks about slashing the military budget all the time.

      It almost makes you wonder how this got modded insightful...

    412. Re:In other words, we should give up. by westlake · · Score: 1

      I'm saying that local entities are only responsible to their local constituents. If a local entity is 100% in charge, they can let their section of the road go 100% to ruin if they don't want it there. And everyone else can just go suck eggs because anything else would be socialism!

      You saw this all the time in early projects like the Lincoln Highway. Someone would finance a section of road as a demonstration project and then - maybe - a neighboring community or state would build and maintain a link to more or less the same standard.

    413. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because the first role of any government is citizen's security. If government is unable to do that, then there is no need for government.

    414. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you even read his budget. Ron Paul does slash military spending.

    415. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most people don't seem capable of grasping that... the D.O. Education didn't even exist until 1979, and it's been downhill ever since it's inception

      Correlation != Causation.
      Imagine how much worse the education system would be if the Feds weren't there to stop the local idiots.

    416. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous? Well, you are pretty fucking out of it, aren't you? Paul can best be described as an isolationist. He pulls back the military to CONUS and extracts us from almost everywhere in the world, including Germany and Korea. Some of his ideas make a lot of sense.

    417. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Panaflex · · Score: 2

      Oh please... your state's DOT ***ALREADY*** maintains those freeways. Sure, there is federal funding - but that money is generally money that bounces back to the state from federal fuel taxes already.

      The Federal Government uses that bounce back as a noose on your state government right now. If your state pisses on the Feds, they don't get all their money back... e.g. Louisiana.

      Highway maintenance is primarily a function of state and local governments. The federal government spends relatively small amounts ($70 million annually) on national parks, Indian reservations, and other federal lands. For local governments - counties, towns, cities - road and street maintenance is their largest expense item.

      Get an education, fool. http://www.fhwa.dot.gov/publications/publicroads/98may/finance.cfm

      --
      I said no... but I missed and it came out yes.
    418. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bmajik · · Score: 1

      I'm undoing my mod points to post this. I can't beleive nobody has responded to you.

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      He does. _All the time_. If you knew anything about him or his plan, you'd know that.

      He is fighting the entire republican establishment on this point, and has been his entire career. He has more anti-war credibility than ANYONE in national politics and has for 30 years.

      The situation is this: our country is bankrupt. If we don't turn around its spending habits, we will come apart in a disorderly chaotic way.

      Paul is making deep hard cuts beacuse they are needed. You'll note that unlike most GOPers, he's not going after entitlements that people are dependant upon with this plan. He's going after things that can be cut without directly and immediately impacting people.

      These departments can either be eliminated in a controlled way, as Paul intends to do, or they will be eliminated when the entire global economy crashes down on top of the worthless USD.

      If you want a controlled landing, with the possibility of it being a touch-and-go, challenge yourself to learn more about Paul and the principles he abides by.

      It's a shame he's running as a republican. He left the republican party after 1988 when his personal friend and ally, Ronald Reagan, whom he helped get elected, showed that the republican establishment was simply incapable of doing the right things. Reagan had a lot of good ideas, and campaigned (and WON) on some of the same things in the Paul plan (like eliminating entire departments). But then he didn't do those things, and instead he got us into military conflicts and raised taxes and blew the debt up. To his credit, we didn't all die at the hands of the USSR.

      Of course, when Paul ran as a libertarian because of his disillusionment with the ability of visionary republicans to get anything done, he got no ballot access, no media access, no nothing.

      The game is rigged. Paul is fighting the media, the 2 party system, the GOP establishment, the Fed, the corportist media. He's against all of it and he is getting people to think about the things that their corporate and government masters don't want them to think about.

      I'd like you to think about them as well.

      Libertarianism is not for everyone, and it takes several years for many people to really come to grips with the ramifications of its principles. But if nothing else, it would be beneficial to all Americans to ask these questions more often:

      "Is this really a left/right, binary argument paradigm?"
      "Is this really a job for the federal government? Based on what?"
      "Is this really something we need a law for? A federal law?"
      "If i had a chance to vote on that, I wouldn't have voted for it. Why is it a law? Is it even a law, or just some regulation somewhere? Who votes on regulations?"

      Paul's contention isn't that the NOAA isn't a nice thing to have. His contention is that we won't have it -- or anything else -- if we continue to wreck the economy. And unlike the defense budget (which he wants to axe), the NOAA isn't plainly constitutional. And unlike the unconstitutional welfare and SS programs, the loss of the NOAA doesn't directly impact people's ability to eat.

      Don't you suppose that weather.com and a few other places would largely fill the gaps left by a gutted NOAA? Maybe not everything. Maybe not as good. But the critical functions that really make a difference in peoples lives (and the bottom line) will be picked up whether the NOAA lives on or not.

      It's always hard to cut something from a budget. But we HAVE to. And we have to cut A LOT.

      --
      My opinions are my own, and do not necessarily represent those of my employer.
    419. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul has stated often over the years he would bring home almost all troops and shut down most foreign bases in a matter of days. Consider your units Bush-Obama units, unrelated to military costs under Ron Paul.

    420. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Great. Let's go communist as that is the gurranteed way of more efficiency!
      The fact that Microsoft, Google and RIM are all producing essentially the same mobile phone OSes and put out same hardwares is not worrying you at all?

    421. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you read the plan? His military spending plan is around $200bn per year lower than the CBO baseline and more than $150bn less than Obama's military budget in the first year alone. This is by far the most serious part of his plan since it is something on which the President has the most control. This pulls us back from subsidizing the defence of foreign nations and immediately stops our involvement in all current wars of aggression (use this word instead of compassion).

    422. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meh - is it really important to test kids over that? For 90% of society, why isn't exposure to subjects like that (and religion, for that matter) enough?

    423. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      Which can't be worse than making generalities based on where you perceive someone may stand.

      From the lack of additional information from you, I had to assume you were for the exact opposite of the grandparent post.

      I am in favor of cutting subsidies on both domestic oil and and alternative energy exploration.

      Now that wasn't hard was it?

      Here is an example of how things work for you. The argument that companies do not do R&D is false because it is incomplete.

      Who said companies didn't do R&D? Please no straw man arguments.

      How it is done now is that companies vie for government grants to do research. So now there is a reduced R&D line but an increased revenue line. The R&D is still there, just not reflected in the financials. The cost is there, but a as a cost of sales rather than an R&D expense.

      Okay so you're saying that R&D funding from the government amounts to corporate welfare? I can see that argument could have some merit. I think it would be more accurate to say that government solicit proposals from public and private entities for solutions to a given problem, and the proposal that provides the most value to the tax payer wins. I think most republicans would agree with that system since it introduces privatization of research. The government still needs to be involved so that the research that is funded by taxpayers should benefit all tax payers not just the company that discovers the solution.

      The bad part is that government takes in tax dollars at 100%, squanders a significant portion to administer the redistribution of wealth, and then funds actual research at 40%-50% of what was taken in in taxes.

      Sounds like hyperbole, and your percentage of tax payers money going toward research is off by a magnitude. Anyway, care to back up these percentages? You'd be surprised how small the portion of the budget that "Obamacare" takes. When I hear "redistribution of wealth" a little red flag indicating bullshit goes off in my head. Let's try to leave the flamboyant talking points to the republican pundits. I could expound on how I also believe entitlement programs are eating up a good portion of our budget. Despite how juicy a topic that would be, it really doesn't apply to research funding does it? It's just a distraction from the main topic. Besides we wouldn't be talking about the real source of our current deficit which is tax payer money going to fund two foreign wars and the previous administration's unwillingness to raise taxes to pay for the wars which was unprecedented. I guess when Pres. Bush talked about sacrifice he wasn't talking to the millionaires. See how distracting and off topic that was?

      Even worse, the research is now not funded by the applicability or merit of the work, but by the whim of the bureaucrat administering the program. Pet projects get funded while other, more useful projects that could be commercialized die.

      Most of the proposals I've seen were vetted by a experts within the field of research. Sure there are some oddball studies like the viscosity of condiments, but there might actually be justification for such a study within the scope of the agency responsible for regulating the naming of retail foods. Otherwise, what would prevent clamato from being labeled as ketchup? Luckily the overwhelming majority of the research grants being awarded are for legitimate mainstream science research and development.

      Now let's get rid of another straw man: the unnamed government bureaucrat. It's another boogie man that fills the republican talking points. I bet you'd be surprised to know that the vast majority of non-competitive grants issued are from earmarks allocated by senators (from both parties republican and democrats alike).

      And while we are here, sayin

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    424. Re:In other words, we should give up. by guttentag · · Score: 1
      Some other numbers to chew on:
      • The New York Times says deployed soldiers overseas cost us about $1 million per year, EACH.
      • Wikipedia says that as of Dec 2010 we had 103,700 personnel in Afghanistan alone.

      What are we currently accomplishing in Afghanistan? I am not saying we're not accomplishing anything, and I'm not saying it's not important... but ask yourself, "is it worth $103.7 billion a year? Is it 9 times more important than the Energy Department's Office of Science, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the National Institute of Standards and Technology, and the U.S. Geological Survey? Because we're spending 9 times as much on Afghanistan per year as we are on all of that combined.

      Is $103.7 billion a year in Afghanistan keeping us safe? Or is it just giving us a reason to keep giving the Pakistanis money that they use to pay terrorists to attack us there so we'll keep giving them money? A strike team killed Bin Laden, not a 103,000-person army. A drone killed Awlaki in Yemen last month. Diplomacy and support killed Qaddafi today. As a superpower in the 21st century, huge combat forces don't win wars, they are political liabilities and drains on the economic strength of the country.

    425. Re:In other words, we should give up. by blind+biker · · Score: 1

      Nothing you listed would have happened without federal involvement, either in providing the research money or planning the result.

      That was exactly the point of the GP post.

      --
      "The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
    426. Re:In other words, we should give up. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Where the fuck were you 3 years ago, when the Bush years and the abomination of the DHS were still in full swing? Yeah, nowhere. That's because you are ok with a large government, as long as it says the things you want it to say, and as long as the people at the top are your people.

      Not to mention that if you want to make an assertion, it is up to you to provide the evidence for it. Otherwise, you're just playing rhetorical games, hoping that no one will notice that you have no leg to stand on.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    427. Re:In other words, we should give up. by AnotherVBDude · · Score: 1

      You may disagree with him, but he is probably the one politician you can't call a hypocrite. Even though, as you point out, he is from a gulf district his is not for federal disaster relief and has called for the elimination of FEMA. He has also spoken out for years against federally subsidized flood insurance, which he claims encourages people to build homes in areas that are more likely to be hit by hurricanes.

    428. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's demanded slashing the military budget for decades. In the last fucking Republican debate he was the only one on stage that suggested cutting the military budget AT ALL.

    429. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does mention the military budget. He wants to quit investing money in land grabbing by our military and nation building efforts.

      that is also included in this plan which a lot of people have failed to represent here. In total the savings would be around 1 trillion USD this year and ballance our budget in 3 years!

      Who can say No to that except people who want the government to pander to their every need, and in tandem fix other country's problems?

    430. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul talks about slashing the military budget in every debate. Why is this modded +5?

    431. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Panaflex · · Score: 1

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      With the wars over, we would return to pre-war funding levels.... which is still a mountain of cash, but not Mt. Everest.

      --
      I said no... but I missed and it came out yes.
    432. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does! He would bring ALL troops home from All overseas bases.

    433. Re:In other words, we should give up. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      And without the guns of the government in front of them, they would hire their own. Take a wild guess as to what form of government most closely resembles a corporation.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    434. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you spent 5 minutes reviewing anything Ron Paul has written or said in the last decade you'd see he's very much in favor of that, too.

    435. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually we should privatize the Government.

    436. Re:In other words, we should give up. by defaria · · Score: 1

      Oh I don't know, perhaps because defending the country is explicitly mentioned in the Constitution as a illegitimate power and reason for having a government and Energy, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, National Institute of Standards and Technology and USGS are not?

    437. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf

      If you read the whole plan he does talk about it.

    438. Re:In other words, we should give up. by BetterSense · · Score: 1

      He does plan to cut the department of Defense by 15% and cut "all war funding". I assume that means a lot of these defense dollars would be redirected into domestic defense programs and maybe even (gasp) research, instead of being pissed away overseas.
      RTFPDF
      http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf

    439. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      maybe you guys should read his plan before pretending to be a smart

      Cuts $1 trillion in spending during the first year
      of Ron Paul’s presidency, eliminating five cabinet
      departments (Energy, HUD, Commerce, Interior, and
      Education), abolishing the Transportation Security
      Administration and returning responsibility for security
      to private property owners, abolishing corporate
      subsidies, stopping foreign aid, ending foreign wars, and
      returning most other spending to 2006 levels.

      pdf

    440. Re:In other words, we should give up. by compro01 · · Score: 1

      Yes, the entity known as the United States Department of Education did not exist until 1979.

      Prior to that, it was part of the United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare.

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    441. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We already have privatized a lot of the operations the military use to and it costs us a LOT more - it's called Xe, formerly Blackwater. Google Blackwater legal issues and you will find enough stuff to make your head spin.

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/09/30/AR2007093001352.html

    442. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Overzeetop · · Score: 2

      Yes, they pay for it. But they do not pay for all of it, as they would. The whole reason the US level things exist is so that those areas with disproportionate resource needs which are shared by the collective population are not the sole financial responsibility of the local residents.

      We may disagree which programs rise to that level, but nearly everyone benefits from a federal program they would not like to pay for in full, our of their own pocket.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    443. Re:In other words, we should give up. by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Basically your attitude just guarantees that states like Montana and Idaho will have a lot of counties with shitty roads, because even though you have to travel through those places to get to where you want to go, not enough people live there to support building nice wide highways through them. I guess we're stuck driving through affluent counties to get where we need to go, even though that means we may have to take a *really* long, inefficient route to get there.

      What's that you say? Have the state government handle building the highways? Alright, so now the states can basically afford to interconnect cities within them with decent highways going through the sparsely populated areas. But now we have the problem that states like Idaho and Montana and North Dakota and places with low populations still can't afford to connect their large cities with large cities in other states with interstate highways. So maybe have the federal government step in there and build necessary infrastructure?

      How about we just agree that for local roads, it makes the most sense to let local governments to build them. For state highways, it makes the most sense for state governments to build them. For the federal interstate system, it makes the most sense to have the federal government handle that. Oh hey, that's already the system we have! Great! Now we can quit bitching about how roads get paid for!

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    444. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Darinbob · · Score: 1

      Then why not all departments? Why just those select few? It's because those are hot button issues with some radical parts of the Republican voter base. Left in place in his plan are Departments of Agriculture, Defense, Health and Human Services, Homeland Security, Justice, Labor, State, Transportation, Treasury, and Veterans Affairs.

      For instance Department of Agriculture has many problems and is a bit outdated, why not merge that into Department of Commerce? Because that would annoy the farmer voting bloc. Homeland Security is a joke and should be broken up and merged to Justice or State, but that would annoy the "what about the terrists?" contingent.

    445. Re:In other words, we should give up. by metiscus · · Score: 1

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      Mostly because he would probably end our ongoing attempts at maintaining an overseas empire. His history of opposition to offensive warfare is pretty well documented. As are his positions on military spending.

    446. Re:In other words, we should give up. by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      They test kids on everything nowadays. If it's worth teaching, it's worth testing to see if it was learned, and to perhaps notice when there are better (or worse) ways to educate kids, at least that's the theory.

    447. Re:In other words, we should give up. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      I don't know, competition can do wonders

      And there's nothing like a geographical monopoly to encourage competition...

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    448. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No more weather forecasting either. It's not just the US that depends on NOAA's National Hurricane Center. Many Caribbean countries that would be hard pressed to track hurricanes depend on this service.

      Then maybe they should start paying for that service.

    449. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul is following the Constitution and nothing more.

      Long story short, the federal government is fuck-all huge and it isn't supposed to be.

      I'm torn on him a bit. I like his ideas in principle, and I like his track record when it comes to voting. On the other hand I don't know how well we'd do without a lot of the more useful things the federal government provides. I don't think cutting everything very quickly is a realistic situation, but he is right that a lot of things do need to be cut and consolidated. We have a lot of unnecessary redundancy everywhere and are wasting billions (if not a few trillion) on it.

    450. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      MOD PARENT UP

    451. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bloodmusic · · Score: 1

      I'd hate to think that the sole litmus test for any scientific endeavor would become "is there any money in it".

    452. Re:In other words, we should give up. by HandleMyBidness · · Score: 1

      I homeschool - my kids kick ass and I don't need your fucking State education.

      Translation: I am wealthy enough to not work, fuck you.

    453. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Overzeetop · · Score: 3, Insightful

      And there are lots of US citizens who have property and part time residences there.

      And it makes us a good neighbor. Just because you're nice to somebody doesn't make you a tree-hugging, money-spending, tax-and-spend liberal. Just as home schooling your kids doesn't make you a evangelist-christian, gun-totin', xeno-and-homophobic conservative.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    454. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First off why don't we just get rid of all foreign aid. We give BILLIONS to countries that hate US. Then start up manufacturing again beings that is what the USA was built on. Then pull back all our troops and put them to work on our boarders Building walls and shooting at anyone that tries to pass them illegally. Before you go on a rant of how racist I am and that I hate Mexicans I'd like to say YOUR 100% Wrong I eat at Taco bell all the time. Honestly though the chances of anyone trying to dirty bomb the US and them sneaking over the boarder between Mexico and the US is very high so we need to secure that boarder.

    455. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Ihmhi · · Score: 1

      That's how the game is played. If a layman wanted to cut stuff, they'd likely cut huge things that they view as money sinks like defense. Give Budget Hero a playthrough or three and you'll get some major insight into this.

      They never threaten to cut the things that could easily be cut without hurting anyone but the private contractors who have their hands around a politician's dick. It's always stuff like medicare or social security or something that's actually somewhat useful. Then, the people throw a fit and the cuts don't get made. Repeat as necessary.

    456. Re:In other words, we should give up. by sycodon · · Score: 1

      No one was ever educated before the Education Department was created?

      The people who put men on the moon with nothing more than slide rules and drafting paper were educated without the Department of Education.

      The people who designed and built the SR-71, did so without benefit of the Department of Education.

      Oh, wait...the people at Occupy my Ass were educated after the Department of Education was created....so there ya go.

      --
      When Fascism comes to America, it will call itself Anti-Fascism, and tell you to give up your guns.
    457. Re:In other words, we should give up. by compro01 · · Score: 1

      When I was in school there was no Department of Education.

      I'll take it you're in your 70s then.

      Or does the United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare not count?

      --
      upon the advice of my lawyer, i have no sig at this time
    458. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Put in standardized units:

      • Energy Department's $5-billion Office of Science = 2.5 days of the military
      • $4.5-billion National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration = 2.25 days of the military
      • $750-million National Institute of Standards and Technology = 9 hours of the military
      • $1.1-billion U.S. Geological Survey = 13 hours of the military

      (Based on Forbe's estimate of the cost of being U.S. military policy being $2 billion per day If you want units solely in terms of the war in Afghanistan, that figure is $300 million per day. Adjust for other wars etc. War: it isn't cheap.)

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      1. While the proposed is eliminating many departments. many of the functions will be moved to other places. Cost savings. (Note no one mentions that, I wonder why)
      2. If you had *ANY* clue about Dr Paul's stances you would know he wants to close almost all over seas bases, end all the wars, bring our troops home. Seriously, have you even spent 5 seconds looking into Dr. Paul's plan?
      He also wants to get rid of the Patriot Act and other crap like that, seriously cutting DHS spending. Also, no more intrusive TSA; go back to *sane* security screening.
      Imagine the cost savings.
      Imagine the Freedom.

    459. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He discusses that issue all the time. He wants to close down the military bases that we have in 175 countries around the world.

    460. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Ben4jammin · · Score: 1

      From TFA: The biggest savings would come from ending funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and holding steady spending across the entire Department of Defense.

      I wonder why people can't be bothered to even read the SUMMARY of his plan contained in the article. While not a Ron Paul supporter, even I know that he generally supports ending foreign involvement that requires defense expenditures

    461. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Typical libertarian nonsense: it's all waste and graft, unless it's my pet interest, then it's an essential part of the social contract. It's a movement that's just as delusional as Communism.

      Um, that's his job - to represent and get for his constituents that which they are legally entitled. What he would prefer versus what he is required to do are two completely different things. Unless you are very lucky, I'll bet there are aspects of your job which you would rather have non-existent...

    462. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From the Oct 18 debate:

      COOPER: You’re proposing a 15 percent cut to the Defense Department. Can you guarantee national security will not be hurt by that?

      PAUL: I think it would be enhanced. I don’t want to cut any defense. And you have to get it straight. There’s a lot of money spent in the military budget that doesn’t do any good for our defense. How does it help us to keep troops in Korea all these years? We’re broke. We have to borrow this money.Why are we in Japan? Why do we subsidize Germany, and they subsidize their socialized system over there? Because we pay for it. We’re broke.

      >> So as you can see he has proposed cuts in the military by withdrawing from Korea, Japan and Germany.

    463. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chrb · · Score: 1

      He proposes holding DoD budget steady to restore to 2006 levels, not exactly what I would call "slashing" when compared to his approach to other Departments (ie. get rid of them).. though ending war budget will have some effect at $100b/yr that is only 50 days of total military spending. No proposed cuts to other things like CIA & NSA black budget, maybe he is waiting to see what the budget actually is, though I suspect he already has some idea and could comment on cuts there if he wanted to.. but still, he does propose bigger cuts than others.

    464. Re:In other words, we should give up. by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

      We have NOAA, the NWS, NASA, and the FAA all doing weather forecasting and forecast dispersal. That right there is an example of the waste and fraud perpetrated on the public by an overly large federal government.

    465. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We are privatizing the military... Let's see... Dyncorp can pay a truck driver with a CDL 413,000 a year. They can pay a police officer who trains afgahan police $109000 a year.

      I've read Ron's books, and I've read Confessions of an Economic Hitman. Yes, we should also slash the military... which we wouldn't need if we'd just quit screwing around in other countries.... like Libya.

    466. Re:In other words, we should give up. by jittles · · Score: 1

      Did Ron Paul indicate how he would run the NHC without NOAA? I'm not saying that they couldn't track the weather without the bureaucracy of NOAA, but it sounds like he is just willfully slashing departments without indicating that the valuable services provided by those departments will be continued. Sure you could relegate the weather forecasting to a private company, but I don't believe that would be in the best interest of the people. And lets face it, if you cut NOAA and move the NHC over to the DOD or something to that effect, the DOD will add bureaucracy to oversee the actions of the NHC. Will there be a net gain in savings? Perhaps, but I'd be willing to bet his numbers are overly optimistic on that front.

    467. Re:In other words, we should give up. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      There is direct and indirect return on investment. The economy as a whole benefits from the existence of well maintained infrastructure, but that infrastructure is often not profitable on its own. More importantly, trying to make a profit on the infrastructure can reduce the amount that people are willing to use it. This retards the growth of any industries that make use of the infrastructure.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    468. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chrb · · Score: 1

      I am sceptical of the official story about all the so-called "gains" in Afghanistan. This graph is partly the reason. PR men from the military tell us we are winning and have broken the Taliban. The figures tell us that we have had more casualties in the last 12 months than any other 12 month period since the war began. If we have broken the Taliban, shouldn't coalition casualties have gone down?

    469. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Mike · · Score: 1

      But of course that would be a legitimate function of a government: to stop one from aggressing upon another.

      And to my knowledge, no form of government resembles a corporation.

    470. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Nemesisghost · · Score: 1

      You obviously haven't been driving across county boundaries much or on something that's not a federal interstate. Between where I live and where the rest of my family lives there are about 10 counties. The roads drastically change at each county line. Sometimes it is just a change in pavement, other times the roads get way worse.

    471. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      I think it would be more accurate to say that government solicit proposals from public and private entities for solutions to a given problem, and the proposal that provides the most value to the tax payer wins. I think most republicans would agree with that system since it introduces privatization of research. The government still needs to be involved so that the research that is funded by taxpayers should benefit all tax payers not just the company that discovers the solution.

      Ideally, it works the way you "think". In reality, it does not. Quite a bit of the research dollars are spent on fairly wide open grants, chosen at the whim of a selection committee that, while theoretically independent, has an interest in keeping in the good graces of the person with the purse strings. I am familiar with it, because as much as I hate the game, these are the rules of the day and refusing to play will put people other than myself out of work.

      Sounds like hyperbole, and your percentage of tax payers money going toward research is off by a magnitude. Anyway, care to back up these percentages? You'd be surprised how small the portion of the budget that "Obamacare" takes. When I hear "redistribution of wealth" a little red flag indicating bullshit goes off in my head. Let's try to leave the flamboyant talking points to the republican pundits. I could expound on how I also believe entitlement programs are eating up a good portion of our budget. Despite how juicy a topic that would be, it really doesn't apply to research funding does it? It's just a distraction from the main topic. Besides we wouldn't be talking about the real source of our current deficit which is tax payer money going to fund two foreign wars and the previous administration's unwillingness to raise taxes to pay for the wars which was unprecedented. I guess when Pres. Bush talked about sacrifice he wasn't talking to the millionaires. See how distracting and off topic that was?

      Excuse me for not being completely specific. The 100% for R&D was relative to 100% of the tax dollars spent on R&D, not the entire budget. You are absolutely correct that the R&D expenditure is trivial compared to entitlement programs. And as though the R&D expenditures are wildly inefficient, I would choose to keep them over entitlement programs in a heartbeat. As flawed as they are, the R&D expenditures do produce useful results, and the system could be improved.

      No, I don't care to backup the numbers relating to the inefficiencies of government. It varies by agency and the actual percentage is not necessarily relevant to the point unless you intend to argue that government is perfectly efficient. For the sake of discussion I'll spot you 20 points and still content the government taking in taxes to "invest" the money elsewhere is a wildly inefficient system of wealth redistribution that only rewards government bloat.

      Again, you falsely label me as a Republican and assume I think Bush was great. Bush started a massive invasion and attempted erosion of our rights that Obama has continued and expanded. You assume I believe Obama is full of shit, and you are correct. However, your assumption of my view of Bush is incorrect, as he was full of shit as well.

      Most of the proposals I've seen were vetted by a experts within the field of research. ... Luckily the overwhelming majority of the research grants being awarded are for legitimate mainstream science research and development.

      Now let's get rid of another straw man: the unnamed government bureaucrat. It's another boogie man that fills the republican talking points. I bet you'd be surprised to know that the vast majority of non-competitive grants issued are from earmarks allocated by senators (from both parties republican and democrats alike).

      You need to see more proposals. The title of "expert" in the organization is loosely applied. Kind of like "sanit

      --
      This post comes with a double-your-money-back guarantee!
      Any offense taken to this post is at your sole discretion.
    472. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Another obvious thing is that the degree of integration attempted here has dubious rationalization. Why should Greece and Germany be part of the same political union?

    473. Re:In other words, we should give up. by siride · · Score: 1

      lolwut? First of all, the NWS is part of NOAA. So that dumb argument goes out the window. The FAA doesn't do any weather forecasting of its own that I know of. The NWS produces aviation forecasts, which are used by airports (who might have their own forecasters, but that's not a government thing). If NASA does any forecasting, it's for things relevant to launches and landing and is probably more specific than the NWS is able to provide. It makes sense that NASA would do its own forecasting.

      This is hardly an example of waste and fraud. And again, for the price tag of 4.5 billion dollars, we, the American people, are getting a damn good deal: best weather monitoring network in the world, one of the best suite of models, top notch research, high quality forecasts, freely available data that can be used for public, private and academic purposes, and so on. If you want to go on a government waste rant, at least pick a department that really is throwing away a huge amount of money with no returns.

    474. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      First thing's first, if I'm going to have to buy every breath I take, then the banks must give up their stranglehold on the flow of currency. I am not interested in playing along with the capitalists if something that costs me $0.05 in taxes ends up costing me $5 because of the middle-men taking their 50 cents plus a cut.

      Microtransactions or bust!

    475. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      That would mean the states will no longer recieve federal subsidies for those things.

      Excellent. This eliminates a considerable abuse of power by the federal government.

      In turn, that means the states will have to RAISE TAXES to make ends meet.

      Or even simpler, not pay for the service that the subsidy/bribe was for.

      I have an alternative plan. Pull the U.S. military back inside the U.S. If anyone "out there" wants our military support, show them a rate card.

      Won't work since the decision making is "in here" not "out there". I would welcome substantial cuts in military budget, but we shouldn't delude ourselves that the US won't get militarily involved in foreign affairs on a frequent basis.

    476. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But he IS talking about slashing our militarism (which is different than defense) spending.

      Ron Paul's plan includes bringing ALL foreign troops home, which includes no longer having our troops in Germany, South Korea, and Japan.

      How much money do you think we'll save by closing 900 military bases on foreign soil and bringing ALL of our troops home?

    477. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      These are valid concerns. But something is better than nothing. Successfully reducing and/or eliminating some departments would lower the barrier to doing the same to some of these other departments.

    478. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are individual 50 states for a reason. His views are States rights, and that States know better for their population on how to re-distribute funds. No more $1 Trillion+ spent on the war on drugs would be another possible idea he supports.

      Or, we can continue with our winning policies - having ~3.8% of the World's Population with ~25% of the World's Incarcerated. Continue with the World Police policies - maybe we won't be around when our kids and grand-kids face massive inflation. Our great K-12 education system has been spiraling to the bottom of industrialized countries for years (we now have the 2nd highest drop-out rate, second only to Spain).

    479. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      To Federalists, the States may as well not exist as entities that can provide essential services.

      If there is an argument saying the Federal government should not do something, it is taken to mean that the person does not believe it should be done at all, by any government, ever.

      Few people are willing to actually have a rational discussion that isn't based on emotion, straw man arguments, or other forms of intellectual dishonesty.

    480. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The military really does need a good haircut.

      We shouldn't be spending more on military than we do on infrastructure. Especially in a day and age where wars between countries are all but extinct.

    481. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Put in standardized units:

      • Energy Department's $5-billion Office of Science = 2.5 days of the military
      • $4.5-billion National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration = 2.25 days of the military
      • $750-million National Institute of Standards and Technology = 9 hours of the military
      • $1.1-billion U.S. Geological Survey = 13 hours of the military

      (Based on Forbe's estimate of the cost of being U.S. military policy being $2 billion per day If you want units solely in terms of the war in Afghanistan, that figure is $300 million per day. Adjust for other wars etc. War: it isn't cheap.)

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      Chrisb you uninformed. Ron Paul talks about slashing the military all the time. It's even in the same plan you didn't read. How do you think you get to cutting a trillion in a year?

    482. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      It could be that the delusion of believing the Dept. of Education is effectual has actually diluted education to the point that the above (likely public-schooled) person does not know the difference.

      How has the Dept. of Education fundamentally changed the quality of education in the US for the better? The larger the bureaucracy, the more it relies on standardization. Standardization has not brought the lowest-performing up, because there are greater impacts from culture, circumstance, motivation, or personal choice. It does, however, serve as a hurdle for those who wish to pursue goals that are not well-served by standardized models and testing. In effect, the best case scenario provided by a Federal department controlling all education is to restrain the top performers while being completely unable to deal with the myriad reasons why the bottom performers are unable to raise their performance levels.

    483. Re:In other words, we should give up. by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      The left loves to complain about how capitalism doesn't deal well with externalities, but the federal government is all about hiding them. The real cost of life is hidden in government budgets that the average person has no ability to see, let alone understand.

    484. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you privatize the military, they'll get away with ~murder!

    485. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      So you must believe that these parents with the money to send their kids to private schools (or move themselves to better public school districts), must be stupid. Otherwise, they would find better schools for their kids, where they would learn things. Most of these people with money are professional types like lawyers, doctors, and engineers. I guess that if these smart people who are paid a lot for their expertise are somehow so dumb that they cannot find good education for their children, then our country is doomed.

      But wait! None of the above is actually true. Parents do send their children to private schools where they do get a better education. I wonder what kind of private schools you are including in your survey. Oral Robert's back-woods religious schools? (I am not putting down all religious private education by the way, most of it is very good.)

      In my personal experience (I went to private schools. My brother did some of both.) private education may not guarantee better grades. But the whole private school experience is much more focused on actually learning as much as each student can, as opposed to just keeping kids in the classrooms and getting them to learn just enough to meet the mandated yearly standardized tests.

      In private schools, you have involved parents who will turn up to talk to the principal and the board and complain loudly when things are not going right. This also happens in public schools. The difference is, in a private school, they're actually listened to and teachers actually get fired when they're not doing the job right.

    486. Re:In other words, we should give up. by IsoRashi · · Score: 1

      In a large part of NJ, all left turns are made from the right lane... jug-handles, etc. Just a thought.

      --
      This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
    487. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So your solution for duplication of effort regarding highway and park maintenance is to have lots and lots of local departments handle their own sections.

      With all those smaller departments, there will be duplication of infrastructure and what not. That's why big businesses can many times do better than smaller businesses, because they consolidate on infrastructure stuff, and save tons of money.

      So taking your explanation, adding in some logic, we get an opposite plan. We should get rid of all the local government stuff, and run things nationally.

      No? Don't like that?

      hmph.

    488. Re:In other words, we should give up. by sjames · · Score: 1

      It will only get involved in foreign affairs if our glorious leaders persist in running the country for the benefit of their cronies rather than the people. I wonder if the 99% could get it all declared an odious debt?

    489. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Yes, pretty much everyone arguing for less Federal control is well aware of that. The argument that the Federal government should not be doing something is not the same as saying no government entity should do it. However, many opposed to less Federal control seem to have no problem conflating the two (some intentionally, some not) and using it as a straw man argument to show the "idiocy" of those they disagree with.

    490. Re:In other words, we should give up. by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      This is NOT a jug handle. We have some of those here too, but they're rare.

    491. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not true at all, if you actually read about his policy you would know that all those things he listed as cut is from FEDERAL level. he would let the states decide, which is actually better.

    492. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Eightbitgnosis · · Score: 1

      Umm, have you ever even listened to Ron Paul before, or even looked at his basic positions? Stopping overseas wars and closing overseas military bases are in his top priorities

    493. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chrb · · Score: 1

      Thank you for taking the time to reply. I actually think a Ron Paul government would be an interesting experiment, but most people are going to find his proposals too radical. You are correct in that many of the functions of agencies like the NOAA would still be carried out; most probably, surveying would become a responsibility of the navy, weather would be commercial or DoD, climate (now controversial) will be done by academia, fisheries - hmm without regulation this would lead to overfishing and rapid depletion of stocks, so not sure about that. But for the other stuff, yes, if it's important then someone will probably fund it. But dismantling large institutions has to be done with care - there will be a lot of organizations who rely on the existing functions that the institution provides, and they will need time to adapt.

    494. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The government's focus is on people?

      Dude, where the hell have you been living the past decade?

      I'm not saying I know which option (or more likely neither) is better, but saying that the Government looks out for people these days is about as retardedly naive as you can get in regards to anything related to the government.

    495. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      The Dept. of the Interior is probably the single most corrupt department in existence. They've "misappropriated" Native trust funds for over a century, and the tribes affected have had to settle for a fraction of the amount that can be proven to have been mismanaged. If they actually fought for all they'd lost, the Federal government would simply ignore them because it approaches half a trillion dollars.

      The wholesale abuse of the mineral, timber, and grazing leases on public lands can also be blamed directly on the Dept. of the Interior.

    496. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      It will only get involved in foreign affairs if our glorious leaders persist in running the country for the benefit of their cronies rather than the people.

      Bingo. This is part of the reason there is a Tea Party movement. The more you strip away from each level of government, the less opportunities there are for cronyism.

      I wonder if the 99% could get it all declared an odious debt?

      Sure they could. They better hit Medicare/Medicaid and Social Security obligations too.

    497. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that a corporation(s) could not provide the same service as NOAA?

      Yes, but why would they?

      That corporations are not capable of launching a weather sat (or buying NOAA's) and providing the service for a fee? The misperception is that your weather info is now free - it is not as taxes and debt pay for NOAA.

      Yes, and it benefits all of us, not just those fortunate enough to have a subscription to WeatherCorp. If there's a tornado warning, do only the people who have paid their monthly fee get notified?

      As to "science" and "research" - maybe it is time for a return to the days of philanthropy and corporate sponsorship?

      Sure, and maybe it's time for winged pigs too.

    498. Re:In other words, we should give up. by SteveFoerster · · Score: 1

      My kids go to public schools, but I still know that's trolling. Homeschooled kids aren't unsocialized, that's a ridiculous myth.

      --
      Space game using normal deck of cards: http://BattleCards.org
    499. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He takes a 15% ax to the military budget.. and cuts funding for the wars.. more than 'liberal' Obama ever did. Where is your magical candidate that cuts more?

    500. Re:In other words, we should give up. by high · · Score: 1

      You are wrong. He wants to cut the budget of the Department of Defence by 15%, this will mean the funding of the wars will end.

      See page 2 in his program
      http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf

    501. Re:In other words, we should give up. by vvaduva · · Score: 1

      Agreed...I was just being sarcastic :) My kids are the most talkative and interactive kids I know. Like I said...kick ass.

    502. Re:In other words, we should give up. by CraftyJack · · Score: 1

      I sympathize with you. You tried to make a point using sarcasm, or irony, or whatever you want to call it. That doesn't work here. You did fine; your comment drips with sarcasm. Koko the gorilla would get it if someone signed it to her, and would make little laughing noises. Unfortunately, we're not dealing with Koko's caliber here.

    503. Re:In other words, we should give up. by LibRT · · Score: 1

      It isn't "magic", it is the alignment of interests and competitive pressures (read: choice) which in most cases results in more efficiencies. If something is non-profitable, then either efficiencies will be discovered which make it possible to extract a profit, or capital will look elsewhere for opportunity, because the people do not deem the benefits worth the cost.

      If something is "unprofitable", it means that the people refuse to pay the cost for something. By suggesting "government" should provide this, you are saying you refuse to pay the cost for that thing unless your neighbors pay some of the costs too, and those neighbors should be given no say in the matter. I've found that many of the same people who argue vociferously against any sort of private monopoly, on the basis that such a monopoly removes choice, efficiencies and freedom, at the same time argue vociferously in favor of "government", which is in all cases a total monopoly, with similar results (except that, in the case of government, they further enjoy coercive powers).

      If the government were to produce all computers, do you think those computers would have the same features, at the same price, with the same reliability which your current free market computer has? Do you think it would be even better? If not, ask yourself why not: why wouldn't the government, as sole producer and provider of computers produce the best computer at the best price with the best reliability and with the highest margins? The reasons you come up with should help explain to you the source of the "magic" you refer to in your comment. That same "magic" is what's currently in the process of making space tourism affordable for you and me.

    504. Re:In other words, we should give up. by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      Or, more recently "Left lane for left turn". Apparently this does not mean "Left lane must turn left". Perhaps they are informing us that left turns are not allowed from the right lane?

      Yes. There are streets where you can turn left from the right lane. That isn't one of them. Hence the sign.

    505. Re:In other words, we should give up. by benhattman · · Score: 1

      Sigh. That federal government intervention was necessary was the GPs point. I hate having to explain sarcasm.

    506. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      But this discussion is about financing, and isn't this proposal just shifting the burden of paying for them from one layer of Government to another? That isn't really a savings, which is most likely Ron Paul's objective. Since most States already have balanced budget requirements, that would be good for the long term. But don't just dump it in the lap of the States as part of some knee-jerk reaction. A budgetary shell game is not in the best interests of the Nation, and since most States are broke right now, robbing Peter to pay Paul ain't going to work.

      It's true that enforcing federalism won't by itself cure the collective budgetary issues that the US and its member states face. But much of the activities in these particular departments doesn't need to be taken up by the states either. I think it'll help overall.

    507. Re:In other words, we should give up. by StingingNettle · · Score: 1

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      That will all cease to exist at our current rate anyway. With in 4 to 5 years 30% to 50% of all revenues will be going to service our debt, AND that is assuming rates will stay as low as they currently are.

    508. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bames53 · · Score: 1

      This budget proposal cuts more than just a tiny sliver of the DoD. It starts with $200 billion in cuts (off the CBO baseline) in the DoD the first year.

    509. Re:In other words, we should give up. by amRadioHed · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, but he used the phrase "sugar daddy gummint", not "sugar daddy federal gummint". He was making an argument against government involvement in education in general, not just federal government. Is that the argument he intended to make? I don't know, but i'm not knocking down any straw men for pointing out his contradiction.

      --
      We hope your rules and wisdom choke you / Now we are one in everlasting peace
    510. Re:In other words, we should give up. by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      But of course that would be a legitimate function of a government: to stop one from aggressing upon another.

      And now you're already in the bloody details. Define aggression. Is it only aggression when physical harm is inflicted? Are threats of physical harm also bad? Who decides whether what happened was aggression or not? Should government only step in to mop up the mess after it happened? Or should it work to prevent situations from escalating to physical violence?

      And to my knowledge, no form of government resembles a corporation.

      It's called despotism.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    511. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you really want a second Civil War to break out over this crap?

      That sounds good to me. I would love to see Libertarians in combat, seeing as they don't grasp the basic concept of mutual aid. The Ron Paul crowd can shoot each other arguing over who is mooching too much ammo, and the rest of us can finally be rid of them.

    512. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Zan+Lynx · · Score: 1

      You hit the nail square on the head! These departments can always use every last penny given to them.

      You hit it right on the head in your second sentence. There is NO possibility that a government agency will admit to being able to do the job with a smaller budget.

      Yet, that is obviously not true. It did the job the year before, and the year before that. It could probably do the job with the people it had back when it started and it would be a better job, because one of the rules of bureaucracy is that new regulations and paperwork are continuously invented to justify the job of each new person hired.

      Where private corporations are all about profit, government bureaucracies are all about how many people they can boss around and how much they can spend. Have you EVER heard of a bureaucracy that submitted a new budget request for less money than the year before? "We discovered that we can do just as good a job by outsourcing Fred's department and therefore we need $5 million less this year." Never happen.

      To predict hurricanes, for example, takes one satellite, a nice computer cluster and about 10 people: meteorologists, system administration, a computer programmer or two. Yet, how many people are now involved with it? And how many of those are useless administrators, receptionists, coffee fetchers, etc? NOAA for example has its own legal department. Why can't they share from a pool of federal lawyers, what do they need their own for? They also have their own international affairs office. That should be the job of the State Department. NOAA has its own Education subdivision. NOAA even has its own small fleet of ships, when they could piggy-back on Navy or Coast Guard almost as well.

      NOAA alone could drop 66% of its expenses and staff and still do a decent job with its primary mission. Sure, it would not be as good. But it would be 2/3rds cheaper and almost as good.

      Will NOAA admit any of that? No, because it means 66% of them would be out of work. The department heads would lose political clout. They would have to make, oh horror, UNPOPULAR DECISIONS.

    513. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bames53 · · Score: 1

      Right, these departments are tiny relative to the amount cut ($1 trillion). The proposal does cut the DoD budget as well. And it's still not enough to balance the budget.

    514. Re:In other words, we should give up. by SteveFoerster · · Score: 1

      Ahh, whoosh on me, then. :-)

      --
      Space game using normal deck of cards: http://BattleCards.org
    515. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      Congressman Paul has spoken about cutting military spending on many occasions. It's just not in his first budget proposal. He would like to shut down every military base outside the United States. After having been to many of these bases, I think it's a great idea.

    516. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bames53 · · Score: 1

      What do you mean "Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget?" Did you look at the plan? The very first item is cuts in the DoD. In fact the cuts there are well over 100x all the items you listed combined.

    517. Re:In other words, we should give up. by teg · · Score: 2

      Hardly. You need regulation like anti-trust law to ensure a free market. If there was no such thing, e.g. consolidating the top wireless carriers and refuse interaction with others would clearly be a profit maximizing move by their owners - and the free market would disappear. Monopoly is the most profitable situation for its owners, and in many markets considerable barricades to entry can be made. Some technical ("you won't be able to communicate with anyone on our network, so you won't have any customers"), and some by a threat that you'll just undercut their pricing until they're broke and you can raise yours again.

      To quote Adam Smith: “People of the same trade seldom meet together, even for merriment and diversion, but the conversation ends in a conspiracy against the public, or in some contrivance to raise prices.” [1]

    518. Re:In other words, we should give up. by gothzilla · · Score: 1

      Kids these days....
      We had all of those things before the federal departments ever existed, and in most cases they were better before the feds stepped in and messed with them. Try reading some history sometime.

    519. Re:In other words, we should give up. by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      It is the default that you are not allowed to make left turns from the right hand lane, and whenever that is not the case, I have seen the exception noted, even up here. I've never seen this sign anywhere else in the country, but twice in one particular town (Waltham). Are you sure that is what they intended? How do you know? Are you sure they're not just making shit up as they go along and ignoring standards?

    520. Re:In other words, we should give up. by pr0f3550r · · Score: 1
      The DE does not establish schools and colleges. And you are correct that there has been a federal office since 1867. It was implemented as part of the reconstruction efforts following the Civil War. There is nothing about the post above that was untrue. Moving the useful functions of the DE to another department certainly seems like a sound way to deal with the financial mess. At least RP is doing something about it rather than rhetoric.

      You are incorrect about the Student Aid and Pell Grant programs since this was specifically addressed by Paul in his proposal.

    521. Re:In other words, we should give up. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      So long as there is freedom of movement and freedom of commerce between the states, people can (and will - in fact, already do) vote with their feet.

      That, and think where the economy of "Jesus science" states will be 50 years down the line. Don't you think it would make a very good, practical lesson in its viability?

    522. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He talks about it all the time. In fact, he seems to be the only Republican that talks about it consistently and earnestly. Did you watch the last debate? Nothing was more concerting to me than the moment of awkward silence of an entire auditorium when he began discussing scaling back the US empire.

    523. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's already happening, and generally it's unconstitutional for the federal government to do these things an claim they fall under the thin guise of regulating interstate commerce. So how is cutting the federal version and increase in spending?!? If we absolutely HAVE to have these types of organizations, and it's only constitutional for the state to do them, and they are already doing a lot of them, then why keep the federal version of these programs?

    524. Re:In other words, we should give up. by siride · · Score: 1

      There's no point in trying to balance the budget in a single package or election cycle. The budget issue is complex and deep. Simply cutting a bunch of things, or massively increasing revenue will have negative results and won't fix the underlying problems and consequences. We must accept that fixing the budget is a decade or longer problem. If the government show that it is actually making progress on solving the problem, I imagine the markets will respond positively, even if we are still running a deficit for a few years yet.

    525. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Put in standardized units:

      • Energy Department's $5-billion Office of Science = 2.5 days of the military
      • $4.5-billion National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration = 2.25 days of the military
      • $750-million National Institute of Standards and Technology = 9 hours of the military
      • $1.1-billion U.S. Geological Survey = 13 hours of the military

      (Based on Forbe's estimate of the cost of being U.S. military policy being $2 billion per day If you want units solely in terms of the war in Afghanistan, that figure is $300 million per day. Adjust for other wars etc. War: it isn't cheap.)

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      He does, consistently talk about slashing the military budget, closing over sea bases and brings our troops home.. you must live under a rock, or like most people, ignore Ron Paul because you think he's "nuts", when in fact, he's the smartest "republican" to run in the past 20 years if you'd just put down the pipe, focus and pay attention to him and THINK a little.

    526. Re:In other words, we should give up. by darkseid · · Score: 1

      And thus, his point is proved.

      NOAA services are not free, they are paid for by taxes. TANSTAAFL. The fact that you call them "free" means you've stopped associating government services with the costs incurred through taxation.

      This is one of the big problems. Too many people think of government services as "free" because there is no direct association with the taxes required to pay for them. The true costs are hidden, so people make foolish decisions because they don't see a cost.

      I like paying taxes, with them I buy civilization.

    527. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Yes, it was sloppy with what was explicit vs. what was implicit, but the link made it quite clear what was intended even if the wording was decidedly not a stellar choice.

    528. Re:In other words, we should give up. by David+Greene · · Score: 1

      Yes. Does a state have the capacity to set up its own geological survey. Not here in Minnesota we don't. We're too busy giving stadiums away to billionaires!

      And yes, that was a joke. We are giving stadiums away but even if we didn't we still have about a $5 billion hole to fix in the next biennium.

      --

    529. Re:In other words, we should give up. by NiteShaed · · Score: 1

      ah, now I get your posts....you're a Ferengi. I always thought you were a troll, but you put so much energy into it all. Now though, I see that it's a cultural difference based on the fact that you're from another planet and you're not actually human. Huh, the things you meet on the internet nowadays.

      --
      Some bring out the best in others, some the worst. Some bring out far more.
    530. Re:In other words, we should give up. by David+Greene · · Score: 1

      The spending problem isn't NOAA or NIST, it's "entitlements"

      B.S. Social Security is self-funded. Medicare and Medicaid would get much better if they could actually negotiate prices.

      No, the real problem is the wealthy not paying their fair share and our unwillingness to pay for three wars.

      --

    531. Re:In other words, we should give up. by David+Greene · · Score: 1

      Currently-federal parks can go private.

      Do you know why we have federal parks in the first place? Because the God damned corporations were looting our natural resources and destroying natural wonders.

      No more low income housing? GREAT! Section 8ers get into the program as a result of horrible lifestyle choices and ruin any neighborhood that will let them in.

      Uh huh. Once again demonstrating the best definition of a Libertarian:

      A Libertarian is someone who, when he asks, "Am I my brother's keeper," answers in full confidence, "no."

      --

    532. Re:In other words, we should give up. by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      I think that blanket statements such as "Feds should do everything" or "states should do everything" are inherently meaningless, and there's no point at all in discussing them. Meaningful discussion is only possible on a case-by-case basis.

      Interstate? Definitely federal, IMO. I don't see a working scheme for having all states maintain it on their own while retaining the system as a single coherent whole.

      Social welfare schemes (medicare, social security etc)? I think states would do better at it. Not the least because it'd let blue states implement full and proper public healthcare programs similar to the rest of the world, without having to "compromise" key parts of it to pander to Republican audience. And there's no reason why the states that want such a thing could not co-operate voluntarily between themselves in a scheme where social welfare tax funds are shared and then redistributed to equalize wealth differences (much like it works today in Canada).

      National parks? I don't know. If it spans several states, then probably federal. If not, I don't have a strong opinion. I very much enjoy state parks around here (Washington), and they seem to be decently maintained - though they've recently had to institute paid access to cover expenses, which I think should rather be covered by general taxation; but then $30 for an annual pass is not an unreasonable price.

    533. Re:In other words, we should give up. by haruchai · · Score: 1

      And that's exactly how I know he's full of shit. I was astonished when he answered a question ( posed by Wolf Blitzer?) about who should provide healthcare by saying he'd like to see a return to the days when we used to take care of each other - this from a fucking MEDICAL DOCTOR. Hey, if I'm dying of cancer, I'm sure the foot baths I get from cousin Mary will save my life. Ron Paul - just another idiot Texan politician ( yes, I know there are several redundancies in that statement)

      --
      Pain is merely failure leaving the body
    534. Re:In other words, we should give up. by elbonia · · Score: 1

      WTF are you talking about? The Department of Education was created in 1867 but was placed as a cabinet level position in 1868 because of it's small size. It was then moved to the Department of the Interior then in 1939 was part of the Office of Education. In 1953 it was then upgraded to cabinet-level status as the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare. As the growing population and number of school aged children increased many noticed that the decentralized education system was failing so in 1979 it was made as a department. Even then it barely had any power to enforce standards in states until President George W. Bush Jr., a conservative, sign the No Child Left Behind Act since states were still failing in providing proper education.

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/No_Child_Left_Behind_Act

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Department_of_Education

    535. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if we did slash all of those military jobs, it might be hard to re-integrate those troops into civilian live in a recession.
      i think it's one of the reasons the war effort is kept up.

      i am however pretty sure that after one term as president, RP would take cost reduction efforts towards the military as well, but maybe not in his initial presidential bid.

    536. Re:In other words, we should give up. by SuperTechnoNerd · · Score: 1

      No more NASA. No more basic research. No more particle physics. No more weather satellites. And since we wont know when destructive storms come.. No more FEMA. Brilliant!

    537. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Doesn't Minnesota fund public education, roads & bridges, and parks? Maybe it doesn't fund any low income housing or energy research, but my state does.
      That $5 billion hole pales in comparison to the one the federal government has, or haven't you been paying attention? The federal government has a $1.5 trillion hole.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    538. Re:In other words, we should give up. by sehryan · · Score: 1

      Are you saying that a corporation(s) could not provide the same service as NOAA? That corporations are not capable of launching a weather sat (or buying NOAA's) and providing the service for a fee? The misperception is that your weather info is now free - it is not as taxes and debt pay for NOAA.

      You are making the assumption that after eliminating these offices, Mr. Paul would then turn around and and lower the tax rate to allow US citizens to keep that money that is no longer needed. But if taxes stay the same, then I would still be paying the same amount, but be getting less service in return. Like Netflix.

      You are also making the assumption that private industry would provide these services at a similar cost as the government does. NOAA costs each taxpayer in the US roughly $33.50 a year. Do you honestly think you will be able to purchase weather forecasts from a private company for that little? Not to mention that weather forecasts are only part of what NOAA does. I can't even name a service that I receive now that I get for $3 a month.

      --
      The world moves for love. It kneels before it in awe.
    539. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bames53 · · Score: 1

      We've had long term plans for decades now. I support them too but so far they've done nothing.

      Maybe this won't do anything either, but I think we're at the point where we really can't be picky. I see too much spending as one of the main underlying problems, so even if there are small-scale negative consequences as a result of this being implemented I think overall it will still be a big help.

    540. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      That's an easy one, the state would take this over and probably do a 10x better job at it, I seriously don't trust the weather service anymore. I get that it can be hard to predict the weather, but seriously? Their margin is almost at the global level where its just like don't bother. The local station is typically dead on though to the county level.

      But ya, it wouldn't be a private entity that took this over, but each state would devot what they feel is needed (Cali would be at the top of this list).

    541. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Social welfare schemes (medicare, social security etc)? I think states would do better at it.

      The only problem with SS being state-run I see is that a lot of people move between states. How do you handle it when someone lives in 15 different states over their career, or moves from state to state with each job? That's a lot of administrative overhead for the various states to communicate with each other, and why they probably wanted to put it at the Federal level to begin with. We're not like Canada where there's only a handful of provinces; there's 50 states. Having a lot of states work together on this on their own is basically a work-around for the Federal government not doing what it's there for.

      Not the least because it'd let blue states implement full and proper public healthcare programs similar to the rest of the world, without having to "compromise" key parts of it to pander to Republican audience.

      I think it'd make more sense if the blue states simply seceded and formed their own country separate from the red states. Then they can do all the social programs they want, while the red states can teach Creationism in schools and mandate a national religion.

    542. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does want to cut military budget to 0, but not defense. He will end ALL the wars and bring them ALL home.

    543. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Coren22 · · Score: 1

      Funny thing is, the fed never performed maintenance on the federal roads, they just provided the money and the overall plan to the states. The states maintain their own portion of the interstate system anyways.

      --
      APK likes to ask for responses to the same things over and over. Maybe he just likes the responses?
    544. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      i like your assumption that education, housing, roads, and bridges can only exist if the government has a department for it.

      I like to think that research, construction, and a market where people can compete would exist with much less waste.

    545. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "RON PAUL Y U NO TALK ABOUT ending the wars? Y U NO TALK ABOUT cutting taxes, inflation and legalizing drugs?"

      (your post makes a valid point but is misinformed. Ron Paul is the ONLY one who talks about cutting the military budget on either side)

    546. Re:In other words, we should give up. by KmhrVv · · Score: 1

      Completely cutting funding for two extremely costly wars is the same as slashing.

    547. Re:In other words, we should give up. by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      It just seems pretty obvious. Particularly since you said the left lane isn't a left-turn-only lane. Probably had problems with dimwitted drivers thinking the left turn was left-turn-only and they could turn left from the right lane, so they put up signs. I'll admit that I don't recall ever having seen one myself.

    548. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Umm, he does.

      He's probably the most anti-war, reduce-military-spending candidate out there, except possibly Dennis Kucinich. Ron Paul voted against every war and military action since he's been in office. He's on record stating that the US should immediately shut down almost all (all?) foreign bases, end all foreign wars, repatriate the troops, and drastically cut military spending.

    549. Re:In other words, we should give up. by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      Of course, the other possibility is that traffic at those intersections just tends to be heavy and traffic intending to turn left needs to get in the left lane early to avoid blocking everything up by trying to merge left too late.

    550. Re:In other words, we should give up. by lastchance_000 · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure that was the point.

    551. Re:In other words, we should give up. by The+Analog+Kid · · Score: 1

      If the government wasn't siphoning so much money off the private economy (actually the economy, since the private economy is the only wealth generator), investors could fund energy research themselves and it would be more efficient as bad projects wouldn't get funded. The loan to Solyndra is a perfect example of why the government should be not involved. Ethanol subsidies is another example. No one in the private sector would fund these things, and if they did and got burned it affects only those investors, when the government does it, we all get burned.

      States could retain control of federally run parks, as they already run state-owned parks.

      The Federal Government according to the Constitution isn't suppose to be involved in education. Right now all they do is pass unfunded mandates on the states and if the states don't comply they have their aid taken away. What a great education system we have. The DC school system is the one system that Congress has control over and it's full of violence and under-performance, we'd be in a lot better shape if the Feds got out of the way.

      There's no reason the States can not run their own low income housing program.

      States own their own roads and bridges now, why would it be any different if the Feds no longer did? You could also privatize them. The argument about tolls is absurd, considering one already pays .50 or more cents to the government per gallon of gas and the money is spent far less wisely.

      Ron Paul is the only one out of the GOP candidate and Obama who have seriously looked to reduce the size of government and get the deficit under control. While some may call his plan extreme, they should instead be realizing how big the government has gotten. Once this debt bubble blows, people are going to wish they had voted for Paul instead, because 2008 will look like great times.

    552. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Palshife · · Score: 1

      I don't have to trust you. I was there. Cars looked different 18 years ago, too. What's your point?

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    553. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Taty'sEyes · · Score: 1

      Have you ever heard Ron Paul speak? After reigning in the Fed, his second point is to BRING THE TROOPS HOME, then cut the bureaucracies, Again a case of research before inserting foot...

      --
      We show geeks how to get their dream girl at EyesOfOdessa.com
    554. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Vancorps · · Score: 1

      Perhaps because that bridge in Alaska would never get built otherwise? The whole purpose of forming a country is to share resources to help everyone grow. When you build up Alaska eventually they start producing oil in more quantity which helps out Florida. Or citizens of Alaska start buying goods as they have infrastructure necessary to create jobs and either vacation in Florida or buy something from there.

      I'm not sure where this hatred of the Federal government comes from. The majority of the issues seem to be related to people re-electing representatives that don't represent their interests, not any kind of structural issue with having a federal government at all.

      Then there is the realization that Ron Paul is advocating we return to the good ole days of robber barons which doesn't really impress me. When you take a look at history you see that these things were created for a reason. I have no problem with evaluating that reason and ensuring structurally the departments actually take care of what they are mandated to take care of. Axing things like education is so far beyond brain dead I don't even know where to begin with the argument. My grandfather dropped out of school in 4th grade, this is not possible in this day and age. He was a product of the depression. More kids are far far more educated today in our current flawed system than were ever educated before the federal department of education was established to unify standards across the country.

    555. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Palshife · · Score: 1

      Are you going to ignore my first point?

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    556. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Paul is a joke and his followers are morons who actively try to mislead people by typing shit like "The Education Department only started in 1979!" If you guys stop trying to lie to people maybe we'd take you seriously.

    557. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Vancorps · · Score: 1

      Funny, I work for a private company and each department works on the exact same principle. What's your point?

    558. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Palshife · · Score: 1

      Yeah. Because it makes sense for every state to have it's own weather satellite.

      --
      Attention deficit disorder is a complicated issue, spanning several major... HEY LET'S GO RIDE BIKES!
    559. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, spoken like a true "I need the government to tell me how to live, where to eat, and when to take a shit" nanny state lover.

      He's the only guy saying you people are big kids and can take care of yourself. Get the government out of your life.

    560. Re:In other words, we should give up. by chill · · Score: 1

      Read my post again, and try and come up with an original response instead of just a pithy (unattributed) quote.

      I wasn't objecting to taxes. I was objecting to the disconnect in the understanding of the relationship between taxes and government services. My objection was to categorizing the services provided as "free", and the entitlement mentality it fosters.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    561. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Where do weather satellites fit into the list "No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges"?

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    562. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Vancorps · · Score: 1

      Way to prove his point. You're talking about a specific city while he's talking about an entire state which had a rather large debate over whether creationism was science. Hint, it's not.

      Furthermore, the parent was illustrating that individual states can and will do things dramatically different. If the people of Missouri are uneducated through lack of investment or more likely lack of money to invest in education that can and will spill over into Kansas. It is not a bad thing to ensure that your neighbors are doing alright. When you all watch out for each other you'll find you have a much stronger community than trying to go at everything yourself. This is why a federal government was created to begin with.

    563. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most libertarians say that disaster relief is a very legitimate Federal thing. You non-libertarians never seem to understand that we aren't anarchists, we just think the Federal government should go back to its constitutional limits, which leave a lot of powers to states. The problem withe the Federal government taking powers it's not supposed to have is well illustrated by the War on Drugs. If pot is grown in California, sold in California, and smoked in California, then it doesn't really involve interstate commerce, does it? So DC has no right to intervene. California has decided to allow pot smoking for medical reasons, and has licensed retailers to sell pot. But DC doesn't care about state laws regarding things that the constitution said should be left to the states. So they swoop in with the DEA and shut down and arrest legit pot retailers.

      In education you have a federal agency that has existed for three decades or so, and seen continually falling education standards and outcomes in this country since that day. Does that sound like a success? I think we'd be better off getting rid of it. I can't guarantee education will get better if we do, but I don't see how it can hurt. We gotta do something major about education, and letting local governments experiment based on their own needs and situations doesn't sound so bad to me.

    564. Re:In other words, we should give up. by siride · · Score: 1

      Regardless of the reason for why those things cost so much, they do, in fact, cost a lot and take up a large percentage of federal expenditures. Defense is a close 3rd. I agree with you on fixes for Medi{care,caid} and the wealthy paying their fair share. That won't fix the whole gap, though, because parts of the entitlement system are destined to balloon out of control, so no amount of reasonable new taxes will ever keep us in the black.

    565. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Vancorps · · Score: 1

      This would make me laugh if I didn't think so many people believed it. You think public schools were great in the 60s? Really? What are you basing this on? How many uneducated soldiers fought in Vietnam? I don't know where you get your facts from, certainly not from any history books.

    566. Re:In other words, we should give up. by PintoPiman · · Score: 1

      No more federally provided energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      Fixed that for you. Just because the feds don't give you something doesn't mean you can't have it.

      These things all predated the federal government. In what ways have federal involvement made them better?

    567. Re:In other words, we should give up. by PintoPiman · · Score: 1

      But but... the CORPORATIONS will magically provide this stuff for us! And it will be even better! And ponies! And Unicorns!!!

      Perhaps, but what about the straw men? Who will provide them?

    568. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mhotchin · · Score: 1

      Um, yeah, I think that was *exactly* his point. "WHOOSH" for you!

    569. Re:In other words, we should give up. by siride · · Score: 1

      They've done nothing because, well, they (the politicians) have done nothing. Or they'll reverse previous gains with new tax cuts, or new major spending increases. Even so, taking the chainsaw approach will be devastating. It may be frustrating to watch the politicians fail to address the problem adequately, but it'll be even more frustrating and painful to watch them destroy the country with draconian policies gutting the public sector. If those policies involve cutting programs like NOAA, we'll get nearly nothing in terms of fixing the budget, but it will cost us a lot elsewhere. That's why it's really important to keep the discussion on the big expenses and not waste time looking at stuff like NOAA and NASA.

    570. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      You think that NASA is responsible for the development of microchips? (T.I., Fairchild) You think that DOD is responsible for microwave ovens? (Raytheon). Clean water systems vary, but are mostly private or municipal.

      And if you think that "eminent domain" is more purchase than seizure, you are quite gullible.

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    571. Re:In other words, we should give up. by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      The Internet we're using wasn't paid for by the US government. The NSF backbone AUP prevented real commercialization of the Internet. When the government got out of the business, the private sector built what we use today. Consider the other technologies: ALOHANET and Ethernet weren't federal projects, and by the late 80's McNealy was running around saying "the network is the computer". There were private networking companies. We were obviously about to wire everything for data. I'd say that the best thing the federal government did for the Internet was the breakup of Ma Bell that (however briefly) smashed the telecom monopoly and made people get used to the idea of not paying per-byte charges (which AT&T would definitely have imposed).

      This thread should be about the idea of limits on the proper size of the federal government and about how we want to cut back when it becomes impossible for us to borrow money. Instead it's about NSFNet. It's not that the government can't do amazing things - it can. It's that it can make economically foolish decisions with other people's money (after all, if they made sense, private companies would do them). And we need to talk about how much of that is really appropriate.

    572. Re:In other words, we should give up. by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      I watched maybe 2 episodes of Star Treck, it was back in 96 I think. I always thought Ferengi were the smartest in that show, but I may be wrong because I am pretty sure that economic ignorance is just as much a part of that show as it is part of general population.

    573. Re:In other words, we should give up. by bames53 · · Score: 1

      It's only this article which is focusing on the small things. The actual budget proposal focuses on cutting big ticket items like DoD and whatnot. The cuts discussed in the article are about $12 billion while that's only a tiny portion of the $1 trillion in cuts in the actual proposal. So yes, let's keep the discussion on the big expenses.

    574. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Government's focus is on government. See Pournelle's Iron Law of Bureaucracy. Once an agency's founders are no longer in charge, the people who come into control have no interest but increasing the size of their domain and their personal power.

      Private institutions are dependent upon the satisfaction of their customers. If they please nobody, nobody buys their stuff. Then they have no money, no power.

      A government agency that pleases nobody faces no such limitations. They continue to make matters worse for the general population until public pressure becomes unbearable or a revolution ensues. Not an optimum strategy if the good of humanity is the goal.

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    575. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you sound stupid and I have never heard otherwise. Not listening == solid evidence.

    576. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      those common law constructs were also not corporations.

      a corporation is a protection from tort claims of the stock holders of a company for a joint venture.

      i would be fine with eliminating them and having holders of stock joint and severally liable for debts of a business which has failed or which is failing to pay it's debts, this is the way liability works under a partnership

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    577. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul does talk about slashing the military... In particular the Department of Defense: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UpedybOR2oY

    578. Re:In other words, we should give up. by hibiki_r · · Score: 1

      The more you push into states, the closer you get to the current EU: Entities with very different laws and economic situations, joined by the hip of a shared currency.

      Go the Ron Paul way, and the country splits apart in the next 20-30 years.

    579. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What a bunch of lazy saps you and your friends must be. The STATES can do all of this, and charity donors are giving in record numbers, which grows every year. YOU and your friends can also....*GASP*.....Volunteer and change your world!!! Imagine that! Actually contributing instead of complaining.

      I suppose you consider "utopia" to be lazy-boy chairs, a handful of DVD's and some buttered popcorn? Stand up and do something with your life for your country and your fellow man. THAT is UTOPIA!

      Kenja, I hope you meditate deeply on this: Are you suggesting that what we live in today is "utopia"? : ) NO WAY.

      The American spirit can do anything it sets it's heart to, but you have to CONTRIBUTE for this to be True. Be an American and play your part my friend, and all is well.

    580. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      ...need to understand that we cannot do this from spending cuts and/or tax increases alone.

      History and sound economic theory both show that tax increases make matters worse. Tax levels are well above the Laffer curve point where government income is maximized (not that maximum government income should be considered a valid goal.). Generally, the smarter, richer, and higher-income a person is, the better able he is to avoid taxes; and the higher his taxes, the more effort he expends avoiding taxes instead of producing.

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    581. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Perhaps a way around it, though, is to define what "speaking" is. A person giving money - sure. A corporation giving money... I'd say not. Otherwise, you'd be giving the people within that corporation a 2nd mouth.

      That's already the case - a corporation cannot donate to a candidate directly.

      However, organizations like Citizens United and MoveOn.org can use their "free speech right" to run ads during the election campaign. I think we can all agree that this is a problem, but we have to figure out a way to prevent it while still allowing the NY Times to endorse one of the candidates in their editorial section.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    582. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So that's why all countries are doing as well or better than Germany. Competition.

    583. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Actually, you might be right! It's like warlord-ism.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    584. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      At least one book has been written demonstrating the financial viability of privately owned roads. Private residential communities have long kept and maintained their own roads. Any commercial concern located on a road benefits from the quality of that road, and by joining with other businesses into a road corporation, can maintain and upgrade that road at quite reasonable prices.

      Modern technology (FastPass and the like) makes possible toll roads without toll booths. There are a variety of ways to handle those who try to be "free riders", who are not economically significant anyway.

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    585. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      A lot of the so-called "National Park System" is a pure land grab with the twin goals of stealing property from its owners and preventing the development of natural resources. Regarding the prevention of massive theft as "ultra-libertarian ideology" is a remarkable twisting of the English language.

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    586. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      If states were left to do some of these things, which they were up until several of these agencies were founded, you'd still have mud paths in places like Louisiana or Montana instead of interstates.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    587. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      If you can't charge for something enough to pay for its costs, then it isn't worth doing. Do you deliberately do things in your own life that, all things considered, are not worth the effort? Having found that they're not worth the effort, do you persist in doing them? If so, you're a fool or insane. The same applies to government and private organizations. If it isn't profitable, it shouldn't happen, because it is a waste of human life.

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    588. Re:In other words, we should give up. by snowgirl · · Score: 2

      Most people don't seem capable of grasping that... the D.O. Education didn't even exist until 1979, and it's been downhill ever since it's inception.

      Also, as others have pointed out, there certainly are some programs that could be considered best done by the federal government... and those would be moved to other departments.

      The DE was formed in 1979 as a split off from the Department of Health Education and Welfare which was formed in 1953...

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    589. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      There are private satellites and private weather forecasting services. The government need not be involved.

      Most people would be better off if the "entitlements" were all ended today. Defense, however, cannot be blindly slashed. We should end nonessential protracted wars (that's all the wars we're currently in) and cut back on foreign bases while encouraging our allies to take care of themselves. That still leaves a lot of money that needs to go into the military and military technology advancement if we wish not to be subject to extortion by foreign governments.

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    590. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Time it took to destroy Pearl Harbor = < 1.0 day

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    591. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But... he does talk about slashing the military budget, and his position on public funding is pretty well-known and not shocking--his constituency are taxpayers, the money is already in the budget and going to be spent, and he actually votes against those bills in the first place.

      Why do you pick the absolutely weak criticisms of him instead of the strong ones, like his comments about the USA being a Christian nation or some exceptions to his philosophy he's made over abortion legislation, or such?

    592. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Ucklak · · Score: 1

      That's a straw man argument you're setting up there as you're probably not well informed on those departments and how efficient/inefficient they are.

      I can attest that the Dept of Education has done nothing but drag down our collective educational system as a country.
      Ever since it's inception and well into it's programs, there has been more money spent on underperforming schools and children than ever before.The return promised has never been fulfilled. We cured polio, smallpox, and sent men to the moon without the Department of Education. We haven't done anything but drop in the educational rankings worldwide.

      Talk to a teacher. See how their hands are tied due to regulation this and regulation that. Teachers that want to teach do not want the Department of Education. Teachers that have tenure and like a paycheck want it to stay.

      Getting rid of those departments doesn't mean the end of it. Get real and intelligent. They're not going to just wither up and go away. The onus shifts to those who have a dog in the fight.

      --
      if you steal from one source, that is plagiarism, if you steal from many, well, that's just research.
    593. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mikael · · Score: 1

      Whether a company outsources or keeps staff in-house really depends on whether it is cheaper to do so. For a small company, it's going to be cheaper to purchase office supplies from mail-order companies because there is competition between suppliers. For a large corporation or government department, it's going to be cheaper to have their own in-house supply group, because they can arrange bulk purchases direct from the wholesaler.

      It's a bit like API modules - if you have two API's that have identical core/low-layer functionality, then it is probably better splitting and merging that functionality into a third API.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    594. Re:In other words, we should give up. by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      I don't think it's phrased plainly enough for dimwitted drivers. My brother's favorite sign along those lines was Philadelphia's "Wait for Green". Because, you know, if the light's been red for a while and you're impatient, why not go?

    595. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, if this privatization stuff is such hot shit, let's privatize the military as well.

      I think we have actually been doing this for many years.
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Private_military_company#List_of_PMCs

      Hell it actually even "paid off" in Iraq...

      "Contractors shall not be subject to Iraqi laws or regulations in matters relating to the terms and conditions of their Contracts, including licensing and registering employees..."

    596. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Mike · · Score: 1

      I vehemently disagree. Anti-trust laws, like so many other laws, are paved with good intentions but in reality they are an abomination.

      I wish I had more time and energy to expound here and now. For now, check out http://www.lewrockwell.com/orig9/brown-c4.html

    597. Re:In other words, we should give up. by belg4mit · · Score: 1

      NOAA (incl. NWS) is Dept of Commerce, one of the agencies on this jackhole's hit list,
      despite the constitution's explicit granting of powers to regulate commerce to the feds.

      --
      Were that I say, pancakes?
    598. Re:In other words, we should give up. by pspahn · · Score: 1

      I don't see why I (living in Orlando) should pay for your avalanche reports

      It's mostly run by a state organization anyway, they're just associated with NOAA, which lives in Boulder.

      And that's fine if Federal dollars don't help to support a system that benefits all the out-of-state tourists that come here. We'll just start charging additional taxes/fees/etc for anyone arriving from out of state to come skiing, the same way we do when we charge out-of-state tourists an arm and a leg when they come here to hunt and fish.

      --
      Someone flopped a steamer in the gene pool.
    599. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      The government has ONE and only ONE job: protect and serve the people it governs. The military is over half it's job - we actually need it as a deterrent to invasion so that the private economy can flourish without someone else coming in and enslaving us all for all but the cost of living per area. Over the years the government has expanded TO BE THE THREAT IT GUARDS AGAINST - this is what must change, and Rom Paul is aiming to get it right.

    600. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, how much money was taken from Texans to pay for these services to begin with?

      Since you hate privatization so much, get rid of your computer, your clothes etc. Oh, and go join OWS at Starbucks and post about it on Facebook from your IPhone.

    601. Re:In other words, we should give up. by HotBBQ · · Score: 1

      You must not live in the South.

    602. Re:In other words, we should give up. by siride · · Score: 1

      The fact that the budget proposal even has these cuts on small but important programs is still disturbing.

    603. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My personal fave is probably this intersection. Note that that curved road, in the direction you're (kinda) facing, has "left turn" and "right turn" lanes. Yes, "right turn", even though no sane driver would think that curve is a "right turn". And on the stoplight (which you can just barely see) is a sign (which you cannot see) that says, and I kid you not: "Right turn on red after stop". Note also, by the lines on the pavement, that traffic coming the opposite direction in the right lane should turn right (solid white line should not be crossed). Note that in the picture you can see a car and truck which have apparently crossed that line. But according to the solid white line, the left lane should also be able to go right. As long as nobody in the right lane decided they want to go straight, that is! Or should I say left.

      My second fave is probably this intersection, where you can see a bus approaching the intersection in a "left turn or straight" lane (no right turn permitted). To its left, in order: "left turn only", "oncoming fucking traffic", and 2 lanes of "oncoming traffic coming 'round that curve". I say the middle lane of the 5 is "oncoming fucking traffic" because, sitting in the oncoming traffic, I've at least twice been head-to-head with some clueless moron who thought that just because the median was to their left, that was their lane to be in. No, moron, you're in my lane. Move.

    604. Re:In other words, we should give up. by siride · · Score: 1

      > There are private satellites and private weather forecasting services. The government need not be involved.

      And how much do those cost? How much of the Earth do they cover? Do they provide data at reasonable or no cost to researchers, who are enriching the field for everyone's benefit? Are they required to provide forecasts for every square inch of the country? Sure, the private sector could maybe do some of it, at ten times the cost (gotta make money!), without the free flow of data, and with plenty of competing services that don't interoperate with each other and are designed to make their owners money rather than provide a service for the citizens of the country.

      > Most people would be better off if the "entitlements" were all ended today

      This is just plain bullshit and you know it. The disabled, elderly and temporarily unemployed should just be thrown on the street tomorrow? Who would really be better off?

    605. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      Read the thread. I was relying to someone who said that doing what Ron Paul proposes would mean "No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges". And just because the Commerce Department (which is not mentioned in the Constitution) is eliminated does not mean that the NOAA is. The NOAA could be moved into another department. Personally, I would not eliminate the Commerce Department, but it is not as devastating as the OP of this thread expressed.

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    606. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You've cherry picked a few offices and ignored that his cuts to the military are much bigger than all these things you mentioned. Also these OFFICES are a small part of the DEPARTMENTS he's cutting

    607. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      You must not live in the South. It's a whole different place than it was in the 50s.

    608. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DragonWriter · · Score: 1

      And thanks to our stellar legal system, it's damn-near impossible to go into business without incorporating or getting sued and losing everything you have.

      Sole proprietorships and not-even-limited-liability partnerships, IIRC, vastly outnumber corporations among all businesses, and most of them don't get sued and lose the owners/partners everything they have (most businesses, including most that aren't corporations, do fail, but most don't wipe out their owners completely in the process, and most of the failures aren't due to lawsuits, except maybe lawsuits to collect debts voluntarily incurred in purchasing goods and services on credit that the business never managed to generate income to repay.)

    609. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      The more you push into states, the closer you get to the current EU: Entities with very different laws and economic situations, joined by the hip of a shared currency.

      They also created tragedy of the commons situations that allowed for transfers of wealth from the more competent countries like Germany to the less competent countries like Greece.

      Go the Ron Paul way, and the country splits apart in the next 20-30 years.

      Might happen anyway. The current approach isn't making a unified society.

    610. Re:In other words, we should give up. by coxymla · · Score: 1

      whoosh

    611. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

      And if the people of Louisiana and Montana are satisfied with that, what is the problem? If they aren't, why should people from other states pay to fix it?
      More importantly, we aren't talking about what things would be like if these departments never existed, but what they would look like if we did away with them.
      I don't happen to agree with Ron Paul's list of Departments to get rid of, but I agree that there are several Cabinet level departments that should be gotten rid of (most of them have parts that should be put into other Departments).

      --
      The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
    612. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Holammer · · Score: 1

      Modelled after Somalia no doubt!

    613. Re:In other words, we should give up. by FiloEleven · · Score: 1

      His plan does cut the defense budget by almost $200 billion and Homeland Security by $13B the first year, and his projected increases are at a lower rate than the CBO baseline, which is a lower rate than the President's budget.

      This cut is a compromise from his campaign rhetoric of saying pretty much what you did, that halving the defense budget takes us to Y2K military spending levels with no harm to anybody but defense contractors.

    614. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may want to read more of the overall plan...overall Military cuts of $832 BILLION over 4 years.

      Of course Gen. Martin E. Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, warns that “indiscriminate cuts” would cause “potentially irrevocable wounds to our national security.”

    615. Re:In other words, we should give up. by daoine_sidhe · · Score: 1

      No more low income housing? GREAT! Section 8ers get into the program as a result of horrible lifestyle choices and ruin any neighborhood that will let them in. People who can't afford those places should move to where they *can* afford, rather than jumping the queue in front of people willing to pay for those spots. There is *always* affordable housing if you're willing to look; federal assistance just crowds out the prime spots.

      Jesus. Just, jesus, you are fucking disgusting. With this mindset good people, good fucking people I know personally who've done nothing more than commit the crime of getting SICK while being poor, would be homeless and soon, probably, dead.

      Just say what you really mean: Fuck you, I got mine. I'm a home owner, I pay property taxes, I'm not in debt. Just because I haven't had anything catastrophic happen in my life doesn't make me better than those you very clearly view as mud people.

    616. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Coryoth · · Score: 1

      . Parks can be managed by the states they are located in - all of them have recreation departments of their own. The same is true of monuments. Public education is already managed by states. There is no need for any federal bureaucracy there AT ALL. Low income housing doesn't disappear because a federal government disappears. Let the housing be managed by each state where it resides. Let states fix roads and bridges directly with the gas tax. And so on and so on.

      In other words, push all the work currently being done by these federal departments down to the state level. Fine. Except the state will have to pay to do that -- it isn't free. Just because the state has their own parks department doesn't mean they can assume the work of maintaining all the federal parks at no extra cost. Likewise for road maintenance, low income housing, etc.

      So what will happen? The states will be forced to raise taxes to cover all of these items. But worse, each state will have to have its own independent bureaucracy to oversee all the new work they've taken on -- what was centralised now needs to be duplicated in each state.

      So what you're really taking about is a massive tax hike, you just get to offload the blame to the individual states. You haven't made anything more efficient, or cheaper, but rather more expensive.

    617. Re:In other words, we should give up. by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      I don't really think that particular bridge in question will support their oil industry in any fashion. The oil is on the northern slopes. The bridge was to be down where the people mostly are. Their oil industry is spawning enough cash flow which is returned to the people to afford their own bridge if they want one.

      While I support everyone helping each other when possible, the problem we have is we are going far beyond our capacity to help each other with the resources at hand. We're borrowing money at a tremendous clip to help not just each other but the entire world and putting the burden of paying for it on the backs of our children and many generations to come. This is where the problem is at. Nobody that I know of has objections to the Federal government providing needed functions, and even a few luxuries when times are good. We don't even object to some borrowing if times are tough. It is the continuous deficit spending with no credible plan to ever pay it back that bothers us.

      I fully agree that the primary fault is with Congress and not with the executive branch. The executive branch really only has the choice of not declaring so many wars - which both parties seem to have a problem with of late, and of using the veto to try to roll back Congressional excesses - which neither party has been willing to do enough of. While it would be nice to fantasize that the Executive Branch could provide some leadership and vision in the process, it has been so long since Congress paid any attention that everyone considers it a pointless exercise. Presidential budgets are routinely declared dead on arrival. At least Ron Paul would be likely to use the veto more often to force Congress to stay within its Constitutional bounds or to use the override to pass something that he opposed. That is more than I expect of any of the mainstream candidates.

      I think that our main problem with the Dept. of Education is that we feel that the standards are established and unified to a large degree at this point in time, but that like every government agency that has been created to deal with a problem, they never disappear when the problem is taken care of. I don't consider the Federal Department of Education to be doing anything of use in the education of my kids. The state department of education is fine, and the local teachers are doing fine, but the federal government? Bah.

    618. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You may call it insane. I call it fun.

    619. Re:In other words, we should give up. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      What state government is going to launch GPS satellites? Or even try to develop it in the first place?

    620. Re:In other words, we should give up. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      So you are saying that local entities would drive away any and all commerce from their area of influence by instituting ridiculous taxes and regulations?

      It seems that the only argument against this is that state and local governments will self destruct, meanwhile the Federal government is already self destructing.

    621. Re:In other words, we should give up. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      What a great jobs program that would be. Duplicating effort in each state for phenomena that are regional and global in scale. Where do you think the locals get their information from? Also, what state is going to launch weather satellites?

    622. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is actually the most anti-military Republican nominee. He was vehemently against both the war in Afghanistan and Iraq. Make no mistake he wants to slash the entire federal budget everywhere, including the military. He wants America it look like it did one hundred years ago. By cutting our science programs we are well on our way.

    623. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Exactly. There is no such thing as a self-made person in the United States because of the common benefits that everyone enjoys. Taxation is merely the cost of living in civilised society. That a lot of your tax dollar is misspent is undeniable, but irrelevant.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    624. Re:In other words, we should give up. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      I think if you're wealthy enough not to work you send your kids to some high end private school. I think most home schoolers do it because they have ideological/religious differences with what public schools teach.

    625. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't NASA not doing it these days exactly why the space initiative seems to have gone to hell recently? Who in private industry is seriously making progress on space exploration?

    626. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      The way your country was initially, people didn't elect senators. This was changed because state legislatures were too lethargic and corrupt to handle the job of producing senators.

      I point this out because moving things from the federal level to the state level does not always imply "a more direct democracy". Sometimes you need to move control up the levels of government to get closer to democracy.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    627. Re:In other words, we should give up. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Personally I wouldn't call weather satellites, communication satellites and GPS satellites a hobby. NASA spends more on Earth facing satellites than all of the others put together.

    628. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul has a lot to say about slashing the military budget. Before you go about politicing please do your homework. this man is the only person up there that MIGHT not be more of the same.

    629. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, if this privatization stuff is such hot shit, let's privatize the military as well. I'm sure that'll work out just fine! I mean, if it's evil socialism to heal, feed and clothe people, it must be worse to publicly fund killing them, right?

      And if Newtonian Physics works on one scale, they should work on every scale (specifically referring to sub-atomic), right? Privatizing the military, the roads, etc. are stupid because those are things best handled on a larger scale (and demonstrably so). Socializing education, healthcare, etc. is stupid because those are best handled on a smaller scale where competition create the most benefit (again, demonstrably so. The healthcare system we have now is not a free market system, so don't bother comparing it to socialized medicine in the least bankrupt socialist country in Europe).

    630. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Frostalicious · · Score: 1

      I thought it was wacky before I understood where he is going.

      Essentially he wants to push responsibilities down to the state level, making the individual states essentially compete with each other. Right now, if you don't like how the Dpt. Education does things well tough luck. You'd have to immigrate to Canada which is typically impractical. So there's no incentive to fix things really, because the US Govt has a captive consumer. Having the individual states compete, there suddenly becomes motivation to improve.

      Sounds like a plan, but I still don't feel it applies to the scientific research agencies. I don't see how you can have those as anything but a collective resource.

    631. Re:In other words, we should give up. by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      I partially agree with you. Each state will have a slightly larger bureaucracy than they do now. States with the most concerns in a particular area might have a bigger cost increase than those which don't value the area as much. The people of certain states will likely see nothing that is done in a particular department that is of benefit to them and will potentially save a lot of money because they simply won't duplicate the functions. This is particularly true in Western states with respect to the BLM.

      The local tax burden will likely be larger. The amount of the increase would be open to debate, as I think there is overlap in function between the federal and state departments that could disappear without any loss to the public. The actual people in the field at the federal level - the park rangers, the custodians of the monuments, and all those folks could be hired by the states - perhaps with less in benefits - but the total number of workers at that level would be similar. The wages and benefits of these jobs would increase the state tax burden but wouldn't be duplicated for each state. The larger number of employees would increase the state administrative burden for the affected departments, but there would be some savings there since there is already a management structure in place. There would be some increase in management at each state level, but some would simply disappear saving cost. Your cost of visiting parks and monuments might increase to pay for it, or perhaps the tax rate would increase to handle it. Eventually, after the deficit spending gets under control and we start whittling away at the debt itself, the federal tax burden should be reduced.

      I don't think the issue is necessarily efficiency per se. I think that most people feel that there is much overlap in function that could be eliminated, making their view of the system more efficient even if the cost was higher for the nation due to some duplication across the states of some functions. I'll use the Department of Education as an example. Teachers, administrators, and school districts in my state would only have to worry about satisfying the requirement of their state Department of Education and not keeping the federal government happy as well. That will lead to more efficiency and less overhead than what we have now. The biggest advantage that I see is that local accountability would be increased. The closer the heads of departments and the departments themselves are to the people they are serving, the greater the accountability. Right now, I don't really think much of the federal bureaucracy really feels accountable to the public at all. The reductions in the paperwork alone would reduce the administrative costs to the state in this one department. Does anything that it is doing today need to be centralized? Texas and California - being the biggest textbook markets - largely dictate the materials people use for instruction. The teaching isn't going to change if the federal department (or the state for that matter) disappears overnight. Kids are still going to go to school and are still going to learn, whether the department is there or not.

      We have this false sense that because the Department of Education exists, all is the same around the country. Sheer sophistry. People already make decisions about where to live based on the education their kids will get. There is a reason I am not in a huge metropolis and there is a reason many people have fled the inner city for the suburbs. There are reasons I don't live in particular Southern states. Regardless of how hard the Dept. tries, it can't equalize the education available to inner city kids and kids in private schools or between schools around the country. Parents will continue to take the education their children will receive into account when making job decisions whether or not the Dept. of Ed is around or not.

      I do think there will be a tax hike if they closed most of the federal government down. The cost would be proportional to just how much they were able to close

    632. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Um, no. This sounds like a free-market argument. The problem is that the "free market" is a largely a myth, especially when real estate or any other sort of monopoly or oligopoly is involved.

      If the shortest path between city A and city B is through shitty little town C (and in fact, a pre-existing interstate highway goes right through the town), and the alternative routes involve far more driving, then C instituting ridiculous taxes won't drive away commerce, it'll gain them tons of ill-gained money, just as long as they don't raise those taxes so high that it's actually worth it to take the much longer alternate routes.

      Worse, if the alternate routes go through shitty little towns D and E, and C, D and E all conspire to set up toll roads with $100 tolls and share the proceeds (so that people don't have a reasonable alternative, except an even longer alternate route), they have the power to do that. Basically, this just takes us back to the days of feudalism. The whole purpose of being in the same country and having a Federal government is to avoid crap like this, but if you take away that power, you're a lot closer to anarchy.

      (As a real-life example of this, I'll provide my own state, Arizona. Suppose you live in Tucson, and want to drive to San Diego. There's only three realistic ways to go, and two of those are way out of the way. The shortest route is I-8 through Yuma and then to San Diego; the next route is I-10 through Phoenix to L.A. and then south to SD on the I-5; the final route is I-10 through Phoenix to I-17 all the way up to Flagstaff and then I-40 to L.A., but this is much farther than I-8. Any other routes have you doing an extra day or three of driving by going through Nevada or Utah. On I-8 there's some puny town called Tacna; on I-10 there's a town called Quartzsite, and on I-40 is some village called Yucca. All three are near the California border, and there's no way to go to CA from AZ without going through one of these towns. If all three of these towns ganged up and instituted $500 tolls to pass, what exactly is your alternative? And why would they care about "driving away commerce"? They don't have any commerce to speak of except for highway travelers stopping for food, but a racket like this would be very profitable for them, as lots of people travel regularly between SD/LA and AZ, not to mention plenty of truck traffic. All this traffic can't simply reroute through Nevada (and some small town up there could join the racket too making this moot).)

      The Federal government is self-destructing because of corruption, plain and simple, as well as infighting. It's pretty similar to what happened to the Romans. In my opinion, the only reasonable answer to this is to break up the country into a handful of smaller countries (but not 50 of them, that's too small and fragmented). Different regions in this country are just too different from each other culturally, resulting in the constant infighting we see now; we can't even agree any more on whether we should have a strong central government, a weak central government, or a government run by corporations (most of the Republicans seem to believe this). Go to any country in Europe or Asia or just about anyplace else, and you will not find such a fundamental disagreement about the role of government. Whether it's China where they believe the government should be strong and centralized, or Germany where it's a Federal republic (but without the infighting), or Iceland where there's only 250k people and no state vs. federal arguments, in most civilized countries, most of the people agree on the role of their government. Of course, there are some places where there's serious disagreements, like the Arab countries where they're debating over whether they should have democracies or brutal dictators, and of course this has resulted in violent revolutions. We were supposed to have settled this question back in the late 1700s. The only answer is to break up the country into smaller regional nations. People in the southe

    633. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I can see how a series of independent states-run NIST would work wonders!

    634. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Nugoo · · Score: 1

      Man, what are the odds he would get every single one of those wrong?

      --
      I explicitly release the above into the public domain.
    635. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      I'm not a homeowner, I don't pay property taxes, and I've had catastrophic things happen in my life. It's just that I recognize that there are lifestyle issues that have to be addressed when helping the poor, and freebies like Section 8 (or its worse predecessors) don't fix those problems but rather, lets them cascade to others and promotes continued poor lifestyle choices.

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    636. Re:In other words, we should give up. by cthulhu11 · · Score: 1

      His political experience, after all, is limited to playing the mayor on "Carter Country"

    637. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      Perhaps a way around it, though, is to define what "speaking" is. A person giving money - sure.

      I think that is where we went wrong, and from that error, other errors were inevitable.

      If I pay for your printing press to print MY pamphlet which flames the Stamp Act, that transaction was part of my speech.

      If I pay you, to fund your pamphlet and hope for the best that you say something I 60% agree with, then that wasn't my speech, it was yours. It's too .. deferential (?) to count as my speech. While I wouldn't necessarily endorse Congress passing laws saying I can't aid you in your speech, it doesn't really look like a First Amendment issue, unless I'm willing to have my byline on your pamphlet (with all the consequences of that).

      The essence of a campaign contribution is that I'm hiring someone else as my proxy to advertise "Vote for Thomas Jefferson" and the person I hire also just happens to be Thomas Jefferson. I don't see why that mechanic needs to be protected, since I'm just as capable of advertising "Vote for Thomas Jefferson" myself. This proxy stuff seems not only irresponsible and deceptive, but I'm drawing a blank on coming up with any upsides it may have. I don't think it's what the framers had in mind, and it sure isn't what they said in any plain text reading (I don't mean case law!) of the First Amendment.

      Once we get that handled correctly, I'm not sure we need to worry so much about any negative consequences of corporate speech. NYT can print editorials and Exxon can buy ads saying vote for a certain candidate, but neither of them (or you or me) will be able to give money to that candidate under the guise of speech. Then we'll all have a clearer picture of what they are giving the money for, and we can make a decision about whether bribery should be regulated. ;-)

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    638. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Europe · · Score: 1

      He was being sarcastic...

    639. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course he wants his share of the Federal funds for his own state, as long as they are there - he still wants to eliminate them (e.g. FEMA, which is financially broken).

      As to war, Ron Paul is very clear on ending the extremely costly external wars (e.g. Afghanistan) and would reduce the military budget much more than any other candidate.

      Libertarianism is not delusional (though I agree that communism is). Libertarianism is based on a straight-forward recognition of the value of individual freedom, and the efficacy of the free market. If you haven't read it, please read "Economics in one lesson" by Hazlitt for starters, if you really want to know why free markets are optimal. Finally, note that the US today is very far from a free market - it is dominated by big corporations and their lobbyists, another situation that Ron Paul aims to fix.

    640. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Yeah, it would be much better if the states had responsibilty for foreign affairs.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
    641. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mikkaboy · · Score: 1

      No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

      I think you're forgetting just how much debt this man is trying to get your country out of. Of the roughly $40 Trillion of Total world debt the US is responsible for about a quarter of it. I'd say a few sacrifices are going to have to be made mate.

    642. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Military takes like 55% of US budget. You don't cut them or they cut you.

    643. Re:In other words, we should give up. by mikkaboy · · Score: 1

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      He has. He's consistently said he'd bring home American troops as soon as humanly possible as soon as he's elected and almost totally eradicate the foreign presence of the US military. which as you've mentioned would be one of the single biggest spending cuts America could make at this point. Which I think is a pretty gutsy move, considering just how deep that hole has been dug by previous presidents.

    644. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Speaking as a person who was homeschooled all the way through high school, the word you were looking for is "troglodyte".

      So, uh, FTFY.

    645. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Kashgarinn · · Score: 1

      You do realize that each state is as big as any country in europe? Do the countries in europe all pay to fund research to a single governing body, or do they decide themselves what to do with it?

      I think Ron Paul is on to something. A lot of the things that the senate of the united states is doing it doesn't need to be doing. Ron paul is more about letting the states do the stuff, I just wish he'd make it more pronounced that he's not just interested in tearing things down just to be teared down.

      It would be very good if this irongrip of the "united states" would be freed so the states could be more free in doing what they want to do.

    646. Re:In other words, we should give up. by jbmartin6 · · Score: 1

      The NJ turnpike was originally built by private investors. And of course there are literally thousands of non-profits and not-for-profits out there that aren't government agencies. So you can pretend that only money-profitable things would get done in a free market, but you can't magically make history unhappen.

      --
      This posting is provided 'AS IS' without warranty of any kind, implied or otherwise.
    647. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Keen+Anthony · · Score: 1

      Sadly, the idiots who'd like to see this end will boldly tell you that they get their weather from the evening news and not the federal government. I suggest you make a car analogy.

    648. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Keen+Anthony · · Score: 1

      Local public schools don't do the job without federal assistance. One of the missions of the Department of Education is to ensure that disadvantaged kids can get an education. In many places, disenfranchisement is very bad, enough to prevent entire groups of kids from getting an education without help. DoE also handles federal student aid. How does a local board of education do that? In fact, public schools have it very bad right now. I myself have bought things for a classroom that I took for granted back when I was a student. I'm not talking about buying notebook paper and scissors. I'm talking about buying soap, paper towels, and printer paper for the teacher to use. According to the DoE, it only contributes nearly 11% to the total budget of primary and secondary schools. It still falls mostly on states and municipalities to handle education. While it's fun to say it's the federal government that's failing out public schools, it seems it's the state and local governments that have failed.

      I'll go ahead and say it. Ron Paul is a delusional idiot. What Ron Paul envisions for modern America is an America of the late 1700s, a system and way of life that had a different reality that what we face today under entirely different conditions. Just because it worked well in 1812, doesn't mean it will work well in 2012. His utopia is nothing more than the fantasy of an overly nostalgic mind as possible to implement at Karl Marx's own utopia. Seriously, Ron Paul stopped being amusing in the 80s when he was claiming there wouldn't be a drug problem if drugs were just made legal.

    649. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Keen+Anthony · · Score: 1

      First of all, public education is managed mostly at the state and local level. The Department of Education has a larger mission including minimizing the effects of economic and racial disenfranchisement and, yes, providing federal aid. People who would like the DoE shutdown should at least learn about what DoE does. I'm with you on DHS, but especially TSA.

    650. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but a lot of sewage, bridge, road, infrastructure money comes from federal support, the state cannot (well the state of PA) even come close to raising enough money to repair or rebuild its infrastructure so this is another idiot idea by the prepubicans. The demonrats (yes I spelled those out like on purpose) really are no better when it comes to solving these problems. The states can govern themselves to an extent before the Feds come in and dictate what laws they can and cannot have, the focus should be on getting rid on the federal death choke on the country, instead of the feds wasting money to go after legal medical pot, or to overturn some state law, ect...

      I love the bull**it politicians fed to people over how they'll do this and that, but in the end it is like using a piece of used scotch tape as a band aid for a gash, get rid of the FEDS dictating (communist like) power over how states can govern (the entire country for that matter) this is what congress is suppose to be doing, not to dictate but make sure laws are fair and constitutional. The feds are wasting tremendous amounts of money to go after the petty and dumb things, the FAA, FCC, FDA are a waste of money and time as while, but I am not going to get into that right now. Get rid of the strong hold the feds have and billions of dollars will be freed up, (example) we have supreme courts, so why are we spending money for federal courts, and the federal courts almost always go against the constitution, or overrule the supreme courts.. This is not a fix just a small solution to the problem. Obviously there is a lot of work that needs to be done, but both sides are going about it the wrong way, they want easy targets for there ideas, and they want to convince the voters there ideas are going to work.

      I am not directing my comments at khallow, so I am sorry if khallow feels that I am, just wanted to use the quote.

    651. Re:In other words, we should give up. by HotBBQ · · Score: 1

      I was born in Plantation, FL. I've lived in Sarasota, Tampa, Tallahassee, and Melbourne. I have relatives in Ft.Lauderdale and Miami. I've pretty much been everywhere in the state of Florida. Of course many people don't consider Florida "southern", especially south of I-4, but my point still stands. The state government of Florida is worse than the federal government, however hard that may be to fathom. But what should one expect from a state that chooses to elect a governor, Rick Scott, who was at the center of the largest Medicare fraud case of all time? The South continues to lag behind in most quality of life standards. This is not due primarily to the incompetence of the Federal government, but rather the incompetence of the people and governments of the South.

    652. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Having supported the Dept. of Education, I can solemnly tell you that the only thing that would be missed if it were eliminated is the Federal Student Aid (grants, financial assistance, etc.). A huge portion of those monies go to non-U.S. citizens at that. DoEd has NOT made any positive impacts on the country's educational system and it would not be missed if it were gone.

      All of these can be managed at the state level. If only a portion of the money saved were distributed to the states to fund projects in these areas, you'd see marked improvements overall.

    653. Re:In other words, we should give up. by ianare · · Score: 1

      Your sarcasm detector is a little off there, but thanks for the alphabet soup.

    654. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, if you read his Executive Summary, he does specifically talk about ending both foreign wars and foreign aid. Here's the link to the full release, see the 3rd section: http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf
        Nice comparison with the military though -

    655. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Spudds · · Score: 1

      Actually, the privatization of the military has already started. The military already doesn't cook their own meals: Haliburton does that. And let's not even bring up Blackwater...

    656. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The government's focus is on people"...
      People who donate lots of money to election campaigns.

    657. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He can't do any good for the rest of the country if he doesn't make his own district happy enough to re-elect him. He has been very principled, but there have been one or two occasions when he had to get re-elected. I'd still take him over anyone else. For most representatives, being hypocritical is a job requirement.

    658. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even if military/defense spending was cut completely, the federal government would still be running a deficit. It is social security, medicaid and medicare that are really breaking the bank. These programs must be reformed and the federal budget must be cut across the board.

    659. Re:In other words, we should give up. by no+bloody+nickname · · Score: 1

      I'm thinking woosh is appropriate here. Even though the post you responded to was a little to ambivalent to work as snark. (if it actually wasn't snark its a prime contender for worst comment ever)

    660. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey Worked great for the Romans :)

    661. Re:In other words, we should give up. by teg · · Score: 1

      That articles does not comment on anti-trust laws, except to use some of the wording for fighting states and others setting standards for products to be sold in their state. Nowhere does it say that monopolies are OK, and should be allowed. Which is good, for a private monopoly is by far the worst way to organize anything... you get complacency and lack of innovative edge you get in the public sector, combined with a profit maximization that underscores it is best not to serve everyone even if you would earn a profit: You could make even more if you raised your margins to your optimal level.

      That said, I believe in the setting of standards too. Especially ones which affect others than yourself - your car polluting and being dangerous doesn't only affect you, they affect others. Which is why they have agreed together that common standards are a necessity. Same for environmental standards e.g. in production - you might not care about carcinogens from your factory polluting together, and the external cost is not borne by you.

    662. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then let the Caribbean countries pay!

    663. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wonder why Ron Paul doesn't talk about slashing the military budget, it would appear the potential savings are enormous?

      If you would bother to read his proposal before you commented, you would see that he defunds all military war spending, ending all foreign wars we are currently involved in. Thats right, to $0. He also would stop all foreign aid funding, the majority of which goes in military $ aid to Israel.

    664. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This guys really doesn't know what he is talking about. Have you heard Ron Paul speak? Read about him?

      He's not big on foreign wars and foreign conflicts. Maybe you should R E A D something about the person you are talking about. Ron Paul DOES talk about slashing the military budget... but that goes against the liberal agenda and talking points you have been lead by the nose into believing. Think for yourself!

    665. Re:In other words, we should give up. by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      [rant]
      Right. And if one actually studies history, philosophy, and things like that one learns quickly that lots of things that were originally organized at the state level -- e.g. "militias", roads, laws permitting slavery, y'know, little stuff like that -- proved ultimately impracticable. For the United States of America -- still the name of the country to become the United States of America, we had to move past the despicable regionalism that lingers still, expressed as resentment that (for the love of God, Montressor) some fraction North Dakota taxes go to help provide tsunami warning in California, some other fraction is spent photographing and tracking hurricanes in the Atlantic, and so on. Sure, and some fraction of the taxes I pay goes to help North Dakota support roadways to rural communities, pay for a massive national defense that protects North Dakotans as much as it protects me (in North Carolina) and both of us pay taxes that go or have gone to help support the massive manufacturing infrastructure in places like Michigan or Illinois or Ohio that provide us with cars and many other goods. From the Civil War on, the US has truly been one country, not lots of fragmented states, and its national identity has been forged and reforged by decades of political, economic, and military conflict with a turbulent world. One has only to look at places like Libya to see the dangers of tribalism and fragmentation in a unified state. Perhaps their civil war will forge a single country with a national identity that transcends their internal tribal identities; perhaps not. I'm a native North Carolinian -- born less than 20 miles from where I'm sitting, but I take no particular pride in that and have lived in two other states in the US and one foreign country for periods spanning at least years. I like NC -- it's a great place to live, primarily because the people are mostly good people, the weather is awesome a lot of the year, the state has mountains on one end and the sea at the other, and the research triangle is a place of high civilization, one of the if not the highest per capita concentration of Ph.D.'s and MDs in the world, four Universities and a half dozen colleges within a thirty minute drive of one another (three within a fifteen minute drive -- NC State is the one that's a bit farther away), lots of representation of the arts, a decent economic base. But I cherish the fact that NC is just one state in the United States, arguably the most civilized nation in the world. This is not to pick on or disparage the many other excellent countries out there -- the world itself is finally becoming rather civilized, and the light of freedom is indeed burning brighter all over the world with every passing year (sometimes without even requiring horrific wars to ignite it) -- but we, along with a handful of close, more or less equally civilized friends, have led the way, often at the expense of many lives and much spent fortune, none of which would have ever been possible as a confederation of loosely allied individual states with no common goals or identity.

      There are in this country still many people who deeply resent the fact that they have to pay taxes. It doesn't matter that in the civilized modern world, our taxes rates are perhaps the lowest, while the benefits we derive from those taxes are the highest. It doesn't matter than they invariably rely on the services and infrastructure provided by those taxes. It doesn't matter that in many cases, they wouldn't even have the jobs that they have in any sector of the economy if it were not for the centralized management and regulation of that economy paid for in part by their taxes. They can always point to one thing or another that some of their tax money is spent on that they derive no benefit from, or that they disagree morally or politically with, and consider it some sort of "tyranny" for their money to be taken away and used for those purposes, even though they have a vote that counts the same

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    666. Re:In other words, we should give up. by SockPuppetOfTheWeek · · Score: 1

      Anyone who says "x is not science" is probably trolling. And probably wrong. It's No True Scotsman. It's "No True Science" can disagree with you on something, therefore anything that disagrees with you on it is "not science".

      Science is a method. It's a tool. Anyone can use it. Or not use it. Like statistics, it can be used to lie. Like statistics, most liars use it. And like statistics, 98% of it is made up on the spot.

      Sorry but it irks me when people say "x is not science" when they mean "I believe x is wrong, because...".

      Don't. It just makes you wrong. Even if your scientific theory is right.

    667. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are truly out of touch with reality if that is what you believe. Govt. did not invent charity, exploration, invention, parks, education or any of the departments they control. You are doing a diservice to every American with this propaganda. Dr. Paul supports all those things you say would disappear if not for Govt. He believes it can be done a lot better and a lot less expensive with the Govt. out of it. Why is it so scary for some to think that Govt. is not the beginning and ending to life? You are brainwashed.

    668. Re:In other words, we should give up. by jack+the+ex-cynic · · Score: 1

      Typical political nonsense: it's all waste and graft, unless it's my pet interest, then it's an essential part of the social contract.

      FTFY

      --
      jack the ex-cynic
    669. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      I'll just repy to a few points. What is to say that DOE (aka the US govt) can't lease the light sources to a private corporation to run for profit? The corporation as I mentioned in my original post could be a joint venture between many corporations, essentially selling back research time in proportion to funds paid into the project. Any extra time would be sold at 'market' rates to non-members.

      One reason why people think that industry/philanthropy can't possibly work is because they compare it to a situation where there was little to be gained by just such a setup - why do that when government is doing it for you?

    670. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      Have you considered that TV news (ota and cable) provide weather information "free" to their viewers in exchange for (hopefully) watching commercials? That the same appear in newspapers?

    671. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmmmm maybe you weren't listening?

      http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pP8CpXd4i74

      How about this occasion. did you hear about it?

      As a matter of fact, I don't think I've heard more than one or two of Ron Paul's speeches where he doesn't SPECIFICALLY address the 700 bases we have in over 150 nations (and wanting to close all of them). The problem here is that you and roughly 80% of everyone commenting on TFA WON'T BOTHER YOURSELVES TO GO TO YOUTUBE, AND LISTEN TO WHAT RON PAUL HIMSELF HAS TO SAY! No you'd rather make stupid assumptions like the idea that if he wants to get the fed out of stuff like energy, education, what foods you eat, that he is saying that he would prohibit ALL government assistance! Nothing could be further from the truth. He has stated thousands of times between this election and the last that he just wants to get THE FEDERAL GOVERNMENT out of doing it (which will reduce the size of the fed, and the associated taxes needed to keep it functioning). If after getting the fed out of it, the state decides to continue a policy once enforced by the fed, there is nothing that says they can't, they just won't be able to expect all of the other states to pay for it via taxes paid to the fed!!!

      -Oz

    672. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      As other posters have pointed out, there are other companies who have very large reasearch operations (basic and applied). While I am certainly concerned about the military/industrial complex end of things, I do not have an issue per se if a company provides a product or service to a government agency.

    673. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      Yes. The fact is, no corporation can possibly have any rights at all, because all of them are fictional notions by the government in the first place. Things that do not exist have no rights at all.

      Owners of corporations have speech rights, and should be able to direct that corporation to make speech on their behalf, and they should not be punished with damage to that corporation, anymore than they should be punished for their own speech.

      This fact does not magically mean that corporations have first amendment rights. That's sorta like arguing that a billboard has a first amendment right. No, the owner of it does, and the owner of it can't be punished either directly, or indirectly by damage to the billboard, for 'speech made by the billboard'. (And, hell, the billboard at least actually exists independent of government fiat, so it could, in theory, have rights. Although it doesn't, and the most relevant one would be the 'slavery' thing.(1))

      Of course, the entire 'corporations have first amendment rights' was just a trick to undo the 'political speech can be limited' decision, by pretending that it somehow didn't apply to corporations. Because we'd already decided that political speech in the form of money could be limited'...but the supreme court decided to add 'from humans' to that, and then invent another category of 'people' and check them for that.

      And, surprise, for some reason they weren't allowed to be limited, despite this making literally no sense even if you grant them first amendment rights on par with people. Even if you count them as actual people, actual people already have limits on campaign giving!

      That right there is the actual problem. The whole dodge of making corporations into 'people' is due entirely to the fact that the court, at one point, decided to put a sanity cap on 'political speech in the form of giving buckets of money.'. And a later court said 'Hrm, how can we make bribery back legal?'

      1) Incidentally, I think someone should arrest the owners of some of the large corporations for slavery. Why on earth would corporations have first amendment rights and not thirteenth? And how on earth is it 'free speech' if slaves are being forced to say it by their owners?

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    674. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      You are making the assumption that after eliminating these offices, Mr. Paul would then turn around and and lower the tax rate to allow US citizens to keep that money that is no longer needed. But if taxes stay the same, then I would still be paying the same amount, but be getting less service in return. Like Netflix.

      On October 31, 2011 US debt will equal 100% of GDP. While he does address some elements of the tax system (which is totally fubar to begin with) the fact remains that this country is in hock and those debts must be paid or defaulted on. So yes, there is a chance (in this case remote) that you might have to personally pay for a service which may have previously been provided by the government. By continuing to pay taxes at the current rate you are, by analogy, being asked to pay off the credit card bill for that plasma tv you bought 5 years ago but could not afford, eventhough it just died.

    675. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      You don't have to sell them to profit-maximizing corporations. Sell them to environmental groups, and with a deed restriction that prevents (heavy) commercial development. They'll bid less (because they won't try to run it at a profit), but it'll go off the books and give the Feds some much needed windfall and a reduction in maintenance costs.

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    676. Re:In other words, we should give up. by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      And why is it free? Because they get it for free. And how do they get it for free? Because our tax dollars paid for it, and it is therefore delivered to pretty much anybody who wants it through many no-cost distribution channels. How are those channels supported? A variety of ways, but most of them entail the carefully controlled use of public resources (such as bandwidth) so that Rhode Island companies can't just flood all of the FM radio bands with enormous and powerful stations and thereby prevent FM stations from functioning at all in Delaware, Pennsylvania, New York, etc -- or vice versa. Now, let's just get rid of the FCC -- damned government agency! Let the radio stations fight an open war for bandwidth, what the hell. Laissez faire, after all. Eventually, to survive, some of the stations band together and create their own governance -- note well, they simply become a shadow government on their own. Of course one of the laws in their government is There Will Be No Competition With This Government, so all competition ceases, quite possibly by a single company buying all of the stations. The owner of that one company is a fervent believer in (pick your poison) and devotes two hours a day to delivering propaganda to its listeners. Nobody can afford to create a radio company that will ever compete with them, because they own all of the delivery infrastructure and can defend the bandwidth by literally scrambling any competing station that tries.

      They don't rely on consumer choices any more -- if you're working and want to listen to music at all, where else will you go? What unregulated "public" resource is protected from exactly the same sort of monopolistic tackeover? Of course they are equally at the mercy of the company(s) that send up weather satellites, and everybody is now TOTALLY at the mercy of the people who send up communications satellites. Eventually the radio companies are taken over by the satellite companies, or vice versa. Why, in a decade or two we could ALL end up working for The Company and you could see what happens when you let corporations provide their own, unrestricted, governance.

      You really do need to read "The Tragedy of The Commons" by Hardin. It's free and online and only takes a few minutes. It deconstructs the greatest myth of unrestricted Capitalism in a few short pages, and all you have to do is drive down any highway and look at the trash at the side of the road in spite of hefty fines and attempted governance to know that it is so very, very true.

      Also bear in mind that weather satellites are not actually built and launched by "the government". Every single bit of them is built by corporations; "the government" is at most responsible for the launching itself and the primary processing of the data that comes from them, and I'd bet that a lot of that is pieced out as contract work (and in any event is done with e.g. computers and other resources purchased from corporations). What you are suggesting is the fragmentation of this clearly near-optimal separation of the work into pieces that are done by companies whose primary business function is to do it and a central entity that both purchases that work at optimal prices and distributes the benefits of that work at optimal prices on our collective behalf! We don't even ask if we "should" provide information about the weather to everyone at the lowest possible marginal cost (free!) -- any idiot can see the enormous benefits of that information being freely available and not controlled by any narrow corporate interest, responsible not to the "customer" but to stockholders interested in making a profit. Weather prediction saves lives, crops, picnics, and billions and billions of dollars of damages that unpredicted weather used to inflict on the human race prior to the 1960's.

      Only a complete, brainless tool like Ron Paul could even contemplate dismantling NOAA, the government agency responsible for providing us with go

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    677. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't have a clue since the TEA long ago corrupted American classrooms. It's sad really, but he did not say he'd wipe out the National Parks, or destroy destroy research. You may not agree with his ideas, so what are YOURS?

    678. Re:In other words, we should give up. by belg4mit · · Score: 1

      Sorry, at the time of reading there were over a thousand comments and feedly was having issues scrolling through them.

      The commerce department is not named in the constitution, but the (in)famous commerce clause does specify a right to regulate interstate commerce, which would naturally be done with some sort of agency or department.

      As another commenter has pointed out, NOAA appears to be the majority of the Dept. of Commerce budget (in non-census years)---5.5 of 9 billion... less than half of what it was two years ago--so keeping the agency but killing the parent is doubly pointless.

      --
      Were that I say, pancakes?
    679. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      Even if you count them as actual people, actual people already have limits on campaign giving!

      So do corporations... Citizens United wasn't about campaign contributions - it was about issue ads.

      I can think of some remedies for Citizen's United, I think:
      - Make all corporate donations transparent. No more setting up a shell corporation, only to secretly fund it and let it fund another corporation which runs issue ads. Thus we will at least know exactly what companies are funding this garbage.
      - Don't offer tax exemption for money spent on ads. Make certain exceptions, such as money spent on fundraising. We should recognize that no significant "education" is going to happen in a 30-second commercial spot.

      I'm sure there are more strategies... but I have to admit it is a difficult problem.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    680. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      You're overlooking an important detail -- most of the 'education' and 'outreach' activities involve the same staff as the 'hurricane' work, and exists mainly to give them something useful to do during the rest of the year. You can't just lay them off for 5 months per year and expect to save 5/12 their current salary costs, because they'll either lose interest outright in working for the NHC, or they'll force the NHC to schedule their consulting gig around their REAL jobs (probably as college professors). Even if they only taught one semester per year, hurricanes DO exist is January, April, and May. They're rare, but they happen.

      Do we really want to risk having the NHC short-staffed when an off-season hurricane that looked like a tropical storm on the satellite and radar suddenly get recognized as a real hurricane when its outer rainbands are already smacking Miami's suburbs and the eye is 18 hours from landfall? Back before we had an army of NHC employees tracking hurricanes from the moment the first drop of rain falls on the Cape Verde Islands, that's basically what used to happen... and even hurricanes that were fairly mild by "Andrew" and "Wilma" standards killed hundreds who found themselves in exposed places with no time to prepare or evacuate.

      Keep in mind that Andrew in particular was a very compact, very fast-moving hurricane that -- even with people watching it like a hawk -- literally went from "category 1" to "category 4 or 5" almost overnight, and showed up on Miami's doorstep with about 2 days advance notice. Had Andrew struck with the NHC running on a skeleton staff, believing Andrew was likely to strike Florida as minor hurricane or major tropical storm up to the point somebody noticed (after most of Miami already lost power) that a 20 mile swath of Eluthera Island basically ceased to exist a few hours earlier, the death toll would have probably been in the thousands.

      Does the NHC operate with 100% economic efficiency? Of course not. In the grand scheme of things, though, the potential tax savings are literally piss in the ocean compared to the economic -- let alone humanitarian -- cost of having a hurricane strike an unprepared metro area somewhere in the US with minimal advance warning.

    681. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Butbutbut, all the little things add up! (Yes, they do. To a rounding error in the budgets of Defense or Medicare/Medicaid).

      So, if this privatization stuff is such hot shit, let's privatize the military as well. I'm sure that'll work out just fine! I mean, if it's evil socialism to heal, feed and clothe people, it must be worse to publicly fund killing them, right?

      Hell, on a related (hypocritical) note, Ron Paul, bastion of freedom, independence and libertarian wankery, seems to have no problem shilling for Federal public funds to deal with coastal damage in his own district. I'm sure, though, that he'd refuse funds to keep rising coastal waters from washing Galevston out to sea.

      Typical libertarian nonsense: it's all waste and graft, unless it's my pet interest, then it's an essential part of the social contract. It's a movement that's just as delusional as Communism.

      Hahahah, yep. Then there's typical republican nonsense: "It's all commie bullshit, unless it's *my* pet project", and typical democrat nonsense: "There's something other than my pet project?".

    682. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Dixie_Flatline · · Score: 1

      He talks about slashing the military budget all the time. He's often on about the 'military industrial complex', and the current state of US foreign policy. He's basically the only Republican candidate that never wanted to get involved in the current wars and demands ending the wars as they stand right now.

      I'm a Canadian looking in, but I've heard LOTS about Paul wanting to cut back on the military.

    683. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul is one of the most vocal advocates for ending the Wars in the Middle East

    684. Re:In other words, we should give up. by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      What is to say that DOE (aka the US govt) can't lease the light sources to a private corporation to run for profit? The corporation as I mentioned in my original post could be a joint venture between many corporations, essentially selling back research time in proportion to funds paid into the project. Any extra time would be sold at 'market' rates to non-members.

      I think it's possible this could work. I have two reservations, however. One is that the DOE has already partially shifted to private contractors to run some of the national labs - because of security issues (like a floppy disk going missing!), the University of California could only renew their contract to run Los Alamos and Livermore by partnering with large defense contractors (I forget which ones, but they're well-known names). Everything I've heard about the effects has been negative - the new bosses don't give a shit about science as long as there are no security leaks, they've cut benefits, and some long-term employees have left as a result. The second is that I'm not convinced that the fabled efficiency of the private sector will make any difference. These facilities are already run 24/7 as much as possible, and the employees who work there now are already the most qualified for the job. So I'm hard-pressed to think of a way to make a profit other than raising the cost of use, or slashing pay and benefits. Alternately, they could sell more time to companies and leave less for academics, which I wouldn't be thrilled about either. (Just to clarify, the way it works right now is that individual groups operate user facilities at the light sources, which they pay for themselves. Academic groups pay very little on top of this to use the facility, with the restriction that all work must be published relatively quickly. Companies which do not wish to publish their results pay an additional fee, on the order of $1000/hour, which helps fund operation costs.)

      But that's not to say that it's impossible; I've wondered in the past whether a convincing business plan could be made for this. I'm really most worried by the fact that neither Paul nor his fans have given any thought to such practical aspects - if they're not simply going to shut down a huge fraction of the US's basic scientific research capacity, what are they going to do instead? Waving your hands and saying "the free market will find a solution" and "we won't miss those welfare queens anyway", like most of the arguments I've seen in favor, isn't a convincing answer.

    685. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      Again, you falsely label me as a Republican and assume I think Bush was great. Bush started a massive invasion and attempted erosion of our rights that Obama has continued and expanded. You assume I believe Obama is full of shit, and you are correct. However, your assumption of my view of Bush is incorrect, as he was full of shit as well.

      It was not my intent to label you as a republican. It was a shotgun method of addressing you and others that have very similar views which happen to be the republican right. I'm considered a RINO myself even though my "liberal" views are very similar to that of Ronald Reagan that the right idolize. I don't think they like Reagan the person/president. They worship the myth of Reagan who was the most popular republican president in modern history therefore they pretend that Reagan had views similar to theirs and point to the myth as something that pattern themselves as.

      You need to see more proposals. The title of "expert" in the organization is loosely applied. Kind of like "sanitation engineers" being real engineers. Many awards are indeed given toward legitimate research, but a strong bias does exist as to who gets the funds. Solyndra is no the only organization working on solar, but they certainly got a disproportionate amount of funds, which was certainly not an accident.

      Well I think Solyndra was an earmark from the Obama administration. There is evidence that Obama ignore advisers concern about Solyndra and even insisted on using them as a campaign photo opportunity.

      Earmarks are dead. They make up a smaller percentage of the budget than the R&D lines you are standing behind. And many earmarks supported very good programs that are now funded on their own lines. That system was abused, but every government process is abused. And when the earmarks went away, those that abused it didn't stop - they simply shifted their behavior to funding mechanisms you have not learned about yet.

      Sorry earmarks are alive and well, the infamous earmark ban never passed congressional vote. However thanks to the Republicans in congress (only because they did this as a publicity stunt) it takes an even larger percentage of the R&D budget and it's less transparent (requires FOIA requests to agencies to uncover). This is how it works.

      1. Publicly declare that they will no longer ask for earmarks in legislation.
      2. Allocate the money that would have gone to the earmark to the agency that is closest to the function of the earmark. This provides legitimacy to the questionable earmark.
      3. Send a letter to the head of the agency stating the intent of sending more money to the agency in exchange for the agency to allocate a portion of the money to the senator's pet project. This allows the agency to collect more money for their management in the form of overhead.

      It's called Letter Marking and it's use has risen dramatically since the republican pledge for no more earmarks.

      One example is Republican Senator Mark Steven Kirk who solicited the Department of Education (ironic considering the republican rhetoric) to release money "needed to support students and educational programs" in his district. It was later revealed that his district received an additional $1.1 million in stimulus money. More info can be found here.

      Knowing how politicians are, I'm sure Democratic congressmen are just as prone to use such a tactic. Except maybe not as hypocritical.

      Anyway despite the rampant letter marking, the overwhelming majority of the research grants issued by the government are competition based.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    686. Re:In other words, we should give up. by meosborne · · Score: 1

      All about you is it?

      Screw the rest of the folks who might like to homeschool but can't because they actually have to work so that their kids can have a place to live.

    687. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      I like Al Frankin's solution to Citizen's United:

      Every single owner must approve political spending. Which, in the case of publicly traded corporations, means every shareholder. Every shareholder must vote for it, which means that anyone can buy part of their stock and stop them.

      I mean, it only makes sense. Why the hell should a company I own part of spend some of my profits on political ads I don't agree with?

      And I don't see the slightest 'free speech' issue with that. I mean, if slavery of these virtual people is legal (Which it must be.) then surely it's legal to require that all slaveowners agree to their actions. I mean, there's plenty of laws about the treatment of slaves.

      In fact, someone should check the laws about slaves already on the books. They're generally considered dead letter, but with the Supreme court apparently unintentionally bringing back slavery, someone should check to make sure there's not already a law prohibiting slaves from speaking about politics without their owners permission.(1)

      This is an utterly surreal concept under modern law, but the entire ideal of owned entities being 'people' is a bit surreal to start with. That really makes no sense at all.

      So do corporations... Citizens United wasn't about campaign contributions - it was about issue ads.

      Yeah, I know they had an idiotic justification for it. Doesn't change how stupid it is.

      1) And while they're at it, check laws in the northern states, like, oh, Delaware, that claimed to to free slaves who reached there. ;)

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    688. Re:In other words, we should give up. by MightyYar · · Score: 1

      I mean, it only makes sense. Why the hell should a company I own part of spend some of my profits on political ads I don't agree with?

      Not a bad idea, but I don't think public corporations are the problem. Look up the Koch brothers... they are responsible for a tremendous amount of money in politics and they own the companies in question outright (privately owned). Further, the idea fails the "NY Times Test". The Times would not be able to have an Opinion/Editorial section if they had to seek the approval of their shareholders.

      but the entire ideal of owned entities being 'people' is a bit surreal to start with. That really makes no sense at all.

      I have to suggest you read the decision - they weren't making that argument at all. The whole "corporation=person" meme came from the press, not the judges.

      --
      W..w..W - Willy Waterloo washes Warren Wiggins who is washing Waldo Woo.
    689. Re:In other words, we should give up. by x_IamSpartacus_x · · Score: 1

      It's too bad there isn't a federal standard for WOOSHes. We could really use one for this post.

    690. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Gr8Apes · · Score: 1

      Interstates weren't built solely or even mainly for the residents local usage.

      --
      The cesspool just got a check and balance.
    691. Re:In other words, we should give up. by DavidTC · · Score: 1

      The Times would not be able to have an Opinion/Editorial section if they had to seek the approval of their shareholders.

      I think making the shareholders actually vote to have such a section would be entirely reasonable. I'm not trying to say they'd have to vote for every instance of speech.

      And I'm not entirely sure that his idea of everyone having to vote for it is reasonable. I think something like a two-third majority should be enough. Hell, a simple majority would probably be enough to stop most corporations from getting involved at all.

      Look up the Koch brothers... they are responsible for a tremendous amount of money in politics and they own the companies in question outright (privately owned).

      Well, yes, but that's not even a corporate problem at all. That's just a problem of money in the system, period.

      The superrich CEO and board of directors abusing public corporations whose stockholders do not agree with what the corporations do is an added level on top of that. If those asshats are going to remove any sort of pension plans, instead encouraging 401Ks, and threaten to privatize social security, well, fuck them. If they're going to remove all other options and force our money into the stock market so we can save for retirement, they're going to have to deal with the fact that we now own part of 'their' corporations, and they don't get to use them to lobby for things that hurt us.

      If you want to deal with the money in the system by people who actually own that much money, I can't see a way to fix that. I was just talking about the money in the system directed there by people who don't actually own that money.

      I have to suggest you read the decision - they weren't making that argument at all. The whole "corporation=person" meme came from the press, not the judges.

      You are correct, Citizens United didn't make that argument. It instead started with the premise that corporations are people. And took it to (one of) the logical conclusion.

      I quote: If the First Amendment has any force, it prohibits Congress from fining or jailing citizens, or associations of citizens, for simply engaging in political speech.

      That, right there, is nonsense. The court started with the premise that 'associations of citizens' have first amendment rights. (And, confusing, the court appears to think they can be 'jailed'. I've never seen a corporation in jail.)

      No association has any rights, at all. Human beings in such an association have. Associations are things. (And not even concrete things, they are merely ideas.)

      I actually have no problem with Citizens United, strangely enough. That didn't 'decide' things poorly...it started from a completely nonsensical assumption that the courts have had for quite some time of corporations being people, added in 'money is speech', and took the logical next step.

      Although, as I said, I'm hoping they take the next step and start trying to figure out what sort of 13th amendment rights corporations have.

      --
      If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
    692. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Personally I wouldn't call weather satellites, communication satellites and GPS satellites a hobby.

      NASA operates the US government's weather and climate study satellites for the NOAA, but it otherwise has nothing to do with the above. NASA doesn't do communication satellites, most which are privately owned and GPS is run by the US Department of Defense.

      NASA spends more on Earth facing satellites than all of the others put together.

      The US Department of Defense spends far more. In addition to GPS, there are a variety of Earth facing recon and launch detection satellites. And I include NASA's "Earth facing" satellites in the hobby category. For example, LANDSAT is a good example with a sequence of one off satellites, but no coherent goal or accomplishment.

    693. Re:In other words, we should give up. by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      There have been 7 LANDSAT satellites so far although one failed to reach orbit. Two of them are still functioning. The next one is scheduled to be launched in 2012. To quote Wikipedia They "...are a unique resource for global change research and applications in agriculture, cartography, geology, forestry, regional planning, surveillance, education and national security." I guess you can call them a hobby but I wouldn't. Over the years they've returned a tremendous amount of information about the Earth.

    694. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Enforcing environmental regulations isn't something that can be reasonably made profitable - but it's damn well worth it. You need to examine life a lot more closely. The ability to charge money or other resources for something isn't the only thing that determines its value.

    695. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      They "...are a unique resource for global change research and applications in agriculture, cartography, geology, forestry, regional planning, surveillance, education and national security." I guess you can call them a hobby but I wouldn't. Over the years they've returned a tremendous amount of information about the Earth.

      Protip: When a manufacturable resource is "unique", it means the maker didn't consider it valuable enough to make a second copy. Note the listing of intangibles. Classic hobbyspeak.

      The LANDSATs are first and foremost technology development projects. But where's the discussion of their impact on imaging satellites?

      Over the years they've returned a tremendous amount of information about the Earth.

      Nobody said hobbies couldn't be useful or help in serious real world situations on occasion. The problem here is that NASA is spending a huge amount of money and getting hobby-level output for that funding.

      The last statement brings up the third symptom. NASA (and other government agencies which are involved in space activities) spend considerably more money for outcome (and by outcome, I mean the primary objective, not the huge list of secondary objectives that tacked on to these projects) than corresponding private It's typical to see private enterprise or non-profits spend an order of magnitude less.

      I'm particularly sensitive to this issue because I just ran (as part of an awesome team) a hobby-level aerospace project for about a thousandth of the cost that a major aerospace firm did for the US Department of Defense. Yes, that's three orders of magnitude. Sure, our craft is probably much less capable than the DOD one, but it's vastly cheaper. Expensive capabilities aren't worth that much. And it's not the first time we've done much for little. (I'll drop a link when our accomplishment gets announced.)

    696. Re:In other words, we should give up. by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      And no billionaires give money to a worthy Charity...not ever...

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    697. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      millitary,,, non issue??!!

    698. Re:In other words, we should give up. by khallow · · Score: 1

      Here's the link I was talking about. We put a primitive airship up to 95k feet. It's no Hindenburg, but it worked and reached an altitude several miles higher than previously attained.

    699. Re:In other words, we should give up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What else would you expect from a Libertarian strict constitutional constructionist? Paul believes the Federal government should only do the things which are allowed to it in the Constitution. Quite rightly he believes that it is not the Federal governments job to create a Utopia, grand or otherwise.
      You surely have a right to disagree with him, but its rather foolish to not expect him to take this stand. It is the logical stand for any strict Constitutionalist. It is also the reason any Libertarian is unelectable for the office of president in the U.S. Too many people suck at the golden teat of the federal government to ever allow that kind of elimination of government waste.

    700. Re:In other words, we should give up. by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      When a manufacturable resource is "unique", it means the maker didn't consider it valuable enough to make a second copy.

      The hell? Hey, the US Navy is a unique resource for the American Military. Guess the whole Navy is just a hobby!

      Seriously, you've raised some good points in the past, but this is just stupid. Along with your "single rover mission (two rovers)" nonsense earlier. So sending two rovers on two separate launches is a single mission? And having a third one in development, I suppose that's still the same mission, huh? When does it stop being a "unique" "hobby"? 10 rovers? 100? 1,000? Or just when you say so?

  7. Scary by ugen · · Score: 1

    EOM

  8. How about... by i.r.id10t · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Getting rid of the BATFE and the TSA instead?

    --
    Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    1. Re:How about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      And while we're axing annoying government existences, can we kill the IRS too?

      And preferably replace it with something that isn't full of holes for the rich.

    2. Re:How about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seconded!

      But if we got rid of the TSA,, where would our high school drop-outs work and wield as much power over the higher educated masses?

    3. Re:How about... by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      Those are in his plans, too. Paul especially hates the TSA because he has titanium knees and gets nut-checked every time he flies.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    4. Re:How about... by Ellis+D.+Tripp · · Score: 2

      But if we got rid of the TSA,, where would our high school drop-outs work and wield as much power over the higher educated masses?

      How about their local police departments?

      --
      Remember "News for Nerds, Stuff that Matters"? Help make it a reality again! http://soylentnews.org
    5. Re:How about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      He does plan on getting rid of TSA too.

    6. Re:How about... by Rinisari · · Score: 1

      I don't know about the BATFE, but I know that the TSA is out in his plan. It'll be privatized, or, really, returned to the airports and the airlines' responsibilities.

    7. Re:How about... by Sperbels · · Score: 1

      Seconded! Seriously, how many fucking intelligence and law enforcement agencies does the federal government need? SS, NSA, ATF, CIA, FBI, DHS, etc. I'm sure there are probably dozens more as well.

    8. Re:How about... by Sperbels · · Score: 1

      DEA has to be pretty high on Paul's list too.

    9. Re:How about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Modded funny because we don't have a "+1, Laughing only so I don't cry", option.

    10. Re:How about... by betterunixthanunix · · Score: 1

      You left out the DEA. Really, we should scrap the war on drugs, release the millions of people who are in prison because they were in possession of drugs, and save billions of dollars each year.

      Libertarian indeed.

      --
      Palm trees and 8
    11. Re:How about... by gander666 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, that is how it was before 9/11. And it was privatized, and paid for by the airlines with fees for landings at airports. It was contracted out to the lowest bidder, who used mostly immigrant labor, at very low wages. The risk assessment done by a private firm would yield that the likelihood of another terrorist attack on an airplane with an entry vector of weak security was low enough to greatly reduce the stridency of the security process.

      Don't get me wrong, I would like to abolish the TSA, as their policies and procedures are far more theatrical than sound security practices. But don't assume that the private sector will do a better job, unless you want the armed mercenaries that were used widely in Iraq to be the security agents. That would be far worse than anything that the TSA has foisted on the population

      --
      Suppose you were an idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress ... but I repeat myself. - Mark T
    12. Re:How about... by Rude+Turnip · · Score: 1

      That's a perfect example of our tax dollars being wasted. Any number of libertarian folks would gladly fondle his balls for free, and probably swallow, too.

    13. Re:How about... by Rossman · · Score: 1

      Or, you know, pare back that absurdly large military industrial complex, which is probably the single thing responsible for breaking the US's bank.

    14. Re:How about... by SoCalChris · · Score: 1

      "Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives should be a store, not a government agency."

      - Stolen from some comedian whose name I can't recall

    15. Re:How about... by alwsn · · Score: 1
      The text from his actual plan, cut to highlight some of the bits left out by the summary / article.

      Cuts $1 trillion in spending during the first year of Ron Paul’s presidency... abolishing the Transportation Security Administration..., abolishing corporate subsidies, stopping foreign aid, ending foreign wars, and returning most other spending to 2006 levels.

    16. Re:How about... by NetNed · · Score: 1

      Yeah and what about our agencies blind eye for the fact in front of them that could have stopped 9/11 from happening? You want to place the short coming of our intelligences agencies playing politics and not doing their jobs on what a privatized security responsibility is? We spent billion on a system that couldn't detect a misspelling of a threats name, something you could google and it would return "did you mean?"

    17. Re:How about... by SkimTony · · Score: 1

      Seriously. Some people have no respect for tradition.

    18. Re:How about... by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      Any number of libertarian folks would gladly fondle his balls for free, and probably swallow, too.

      Hahaha, and you'd take anal sex from Ted Kennedy's rotting corpse, right?

      See, not actually funny or clever.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    19. Re:How about... by sammy+baby · · Score: 1

      Why choose?

      Cuts totaling $1 trillion during the first year of a Paul Presidency would be achieved by eliminating five federal cabinet departments – the Departments of Energy, Housing and Urban Development, Commerce, Interior and Education. Cuts of this scale will also be accomplished by a Paul Presidency abolishing the Transportation Security Administration and returning responsibility for security to private property owners, abolishing corporate subsidies, stopping foreign aid, ending foreign wars, and returning most other spending to 2006 levels.

      (Note: please don't read this post as an endorsement of the plan.)

    20. Re:How about... by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Paul's had some good ideas, but this is really going too far.

      The Federal budget can be cut down to a fraction of its current size, while still maintaining most or all of these services. Here's all we have to do:

      1) Cut the DoD budget, and pull out of foreign wars. Close most military bases in foreign countries. Reorganize and downsize the military so that it's a defensive force (like the Department's name suggests).

      2) Shut down the DEA, legalize marijuana, decriminalize other drugs, and release everyone in prison that's there for non-violent drug offenses and expunge their records so they can get normal jobs instead of being forced into a life of crime.

      3) Eliminate federal welfare programs, and encourage states to set up their own if they're so inclined.

      4) Eliminate most foreign aid, as it usually just goes to prop up dictators.

      I'm sure there's a bunch more things that can be done, but certain things do need to be kept at the Federal level, like the FAA (which is pretty dependent on the NOAA for operating aircraft safely), USGS (for predicting earthquakes), FEMA (for dealing with large disasters; just don't appoint some idiot horse-show manager to run the place), etc. And cutting parks is just idiotic. Ever play SimCity? That was always one thing you could do to keep the people happy: increase park funding.

    21. Re:How about... by Syberz · · Score: 1

      But who will protect the uneducated masses from the terrorororists?

      --
      ~Syberz
    22. Re:How about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quoting his plan posted on his website: "Cuts of this scale will also be accomplished by a Paul Presidency abolishing the Transportation Security Administration" so have no fear, cuts will be made to that fascist department too.

    23. Re:How about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Add the DEA to the mix, too. Probably the most ineffective law enforcement agency since the Bureau of Prohibition.

    24. Re:How about... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wondered about that as well. How did DHS not make the list of departments to be cut?

  9. Simple solution by i+kan+reed · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "For every complex problem, there is an answer that is clear, simple--and wrong."
    --H.L. Mencken

    1. Re:Simple solution by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 3, Insightful

      For every complex argument reduced to simple terms, there is a bonehead who will use a one line quote as a counterargument.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    2. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Large quantities of butthurt detected.

    3. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "For every complex problem, there is an idiot using a quote to sound smart. And they always get the quote wrong"
      --Jezus

      "there is always a well-known solution to every human problem — neat, plausible, and wrong"
      http://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/H._L._Mencken

    4. Re:Simple solution by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry, I pulled it off a quick google search. Would it help that knew it sounded like a misquote when I posted it?

    5. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "A witty saying proves nothing."
        --Voltaire

    6. Re:Simple solution by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      Except that the applicability is quite clear. Original scientific research with no immediate payoff is one of the easiest areas of government action to justify, economically. Blindly eliminating programs without concern for their content is, in fact, trivial reductionism that the quote was intended for.

      Moreover, your position doesn't come from any sort of logic, as is basically apparent in the idea of the quote. The fact that both our statements are bare assertions doesn't make them equal, as there is a formal reasoning and history behind what I posted, and I can't find any way to cast what you posted as anything beyond petty whining. You don't make any cogent counter-argument for why this reductionism is valid, you just blindly refute the refutation.

      I promise you the following: if you make a cogent rational counter argument, I won't assume you're a moron just because of your position. The post you just made, however, ain't doing you any favors.

    7. Re:Simple solution by qwertyatwork · · Score: 1

      The truth resists simplicity - John Green

    8. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you are him. Congratulations on being your own example!

    9. Re:Simple solution by Hotweed+Music · · Score: 0

      He's not blindly eliminating programs.

      Do you really think a 12-term Congressman with a bulletproof voting record would take a blind shot in the dark?

      No. He knows what he's talking about. These departments have a lot of redundant functions that could be handled by the states.

      Now, I'm not saying I agree with the elimination of all these departments, but calling him a simple-minded blind fool is absurd of you.

    10. Re:Simple solution by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      It is cogent and rational; Paul's arguments address everything (and more) that you just argued, but since his arguments have been simplified by this quaint article, your quote appears to offer some sort of wisdom, but it doesn't.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    11. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "For every complex argument reduced to simple terms, there is a bonehead who will use a one line quote as a counterargument."
      --MyFirstNameIsPaul

    12. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "For every complex problem, there is an answer that is clear, simple--and wrong."
      --H.L. Mencken

      Mencken was a Libertarian, so he would probably support this.

    13. Re:Simple solution by DeathPenguin · · Score: 1

      ...as opposed to the complex solutions we have now that are also wrong :-P

    14. Re:Simple solution by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      Please illuminate me. I made my statement based on the information I had available. If their are reasonable counter-arguments, I would love to hear them. I like having my views challenged in meaningful ways. If you don't care to regurgitate arguments you didn't make yourself, at least point me at where I can find more information.

    15. Re:Simple solution by J-1000 · · Score: 1

      For every quotable quote there is another quotable quote that says exactly the opposite yet seems equally true.

    16. Re:Simple solution by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Sometimes you have to cut the Gordian Knot to get anywhere.

      When you have a complex problem that is getting more and more complex with each passing day, the solution is to get rid of those making things more complex. That is all that is happening here.

    17. Re:Simple solution by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      A good place to start is with Liberty Defined. That site is really just a brief summary of the book. What I like about that book is that he goes through each of the most common issues, but he does a good job at citing so you can look up his influences and deeper arguments on specific topics. You could also check out the Mises Institute, which he helped to establish. BTW, I'm not a supporter of Ron Paul because of his views on liberty and such, I am a supporter because he supports the rule of law. For example, he (an OB/GYN) believes that life begins at conception, yet he votes against bills that make such beliefs law because he feels the Constitution does not grant the Federal Government the power to regulate medial procedures.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    18. Re:Simple solution by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      That doesn't explain the supporting argument for eliminating the specific things in the article. Constitutional governance is a great thing, but eliminating the department of energy because regulating nuclear material isn't in the constitution is extraordinarily boneheaded. From a continuing to exist perspective, we're much better off from having a department of energy, and the simple, clear, and wrong answer to freedom is to eliminate anything that doesn't fit within a narrow purview from government oversight. I feel like you've done nothing to justify your criticism of my original point.

      Thank you for trying to present what I asked for. That was nice of you, but I simply don't see the justification for this in the "too much government is bad" cliche.

    19. Re:Simple solution by StingingNettle · · Score: 1

      "An intelligent fool can make things bigger and more complex ... It takes a touch of genius - and a lot of courage to move in the opposite direction." -- Einstein

    20. Re:Simple solution by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      Are you stating that the Government can operate outside of its specific grants when it deems such actions necessary? When this becomes accepted policy then there is nothing to restrain the government from locking up and executing its own citizens (I tried to find an article which described the method for which the Nazis first initiated such policies and compared them to this panel). Under the Constitution when there is something that needs to be changed there is a clear ratification process. Every dictator throughout history has made these same arguments; that needs arise that are greater than granted powers, thus we must ignore the grants.

      That said, there are many aspects of Interstate commerce that can be regulated, including nuclear materials, and states can perform duties as well. Nevada certainly has rejected Yucca Mountain, local California residents hated Rancho Seco, and Oregon residents would have eventually shut down Trojan Nuclear Power Plant, so it's not like they aren't paying attention .

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    21. Re:Simple solution by i+kan+reed · · Score: 1

      I rather favor a rights (blacklist) based approach to constitutional limitations rather than a strict constructionist point of view (whitelist). It acknowledges the abuse of power being a dangerous problem to free society(and such execution orders do not get a pass from me, though in a discussion that would serve only to frustrate, your Nazi comparison is completely misguided), without jumping the overzealous conclusion that every action taken by a government is negative unless defined by a centuries old purview. This all or nothing approach to government and freedom is, for a lack of better wording, too prone to injustice.

      Your system of allowing states more power and federal less does NOTHING to curb government abuse of power, it merely localizes it. I don't really think it's internally consistent. The federal government in the US has a much better history of laws we would consider reasonable today versus states and municipalities. It's not a very compelling idea that South Carolina could allow an unregulated nuclear plant across the border from my house without my getting a voice in it at all.

      Also, since you seem to have misread me, I endorse nuclear power as a concept, just not without careful watch over the creation of fissile materials. It's among the safest, cleanest, and most efficient mechanism of generating energy in the world.

    22. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      awesome

      I don't have a slashdot account, so mod point love is a mystery to me. I hope this reply finds you well.

    23. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Frustra fit per plura quod potest fieri per pauciora [It is futile to do with more things that which can be done with fewer].
      --William of Ockham

    24. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dr. Paul would probably agree. Government solutions to problems are way too simple-and wrong.

    25. Re:Simple solution by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      What you are favoring is no rule of law, but you can't see it. The Constitution is a whole thing that cannot be broken into parts. It is one agreement; one large grant of powers.The ratification process works: for example, the 'centuries old purview' did not include giving women or blacks the right to vote, but that is now in the Constitution.

      It is not 'my system' because I did not make it and there are certainly things in it that I do not like, but that does not mean I am willing to grant the Government the power to make any law it deems necessary, which is the only other alternative. Let's look at some of the reasonable laws from our federal government: a drug war that has made the U.S. number one for percentage and number of citizens incarcerated and has turned inner cities into virtual war zones and other nations into real war zones. A secret panel that decides which citizens get the privilege of due process. A secret entity that gives trillions of dollars to whomever it wishes without question or even audit. Several entities that guarantee bad loans with public funds. Sallie Mae is the very definition of predatory loan practices. An onerous tax code that ridiculously penalizes the middle class. Offensive wars based on rumor. The list goes on. I can move to another state, but expatriation is a whole 'nother ball game.

      The Constitution deals with interstate issues. If you damage the property of someone else, then the guilty party must answer to you in court.

      One additional note, I do not feel it is fair that you should decide what form of government I should live under and likely you feel the same way for the reverse. This is the concept of a republic; that we can choose to live in a society of laws that is more to our liking. This is the real reason that the Constitution was such a brilliant compromise; it allowed each state to enact the laws that it desired. Vermont, for example, had outlawed slavery even before the Constitution was drafted. They were not forced to change those laws by joining the republic.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    26. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He didn't reduce the argument to simple terms, just the meta argument. On the other hand you just called yourself a bonehead.

    27. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For every complex argument reduced to simple terms, there is a bonehead who will use a one line quote as a counterargument.

      Because that is all a simplistic argument needs to be refuted?

    28. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, now that we've done Obama's way and found out how wrong it is, let's take the more complex approach offered by Ron Paul & Co.

    29. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For every complex problem, there is a simple concise star trek explanation.

    30. Re:Simple solution by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

      Why don't we look at this as a starting-point, rather than a solution?

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
    31. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True statement, but false premise - this is a simple problem, not a complex one. The US government is broke, flat broke. We are almost $15 trillion dollars in the hole, and yet are still spending at an alarming rate. So you can justify the importance of these programs in our daily lives all you want, and describe life without them as some sort of dystopia, but that doesn't make them any more affordable. And while we should fight for some of them, e.g. NOAA, to be preserved, as the first responsibility of the government is to protect its citizens, a great many of them (e.g. HUD) have done more harm than good for this country, and have spent exorbitant amounts in doing so. Unfortunately, politicians win votes by making promises they cannot afford to keep (universal health care, anyone?), which has lead to this bloated government, but instead of admitting to this, they borrow and/or print money in order to save face today at the expense of future generations. As a result, we have become accustomed to a way of life that is simply unsustainable, as the masses are finally discovering, and the sooner it gets fixed, the better off we will all be in the long run.

      If you don't like to face hard facts, then maybe you should go live in Greece, let us know how that goes. Then again, us Americans will all be living in our very own Greece in a matter of years if this keeps up.

    32. Re:Simple solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The root cause of the problem is not complex. It is actually very simple. Our government spends too much money very inefficiently. And the solution is to get rid of those departments that are inefficient, and release the authority down stream. Simple in terms of architectural decision.

  10. No more by tthomas48 · · Score: 1

    warnings about hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis.

    1. Re:No more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no, private companies would take over those. they've already proven more apt at weather stuff

    2. Re:No more by MightyMartian · · Score: 4, Insightful

      So people would have to pay to find out if a hurricane is going to nail them?

      Ah America, land where sociopathic greed is not only approved of, but actually encouraged.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    3. Re:No more by lochnessie · · Score: 2

      They're more apt at what, interpreting the massive amounts of weather data supplied to them by NOAA?

    4. Re:No more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      warnings about hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis.

      private corporations are always willing to fill in the gap...the only difference here would be that you would have to pay for getting those warnings.

    5. Re:No more by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      You do realize we are getting to the point of just trying to save the republic right? Just throwing it out there so you can put hurricane prediction into perspective... *You* *WANT* hurricane prediction, but we are damn close to not being able to send out millions of food stamp checks. Sounds like greed is alive and well on both sides I guess... Do you think the government went over to the tree that shits money to pay for Hurricane warnings? People ALREADY HAVE TO PAY to find out.

    6. Re:No more by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep. if the federal government doesn't do it, it won't get done. no one else is capable of figuring out weather patterns.

    7. Re:No more by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      Who do you think pays for NOAA now? The fairy God mother? The horror to think that your local tv station or newspaper will have to pay a private company for that service now.

    8. Re:No more by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Where do you suppose they get their data?

    9. Re:No more by boristdog · · Score: 1

      Why the corporations would surely launch their own weather satellites! And they would be very generous in selling you the data, although prices may go up in hurricane season for the gulf states, and winter for the northern states, but it's the free market!

      Oh, but if you share that data with someone who didn't pay, the WIAA will sue your ass into oblivion. "Sorry grandma, I can't tell you if a hurricane is about to hit your house. It cost me over $50,000 in lawsuits last time I warned you."

    10. Re:No more by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      And who exactly is going to pay for the satellites and the scientists? Do you actually know what NOAA does?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    11. Re:No more by Altus · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yea, better to ditch essential services than tax rich people.

      --

      "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    12. Re:No more by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      warnings about hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis.

      private corporations are always willing to fill in the gap...the only difference here would be that you would have to pay for getting those warnings.

      I'd like to see that business plan.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    13. Re:No more by siride · · Score: 1

      They won't do it as well. There already are private weather companies and they can do anything NOAA can do...if they wanted to. If they really are better, then why does NOAA still do all the kickass stuff and run the best weather monitoring network in the world? Where are all the private weather models in the US that run so much better than the ones at NCEP? If there's money to be made, if the private sector really is better at providing weather data and forecasts to the public at reasonable prices and in a way that is supportive of research, public, private and academic, then where is this giant market? It doesn't really exist because NOAA actually does a damn good job. And all the data is available for free, for public use. That means academia can do useful research and private companies can use it to make their own, potentially better forecasts without spending a lot of money on a weather monitoring network or supercomputers for weather models.

      Honestly, the current model is pretty kickass. The weather data and modeling is a public good, and anybody, including private companies, can use, abuse, slice and dice that data for whatever purpose without getting tied up in legal issues, IP rules, contracts and other bullshit typical of the private sector. If you want a model for what the government *should* be doing, take a look at programs like NOAA and the NSF, or the agencies that gave rise to the internet. Let the government be the incubator for research and long-term investments and let the private sector come in and make money off of it without having to take a giant risk that probably won't pay off for years or decades. That's how you can create jobs.

    14. Re:No more by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      warnings about hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis.

      private corporations are always willing to fill in the gap...the only difference here would be that you would have to pay for getting those warnings.

      Right. You would pay by having to watch commercials. It's not like the Haliburton Hurricane Center is going to take you credit card number before telling you the latest models.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    15. Re:No more by Chapter80 · · Score: 1

      No more warnings about hurricanes, earthquakes, tsunamis.

      Watch out for hurricanes, earthquakes and tsunamis.

      (Please read this daily. Thank you.)

    16. Re:No more by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Hahaha....suuuuure.

    17. Re:No more by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Except that people ARE paying for it through taxes and inflation and borrowing (future taxes). So where and when was that ever FREE?

      It's much more fair NOT to tax everybody just to have SOME benefit from this. In fact it shouldn't be done that all are taxed for benefit of some - this is confiscation of property without just cause and representation.

    18. Re:No more by alphatel · · Score: 1

      I would pay to see a hurricane, but not to hear about one.

      --
      When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
    19. Re:No more by PintoPiman · · Score: 1

      So people would have to pay to find out if a hurricane is going to nail them?

      Ah America, land where sociopathic greed is not only approved of, but actually encouraged.

      Dude, are you under the impression that if the government pays for it then its free? People have to pay now, dumbass!

      The difference between state vs federal vs private sector is really just a matter of WHO pays. In the federal case, its folks who are rich enough to be taxed but not rich enough to avoid taxes. In the private case, it might be the people that actually benefit from the service. In the state case, it'd be about halfway between those two...

    20. Re:No more by PintoPiman · · Score: 1

      If they really are better, then why does NOAA still do all the kickass stuff and run the best weather monitoring network in the world?

      The NOAA is competing unfairly. If I don't pay $private_sector_meteorologist for his wares, he doesn't get money. If I don't pay NOAA, I go to jail.

    21. Re:No more by siride · · Score: 1

      Well, we could all leave this country and then it wouldn't have any money to pay for NOAA (or any people to staff it for that matter). Really, it sounds to me like you are arguing for no government whatsoever. After all, any government function is technically "unfair" competition against the private sector. You also miss the point that the public sector does things the private sector can't do effectively or fairly, or may not want to do at all. If the private sector really could do a better job, it would have by now. There's nothing stopping private sector weather services, monitoring networks, weather models and forecasting agencies. While some of these exist, they are generally not a whole lot better than what NOAA provides. And none of them would pool their resources into a 4.5 billion dollar a year common resource. Instead, we'd have a system that would cost twice as much with half the value, unless you have a lot of money to pay for the very fancy products.

    22. Re:No more by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      Did you miss the earlier reply where it was suggested to privatize? After all, no company could possibly afford to launch a satellite or have the necessary engineers, etc to handle the service. DirecTV is government owned, right?

    23. Re:No more by PintoPiman · · Score: 1

      Well, we could all leave this country and then it wouldn't have any money to pay for NOAA (or any people to staff it for that matter). Really, it sounds to me like you are arguing for no government whatsoever.

      I'm not arguing for anything at all. I'm explaining why NOAA has no private sector equivalents. You asked a question, I answered it. A private sector alternative would need to actually convince users to pay it money. The NOAA has no such obligation.

    24. Re:No more by siride · · Score: 1

      Well, yes and no. If NOAA really provided no service whatsoever, it would likely eventually get cut. It certainly would be replaced by private sector equivalents even before being cut.

      I would disagree that the private sector doesn't have this problem. Large companies can keep alive product lines and services even if they are losing money or are of low quality. In a situation with monopolies or oligopolies, companies don't really need to convince you to do much of anything: you have no choice but to buy from them or go without. And unlike is the case with government, you can't write your representative, or elect a different president to change the situation.

  11. Pretty Sure by OverlordQ · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That if this happened, after the next earthquake or hurricane demolishes a few large metropolitan areas people would be wondering why we had no warning.

    --
    Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
    1. Re:Pretty Sure by hierofalcon · · Score: 2

      The functions of NOAA could easily be considered as a national defense issue and moved to the Department of Defense. So could the CDC or a few other critical pieces of government. Any necessary agency can find a home. If you move the portions of government that have been placed in odd departments out of them and to where they make sense, you really start to see just how much of a waste some of the other departments are.

    2. Re:Pretty Sure by CraftyJack · · Score: 2

      I had no idea that NOAA, NIST, and USGS operate on such small budgets. Color me impressed.

    3. Re:Pretty Sure by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      The alternative is economic collapse and providing no services. Pick your poison.

    4. Re:Pretty Sure by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      But that doesn't save money, just shuffling responsibilities around.

    5. Re:Pretty Sure by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Screw that, when the entire country got nuked we'd wonder why we abandoned all of the energy departments nuclear weapons production facilities.

    6. Re:Pretty Sure by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      And, in fact, where you basically have to shoehorn it into another department (NOAA in defense?), you're probably going to produce a vast number of inefficiencies as unlike organizations have to try to figure out how to talk to one another, and where the parent department has a mission statement that tilts in one direction now either has to accommodate one that tilts the other way, or simply force it to their direction.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    7. Re:Pretty Sure by Microlith · · Score: 1

      No it isn't. You could trim the military's budget and reform Social Security instead, saving enough to pay for these services several times over.

    8. Re:Pretty Sure by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      Social security is already fully funded/paid for. We'll need to be proactive to keep it that way though. Triming the military budget to ZERO wouldn't fix it... what next? I must apologize, i replied to the wrong post... Have a mod point..

    9. Re:Pretty Sure by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      Excuse me, but what would happen today if there was 24 hours notice of a hurricane coming to Miami? Well, you would think that we would secure all of the buildings, board up all the windows so they don't break and evacuate the population, right?

      Wrong. 24 hours would be a start but not anywhere near enough time to evacuate any major population center. More people would die from the evacuation than could possibly be killed by the hurricane no matter what kind it might be. There is not a hope in the world of boarding up enough windows to make any meaningful difference in glass breakage.

      So what would happen? Nothing. Nothing at all. Probably some attempt would be made to keep the whole thing quiet and not encourage people to evacuate where they would be killed on the roads or trapped in their cars. It was studied extensively in the 1950s and 1960s when the concept of a limited nuclear war was being bandied about. Attempting to evacuate a major city at that time was pretty much ruled out as being wildly impractical - it would take many days. Today, with less train service, it would probably take more than a week.

      So any sort of warning would simply not be acted upon in any meaningful manner. There isn't anything that can be done about such things as earthquakes or hurricanes except maybe tell people to stay indoors. Maybe keep them out of tall buildings, except the tall buildings are probably much safer than small apartment buildings and most individual homes.

    10. Re:Pretty Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow.. I didn't know the government predicted Earthquakes for us.
      we should have told Japan.

    11. Re:Pretty Sure by element-o.p. · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the argument wasn't "just shuffle responsibilities around so it looks like we are cutting waste", but rather was "put departments on the cutting block, move the responsibilities that really are needed to another department, and dispose of the rest."

      --
      MCSE? No, sir...I don't do Windows. Yes, I am an idealist. What's your point?
    12. Re:Pretty Sure by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      I agree that the various departments have different priorities and might take time to get to the place they are communicating well with each other. They don't communicate well now in different departments and this is to the detriment of the American people. This might force them to become better at it. The homes I suggested were examples and might not be the best fit - but their purpose is largely aligned on a macro level - protection of the U.S. people. Their methods of going about it are simply different. In some cases though, it would be better to have them aligned as there is overlap now between the two.

      As other posters have mentioned, fixing the size of the bureaucracy needs to be addressed before lenders stop rolling over our increasing debt and the services stop completely. Nobody is saying the way is going to be smooth or public employees or elected officials are going to be happy.

      The private sector has been dealing with these issues for years (corporate buyouts, different cultures, communication between high management and subsidiary companies that may not do something high management thinks of as critical). In both cases, there is streamlining at the high end where people are no longer needed and facilities can be combined. This is one of the places where there is savings. In addition in the private world, the new management may decide that some functions are not needed or important to their long term plan and sell the bits off that aren't needed or simply shut them down. The public sector has been largely immune from these types of disruptive changes. It's about time they found out that their ruts can indeed be climbed out of and they can continue to function if they get moved to different management.

    13. Re:Pretty Sure by TonyXL · · Score: 1

      How about the states pay for their own stuff? Why should someone from Ohio pay for California's earthquake system?

    14. Re:Pretty Sure by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Sure it does... you ax 90% of the department and keep the 10% that actually does something of value; it's no longer large enough to operate as an independent agency, so you roll it into the agency that best suits it.

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    15. Re:Pretty Sure by alphatel · · Score: 1

      And Fox News would blame it on the welfare recipients who didn't pay their hurricane bills.

      --
      When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
    16. Re:Pretty Sure by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Social Security is a red herring, and has been used as such by the republican party since it's inception.
      It is funded, paid for, and is design to have slight modification depending on the economy.
      In no way does it need 'restructuring'.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    17. Re:Pretty Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And then figure out a way to blame liberals and/or lawyers.

    18. Re:Pretty Sure by geekoid · · Score: 1

      No, the Military can be a useful arm to respond to incidents as determined by those agency, but the military has a different mission, one that does not align with those agencys.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    19. Re:Pretty Sure by geekoid · · Score: 1

      And it will be the liberals fault, for some reason.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    20. Re:Pretty Sure by Rakishi · · Score: 1

      If cutting the $700 billion defense budget doesn't fix it then cutting the less than $15 billion programs listed definitely won't fix it. Neither will cutting the $200 billion in all those departments.

      Interestingly enough a large majority of the Department of Energy spending is related to nuclear weapons. I guess Ron Paul wants us to just dump all those nukes in a Nevada field.

      So, congratulations on utterly failing.

    21. Re:Pretty Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Especially that NIST does some world-leading research that noone else seems willing to do.

    22. Re:Pretty Sure by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Sure it does. NOAA is just one small part of the Department of Commerce. Keeping NOAA will be nowhere near as expensive as keeping the entire department.

    23. Re:Pretty Sure by Tubal-Cain · · Score: 1

      Nuclear weapons seem like something that would fall under the DoD's budget, not DoE. And if it doesn't, you can bet the military would pick up that tab real quick.

    24. Re:Pretty Sure by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      > Why should someone from Ohio pay for California's earthquake system?

      Because roughly half of America's computer-related economy depends upon California's continued existence as a going concern? Because roughly a third of the cargo destined for Ohio gets unloaded from ships in Long Beach? Because 70% of the movies, TV shows, and music enjoyed by Ohio residents comes directly from California?

      Need I remind you that Ohio itself is somewhat seismically-active? How much would it cost Ohio taxpayers to staff and run a completely independent Ohio department of Earthquake Preparedness? Think of it as insurance. Ohio pays a penny per year for a dollar's worth of earthquake-related services that it usually doesn't need, but will need very badly if a once-in-2,000-year earthquake tears a gash through Cincinnati.

      Ohio has even gotten smacked by a few hurricanes over the years, including Camille. It slammed ashore in Mississippi as a category 5, and apparently kept skidding over the Appalachian foothills until it rolled into Ohio as something between a weak category 1 hurricane and strong tropical storm. In any case, if New York City were wrecked by a major hurricane, I guarantee Ohio would notice pretty quickly, because most of its gas comes from refineries in New Jersey.

    25. Re:Pretty Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and you'd still be here doing what exactly....

    26. Re:Pretty Sure by systemeng · · Score: 1

      The reason nuclear weapons are under DOE instead of DOD is that we probably wouldn't have them if DOD had been left to develop them. The security cultures of the organizations are very different. DOE operates under an open culture where the smart folks are allowed to see most all of the information except for select areas which are very compartmentalized. The DOD works by trying to keep everything on a need to know basis resulting in mass duplication of effort and the people capable of solving a problem typically not being allowed to do so.

      The scientists on the Manhattan project largely prevented the paranoid security culture from slowing their work during the second world war. Once the bomb was developed and the affair no longer results-oriented, General Leslie Groves pulled Robert Oppenheimer's security clearance because Military culture was incapable of handling someone whose ideology did not fit with their own. Why they never pulled Edward Teller's clearance is a mystery but I suspect it is because Teller was still needed in H-bomb development. Even in his later years, Teller, in a speech he gave to a group I was in, said that the security rules at DOE were a bunch of bunk. Some old DOE hands at the speech said this was one of the first time they heard Teller mutter at the end that the security rules also must be followed (around 1992).

      DOE has some great programs but now that it has been run by defense contractors for the most part rather than University of California, for the last 5 or 10 years, DOE is a much poorer place and bound to be plagued by the same inefficiencies that DOD is. A large group of scientists openly sharing information in what was definitely a collegial setting in the late 1990's is almost certainly being replaced by DOD type folks with a bunker mentality.

      For me, the DOE should probably should remain doing energy research and the weapons function could be transferred to DOD. Unfortunately, most of the technical capabilities in the national labs are based on having gold plated everything and top rate people trained to produce and analyze anything, especially the odd kinds of things encountered designing nuclear weapons. Budgets are such that most of these facilities probably could not be maintained for peaceful work if all of the equipment, supplies and technicians weren't being paid for from a bottomless defense budget. If all the nuclear weapon budget at DOD went away, there is a good chance that the useful civilian science would also stop unless a large amount of funding was added to civilian science programs to make up for the lost support of the first rate infrastructure.

    27. Re:Pretty Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So... would you be as so kind as to present the earthquakes that we have predicted? The last time I checked that was something we couldn't do.

    28. Re:Pretty Sure by bames53 · · Score: 1

      Closing down the department of energy doesn't mean abandoning nuclear weapons. Although the plan doesn't mention it specifically it does move important functions from the eliminated departments to other departments. I've heard people in the Paul camp say that nuclear weapons should be in the DoD instead of hidden in the DoE. Presumably that's what would be done under this plan.

    29. Re:Pretty Sure by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      And what would the talking heads do a 6pm if they can't scream for an hour that a thunderstorm is on the way?

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    30. Re:Pretty Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when can we predict earthquakes?

    31. Re:Pretty Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming he's as liberal as he says he is, everybody would be too high to bother about a few cities being destroyed.

    32. Re:Pretty Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unlike the current situation, where we're warned about earthquakes 3 days in advance?

      Wouldn't be a big deal if California would take over the USGS.

    33. Re:Pretty Sure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because that worked out so well for New Orleans a couple years back...

  12. Efficiency by hierofalcon · · Score: 2

    There are many niches in several huge departments that need saved. I suspect that Ron Paul would agree with that. Roll these few small portions over into some other existing department that has some constitutional basis for existing and let it be managed from there without the entire overhead of a full department structure. Return control of all the rest to the states where they belong. If individual states feel the services were worth it, they can create their own departments (if they don't already exist) and hire the federal workers. Perhaps some federal workers can be hired into existing state departments. If they have no constitutional basis for existing at the federal level - GET RID OF THEM.

    1. Re:Efficiency by CreatureComfort · · Score: 2

      Yeah, because who really needs or wants all those nasty national parks. Sell them to corporations to "develop". If future generations, those worthless ingrates, want to have natural beauty, they can bloody well buy 'em back from the corporations and return them to "pristine" beauty. By god we need the money now!

      And why should Wyoming have to pay to predict and monitor hurricanes. Florida, Texas and the rest of those freeloading "water" states can fund a dozen satellites and planes to fly through the storms if they care about them so much. Why should everyone else care about minimizing damage to the Port of Houston, the gulf refineries, or the fruit and vegetable crops. It doesn't affect me... I get all my stuff from Walmart, not any of those places.

      Because, nowhere in the Constitution can I find authorization for a National Parks Service, or NOAA, or even FEMA.

      --
      "Unheard of means only it's undreamed of yet,
      Impossible means not yet done." ~~ Julia Ecklar
    2. Re:Efficiency by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      I think the preamble "provide for the common defense" would cover NOAA. FEMA functions could be handled by states. You're right about the NPS though - let the states manage the national parks in their borders. Just because RP wants to get the federal government out of some functions doesn't necessarily imply the corporations get to take over the functions - although many customer facing services in parks are already contracted out to the private sector. In many cases the states already have bureaucracy in place that could handle them and could hire some of the displaced federal workers to take up the slack. Not everything has to have some nationalized leadership to still work.

    3. Re:Efficiency by chill · · Score: 1

      Article I, Section 8, Paragraph 17

      "To exercise exclusive Legislation in all Cases whatsoever, over such District (not exceeding ten Miles square) as may, by Cession of particular States, and the acceptance of Congress, become the Seat of the Government of the United States, and to exercise like Authority over all Places purchased by the Consent of the Legislature of the State in which the Same shall be, for the Erection of Forts, Magazines, Arsenals, dock-Yards, and other needful Buildings;"

      That one gives the Congress the authority to create National Parks, as long as the State the park is in agrees. In some cases, parks were created out of Federally owned land before any State existed there.

      The next paragraph gives them the authority to create the National Park Service, which they did in 1916.

      Both the NOAA and FEMA can easily be read in under Paragraph 1 of that same section:

      ...and provide for the common Defence and general Welfare of the United States;

      If FEMA isn't "the general Welfare", I don't know what is.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    4. Re:Efficiency by rickb928 · · Score: 1

      "If they have no constitutional basis for existing at the federal level - GET RID OF THEM."

      How DARE you, sir! Even Harry Reid knows government workers are more important than private-sector workers.

      Oh, the humanity!

      As frakking if.

      --
      deleting the extra space after periods so i can stay relevant, yeah.
    5. Re:Efficiency by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 1

      Short version - I got mine, fuck y'all. The whole concept of solidarity in a society, making stuff easier for everyone by economies of scale is totally alien to you, isn't it? Got yours, after all already.

      --
      Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
    6. Re:Efficiency by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      NOAA and FEMA are also defense. We've just gone long enough without losing half our fleet to an unexpected storm or the looting and burning of hordes displaced by a natural disaster that we've forgotten the national security aspects of them.

    7. Re:Efficiency by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      I agree that FEMA could easily fit under the "general Welfare" clause. I simply feel that we would be better off if the states took care of their own people in trouble instead of relying on a national agency to do the work. It is one case where I respect the agency, but feel it is a state function. There are many other agencies that I simply have little or no respect for their function and existence at all.

      I'd argue with your first point though. The "for the Erection of Forts, Magazines..." clearly points this clause as giving the government authority to purchase land to create military bases and control them. It doesn't stretch to the NPS.

    8. Re:Efficiency by chill · · Score: 1

      The government could just purchase land for the creation of military bases?

      Sorry, that isn't how it is supposed to be read. Considering one of the primary authors of the document is Thomas Jefferson. The same Thomas Jefferson who finagled it to allow him to make the Louisiana Purchase -- though not without debate on the issue.

      We'd also have to give Alaska back. And what about land acquired through conquest and treaty, like what we took from Mexico and what was ceded from Britain, Spain and Mexico?

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_territorial_acquisitions

      The NPS was created by the clause that allows them to make laws to regulate the Federally owned lands. The acquisition of the land would be the only hiccup.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    9. Re:Efficiency by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      I'd say that Article IV/Section 4/Paragraph 2 would be more likely to give them the authority to purchase and administer territorial land. After that land becomes a state though, I'd stand by what I said about federal authority being limited to military installations in states as being the original intention of the authors once statehood was granted.

      The framers original intention doesn't cause much more pause than a speed bump if the government wants things a certain way though.

  13. This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul is about less government, so he is realigning money from the government to... I'm not sure, health care?

    He is assuming the slack will be picked up by corporate America and independent agencies, or perhaps he wants to offer research grants later?

    Either way, not enough information in the article to make an educated opinion on his stance besides it makes him sound like a moron, but it may not be as straight forward as that when you factor in everything. I'd also be interested in seeing department benchmarks to see if these departments are performing as they should, ex. for the longest time NASA was not.

    1. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by JustSomeProgrammer · · Score: 1

      I sure hope there are other factors. Because I thought Ron Paul was supposed to be the smart candidate.

    2. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by khallow · · Score: 1, Flamebait

      Ron Paul is about less government, so he is realigning money from the government to... I'm not sure, health care?

      Taxpayers and US debt holders.

      He is assuming the slack will be picked up by corporate America and independent agencies

      I'd say that's a reasonable assumption to make.

      I'd also be interested in seeing department benchmarks to see if these departments are performing as they should, ex. for the longest time NASA was not.

      Depends on the benchmark. There's "All government spending is evil!" benchmark, and the "Everytime government spends a billion dollars, an angel gets its wings!" benchmark, which would yield strictly opposite results.

    3. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sound like a moron? He's been studying this for a good chunk of his life and made a career out of it. What have you done that makes your opinion more valid then his?

      People are constantly forgetting that is more government then just federal. State governments can engage in these programs on their own as well.

    4. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      Herein lies the issue: "Ron Paul is about less government, so he is realigning money from the government to..." We are borrowing over $.50 of every dollars, the country is dead flat ass broke.... So many flaws in once sentence. Realigning money FROM THE GOVERNMENT. That assumes it was THIER TO BEGIN WITH. See, the government does actuall make money, they take it from others. So, I do not accept the premise of the statement. "Realigning money". Again, we are broke and going down the shitter fast. Here is a thought, instead of realigning the money, just don't spend it.

    5. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by DarKnyht · · Score: 1

      The plan is essentially this. The Federal Government is doing things it is not meant to do, but the States Governments were as per the constitution (The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people). So let's move those things back to the states, and the cost of the Federal Government will go down.

      The part he doesn't mention is that the cost of State Government will go up as it reabsorbs these functions. However, as intended the voters will have more control that way.

      --
      Voting them all out of office, now that's change I can believe in.
    6. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      He is assuming the slack will be picked up by corporate America and independent agencies, or perhaps he wants to offer research grants later?

      The states. If it's profitable, private industry will do it. If it's necessary but not profitable, then the states will do it. Should the people in Illinois pay for hurricane monitoring for the people of Florida? Let the coastal states form their own Hurricane Center and pay for it themselves. Just as parks, roads, housing and education should all be state funded and controlled.

      Ron Paul is a 10th Amendment guy. Anything not specified in the Constitution as a federal power is the state's responsibility.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    7. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by nedlohs · · Score: 1

      Because he wouldn't be assuming the States would handle things themselves.

    8. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Only most of what he proposes to axe are explictly permitted the federal government by the Constitution.

    9. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by geekoid · · Score: 1

      " the country is dead flat ass broke"
      no, we aren't. What broke is people understanding of finance and economics. What is broke is people following pundits and not actually experts with a good history.

      ". See, the government does actuall make money, they take it from others"
      Are you really the simple? really? I am torn, On one hand I hope you haven't actually thought about it, OTOH maybe your an idiot.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    10. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by geekoid · · Score: 1

      Huntsman is the smart pub candidate.
      OTOH, we are talking about a party who doesn't like him because he understands science.

      That alone is why no thinking person should be a republican right now. The party doesn't want thinking, they want there preconceive notions to be fulfilled.

      So we may end out with a militant religious radical as the front runner for the presidency in the republican party.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    11. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      I'm saying the article makes him sound like a moron, I don't think Ron Paul is a moron, doesn't say much for you does it anon troll?

      Why don't your write a letter to your governor asking him/her to start an oceanic science program in your state? Rofl

    12. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by Synerg1y · · Score: 1

      This works as long as Florida gets more money federally. If the state finances out of its own pocket... the money comes from the state's population. This is already somewhat evident, a house in Montana is 10x cheaper than a house in New York, but that's because land is a commodity in one place and not so much the other. Florida can't do anything about being on the coast, so it would be more expensive to live in Florida than Carolina, so Florida would lose population leading to less money and so forth so forth, until we have New Orleans all over again w/ 1/4 the population.

      As long as the appropriate funding models are followed the states can handle themselves, then again we can also talk about federal vs state tax balances to bypass the government completely in terms of funding. In that case Florida's state tax would be higher than Carolina's while both get equal funding from the government, and what has to happen is the federal tax is set to a significantly lower level (the lowest state level) and state tax is adjusted appropriately.

      It would definitely be different with Ron Paul, I am not qualified to say that is what we do or do not need though, I can say some of our systems are broken and need more than fixing to right the boat again, shame the government doesn't ship with a reset switch.

    13. Re:This is actually not as surprising as it sounds by vawwyakr · · Score: 1

      You should look up how money enters the economy. There are some excellent basic run downs on youtube even.

  14. Love this guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slash and burn baby! Until the federal budget is cut below current tax revenues we will never dig ourselves out of the hole that democrats have made.

    1. Re:Love this guy by sxpert · · Score: 1

      For the record, the hole was dug by that bloody moron called GWB

    2. Re:Love this guy by JDAustin · · Score: 1

      The hole was always there. GWB took a shovel and made it deeper. BHO threw out the shovel and brought in a backhoe.

      Apologize all you want for BHO, but he has put us more in debt then GWB did. And all the additional debt has shit for the economy.

    3. Re:Love this guy by Applekid · · Score: 1

      For the record, the hole was dug by that bloody moron called GWB

      Wow, that bloody moron has been alive for over 150 years.

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
    4. Re:Love this guy by haystor · · Score: 1

      Ah, I too long for the days of Clinton. If only he could come back and we could recommence the internet bubble.

      Clinton is a good example of hands off government because the dems couldn't get anything passed and then the Republicans took over and nothing got done.

      This isn't good leadership (by either part). It is what happens when the country gets left alone.

      The government doesn't make jobs, it doesn't stoke the economy. It can put barriers (regulations) in place or move money from the most successul to less successful endeavors.

      --
      t
    5. Re:Love this guy by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      For the record, the hole was dug when we left the gold standard. Political affiliation has squat all dick to do with the debt problem. We'll just ignore the fact that the executive branch can't spend money.... Who cares about that whole pesky constituion thing...

    6. Re:Love this guy by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      No, he really hasn't.

      If there is a prize for amount of debt run up, GWB wins by a landslide (unlike his election to office by a handful of Americans dressed in black).

      Look at it this way. A driver steers a bus onto a steep, icy hill and accelerates downwards. Then he hands over the driving duties to Obama, and Obama says "right, time to sort this out" and puts the brakes on. Who do you blame for the bus continuing to slide down the hill with the brakes on? What if the solution is to accelerate faster to clear a gap at the bottom?

      Then you have issues like the Repubs in the back voting "no" on putting the brakes on (Bush tax cuts for wealthiest americans), or voting to accelerate even faster (defence budget, doubled since 9/11 from an already massive number). Then you discover that your brakes are in really poor shape because the rules on looking after them were slackened, making things much more profitable for the mechanics (global financial crisis triggered by irresponsible practices by Wall Street and major financial institutions).

      Obama is in an unenviable position. Not only does he need to make major reforms in a recession, but he has a large number of people working against him *against their own interest* because they've been told he's "ruining America" by powerful vested interests. He's certainly no second coming, but I give him credit for being able to accomplish what he has managed to do already.

    7. Re:Love this guy by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      For the record, the hole was dug by that bloody moron called GWB

      Wow! If you hate Bush for the deficit, you must REALLY hate Obama. He's grown the deficit more than Bush did in less than half the time!

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    8. Re:Love this guy by tbannist · · Score: 1

      You do realize that most of the debt that BHO has added is paying for programs and tax cuts from GWB?

      Tax cuts and programs that Congress won't let him get rid of.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    9. Re:Love this guy by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Clinton's reinventing government initiative trimmed and streamlined the federal government with measurable results: http://govinfo.library.unt.edu/npr/whoweare/historypart5.html

    10. Re:Love this guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What if the solution is to accelerate faster to clear a gap at the bottom?

      This is the point at which your analogy lost any hope of being honest.

      Don't you have an Occupy protest to go to?

    11. Re:Love this guy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're not entitled to your own "facts."

    12. Re:Love this guy by jo_ham · · Score: 1

      Why? Because there's no record of spending ever helping to get a country out of recession... you're right... oh wait... the other thing.

  15. Who handles the nukes then? by orphiuchus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Doesn't the DOE spend a good deal of its time dealing with nukes?

    Isn't that kind of important? Even to libertarians?

    1. Re:Who handles the nukes then? by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 2

      The NNSA has responsibility for servicing the nukes and that would be transfered to DoD where it belongs. I would expect any functions in the former weapons labs still related to stockpile management would be also.

    2. Re:Who handles the nukes then? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Doesn't the DOE spend a good deal of its time dealing with nukes?

      Isn't that kind of important? Even to libertarians?

      Shouldn't the military be dealing with Nukes? The military, by the way, is an enumerated power in the Constitution, so even Ron Paul supports the federal role.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    3. Re:Who handles the nukes then? by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

      But the savings associated with "zeroing out" entire departments would go bye bye. It's easier if we don't think about this and CUT CUT CUT.

      Speaking of which, Yosemite probably is of enormous value to the timber industry!

    4. Re:Who handles the nukes then? by tmosley · · Score: 1

      They don't "deal" with nukes, they just say "no" to everything having to do with nuclear power, and keep us dependent on foreign oil, to an even and ever greater degree than when they were founded a few short decades ago.

      New nuclear power plants would be safer than current ones, allowing outdated designs to be wound down safely, and even to have their waste reprocessed rather than throwing it all away under a big mountain in the desert. But the goobermint don't like that.

    5. Re:Who handles the nukes then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Military nuclear applications are run by DoD. Civilian nuclear is regulated by NRC. If you're thinking of things like Los Alamos, that's research. Which is not to say this is either a good or bad idea- just that Energy doesn't does little nuke regulation.

      It does regulate non-nuke safety, however- for example, DoE has an Office of Pipeline Safety, so those don't blow up (as much)

    6. Re:Who handles the nukes then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that's true. But I'm sure there is market value in it, so some enterprising company would be more than happy to build nukes commercially and sell them at market prices with only a slight markup from cost (they have to make a profit, of course). It might even get some competition going, which would ultimately save money. Then you wouldn't be spending all that money on economically inefficient, government-funded, Department of Energy, socialist nuclear bombs.

      Of course, you might end up buying them from companies in China or Russia instead, but that kind of outsourcing is okay as long as it saves taxpayer dollars, right?

    7. Re:Who handles the nukes then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      isn't that kind of the military's problem to deal with?

    8. Re:Who handles the nukes then? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That should be handled elsewhere. The DOE was founded primarily in response to oil crisis with the hope that it would make the US more energy independent. and it is a testament to the failure of government to solve these kind of problems since the US is drastically less energy independent after 30 years.

  16. Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For everyone posting above, do you really think it is the job of government to provide these services? Put them in the private sector where they can be run efficiently.

    1. Re:Huh? by unimacs · · Score: 2

      Does that apply to software too? The only good software is produced by the private sector?

      This just doesn't hold water. There are some things that the private sector does well. Regulate itself is not one of them. Anything that is not immediately (or ever) profitable in and of itself is also something the private sector sucks at.

      In the private sector short term profitability is often the only thing that matters and there are so many things for which this is the completely wrong approach.

  17. Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.... by Fallen+Kell · · Score: 2

    Yeah, that 1% really does a whole lot.

    --
    We were all warned a long time ago that MS products sucked, remember the Magic 8 Ball said, "Outlook not so good"
  18. A Realistic Look at What America Can Afford by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    We should all have trouble sleeping knowing that a trillion dollars in budget cuts won't eliminate the deficit.

  19. Where is his defence cuts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His defence cuts were main reason I was thinking of supporting him. There are no base closures in this. No cuts in R&D. His plan state we would hold defence spending where it is after ending the wars. That sucks. Thats not what he has been promosing. Way to roll over Ron Paul.

    1. Re:Where is his defence cuts? by sglider · · Score: 1

      *No base closures*? You mean, except all of our overseas bases? With all those troops home, we're probably going to need all the bases we have open right now in the Continental US.

      --
      War isn't about who's right. It's about who's left.
    2. Re:Where is his defence cuts? by arth1 · · Score: 1

      How about laying off all the mercenaries? It's not like they have tenure, is it?

    3. Re:Where is his defence cuts? by khallow · · Score: 1

      His defence cuts were main reason I was thinking of supporting him.

      So you didn't support him. No surprise then that his actions don't reflect your viewpoint.

      Also, the political world is more about what you can do than about empty posturing. I think even this fairly limited proposal is going to fail hard.

    4. Re:Where is his defence cuts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His defence cuts were main reason I was thinking of supporting him. There are no base closures in this.

      I'm just pointing out that national defense is a Constitutional function of the Federal Government.

      Energy, Education and Housing and Urban Development is not.

      I guess Commerce and Interior could go either way depending on the scope of the department.

  20. Still no mention of military spending by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    The Department of Energy manages the nation's power supplies, the Department of Commerce collects taxes, the Interior governs our damn national parks and the immense stretches of government-owned land along with all our environmental efforts, the Department of Education mandates school curriculum and is perhaps the only way social mobility even exists, let alone educated poor (free lunches etc.), weather forecasting would be impossible without NOAA, and neither would our current understanding of climate change, without NIST our clocks wouldn't run on time and our industry would not have any baseline standards, and without the USGS, well, we'd have no idea what our natural resources look like--or our flood risk, earthquake data, and so on.

    Without government spending a great many things that people take for granted would disappear and the world would become a much more unpleasant place.

    1. Re:Still no mention of military spending by khallow · · Score: 1

      The Department of Energy manages the nation's power supplies, the Department of Commerce collects taxes, the Interior governs our damn national parks and the immense stretches of government-owned land along with all our environmental efforts, the Department of Education mandates school curriculum and is perhaps the only way social mobility even exists, let alone educated poor (free lunches etc.), weather forecasting would be impossible without NOAA, and neither would our current understanding of climate change, without NIST our clocks wouldn't run on time and our industry would not have any baseline standards, and without the USGS, well, we'd have no idea what our natural resources look like--or our flood risk, earthquake data, and so on.

      When you put it that way, his spending cuts do make a lot of sense. After all, most of these with the exception of the regulatory stuff and tax collection, can be done by the private world.

    2. Re:Still no mention of military spending by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      And both regulation and tax collection he objects to on princible.

    3. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should go read the plan? He cuts the most (in dollar terms) from defense and is advocating closing the majority for our foreign bases (ie, Japan, Korea).

    4. Re:Still no mention of military spending by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Usually, when I talk to industry folks in my old field they would say how much they loved and needed NIST for people to find their advertising claims reliable (they were based on NIST standards or NIST calibrated equipment and were, therefore, reliable and reproducible). When one large program of this type got cut, no private industry filled in and the sales people started to complain about lost sales.

      But what were you saying?

    5. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      /Whoosh. You kinda missed the point. These are all the things you want. It's just that little voice that keeps getting missed, it's not free and we can't pay for it. Why is this so hard for folks to understand. Okay, tax the rich at 100%, fine. Okay, we did that, not get rid of the other 85% of our overspending and we'll talk.

    6. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Eowaennor · · Score: 1

      The DoE does a whole lot more than just "supply power" and "energy" research. It runs a large number of national laboratories including Brookehaven, Fermi Lab, Jefferson Lab, Oak Ridge, SLAC, etc. Many of these labs are not single focus and have research facilities ranging from biofuels to medicine. For example many cancer treatment technologies have originated from DoE labs, I would hope that most people here would agree that cancer research is important :)

    7. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They can, but will they? Who's going to step up do what NIST does or NOAA? I don't think "well, someone will" is a good enough answer.

    8. Re:Still no mention of military spending by gurps_npc · · Score: 1
      No, they can't. It is easy for an ignorant person to just say "do it privately", but you have no idea what you are talking about. You can run anything privately, but most of the time it is a really bad mistake. That's why it is done by the government, it's not a conspiracy.

      Managing the nations power supply for example. The entire point of doing it nationally is to avoid problems of two local areas disagreeing and having compatibility problems.

      OK, so you say we can do it with one big corporation, as opposed to multiple ones. Uhm, you just got rid of 90% of the benefit of doing it privately - competition. The only real difference between a single monopolistic corporation managing our power supply and a government agency is that the corporation costs more because it gives it's owners a profit.

      OK, lets do national parks separately. Whoops, the corporation that ran it just decided to let them drill for oil, because that is more profitable than visitor fees. Was it a greedy corporation making a profit, or the exact same thing the US government does when it allows oil drilling? When the government does it, the people can rest assured that profit is not the only motive.

      This kind of stuff goes on and on.

      --
      excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    9. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      Yes,it will go on and on. Of course, when we can't send out 14 million welfare checks we'll at least have damn nice parks. That'll teach those greedy corporations...

    10. Re:Still no mention of military spending by khallow · · Score: 1

      They can, but will they? Who's going to step up do what NIST does or NOAA? I don't think "well, someone will" is a good enough answer.

      However, I do think that is a good enough answer. It's worth noting that there are already partial substitutes for the NIST and the NOAA (for example, ANSI and Underwriter Laboratories for the former, commercial weather services for the latter).

    11. Re:Still no mention of military spending by lxw56 · · Score: 1

      The Department of Energy manages the nation's power supplies,

      The power companies are quite capable of that.

      Department of Commerce collects taxes,

      I thought this was the responsibility of the Treasury Department.

      the Interior governs our damn national parks and the immense stretches of government-owned land along with all our environmental efforts

      It's worth noting that the federal government owns 30% of all US territory. Should it?

      The Department of Education mandates school curriculum and is perhaps the only way social mobility even exists, let alone educated poor (free lunches etc.),

      The DoE oversees a few school services that should be provided by states or other organizations. It also regulates, often detrimentally, state education as if the states or school districts are unable to do so themselves.

      weather forecasting would be impossible without NOAA, and neither would our current understanding of climate change, without NIST our clocks wouldn't run on time and our industry would not have any baseline standards, and without the USGS, well, we'd have no idea what our natural resources look like--or our flood risk, earthquake data, and so on.

      Private companies and other organizations do many similar things - satellite imagery, weather forecasting, standardization, risk assessment. Why not also do these?

      Without government spending a great many things that people take for granted would disappear and the world would become a much more unpleasant place.

      How do we get bread baked and distributed to stores? What federal agency oversees the care of abandoned pets? Services we consider unthinkable without the government are services that have been provided elsewhere, separate from a massive institution that claims authority to rule us under threat of violence.

    12. Re:Still no mention of military spending by khallow · · Score: 1

      You can run anything privately, but most of the time it is a really bad mistake.

      Generalizations generally fail. In this case, is it better for government to run your life?

      Managing the nations power supply for example. The entire point of doing it nationally is to avoid problems of two local areas disagreeing and having compatibility problems.

      Then that's managing standards for the nation's power supply, not managing the power supply. Maybe you ought to think about this stuff a bit.

      OK, so you say we can do it with one big corporation, as opposed to multiple ones. Uhm, you just got rid of 90% of the benefit of doing it privately - competition. The only real difference between a single monopolistic corporation managing our power supply and a government agency is that the corporation costs more because it gives it's owners a profit.

      And we have to do it with one big corporation why? For some hypothetical standards benefit that could be obtained in another way? Do you realize how stupid that strawman makes you look?

      OK, lets do national parks separately. Whoops, the corporation that ran it just decided to let them drill for oil, because that is more profitable than visitor fees. Was it a greedy corporation making a profit, or the exact same thing the US government does when it allows oil drilling?

      The business (not corporation) could also just do both. The "either/or" here is a false dilemma. Also, oil drilling is a temporary thing. It'll run out in a few decades. The forest will remain.

      When the government does it, the people can rest assured that profit is not the only motive.

      Actually the people cannot. As a near trivial survey of government actions would have informed you, a lot of actions are done to enrich businesses (what you call "corporations"), politicians, and other special interests. Those acts of corruption become impossible to perform when the government no longer has the power.

    13. Re:Still no mention of military spending by khallow · · Score: 1

      Usually, when I talk to industry folks in my old field they would say how much they loved and needed NIST for people to find their advertising claims reliable (they were based on NIST standards or NIST calibrated equipment and were, therefore, reliable and reproducible). When one large program of this type got cut, no private industry filled in and the sales people started to complain about lost sales.

      If they can't be bothered to form a replacement for the NIST's role here, then it must not have been that valuable. It was wonderful when the US taxpayers were providing a free service, but now that the industry has to pay for it, it doesn't happen. Strikes me as solid evidence that nobody should be providing that service then.

      This reminds me of the US citizens who ride European trains and then complain that the US doesn't have them. Give me some European taxpayers to pay the subsidies on that high speed train (just as they do in Europe) and I'll remove my objection to the plan. It's a wonderful service, but somebody has to pay for it. I'll do my best to make sure it's not me (well, unless I actually should use it for some reason).

    14. Re:Still no mention of military spending by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      They said nobody would trust a non-USG testing body and that they wouldn't either.

      In any case, the fact that a niche exists does not mean that someone will fill it.

    15. Re:Still no mention of military spending by khallow · · Score: 1

      They said nobody would trust a non-USG testing body and that they wouldn't either.

      Uh huh. Credibility doesn't magically grow on trees. Once again, if they aren't willing to pay, then they don't play.

      In any case, the fact that a niche exists does not mean that someone will fill it.

      I said that as well, The niche has to be worth filling first.

    16. Re:Still no mention of military spending by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      You might want to look up niche in the dictionary. (hint: if it makes profit, it is worth filling).

      You have a theory that no evidence can contradict:

      * government fills role -> no evidence about optimality of it existing (you fail advanced econ BTW if you think this)
      * government does not fill role and no private company fills role -> not worth filling
      * government does not fill role and private company fills role -> worth filling

      Problems with your theory:
      * there is no country without a food or drug regulatory body that has a private one that works. People want them... but don't get them.

      People make all sorts of stupid moves in health (i.e. purchasing cough syrup) when drug regulatory bodies don't help them. Doctors are not capable of this (many, many people go to the doctor when they get a cold or flu and the doctor gives them medicine that is expected to mildly harm them). You need a government body--not because it cures all woes (see store shelves for continued existence of cough medicine) but it does reduce the snake oil substantially.

    17. Re:Still no mention of military spending by khallow · · Score: 1

      You might want to look up niche in the dictionary. (hint: if it makes profit, it is worth filling).

      The problem here isn't the definition of "niche". It is the question of whether it makes profit.

      You have a theory that no evidence can contradict:

      You misunderstand the role of evidence. You did indeed provide evidence that contradicted my theory, such as it is. But I presented a counterargument that showed the weakness of your evidence.

      there is no country without a food or drug regulatory body that has a private one that works.

      There are several private certifiers for organic produce and products.

      People make all sorts of stupid moves in health (i.e. purchasing cough syrup) when drug regulatory bodies don't help them. Doctors are not capable of this (many, many people go to the doctor when they get a cold or flu and the doctor gives them medicine that is expected to mildly harm them). You need a government body--not because it cures all woes (see store shelves for continued existence of cough medicine) but it does reduce the snake oil substantially.

      Conversely, a regulatory agency provides a lot of free cover for snake oil. The financial industry is filled with such things.

    18. Re:Still no mention of military spending by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Okay, tax the rich at 100%, fine.

      Ok, fine, drop all taxes to 0% and cut all spending to 0, disband the federal government.

      Sounds equally stupid, right?

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    19. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Quila · · Score: 1

      The Department of Education doesn't educate one child. Its latest, greatest feat is implementing No Child Left Behind, which local educators generally hate, but administrators love.

      The standardization function NIST is constitutionally mandated, and thus Dr. Paul would not support the dissolution of that function.

    20. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      So how is an army of unemployed soldiers going to help our economy?

    21. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      That sounds good to me. Why doesn't he just focus on that and leave the NIST and NOAA and national parks alone, because it's making him look like a nut.

    22. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Actually, he's even nuttier than I thought: he wants to privatize the FAA. If you do that, then you can't restrict people from flying anything they want, regardless of regulations, or flying without a license. You can't have a private entity dictating regulations to the public.

    23. Re:Still no mention of military spending by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      There are several private certifiers for organic produce and products.

      Yep, and they are government certified.

      Let me help you with niche, "a specialized but profitable corner of the market."

    24. Re:Still no mention of military spending by khallow · · Score: 1

      Let me help you with niche, "a specialized but profitable corner of the market."

      I guess I'll have to disagree with that definition. By my definition, a niche is a specialized corner of the market. It need not be profitable. And we still have the problem that we apparently don't have a profitable situation.

    25. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      Really? Congress could not pass a law with the same effect? Do people drive without a license? And is that regulated at the federal or state level? Perhaps you should do more research on RP and his positions - he is against the federal government doing things it should not be involved in. He is for individual states and municipalities doing things they see fit to do so long as they do not violate the constitution.

    26. Re:Still no mention of military spending by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Don't be stupid. How many plane flights take off and land in the same state? In commercial jets, a tiny minority. Even in private flights, interstate travel is common; that's why people use airplanes, after all, to travel long distances quickly, not to go to the grocery store. This makes it a Federal responsibility, for the same reason that interstate highways are managed by the Federal Highway Administration, even though the actual construction and policing of those highways is handled at the state level since it takes quite a while to drive from one state to another in most cases.

      I'm all for returning certain things returning to State hands; welfare, for instance, should be a state responsibility, since some states obviously want to do it differently than other states, or not at all. Things which involve interstate commerce and travel, however, are obviously a Federal matter, as outlined in the Constitution. Civil aviation is absolutely connected to interstate commerce.

  21. Nice by COMON$ · · Score: 2

    Not the departments I would choose necessarily but this is the type of thinking I am on board with. As a states rights individual, I believe that the best way to serve our interests is to make massive cuts in the form of getting rid of Administrative service departments that are not necessary anymore.

    --
    CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    1. Re:Nice by Nemyst · · Score: 2

      Wait... You think the DOE is not necessary anymore with the looming energy crisis and all the talks about global warming? And when is education ever NOT necessary?..

      On top of that, all of this is just cents compared to the overall budget, yet the sacred cows like the DOD never get cut.

    2. Re:Nice by goldspider · · Score: 1

      "And when is education ever NOT necessary?.."

      ...you say as if the states have no involvement in managing public education.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    3. Re:Nice by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      States rights activists are a joke. States can barely keep themselves afloat, except for those with petroleum resources (i.e. North Dakota). The federal government exists to take care of things to large to be handled by any one state, as it should.

    4. Re:Nice by epine · · Score: 1

      Not the departments I would choose necessarily but this is the type of thinking I am on board with.

      Honestly, I laughed out loud at your use of the word "thinking". I detect no thinking here whatsoever.

      Thinking would involve a detailed cost/benefit analysis written as a terms of reference for a viable transition plan. It wouldn't sound like a drunk at the Politburo playing daisy with the purse strings of power, where terms of reference are never more than a slam of a shoe.

    5. Re:Nice by zzsmirkzz · · Score: 2

      Wait... You think the DOE is not necessary anymore with the looming energy crisis and all the talks about global warming? And when is education ever NOT necessary?.. On top of that, all of this is just cents compared to the overall budget, yet the sacred cows like the DOD never get cut.

      The DOD doesn't get cut because it is one of the few things the Federal Government is supposed to do . These things are good but are implemented at the wrong level, these should be covered by local/state government. The DOE is an abysmal failure if you look at what the Department was founded to do, decrease our dependance on foreign energy. It has not done that, at all and should be de-funded for failing to accomplish its mission. But as with everything in the Federal Government, no one knows what anyone else is supposed to be doing, so we've had new Federal Agencies/Departments proposed to do what? Decrease our dependance on Foreign Energy. Gut it all and start building back only what you need to survive.

    6. Re:Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm assuming he means necessary at the Federal level - Education, by and large, is a local/state concern FAR more than a Federal one.

      One could even argue than many of the reasons we've had significant failures in the US in education can be traced to Federal education mandates. Mandates that require excessive standardized testing, metrics based education where it's more about what the kids can regurgitate rather than testing their ability to think and apply knowledge skills, etc.

      That isn't to say that there aren't portions of each of these Cabinet-level departments that aren't useful and necessary at the Federal level, because there are.

      I certainly hope that the details of the plan are far more nuanced than "everything in the DoEd, DoEn, etc is gone".

    7. Re:Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On top of that, all of this is just cents compared to the overall budget, yet the sacred cows like the DOD never get cut.

      Ummm... from TFA (which is only 4 paragraphs long ...):

      The biggest savings would come from ending funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan and holding steady spending across the entire Department of Defense.

    8. Re:Nice by BarefootClown · · Score: 2

      We landed men on the moon a decade before the Department of Education was created. It's not that education isn't necessary, its that it doesn't have to be managed at the Federal level. Do you really think our education system is substantially better than it was in the fifties and sixties, and that the improvement is a result of Federal action?

      --

      "Make it ten--I am only a poor corrupt official."
      --Captain Louis Renault (Claude Rains), Casablanca

    9. Re:Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, DOE is not necessary. What are they doing about the looming energy crisis? Granted, yes, DOE does fund some research- but much more useful and relevant research is being done privately.

      As for your environmental reservations, that's more EPA, which should also go. Allowing corporations to pollute simply by paying fines is, well, allowing corporations to pollute (and pass the fines to their customers). If the government was effective at defending individual's property rights, land owners near pollution sources could sue and get it stopped- but instead, we have a government agency that tells the corporations that it's ok.

      Education is necessary, but it's entirely unnecessary to mange education from hundreds of miles away from the students. If education is managed locally, it's more relevant, and, importantly, more competitive. Because if the schools suck on one state (or even county or city) people won't raise their kids there. Managing it as one big system defeats that, costs money, and gets us nothing.

      Ron Paul has announced major DOD cuts, also. While he doesn't want to cut "Defense" he does want to cut the wars and many foreign bases. So yes, DOD will stay around and at a level were we can comfortably defend ourselves, but nowhere near the levels it's at now.

    10. Re:Nice by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      Not all administrative services, but the unecessary ones, like DAS, do we really need a purchasing department? Why cant agencies handle their own purchasing? There are many others. It is like your personal budget, there are a bunch of things that creep up over time, but if you really take a hard look and balance your personal budget you find that there are things you dont HAVE to have.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    11. Re:Nice by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      The problem with Gov't is incentive. The Gov't rarely cuts programs (they do but rarely), so what is my incentive to perform? In my state (Nebraska) we are privatizing large portions of HHS. The advantage? The state still regulates and sets up the metrics for performance, but the private companies now have a contract that can be revoked when metrics are not met. There is skin in the game. With Gov't agencies, the biggest incentive is making the public think you need more money.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    12. Re:Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll see your straw-man arguments and raise you the following:
      Sure, until the private weather services start charging farms for forecasts (NOAA), predicting hurricane paths and so forth?
      Or how about the states setting up their own standards for education and watching our nation really drop in the rankings / standard of living?
      Or doing away with the EPA and now everyone is drinking, eating, and breathing like it's Pittsburgh from the 1920s?
      Or how about commerce? Knowing that there ARE rules and standards on how cross-state business transactions should occur. Do you think that states will race to become the next Delaware? Why not?

      Libertarianism is like jerking off to a super-model picture- it's great as a fantasy, but once you know the details, things get ugly real fast.

    13. Re:Nice by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      How's that working out for us?

    14. Re:Nice by COMON$ · · Score: 1
      I beg to differ, my state (Nebraska) has a balanced budget, is progressive in legislation, and survived the economic meltdown with the lowest unemployment rate in the nation. We have some of the best schools, lowest crime rates, cheap housing, and our happiness level is always on the top of the nationwide charts. Given we are an agricultural state but that is shifting slowly so our dependence on the federal subsidies is getting less every year.

      So hell yes, you can call us states activists a joke, but if states were allowed more self governance we will be a better, more stable economy.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    15. Re:Nice by COMON$ · · Score: 1

      Thinking as in, reduction of expenditure vs increase in revenue. Doing an audit of what this gov't needs to run and what can be handled outside of the gov't. Internal audits are often useless as bureaucrats are experts on showing a positive bottom line no budgets dont get cut any deeper than a token smidge to show due dilligence. But it is almost impossible to argue with someone who says, your dept is useless. Sell the car, buy a smaller house, dont whine to the boss that you need a raise.

      --
      CS: It is all sink or swim...oh and did I mention there are sharks in that water?
    16. Re:Nice by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      Considering that most of our budget is consumed by social security, medicare, and the defense department? Not so bad, considering we'd still have to pay for those three things out of the federal government's budget anyway if we shrunk the federal gov's responsibilities.

      http://www.flickr.com/photos/designbyseeing/5474288518/sizes/l/in/photostream/

      The problem isn't wasteful spending, not at all. The problem is that we've accumulated massive liabilities without saving for those liabilities. Yes, you can cut DoD spending, as long as we move to a fuel source that we don't have to defend from the other side of the world. Sure, you can cut social security and medicare, but be prepared to deal with a demographic with sizable influence (AARP) as well as poverty for that age bracket.

      No, there are no simple answers. We are going to have to fundamentally change the structure of both our economy and our social safety nets in the US. But I sure as hell can tell you that Ron Paul isn't the answer. In my educated opinion, he's a fucking nutjob.

    17. Re:Nice by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Wait... You think the DOE is not necessary anymore with the looming energy crisis and all the talks about global warming? And when is education ever NOT necessary?..

      On top of that, all of this is just cents compared to the overall budget, yet the sacred cows like the DOD never get cut.

      Slippery Slope Fallacy.

      Just because the FEDERAL government gets out of something, doesn't mean it will fail to exist. For example, the DOE didn't exist until 1980. Did public education exist before 1980?

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    18. Re:Nice by YojimboJango · · Score: 1

      I think the DOE isn't necessary when the states level energy departments are doing a lot of good. Also what percentage of Americans get educated federally? I went to a state university, a county technical school, and both city and private K-12.

      Granted I also don't fully agree with him on all his points, but if all those federal dollars went direct to our city, county and state education I think we'd be a lot better off.

    19. Re:Nice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are blaming the wrong people for that failure. The department has no authority. They can come up with plans and ideas but they can't make anybody even the government follow them. So unless they come with something to make power from political hot air it won't mean much.

    20. Re:Nice by nomadic · · Score: 1

      If you're black, latino, asian, female, and/or poor, then yes, our education system is substantially better.

    21. Re:Nice by Glothar · · Score: 1

      I think we're actually teaching minorities and disadvantaged students... which we weren't so good at in the fifties and sixties. We've had compulsory education in every state since the early twentieth century (which is a lot shorter than many people believe), but for the first half of that century, the schools weren't so good at actually providing equal quality to all students. One of the things the DoEd is supposed to be working on is leveling that out. The apparent decline in educational quality is due in large part to the fact that we're no longer hiding the fact that we don't do so well with immigrants, minorities, and other disadvantaged students. Of course, this is also why private schools look so good. They're allowed to simply not report those scores/statistics... or simply deny admittance to the students.

      Even then, I'm still on the fence about the DoEd. These days it looks more like some zombified department, serving only as the host to the parasite that is No Child Left Behind and forcing all the states to pay for standardized tests that mean absolutely nothing (Seriously: I can't imagine a more depressing achievement than having children with the greatest ability at filling out multiple choice tests). I'm fine with it going away, so long as we don't revert to pre-Civil Rights schools or move to a privatized (serve the rich, screw the poor) school system.

    22. Re:Nice by Glothar · · Score: 1

      And yet, ND is one of the biggest tax sponges in the country.

      While it might have the oil and coal reserves to keep itself afloat, it would still fail because the stingy populous would refuse to pay higher taxes (despite having one of the lowest tax rates in the country). Maybe we could save money by privatizing North Dakota.

    23. Re:Nice by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      While it might have the oil and coal reserves to keep itself afloat, it would still fail because the stingy populous would refuse to pay higher taxes (despite having one of the lowest tax rates in the country). Maybe we could save money by privatizing North Dakota.

      The result would probably be Texas. Low taxes, but all the new jobs created are either government jobs or jobs paying minimum wage you can't live on.

    24. Re:Nice by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      "For example, the DOE didn't exist until 1980. "

      Sure, it was called the Atomic Energy Commission.

    25. Re:Nice by J-1000 · · Score: 1

      On top of that, all of this is just cents compared to the overall budget, yet the sacred cows like the DOD never get cut.

      Ron Paul proposes to cut the DOD by 15%, and to end all foreign wars. Source.

    26. Re:Nice by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Paul's budget cuts the DOD budget by 200 billion dollars immediately. Thee is a 15% blanket cut, and it pulls war funding. That's day one.

    27. Re:Nice by tmosley · · Score: 1

      lol, a parasite sucking from 50 hosts is necessary to keep each of the hosts afloat. That is hilarious. Mod parent funny.

    28. Re:Nice by Nemo137 · · Score: 1

      I went to a state university, a product of the Morrill Acts, which was heavily funded by federal research grants, with the assistance of Pell grants and subsidized direct student loans. It's not like state universities are some kind of shining example of states doing things all by themselves.

    29. Re:Nice by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      Someone, I think you miss the humor of your post being sent over a network collective created by a federal government agency. States don't provide military protection for the country as a whole, don't do R&D, don't do a whole lot all by themselves. State equivalent of the DOE? The CDC? NASA? Yeah, didn't think so.

    30. Re:Nice by tmosley · · Score: 1

      First, I didn't say they didn't do anything, but they are moving water from one side of the pool to the other while spilling some on the ground. The Federal Government can't create more than it consumes due to its nature. Claiming that they somehow keep ALL the states afloat is simply BS, and the fact is that it doesn't happen. More often, the Feds try to control state governments by using money taken from those same states as a lure. We see it in federally mandated speed limits (why is the speed limit 70 in the middle of perfectly flat desert?), in federally mandated drinking ages, etc, etc.

      Second, when is the last time the US was invaded? How many other nations have we invaded since the last time we were invaded?

      Third, the Internet is different from DARPAnet, and would have come about on its own, simply as a result of rapidly improving computers. Just because the government happened to fund the first group to make a network connection doesn't mean it wouldn't have happened without them.

    31. Re:Nice by asher09 · · Score: 1

      Yeah. in fact, I'd get rid of all the depts except for depts of State, Treasury, HHS, Defense, VA, and Transportation. I doubt that we'd notice any difference in our daily life without the other depts.

      --
      Some were yelling one thing, some another. Most of them had no idea what was going on or why they were there. Acts19:32
    32. Re:Nice by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      Third, the Internet is different from DARPAnet, and would have come about on its own, simply as a result of rapidly improving computers. Just because the government happened to fund the first group to make a network connection doesn't mean it wouldn't have happened without them.

      It's shit like this people. You can't just assume things are going to happen because time went by. Hindsight is 20/20. Just because someone did it first doesn't mean someone else would've come up with it eventually. By your logic, no one should do R&D because someone else will do it eventually. *facepalm*

    33. Re:Nice by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      Do you really think our education system is substantially better than it was in the fifties and sixties, and that the improvement is a result of Federal action?

      No, and no. I think a cultural shift away from valuing education and intellectual pursuits has far more to do with the decline of education than any effect Federal involvement could have had.

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    34. Re:Nice by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      The DOE is an abysmal failure if you look at what the Department was founded to do, decrease our dependance on foreign energy.

      And how do you propose they do that if Congress doesn't provide enough R&D funding? You're basically arguing the GOP's standard "starve the beast" strategy. 1. Underfund a program 2. Wait for it to fail 3. Say "See, government doesn't work", then take the money and give it to rich people so they can "create jobs".

    35. Re:Nice by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about? The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare was formed in 1953, well before the moon landings. It was simply reorganized into two departments later on, in the 70s during Carter's Administration.

      Are you going to try to claim now that there was no Border Patrol until Bush formed the Homeland Security department? How idiotic.

    36. Re:Nice by Keen+Anthony · · Score: 1

      Education is not managed at federal level. It's still done at state and local level. Visit the Department of Education website and learn about their mission. http://www2.ed.gov/about/overview/focus/what_pg3.html#doesnot

  22. Ron Paul... by bmo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    is a nutjob.

    I had a long dissertation thought out, but man, this shit just boggles my mind. NOAA? Is he kidding? I'm sure all of you remember (probably not, but I'm giving the benefit of the doubt) the fact that he said that "Hurr, Galveston didn't have anyone to bail them out during their hurricane" totally forgetting how many people /died/ because of no hurricane warning and forecasting.

    The next time there's a hurricane coming up Galveston Bay, I want Ron Paul to be out in the middle of it. Outside. Naked.

    --
    BMO

    1. Re:Ron Paul... by Theolojin · · Score: 4, Funny

      The next time there's a hurricane coming up Galveston Bay, I want Ron Paul to be out in the middle of it. Outside. Naked.

      --
      BMO

      I don't want Ron Paul outside naked *anywhere*.

      --
      Life is short; think quickly.
    2. Re:Ron Paul... by Kugala · · Score: 4, Funny

      How could he be out in the hurricane if we don't know it's coming?

    3. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      none of these agencies are authorized by the constitution anyway. maybe you're a nutjob for thinking they shouldn't have to follow the law when assuming any random power they can think of.

    4. Re:Ron Paul... by bmo · · Score: 1

      Point taken.

      --
      BMO

    5. Re:Ron Paul... by Applekid · · Score: 1

      none of these agencies are authorized by the constitution anyway. maybe you're a nutjob for thinking they shouldn't have to follow the law when assuming any random power they can think of.

      But but but a butterfly flapped it's wings and that affected interstate commerce.

      --
      More Twoson than Cupertino
    6. Re:Ron Paul... by Raenex · · Score: 1

      But but but a butterfly flapped it's wings and that affected interstate commerce.

      Clearly we need to wipe out this butterfly menace.

    7. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The next time there's a hurricane coming up Galveston Bay, I want Ron Paul to be out in the middle of it. Outside. Naked.

      --
      BMO

      I hate you for the image you just implanted in my mind.

    8. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The middle of a hurricane, the eye, is calm and in some cases sunny. One can walk around naked without getting hit by a Dodge in the middle of a hurricane.

      That's very thoughtful of you to look out for Ron Paul's safety like that.

    9. Re:Ron Paul... by Bardwick · · Score: 2

      Confused.. We're going broke and looking quickly down the barrel of economic collapse with most if not all government programs being suspended, massive unemployment, riots, murder and general lawlessness, possible starvation. Not to mention the collapse of the finest country the world has ever known. Your counter argument is "We need to know if a hurricane is coming.". That pretty much sum it up?

    10. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We stake him out there all summer.

    11. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You forgot the classic component: Chained to a rock.

    12. Re:Ron Paul... by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      is a nutjob.

      I had a long dissertation thought out, but man, this shit just boggles my mind. NOAA? Is he kidding? I'm sure all of you remember (probably not, but I'm giving the benefit of the doubt) the fact that he said that "Hurr, Galveston didn't have anyone to bail them out during their hurricane" totally forgetting how many people /died/ because of no hurricane warning and forecasting.

      The next time there's a hurricane coming up Galveston Bay, I want Ron Paul to be out in the middle of it. Outside. Naked.

      --
      BMO

      So you actually believe that without NOAA, we will be blind to hurricanes? You do realize that there are several other federal agencies that could take over that role, right? For example, the military depends on accurate weather forecasts. Why not turn the responsibility over to them? The airline industry relies on accurate weather forecasts. They could do the job as well. We could even make a deal where they have to make their forecasts publicly available in exchange for the free satellites they will be receiving.

      Also, it's not like all the men and women on ships and oil platforms won't be able to call back to their loved ones in Galveston and say, "Sure is windy out here!"

      Also, when that big hurricane hit Galveston over a century ago, we didn't have forecasting because there were no satellites, airplanes, communication channels or ships that would move faster than the hurricane itself. It wasn't because NOAA didn't exist. It was because even NOAA would have been blind to the coming hurricane.

      Try again please.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    13. Re:Ron Paul... by roman_mir · · Score: 1, Insightful

      He is not cutting enough. He is not cutting in time.

      AFAIC it's a good start, but its FAR from perfect. He needs to cut 3 Trillion in ONE year, not 1 Trillion. He needs to have the budget balanced in 2 years, not in 3.

      But this is a START. We must start somewhere. IRS must also be shut down, by the way, he is not even talking about that right now unfortunately.

      Freddie/Fannie, FHA, HUD, FDA, FAA, EPA, CIA, FBI, dep't of energy, education, agriculture, business and it is STILL NOT ENOUGH.

      He can't rely on attrition, he needs to FIRE 10 MILLION people right away, in the FIRST year from the gov't. He needs to fire 10 MORE MILLION in the next year.

      And this is STILL NOT ENOUGH.

      He needs to REDUCE the size of military industrial complex by LETTING GO of 75% of military. AND EVEN THAT IS NOT ENOUGH.

      He needs to abolish all of the business and labor regulations. EVENT THAT IS NOT ENOUGH.

      He needs to get rid of all of this nonsense - so called 'civil rights' bullshit, which is nothing more than a bunch of entitlements for some and obligations for others.

      AND EVEN THAT IS NOT ENOUGH.

      All of the gov't involvement into business must stop. There must be no more subsidies to any business.

      SS and Medicare MUST SHUT DOWN. No more minimum wage, no more gov't involvement into any unions.

      The only money is gold.

      Once he does all of that, finally it will be enough, but not good enough to make sure that it does not return.

      He needs to ensure that none of this stuff returns. The Constitution needs amendments to PREVENT future governments from returning back with any of this nonsense.

      It's only enough, when the gov't knows its place - in the gutters. The place of gov't is in the gutters. Gov't cannot be trusted.

      Gov't must not be trusted.
      Gov't cannot be allowed to regulate any business.
      Gov't cannot be allowed to prevent any liberties, it must be FORCED to PROTECT liberties and private property and contract law, otherwise the gov't is not just impotent at its direct job, it's detrimental to the society.

      All of gov't functions must be severely limited by a very specific Constitutional change that would put an end to all of the above activities not just at this point, but for a long long time (until they inevitably figure out a way around it, as they always do, but then at least another 2-3 hundred years will pass and it will be up to the future population to fix their own problems created by the cracking gov't force.)

    14. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While Ron Paul's isolationist foreign policies are naive and dangerous to U.S. security, his domestic policy ideas have merit. Why do you believe NOAA is the only entity capable of tropical storm forecasts? Did you know there are thousands of forecasters outside of NOAA? Several universities have excellent storm forecasting meteorologists. The oil industry pays so much money out for weather forecasts that six private firms have been created that do nothing else but forecast tropical weather. These firms offer services that compete with NOAA, even though NOAA is "free".

      If NOAA went away, the private market would step right in and efficiently compete to sell their services.

      P.S. Since Ron Paul is from Lake Jackson (a few miles from Galveston), he has a little experience with hurricanes.

    15. Re:Ron Paul... by jeek · · Score: 1

      Bonus points if he's also petrified and covered in hot grits.

      --
      If you want to be seen, stand up. If you want to be heard, speak up. If you want to be respected, sit down and shut up.
    16. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I had a long dissertation thought out, but man, this shit just boggles my mind.

      I know from experience that the long dissertations in response to the Libertarian religion is futile if you are expecting to raise any doubt but keep this in mind. Others who are not Libertarian but are interested and searching for information may also read your dissertation and seek additional information beyond the cherry picked history, quote mining, and simplistic blind to the world and history view of economics that is the Libertarian religion. Your dissertation may still be of benefit to society by saving some individuals from being converted into Paul bot heads programmed to roam the internet parroting a narrow and incorrect perspective on people, governments, society, and economics.

      Sometimes it is as simple as pointing out the real motives of those behind the source for the rhetoric, i.e. Ron Paul. If you quote actual legislation from Ron Paul it becomes clear to anyone who is objective that he really isn't even a complete Libertarian. Ron Paul's objective has less to do with limited government and more to do with a power state level government empowered to force his personal religious and economic views on the populace. The funny thing is that it is out in the open in the words they use, "States Rights!". If anyone would understand objectively what that means. Contrast the states rights mantra with the Declaration of Independence which points out that rights are endowed on individuals not states.

    17. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Imagine him nude and out on the beach in his lawn chair laid back doing some tanning and he falls asleep, not realizing the hurricane is quickly approaching.

      Argh don't imagine that.. I just threw up in my mouth.

    18. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess we'll have to strip him and tie him to a tree right now, just in case.

    19. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem isn't forecasting hurricanes. The problem is building a home in an area where hurricanes are prone to hit.

    20. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Governments use force. You are quite ignorant of how the programming works.

      If the people want to self organize out of free will and rational discussion then this is acceptable.

      Taxing is quite literally robbing people of their hard earned capital - there is a gun barrel at the end of every government program. Limit this as much as possible. Don't be a moron - less government run programs the better.

    21. Re:Ron Paul... by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      Serious question, but what do you think will happen to tax revenue when you start laying off large portions of the workforce? Federal employees still pay taxes and private industry isn't strong enough to absorb that many layoffs all at once either.

    22. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      You actually think that if a government agency doesn't do it, there will be no warning about weather? Ridiculous and unimaginative are you. Free markets respond to demand. Is there desire to predict the weather? Yes. Can a productive business be started? Yes. Decentralization is a key issue for safety of all kinds, especially economic safety and the protection of the rights of individuals.

      Lots of people died in Katrina, and they knew the hurricane was coming. Lots of these people died because the government had all the citizens believing they would provide for their every need. When you analyze Katrina, you will realize that individuals and non-governmental groups helped the most, and their efforts were hindered by the federal government. In fact, the only federal agency that was worth a damn during Katrina was the Coast Guard. There is authorization in the Constitution for a Coast Guard -- NOT for FEMA or many of the other bureaucracies that we call departments.

      For you to say that the only peace candidate, the only candidate to predict the housing bubble, the only candidate to oppose the Patriot Act, the only candidate to predict endless wars, and the only candidate to recognize that the destruction of the US Dollar is our greatest threat is a NUTJOB makes you look pretty foolish. Pretty crazy, all his babbling about unattainable foreign wars and domestic entitlements. Pretty crazy, all his talk about liberty and the constitution. Pretty crazy, all this talk about the FED, which is the source of the business cycle and why there are so many Occupy Wall Street protestors (though many of them don't yet know that).

      Very silly comment.

    23. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Personally I would be more likely to be outside naked in the middle of a hurricane if I did not know it was coming.

    24. Re:Ron Paul... by JayWilmont · · Score: 1

      We can afford the weather service as it takes up less than a fraction of a percent of our total budget. Knowing when hurricanes are coming saves thousands of lives a year (which is financially worth doing even without looking at the moral/ethical side of things.)

    25. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Seriously?

      Ron Paul's comment was specific to FEMA and relating it to the Galveston hurricane. I'll encourage you to look into exactly how well FEMA handled the Katrina hurricane. Further, even if they do handle other disasters in a mildly acceptable manner, it is a massively inefficient use of resources.

      Utilizing the state's national guard to secure the area and provide emergency assistance to those in need along with a state's own emergency management department is a much better answer than FEMA. Why the duplication of effort?

      Further, important aspects of different departments are rolled into others. An example would be the census department is a constitutionally required item, which is currently under the department of commerce - that would have to be rolled into another department. Hurricane tracking is important, and as such would likely be rolled into another department.

      Also, remember Ron Paul is running for president - not congress. This 'proposal' is just that.

    26. Re:Ron Paul... by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      "You do realize that there are several other federal agencies that could take over that role, right? For example, the military depends on accurate weather forecasts. Why not turn the responsibility over to them?"

      Why should all other agencies perform redundant functions outside their core mission when one group with the concentrated expertise can do it for the whole nation?

      Weather doesn't obey any state or national lines and requires large scale investment and coordination and influences a wide variety of human activities. It's prime subject matter for a dedicated federal effort.

    27. Re:Ron Paul... by eNygma-x · · Score: 1

      Yeah I want to hear your dissertation....

      --
      As in most religions, it's the followers that turn people off to the religion. And Mac users are the worst.
    28. Re:Ron Paul... by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Galveston is in his district. You really think that he would do something to endanger the people of his own district?

      Also, if you actually knew ANYTHING about the great hurricane, you would know Cuban officials were warning Texas about it days before it arrived, but the National Weather Bureau ignored the warning, claiming the storm would head up the Atlantic Coast.

      Further, it's not as if the satellites would suddenly fall out of the sky. They could easily be operated by state governments. But state-worshipers don't want to hear anything about capabilities of locals, much less private companies.

    29. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me complete your train of thought for you bmo:

      1) Paul cuts NOAA
      2) (you assume no company would even THINK to take over NOAA's responsibilities)
      3) USA is buffeted by hurricanes until people start dying
      4) you want congressman Paul to be the first one to die of exposure

      If such a basic concept of "the government is terrible at spending money wisely and Paul wants a business to run its own version of NOAA because the gov doesn't have to," then maybe you are the nutjob and you should stay away from politics until your mind straightens out; you sound not well and you're not contributing anything anyways, so nothing of value would be lost.

    30. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Simple: We tie him up there until a hurricane comes! And if it takes a thousand years! ^^

      Also, I recommend two budget cuts that will let us have the same amount of surplus that we have in deficit now:
      1. War chest.
      2. Tax breaks for the wealthy.
      Oh, and if we take back our money from the banks, we'd be swimming in money!
      Give that to free education and science, make the most of it by putting it all up on the net for free afterwards, and pretty much everyone can be an expert at whatever he loves and ask for big money. And because everyone can do it, everyone also has the money to pay big money, so that it stabilizes as a high-income economy.
      This is proven to make no difference to companies, but bring much a better life to just about every human of a state.

      But oh well, some bastards are so dumb, that they don't get how much helping those around you helps yourself. (Hint: It's the reason we humans are [were?] so successful in the first place! And the same thing happening to corvids too right now, shows that this is no coincidence.)

    31. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RP's answer to this - and it's his same answer for California's earthquake zone - is that if these protections weren't put there in the first place, the market would imply people wouldn't be living/building homes in these high risk areas. If a private insurance company came along and sold them insurance, then go right ahead. Unfortunately it is going to be a long road back to sane budgets, and a lot of people are going to be hit very hard. But I don't live in these danger zones so why should I help pay for you who does, knowing the risk?

    32. Re:Ron Paul... by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Serious answer: government workers do not pay taxes.

      I actually talked about it some time ago: government workers do not pay income taxes.

      The point is that the only real entities that actually pay income taxes are those entities, that produce something of value. Government just shuffles money around to make it look like government workers pay income taxes (and this is used just to boost their salaries, due to all the deductions they can make,) but in reality those who do not actually produce something do not pay income taxes, and government workers don't produce anything.

      I can explain it very simply if instead of money we look at a simple example of barter economy:

      Say a fisherman catches 100 tons of fish in a year. If he pays 'income tax', he must now give up say 35 tons of fish to the government.

      Government then takes 35 tons of fish from this fisherman and uses it to pay its workers. Say a government worker gets 200 tons of fish a year for his work. Now he is asked to pay back 70 tons of fish.

      Did he actually pay income tax? How did he do it, he didn't catch any fish? Of-course he deducts some of his spending and gives back maybe 30 tons of fish, so now his salary in reality is 170 tons of fish per year.

      Government workers don't produce anything legitimate that can be used to pay actual income tax from, because there is no actual income. Government workers do not generate profit (government doesn't generate profit, it's a pure spending item, so every ton of fish is deducted from consumer spending and investment capital in return for non-productive government jobs.)

      --

      Secondly: I expect Ron Paul to come out with another plan concerning taxes separately from this plan concerning the budget.

      He needs to balance the budget first, he needs to reduce the spending for real (not reduction in rate of increase, but actually spend LESS MONEY next year than the year before), so once government is SHRINKING in size and spending, THEN taxes can be cut.

      There is no free lunch and there is all this debt, so some of it also has to be paid back. NONE of the potential candidates EXCEPT Ron Paul and Gary Johnson are talking about REDUCTION of government.

    33. Re:Ron Paul... by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Uhh, they did have a hurricane warning. You should have seen the evacuation. Furthermore, Ron Paul mainly is talking about the fact that other states shouldn't have the financial responsibility of cleaning up Galveston when idiots that live there are fully aware there are hurricanes. Its their risk. I lived in Houston at the time all this shit went down so why don't you stop talking about things you know nothing about.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    34. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please take your meds.

    35. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      is a nutjob.

      I had a long dissertation thought out, but man, this shit just boggles my mind. NOAA? Is he kidding? I'm sure all of you remember (probably not, but I'm giving the benefit of the doubt) the fact that he said that "Hurr, Galveston didn't have anyone to bail them out during their hurricane" totally forgetting how many people /died/ because of no hurricane warning and forecasting.

      The next time there's a hurricane coming up Galveston Bay, I want Ron Paul to be out in the middle of it. Outside. Naked.

      --
      BMO

      It was in 1901. The hurricane warning system back then was someone yelling "Holy shit, look a hurricane".

    36. Re:Ron Paul... by ItsJustAPseudonym · · Score: 1
      No, it would be for environmental observation, see?
      • If Ron Paul's "package" is wet, then it is raining.
      • If Ron Paul's "package" is swinging side to side, then it is windy.
      • If Ron Paul's "package" is bouncing up and down, then there is an earthquake.
      • If Ron Paul's "package" and Ron Paul are missing, then there is a hurricane or tornado.

      It is crude in multiple contexts, but it could work!

    37. Re:Ron Paul... by darkstar949 · · Score: 1

      Alright, so say we call the income tax that they pay a funny accounting trick, regardless, the point still stands that the CBO uses the "income tax" that federal employees pay in their calculations for forward tax receipts, if you start removing that money from the equation then that is a loss of revenue that you need to take into account.

      Likewise, my point about private industry not having the jobs for a massive layoff of federal employees to fill still stands, if you start to have massive layoffs the unemployment numbers are going to have a major spike and will take years before you see them start coming back down. If something like that happens, it doesn't really matter who is in office, odds are they aren't going to get reelected come the end of their term and the same goes for their party for awhile.

      This isn't to say that some house cleaning isn't needed when it comes to federal government though, there is a lot of redundancy that you can get rid of and simple attrition is also a good way to reduce number without seeing that massive spike in unemployment.

    38. Re:Ron Paul... by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      That's right, because Dr Paul hasn't thought about that at all, and just says "close it and frig all them idiots on the coast". That's exactly what he's saying.

      If Dr Paul is a nutjob, you are a fucking idiot.

    39. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good point. Well, either we could pay a lot of taxpayer money to private forecasters and send him out there when they say it's time, or alternatively we could save the money and put him out there now to wait.

      I like the latter option because it will be much cheaper for taxpayers.

    40. Re:Ron Paul... by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      if you start removing that money from the equation then that is a loss of revenue that you need to take into account.

      - sure. You also have to take into account that the moneys is going to be spent by private individuals who are now taxed less (IF this includes tax reductions, but that plan is not yet out).

      However in reality this means that government is now going to be spending less, which means it's going to be borrowing less and printing less. Fed is out there, buying out all sorts of US Treasury debt (their plan was very explicit - hold interest rates at 0 for 2 more years at least, this requires active buying on their part, they can't just SAY they are going to keep interest rates low, they have to ACT on that promise, which means monetization of debt.)

      ANY new dollars printed by the Fed that end up monetizing US debt is money that destroys value of dollar (and, by the way, it's money that has to be paid back with interest from future tax payers! *if there will be such a thing in USA left with all this insane government spending*)

      CBO by the way is garbage. All of the numbers they release are cooked, don't let them being supposedly a 'non-partisan' confuse you into believing that. They are as 'non-partisan' as the Fed is 'non-political'.

      When the Fed was established, it actually started out with a STRONGER gold reserve ratio than private banks of the time! It was a stronger currency that they were providing than private currencies of the time! That's the bait and switch they played on people, as 40 years ago the USD was devalued to 0 by Nixon.

      The point is that GDP numbers are cooked (never mind that 70% of it is spending, which is done to buy foreign products, that's what the 53Billion USD/month trade deficit is about). The CPI is cooked (it's over 11% in reality, it's been between 11 and 15 percent for almost 2 decades now).

      Never mind that the annualized CPI reported a day ago is now almost 4%, which is not counted the way it was counted 40 years ago, but when Nixon saw 4% then, he implemented wage and price controls! Not that it's the right thing to do, it fails, it creates shortages and black markets and unemployment (and it did then too, that's what depression + inflation + unemployment was - stagflation), but that's what people used to think, that 4% inflation was a SERIOUS matter! They don't think so anymore, even though they don't count inflation as honestly as they did back then, they under-report it by near 10%. That's why GDP is also nonsense by the way, the inflation numbers are used as 'deflater' for GDP, so GDP has been shrinking for 20 years now as well, and likely by 10% a year at that!

      Also, yes, you are CORRECT. Right now USA doesn't have jobs to hire all those people. But the same thing was said about WWII - in fact the idiots of Keynesian witch craft of the time said that the military shouldn't have been released and bombs should have continued being made, all that, because they didn't understand that when gov't actually shrinks spending, it's private sector that gains ability to spend and invest.

      It's absolutely necessary not just to cut government jobs but to cut all of the regulations as well, because if regulations stand there will be NO JOBS IN USA.

      Same applies to income and corporate and payroll taxes - these need to be abolished. They should be at least cut as well as regulations at first and gov't workers must be released as regulations are abolished and departments are shut down.

      All those departments enforce tons of regulations, and those regulations must stop for the economy to restart.

      And yes, there WILL be spike in unemployment first. It's the same exact principle that needed to apply to the failing banks back in 2008. GE, GM, banks, house foreclosures, all of the companies that were bailed out and all of the individuals.

      All bail outs must stop and entities must be allowed to fail. Only allowing entities to fail can actually restructure the economy, reallocate the capita

    41. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NSFW: Too late!

    42. Re:Ron Paul... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      ROFL. Thanks for the laugh. I think this wins the entire thread for most delusional libertarian rant in the entire thread.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    43. Re:Ron Paul... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      ROFL. Thanks for the laugh. You win this thread for most delusional libertarian rant.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    44. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are in a loop.

    45. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Assuming you don't live along the Pacific, Atlantic, or Gulf Coasts, can we laugh at you (and pity your neighbors) if Yellowstone erupts as a supervolcano someday and buries your neighborhood under a few feet of ash? Tiny, tiny likelihood of happening... mind-blowingly horrific consequences if it ever does. But that's OK, because you're flawlessly self-reliant, and will boldly march into the lahar before getting your skin boiled off and/or choking to death to make a political point and get even with the evil, left-wing bicoastal residents who support socialist boondoggles like the NHC and USGS.

    46. Re:Ron Paul... by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      True, but we have tens of thousands of things that make up small percentages of the budget...

    47. Re:Ron Paul... by Wireless+Joe · · Score: 1

      I don't want Ron Paul outside naked *anywhere*.

      What if he was naked outside the ionosphere?

    48. Re:Ron Paul... by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      Not sure this is a joke or not, but i'll bite. A federal employee makes $100,000 in tax payer money. If he is terminated, you are going to miss out on $27,000 in tax revenue. Comes out to +$73,000. We could even PAY them (just cash mind you, no benefits), $50,000 and still come out $23,000 ahead for each. Your right though, private industry couldn't not absorb.

    49. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, it's

      --
      BMO

      and he has a small UID. He gets modded up by his friends on every thread and usually adds nothing to the discussion. You make a very good rebuttal, but few will ever see it.

      Slashdot, like every other online community, has turned into an echo chamber clique. It's why I don't participate under a userid anymore. On any of them.

      No facebook account, either. Funny reading you people bitch about facebook while having an account. I never made one and never will.

    50. Re:Ron Paul... by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      I answered this completely, no need to redo in another sub-thread.

    51. Re:Ron Paul... by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul is on record for saying that the other 49 states shouldnt have had to pay a dime for the damages in Texas. I was there when it all happened, and they had plenty of warning to get out. The people that didn't leave Galveston were simply idiots and should have listened to the official recommendation. Even on foot you could have traveled to a safe place since you could have walked to Houston faster than driving at the time. The evacuation through Houston at the time was absolutely mind-blowing. They shut down a 6-8 lane freeway (depends on where you are at on it) to south-bound traffic and still had people bumper to bumper in all lanes heading north for a couple days before the hurricane hit. When the Hurricane finally hit the streets flooded in Houston, trees fell down everywhere, roofs were ripped up, power went out most places, and there was a ton of other property damage. You also couldn't get gasoline because the supply of it was limited. I had to basically rely on word of mouth as to where the next tanker was heading so I could fuel up. Galveston was basically wiped out. Ron Pauls argument was that people in Galveston know full well the risks of living there, hell, you can't even get flood insurance usually in Houston/Galveston, so why should the other 49 states pay to fix damages or provide for you when the inevitable happens if you are dumb enough to live there? If you own property, find an insurance company to pay for your damages who is willing to risk it, save up supplies and money for a situation like that, and get a plan for relocation for when a hurricane hits. I got the hell out of there, but I lived there through the whole thing and I can tell you it didn't happen the way you think it did. I would suggest before believing in lies or just simply making shit up, you try to get an idea what you are even talking about first.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    52. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hang him on a cross, he can be the next jesus.

    53. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And the response was any better for Katrina? the billions of dollars we spend doesnt do anything for weeks. a private organization would respond much faster. are you asuming all weather reporting would be gone? dont listen to the fear mongering being fed to you. ron paul is not in the pocket of the good 'ol boys you'll hear a lot of negative stuff because of that. he is not inhuman, it is not his intent to hurt anybody, it is to privatise. the assets of noaa wouldnt just sit there collecting dust, you would likely hear of a company called noaa2 that does just as much that taxpayers dont have to give half of their paycheck for.

      As it stands now we have a president startring a bigger mistake than social security. hindsight is 20/20 but he doesnt care. anything is better than our last 3 presidents

    54. Re:Ron Paul... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's called politics. You ask for a minimum of 150% of what you want. You're not going to get it. You're lucky to get 10% of what you want, even if you are the President of the US. See Obama's campaign promises and how many have been passed.

  23. TANSTAAFL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    "There ain't no such thing as a free lunch"

    If you as an individual value these departments so greatly, you should ask who to make the check out to. Just don't ask me to split the bill, I brought my own lunch.

    1. Re:TANSTAAFL by itsenrique · · Score: 0

      Ah yes, I've got mine so fuck everyone else... This is exactly the kind of society that is going to dig itself out the huge cultural, political, and economic whole. We just need more greed. Brilliant! Never mind post people pushing this viewpoint voted in representatives that voted for expensive wars we are all stuck paying for, now they want to slash low income housing, education, and even THE WEATHER for god's sake. Sorry anonymous greedy fuck bag, that's not how any first world nations I know of operate. We are headed for the shitter with the biggest class divide ever because propaganda has been able to convince Joe Schmoe that everyone is out to get a piece of his lunch to pay for "entitlement" and "wasteful government" when really its as much Joe's fault as anyones we are overspent (blue or red). Joe can't see his lunch is going to get smaller either way, he's not rich, and he's not going to be. But that's the way its really going to play for Joes. /End rant.

  24. I like Ron Paul by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I like Ron Paul's stance on many things, bringing the troops home, non-interventionalism and auditing/ending the fed. I am wondering though if he cuts these departments if aspects of these programs might be allocated somewhere else? I am pro science, but I am also pro balanced budget, less government intrusion and stopping the government overextension. Ron Paul is also unlike any of the other candidates in that he explains himself instead of parroting buzz words and playing to the public's emotions.

    1. Re:I like Ron Paul by polar+red · · Score: 1

      less government intrusion

      meet your new unelected government : the corporations.

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    2. Re:I like Ron Paul by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      meet your current elected government: the corporations.

    3. Re:I like Ron Paul by yurtinus · · Score: 1

      A corporation is just a body of people who are elected by the money *you* spend on their products and services. We really need to stop treating corporations as a magical money making entity or some mythical bogeyman. Corporations do great things to facilitate business, jobs, and the economy - we've simply let the pendulum swing too far toward allowing *people* to hide from their bad decisions inside their corporations.

      --
      +1 Disagree
  25. Umm how about by Dyinobal · · Score: 1

    How about getting rid of TSA, DHS, and cutting the military spending budget by something meaningful?

    1. Re:Umm how about by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      How about getting rid of TSA, DHS, and cutting the military spending budget by something meaningful?

      Sure, but that would be real, substantial savings and not a mere token gesture.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    2. Re:Umm how about by nairb107 · · Score: 1

      How about getting rid of TSA, DHS, and cutting the military spending budget by something meaningful?

      Sure, but that would be real, substantial savings and not a mere token gesture.

      http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/ron-paul-plan-to-restore-america/ Take a look at the plan I think you'll see he's giving you what you ask for. TSA is eliminated. DHS and Military Spending cut significantly. $1 Trillion is cut from the budget in the first year and the budget is balanced in the next three.

    3. Re:Umm how about by jonnythan · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure about the DHS, but his plan definitely calls for the elimination of the TSA and a huge cut in military budgeting. The plan calls for an immediate withdrawal of all war funding and bringing our troops home with an immediate spending freeze.

    4. Re:Umm how about by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      How about getting rid of TSA, DHS, and cutting the military spending budget by something meaningful

      Privatizing the TSA is right there on the front page of the summary.

      The airlines won't treat their customers with malice and disrespect. They also won't get a pass on sexual assaults.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    5. Re:Umm how about by zill · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul plans to abolish the TSA, break up DHS, and cut military spending by $832 during his first term.

      Sounds like he's the man you're looking for.

    6. Re:Umm how about by J-1000 · · Score: 1

      He plans to privatize the TSA and to cut some of the DHS funding. Source. (BTW, I may be blind, but I don't see the TSA on his itemized lists, even though he mentions it in writing.)

    7. Re:Umm how about by tmosley · · Score: 1

      $200 billion is cut from the DoD on day one. It's line item number one on the budget.

    8. Re:Umm how about by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 1

      Perhaps you should read more about Ron Paul and listen to him speak. He is for all of those things and has put forth bills to end the TSA, cut military spending, and end the wars. He has spent his life fighting for things like getting rid of TSA, DHS, and cutting military spending by something meaningful.

    9. Re:Umm how about by bames53 · · Score: 1

      All of those are eliminated or substantially cut. Did you actually look at the plan?

    10. Re:Umm how about by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Right, instead they won't bother much with security at all. TSA sucks, but throwing the baby out with the bathwater isn't the answer. Israel manages to do a good job with their security.

    11. Re:Umm how about by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

      TSA hasn't caught any terrorists and they've let through 65% of attempted smugglings. So, the airlines can't do much worse.

      But, Southwest could require strip searches if it makes people feel better and Delta could allow everybody to be armed and train their stewardesses in Kung Fu.

      --
      My God, it's Full of Source!
      OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    12. Re:Umm how about by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul has proposed substantial military cuts. If he mentioned all his proposed cuts every time he mentioned one, he'd talk for hours.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    13. Re:Umm how about by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe Ron Paul has proposed each of those as well. Remember that you are reading an article on the website of Science, so of course they are going to focus on those proposals which directly affect their sector. But Dr. Paul's main push has always been to close down the 700+ military bases in 130+ foreign nations and bring those troops back home, not only because of the incredible cost of maintaining the bases, but also because our unwelcome presence around the world is well known (and was known prior to 9/11) to be a principal source of hatred towards the US (how well would you sleep at night if we allowed Russia to keep bases on our own soil?). The nation building must stop, we must stop acting like the police force of the world, and we need to focus more on defending our homeland than attacking others. We would save money, lives, and TSA/DHS would be obsolete.

  26. Why is federal spending the only way? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...and is being bound to a government teat really best for science? Is that how we want the future to unfold?

    I think pulling all that stuff from the federal government would be a good thing. If it's really important to you, form a research non-profit and build up a private endowment for the sort of reasearch you want done. It will be more independent, and less likely to be abused, cut, or jerked around like a doggie toy next time a GWB or BHO is in office.

    1. Re:Why is federal spending the only way? by bmo · · Score: 1

      Because private industry has been cutting back on R&D for the past 30 years and shipping it off to China.

      And don't even ask about basic science. There's no "profit motive" in it. Corporations don't do any worthwhile basic science. Not biology, not atmospheric, geological, astronomical, or even math. It's all applied science, with the goal of getting a profit next, or better "this quarter." Basic science is too long-range to be even considered.

      All you libertarians are goddamn know-nothings and penny wise/pound foolish niggards that cheered when Sarah Palin decried fruit fly research (it's really about genetics, but whatever). I do /not/ want to live in your fantasy world.

      --
      BMO

    2. Re:Why is federal spending the only way? by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      Because private industry has been cutting back on R&D for the past 30 years and shipping it off to China.

      And don't even ask about basic science. There's no "profit motive" in it. Corporations don't do any worthwhile basic science. Not biology, not atmospheric, geological, astronomical, or even math. It's all applied science, with the goal of getting a profit next, or better "this quarter." Basic science is too long-range to be even considered.

      All you libertarians are goddamn know-nothings and penny wise/pound foolish niggards that cheered when Sarah Palin decried fruit fly research (it's really about genetics, but whatever). I do /not/ want to live in your fantasy world.

      -- BMO

      There are other alternatives to Federal spending then private spending. How about city spending? How about state spending? Why does the Federal government have to be the one doing all the spending?

    3. Re:Why is federal spending the only way? by bmo · · Score: 1

      There are other alternatives to Federal spending then private spending. How about city spending? How about state spending? Why does the Federal government have to be the one doing all the spending?

      Because if we left it up to Tennessee, there would be an ORNL.

      You are delusional.

      --
      BMO

    4. Re:Why is federal spending the only way? by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      There are other alternatives to Federal spending then private spending. How about city spending? How about state spending? Why does the Federal government have to be the one doing all the spending?

      Because if we left it up to Tennessee, there would be an ORNL.

      You are delusional.

      -- BMO

      Maybe they would close that lab; maybe they wouldn't. I don't really know. That would be up to the people in Tennessee.

      If they choose to close it and want to use the money for anything else (schools, roads, parks, paying for other research centers besides ORNL) that would be their business. If people outside of Tennessee are concerned about that National Lab they can always pay for it themselves.

    5. Re:Why is federal spending the only way? by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      I think pulling all that stuff from the federal government would be a good thing. If it's really important to you, form a research non-profit and build up a private endowment for the sort of reasearch you want done.

      As a scientist who works for the federal government, I actually agree with you, but only in principle. In the real world, the government currently funds a great deal of undirected basic research, and operates a number of shared facilities that are unparalleled in the world. There aren't any non-profits with that kind of money which can suddenly pick up the slack and continue onward as if nothing had happened. The immediate result of slashing these activities will be that all foreign scientists go back to their home countries, and a number of US scientists follow them. The commercial activities that tend to naturally flow from academic research (like the entire biotech industry) will either wither or move. Maybe in a decade we'd be able to rebuild to the point where we were before - the single largest producer of basic scientific research in the world - but by that point, we'd be far behind the rest of the industrial nations, who would no doubt see this as an excellent opportunity to capitalize on our losses.

      Now, as I pointed out above, if you believe that we're headed towards national bankruptcy and economic collapse anyway, maybe this is inevitable, and better to get it out of the way now, to improve our chances of recovery. And I'm not entirely unsympathetic to that point of view. But it's delusional to pretend that everything would just work out, and the private sector would take care of the problem.

    6. Re:Why is federal spending the only way? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      And don't even ask about basic science. There's no "profit motive" in it. Corporations don't do any worthwhile basic science. Not biology, not atmospheric, geological, astronomical, or even math. It's all applied science, with the goal of getting a profit next, or better "this quarter." Basic science is too long-range to be even considered.

      You mean like:
      (from HERE)
      The National Science Foundation gave the Minnesota Zoo over $600,000 so that they could develop an online video game called "Wolfquest".
      Almost unbelievably, the National Institutes of Health was given $800,000 in "stimulus funds" to study the impact of a "genital-washing program" on men in South Africa.
      The National Institutes of Health spent approximately $442,340 to study the behavior of male prostitutes in Vietnam.
      Approximately $1 million of U.S. taxpayer money was used to create poetry for the Little Rock, New Orleans, Milwaukee and Chicago zoos. The goal of the "poetry" is to help raise awareness on environmental issues.
      The National Science Foundation spent $216,000 to study whether or not politicians "gain or lose support by taking ambiguous positions."
      A total of $3 million has been granted to researchers at the University of California at Irvine so that they can play video games such as World of Warcraft. The goal of this "video game research" is reportedly to study how "emerging forms of communication, including multiplayer computer games and online virtual worlds such as World of Warcraft and Second Life can help organizations collaborate and compete more effectively in the global marketplace.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    7. Re:Why is federal spending the only way? by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      "Why does the Federal government have to be the one doing all the spending?"

      Because the problems the government addresses are national-scale, the expertise for specific problems is not distributed uniformly across states, and the benefits accrue to the nation in its entirety. And because believe it or not, Federal employees, especially in scientific R&D areas, are much smarter and more ethical than most State employees.

    8. Re:Why is federal spending the only way? by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Why does the Federal government have to be the one doing all the spending?

      Because they have the most money.

  27. Slashdot = CNN by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Wow i didnt realize that slashdot was a liberal mouth peice. Get bought by turner?

    1. Re:Slashdot = CNN by siride · · Score: 1

      Reading the comments, you'd think this is a libertarian haven.

  28. I can almost sympathize... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I kind of understand the reasoning behind this. I know more about Canadian public service departments, but it's probably similar in the USA.

    It's not uncommon knowledge that there are many departments which appear on the surface to have legitimate purposes are very far from actually doing anything useful. There are departments where some 80% of workers come in, work for some 1 hour a day, and generally just forward emails around in an attempt to push their work onto who they think should be doing it, who, of course, in turn pushes that email onto someone else.

    You could easily axe 80% of the personnel from such departments just by hiring competent people and giving them the training and authority to actually do things themselves.

    These departments may not be completely useless, but if they are horrendously bloated and consist primarily of cushy fabricated jobs, they they still could be 90% useless.

    Imagine a society where most people actually worked while at work! I'm not sure what would happen to the hopelessly incompetent people who tend to end up in government jobs though in such a society.

    Overall it's a very tricky problem to solve.

  29. Should work fine.. by greywire · · Score: 1

    .. as long as he doesn't cut the military budget.

    We'll need the army when the american people revolt and martial law is instituted.

    --
    -- Senior Software Engineer, Attorney appearance services, locallawyerapp.com.
  30. Ron Paul is god dammed retard!!! by r0k3t · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul is god dammed retard!!!

    1. Re:Ron Paul is god dammed retard!!! by bhengh · · Score: 1

      Compared to your insightful, well-reasoned, and grammatically perfect rebuttal?

    2. Re:Ron Paul is god dammed retard!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gotta side with r0k3t on this one.

  31. Typical Libertarian Naivete by mathmathrevolution · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The US needs a nuclear weapons program. We need border patrol. We need specialized regulatory and enforcement agencies like FCC. Pretending that all these programs are optional to anybody, even the most retrograde conservative, is just empty posturing and shameless pandering to ideologically driven morons.

    1. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by CadentOrange · · Score: 1

      The US needs a nuclear weapons program. We need border patrol. We need specialized regulatory and enforcement agencies like FCC. Pretending that all these programs are optional to anybody, even the most retrograde conservative, is just empty posturing and shameless pandering to ideologically driven morons.

      As a reformed libertarian, I whole heartedly concur.

    2. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      Where did RP say he was cutting the weapons program? Or border patrol? Quotes please. Show me what these 'specialized regulatory and enforcement agengies' have done? SEC? FCC? FDA? They are nothing more than home away from home of corporate lobbyists. Yeah SEC prevented the financial tardation! TSA is sure to prevent anyone getting on a plane with something bad [how many newspapers have run stuff past the TSA successfully?]

      It is actually you who is shamelessly pandering to the status quo and fear mongering.

    3. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do we need a nuclear weapons program?

      Face it. The way we've been doing business, which has some of your ideas of what we need in it, is not working. Drastic change may be what this country needs to get its ass back on track. Stop being a d*ck and learn to compromise. Just because he's elected doesn't mean that every one of his ideas will happen.

    4. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul wants border patrol; he thinks the military should be defending the borders rather than stationed around the world.

    5. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by TonyXL · · Score: 1

      Yeah, we need the FCC, they're great.

    6. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US needs a nuclear weapons program. We need border patrol. We need specialized regulatory and enforcement agencies like FCC. Pretending that all these programs are optional to anybody, even the most retrograde conservative, is just empty posturing and shameless pandering to ideologically driven morons.

      Sarcasm?

    7. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It worked for Obama...

    8. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Jawnn · · Score: 2

      The US needs a nuclear weapons program. We need border patrol. We need specialized regulatory and enforcement agencies like FCC. Pretending that all these programs are optional to anybody, even the most retrograde conservative, is just empty posturing and shameless pandering to ideologically driven morons.

      This. A thousand times this.
      And the saddest part? The ideologically driven morons are legion, and many of them vote.

    9. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by geekoid · · Score: 1

      UIts logically fallacious to assume the becasue an agnecy amde mistakes, there is no need for said agency. It just means it need to ahve control put into place

      And you assumption the the SEC is at fault fr the financial meltdown is stupid. They enforce the laws they where supposed to. the Bush administration ignored their many warning.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    10. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by spopepro · · Score: 1

      Uh... what do you think the Dept. of Energy does?
      Hint: The Nova laser and NIF are not about power generation.

    11. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The US needs a nuclear weapons program.

      Really? The US *NEEDS* a nuclear weapons program? Care to back up your unsubstantiated nonsense?

    12. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by mathmathrevolution · · Score: 1

      No we do not need specialized regulatory and enforcement agencies like FCC, at least not at the federal level. It comes down to property rights

      1) If it "comes down to property rights" then you should support the existence of the FCC which enforces property rights for the broadcast spectrum.

      2) The broadcast spectrum literally goes across state borders which means that its content is by definition "interstate commerce" and explicitly subject to regulation under the US constitution.

      As for border patrol, Paul wants to bring the troops home to guard the borders. A much better idea than building a wall.

      3) Border Patrol agents and the enlisted soldiers of the United States military have entirely distinct roles and training needs. The purpose of Border Patrol isn't intended to or capable of stopping a military invasion. They are a law enforcement agency, with limited military training and capability as is appropriate for their role. Border Patrol needs specialized training to enforce laws and interact with our legal system while respecting the rights of US citizens. Ron Paul's Border Patrol ideas are just more inane posturing that appeals to naive Libertarians who haven't thought things through.

    13. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He wants a strong defense, not a military industrial complex. He wants to protect our borders. And who's regulating the regulators? E.g. Meredith Baker.

    14. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why exactly do you need MORE nukes? Who exactly is the enemy? Iran??? Not bloody likely.

      It occurs to me, that the US needs to invent enemies just to justify the spending on weapons and war. And FYI, the US has enough nukes already to obliterate everyone, everywhere several times over. There is no need for more nukes.

    15. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      DOE is not just about the weapons labs and programs. And those functions which are necessary and appropriate to continue would end up in a more appropriate agency like DoD.

    16. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by spopepro · · Score: 1

      So, in other words, not cut at all. Just a shell game then.

    17. Re:Typical Libertarian Naivete by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which would be why Dr Paul, agrees with you.

      You may want to read his take on the issues before you post idiotic rhetoric like this.

      http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/national-defense/

  32. Over the top campaign promise by ddd0004 · · Score: 1

    This sounds like some over the top plan a'la Ross Perot, but in reality there is no way something like this would happen. This wholesale closure would be nixed by Congress, but a moderated plan to review and reduce needless functions would make perfect sense.

    1. Re:Over the top campaign promise by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      I believe you're correct. The good thing about Ross Perot was he brought the government debt into public debate. President Clinton and Congress made some modest efforts toward balancing the budget and were unexpectedly successful at least for a few years. Without Ross Perot bringing the issue to the public's attention, there probably wouldn't have been any effort by our political leaders in that direction whatsoever. So I say good for Ron Paul.

  33. It would kill Boulder, Co. by scum-o · · Score: 1

    NOAA and NIST have huge headquarters in Boulder, Co. Cutting these departments would affect Boulder in a *huge* way - much like GE's pull-out of Michael Moore's home town devastated that town.

    1. Re:It would kill Boulder, Co. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      whatever, I'm sure all of the out of work engineers, meteorologists, and scientists can find work manicuring buds for the local cannabis club.

    2. Re:It would kill Boulder, Co. by jeffmeden · · Score: 1

      NOAA and NIST have huge headquarters in Boulder, Co. Cutting these departments would affect Boulder in a *huge* way - much like GE's pull-out of Michael Moore's home town devastated that town.

      If the $12 billion that he wants to save means creating the next Michael Moore, I think I speak for a majority when I say "JUST SPEND THE MONEY!"

  34. Political chat on Slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I forget most of you are big government, possibly one world government supporters, so fending for yourself or attempting to save money doesn't mean much to you.

    How's that Obama sticker holding up on the back of your car? Faded out yet?

    1. Re:Political chat on Slashdot? by polar+red · · Score: 1

      one world government

      you mean the corporations ?

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    2. Re:Political chat on Slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One world government where we lick the boots of the UN

    3. Re:Political chat on Slashdot? by polar+red · · Score: 1

      The UN is elected. Corporations are not.

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    4. Re:Political chat on Slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How's that wireless connection coming to you from your protest?

      It's funny how you anti-corporation folks whine about corporations, have corporate things like electronics and demand more government intervention in corporations but scream about corporations working for the government.

    5. Re:Political chat on Slashdot? by MarkvW · · Score: 1

      People are foolish if they think corporations will rule us if we abandon our government. Corporations can't even rule themselves.

      Corporations would devolve into cartels and trusts and monopolies and those organizations would pick governments that suited them. Like the railroads did in the second half of the 19th century.

      Where does it go from there? Revolution.

    6. Re:Political chat on Slashdot? by polar+red · · Score: 1

      -I- don't scream about corps working for the government, I happen to like that system, provided there are enough checks to keep the money-flow from the government to the private sector under control. What I don't like is corporations paying nearly NO taxes, while they get the benefit of, amongst other things : using public infrastructure, and workers educated with government money.

      --
      Yes, I'm left. You have a problem with that?
    7. Re:Political chat on Slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      NEWS FLASH: 50% of Americans do not pay income tax and 3 out of 5 are on food stamps!

  35. So, he wants a 19th Century economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Jeez. Because deregulating the financial sector has worked soooooo very well.

    1. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Yeah, or look at countries without the equivalent of an FDA. In Mexico they have no food labeling standard and if you buy and test food made there it is just as ... wait, I'm being told the stated ingredients are actually replaced with much cheaper ones. But somehow... private sector...

    2. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      Mexico has no food labeling standard?

      "Food products sold in Mexico use the NOM-051-SCFI-1994 "Información nutrimental" product labelling standard (which is very similar to "Nutrition Facts" in the U.S.). The Official Mexican Standard, or NOM (Norma Oficial Mexicana), was developed by the Mexican Secretary of Commerce and Industrial Promotion (Secretaría de Comercio y Fomento Industrial, or SCFI), now a part of the Secretary of the Economy (SECOFI). It entered into effect on January 24, 1996,[6] and defines "General specifications for labelling foods and pre-bottled non-alcoholic beverages".[7]
      [edit]"

    3. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Interesting. i last checked on a bottle of "vanilla extract" purchased in the early 1990s.

    4. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by tmosley · · Score: 1

      You can't deregulate the financial sector without ending the Fed. As long as the Fed is there, any and all laws can and will be bypassed for the benefit of the banks. Deregulation was never the problem. At most, it just made the problem come to a head instead of festering in the background as it has done since the Fed bailed out the S&L banks in 1987.

    5. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by tmosley · · Score: 1

      I never had problems with food I bought in Mexico, nor have I ever heard of anyone who has. You sure we aren't using other people's money to tilt at windmills?

    6. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by BetterSense · · Score: 1

      People also go to Mexico to get treatments that are unavailable in the US (due to not being approved), but apparently desired by those same people who feel its worth the risk to them. It's not like hyperregulation has no downsides.

      TANSTAAFL.

    7. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by TheFlamingoKing · · Score: 1

      Is TARP an example of deregulation? Just checking.

    8. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by mojo-raisin · · Score: 1

      It's like this:

      It's the private sector's fault that Freddie & Fanny loosened lending standards. It's also the fault of the private sector that the Fed dropped interest rates to 0%.

      That should clear things up.

    9. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it is regulation that caused the mess, but that is too convenient to ignore.

    10. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are not familiar with Dodd-Frank, are you?

    11. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But we didn't deregulate the financial sector silly:
      http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/229635/we-i-didnt-i-deregulate/veronique-de-rugy

    12. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The financial industry is one of the most heavily regulated industries in American history. How on earth can you call it deregulation with a straight face?

    13. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The deregulation has absolutely nothing to do with the government making sub-prime loans a profitable business to get into. Under the old law, banks, brokerages and insurance companies were effectively barred from entering each others' industries, and investment banking and commercial banking were separated. De-regulation took those restrictions away. That's it. It didn't make sub-prime loans profitable, and it didn't give bankers any reason at all to loan money to people who couldn't pay it back.

      Are you old enough to remember when there was a home loan store on every corner? They were there because the government made making bad loans profitable. Anyone could get a loan even if you couldn't afford to pay it back because the government was backing the loans or outright buying them.

      Do you remember the day the housing bubble crashed? Do you remember why? It was when the HUD announced that Fannie and Freddie would no longer be buying sub-prime loans from private lending institutions. Taking these facts into consideration please explain why anyone is blaming private business for the economic problems, or why de-regulation somehow magically changed the laws of nature and made bankers start doing things that everyone knows will make you lose money.

    14. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Just so I understand this: what deregulation are you talking about?

    15. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by PintoPiman · · Score: 1

      Jeez. Because deregulating the financial sector has worked soooooo very well.

      When on earth did we ever do that? We might have rolled back one or two rules amongst a corpus of thousands, to which new rules are being added with frequency.

      Even if (and it's a HUGE if) we ever actually deregulated finance, the fact that the feds get to print as much money as they want pretty much trumps everything else.

    16. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He voted against repealing the Glass-Steagall Act. Mangru interview

    17. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      40 years ago most packaged foods were labelled "Appr Penna Dept Agr" - Approved by the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture. Pennsylvania had the most stringent food standards, and their approval was considered adequate by the other states.

      The FDA is a battleground of political forces, where giant pharma begs and bribes for approval of good and bad medicines and tries to prevent the approval of its competition's products. Various forces try to make vitamins and other food supplements illegal, and override freedom of the press with FDA rules, lawsuits, arrests, raids, and murders. There are few things that would benefit the US more than wiping out the FDA and jailing its top executives.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    18. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      Look, you can waste your money on cough syrup, and people even use it on children where it is dangerous to administer. The fact that people go to Mexico to get treatments that will not help them and might harm them is not a very good argument against regulation. FDAs rule is "safe and effective" (put in place after cough syrup was approved), I have no idea why you would want treatment that does not meet this definition.

    19. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      What size tin foil hat to you wear?

    20. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by BetterSense · · Score: 1

      It's pretty obvious actually. Have you considered that maybe not everyone always agrees with the FDA in its assesment of what is "safe and effective"? Many people feel its more "Safe enough, effective enough, and makes the pharmaceutical companies sufficient money". Your unwavering faith in the nobility and competence of federal regulatory agencies is not shared by everyone.

    21. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Freddie and Fannie were on the trailing edge of that trend. And the whole thing would have been a minor problem if the risk hadn't been hidden and distributed throughout the entire system via opaque financial instruments, encouraging lenders to profit off consumer desperation and stupidity. And may I remind you how well deregulation worked for Enron.

      Basically everyone in the system -- both people and corporations -- acted in their own immediate (if naive) interests ... which is exactly what you can expect them to do, just as you can expect people acting in their immediate interests to wind up in the pessimal solution of Prisoner's Dilemma. The whole point of regulations is to prevent this.

    22. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So are you omitting the bit of history about collateralized debt obligations and other new financial instruments which were used to conceal risk and and spread it throughout the system on purpose, or are you simply uninformed?

    23. Re:So, he wants a 19th Century economy by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      FDA does not conduct studies, and only universities have conducted studies on cough medicine (industry would not pay to show their product sucks).

      Safe and effective is pretty minimal and, being aware of the actual process, they do a very good (if delayed by underfunding) job of it.

      But as for, "Safe enough, effective enough, and makes the pharmaceutical companies sufficient money". that is right, it's a free market, so it has to be profitable or worth something in an ad for how great the company is for them to make it.

  36. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    He also brings home the troops and ends the empire abroad. That saves nearly a trillion. Per year.

  37. Still a drop in the lake of the US debt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Total debt is 10 trillion around, structural debt is around 1 trillion a year and he wants to cut very necessary services for a total of 11.35 billion dollars in savings.

    More people out of work and less people to make sure companies and educators are doing what they are suppose to be doing. The multiple effect of these people going out and spending money. More strain on unemployment benefits. What is the value of educating people to work? Whats the value of being able to predict the weather? Or warn people about Hurricanes, Tornadoes, etc? I mean I guess your fellow citizen can call you when a Tornado is on the way much better the NOAA.

    All for a 10% reduction in the annual debt and no means of lowering of the total debt already incurred.

    I thought Ron Paul has some good points, then he does something as dumb as this. BRILLIANT!!!!

    1. Re:Still a drop in the lake of the US debt by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      Total debt is 10 trillion around, structural debt is around 1 trillion a year and he wants to cut very necessary services for a total of 11.35 billion dollars in savings.

      His proposals total to $1 trillion a year; not $11.35 billion.

    2. Re:Still a drop in the lake of the US debt by siride · · Score: 1

      But these programs are only 11.35 billion. They might as well stay in and serve their useful purpose. Not that, of course, they shouldn't be reviewed for efficiency. We can probably dump the DoEd.

  38. It is a start. by Beer_Smurf · · Score: 2

    Ron Paul is putting out something that might start to make a dent in looming disaster that is the budget.
    Please look for your self and see how long until the amount of interest due on the debt is larger than what the government collects.
    All the other politicians are fiddling while Rome Burns.

    1. Re:It is a start. by JoeMerchant · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul is putting out something that might start to make a dent in looming disaster that is the budget.

      Please look for your self and see how long until the amount of interest due on the debt is larger than what the government collects.

      All the other politicians are fiddling while Rome Burns.

      It's smoke and mirrors, he won't really be able to kill NOAA, DOE, or any of those programs, this would temporarily cripple them while they scramble to justify their existence, but at the end of it all, his budget cut would be more like a reshuffling of the cut departments into other organizational shelters. I doubt he'd get 20% of the cost reduction advertised by the time the whole thing is over, but there would be an 80% reduction in efficiency in those programs while they do the bureaucratic jig.

      Try looking places like military deployment. I'm not saying our soldiers don't need air conditioning in the desert, but I am saying that the fuel to run the air conditioners is costing more than NASA's entire budget... maybe if we had fewer soldiers deployed in the desert?

    2. Re:It is a start. by MightyMartian · · Score: 2

      Well, more likely Congress would simply refuse to cooperate. I've long said it, that if Ron Paul were president, he'd be spending a lonely four years in the White House with a Congress that would refuse to work with him. It's not like most of what he proposes he can actually do anyways. To dismantle those departments would require Congressional approval. Do you think, for instance, that all those Congresscritters from California up to Washington State would ever stand by and let the USGS be killed or farmed out? Do you think all those Congresscritters along the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Seaboard would actually go along with wiping out NOAA?

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    3. Re:It is a start. by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul is putting out something that might start to make a dent in looming disaster that is the budget. Please look for your self and see how long until the amount of interest due on the debt is larger than what the government collects. All the other politicians are fiddling while Rome Burns.

      Cutting useful programs to save $12 Billion is also fiddling while Rome burns. Even cutting $12 Billion of useless programs would be a drop in the fire bucket.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
    4. Re:It is a start. by siride · · Score: 1

      Cutting these small departments will do almost nothing for the deficit problem, but will hurt our ability to remain competitive in weather monitoring, research and other areas. What's the sense in that?

      The deficit problem is almost entirely in two big areas: mandatory entitlement spending and defense. Look at any chart of federal spending and that will be readily apparent. Once those areas are improved, spendingwise, then we can start looking at the smaller programs. Even then, ones like NOAA and the NSF should be near the end of the list, since they provide such useful services at a really great price.

    5. Re:It is a start. by kelarius · · Score: 1

      Try looking places like military deployment. I'm not saying our soldiers don't need air conditioning in the desert, but I am saying that the fuel to run the air conditioners is costing more than NASA's entire budget... maybe if we had fewer soldiers deployed in the desert?

      Hes planning on doing exactly that, the majority of his $1 trillion in cuts is in him ending the Iraq/Afghanistan wars.

      --
      Personally I'd rather have my idiots at home glued to the TV than out doing idiotic things
    6. Re:It is a start. by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 1

      If you want to make a dent, use something larger than a jeweler's hammer.

      The $12 billion saved by axing these 5 departments is nothing compared to the big ticket items. Medicare has a budget of $793 billion. Defense has a budget of $689. Decreasing both of those by only 10% would be more than enough to fund all 5 departments. If you want to make a dent, cut them both in half.

      Social security has a budget of $701 billion, but it brings in $865 million in revenue, so it isn't a budget problem. But sure, cut it too if you want.

      I don't know why this is so difficult for Republicans to understand. Bank robbers rob banks because that's where the money is. If you want to cut the budget, you cut it where the budget is fat; that's where the money is. Ron Paul zeroing out 5 departments to save $12 billion is like an armed robber holding up a kid with a lemonade stand. It's cowardly and stupid and isn't going to solve a damn thing.

      --
      Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
    7. Re:It is a start. by RedDeadThumb · · Score: 1

      if Ron Paul were president, he'd be spending a lonely four years in the White House with a Congress that would refuse to work with him.

      So what you are saying is that nothing will change from how it is now.

    8. Re:It is a start. by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      I think people would look back fondly on this period as an era of cooperation and goodwill between the White House and Congress if Ron Paul became the next president.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    9. Re:It is a start. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's actually cutting $1 Trillion...in the first year. Read the plan: http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/ron-paul-plan-to-restore-america/

    10. Re:It is a start. by Beer_Smurf · · Score: 1

      This is only a small part of his cuts. Not his only cuts. Take a look at ending the wars and closing bases around the world. Yes you are right more cuts are needed, and he is working on those also. Take a look at the rest of his plans.

    11. Re:It is a start. by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      Presidents do mostly get to just sign or refuse to sign legislation that Congress sends them. The thing about RP is this. He has balked signing (voting in his case) any legislation that doesn't pass constitutional muster, without regard to whether it came from the Democrats or Republicans. His party - the Republicans - don't like him because he won't play ball and vote the way they want him to for the "good" of the party.

      There is some legislation that might have a hard time mustering the votes for a veto override. So by not signing the funding bills - perhaps not signing an omnibus bill and forcing Congress to actually do its job and send individual bills that are germane to one topic to his desk rather than using the now obligatory must pass rider approach - he just might be able to cause a change in how things are done even if Congress is against him. I suspect there are few bills he doesn't like or doesn't feel are right that he will sign, regardless of "must pass" aspects.

      The Congress may be considerably different as well - their approval rankings are disasters. RP won't have any trouble communicating with the American people exactly why he rejected a piece of legislation. It is up to the American people to hold their Congress accountable now, and it will be no matter who is elected president. I'd rather have somebody at the top who was willing to veto legislative garbage than someone who would smile and do what their party wanted.

    12. Re:It is a start. by ironjaw33 · · Score: 1

      Well, more likely Congress would simply refuse to cooperate. I've long said it, that if Ron Paul were president, he'd be spending a lonely four years in the White House with a Congress that would refuse to work with him. It's not like most of what he proposes he can actually do anyways.

      I'm very curious about this. Most presidents propose some measure of change as part of their campaigns, change which usually fails miserably. My guess is that Ron Paul would succeed in getting at least one of these federal departments cut or reduced somewhat, but definitely at nowhere near the scale he proposes.

      I'll bet that most of this "kill everything" rhetoric will die off quickly if he makes it past the primaries, much less gets elected. What kinds of measures does Ron Paul introduce and/or support in his current capacity as a representative? Do these meet fierce opposition? I don't know since I don't live in Texas and don't hear many specifics, but I'll wager a guess that most of the bills he champions aren't that radical.

    13. Re:It is a start. by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      The president has immense powers that can be used to disassemble an agency while appearing to do no such thing. With a Republican legislative branch, Paul's appointments will be mostly approved, and the cabinet can do a great deal to disable their various departments, until it's too late to put Humpty Dumpty back together again.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    14. Re:It is a start. by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 1

      I've seen his other plans. We're talking about 5 departments vanishing. That part of his plan is stupid and insane.

      If someone says, "Everyone should get vaccinated for measles and wear their underwear on their heads", then I'm not going to spend much time commenting on their sensible vaccination plan. I'll focus on the insanity.

      --
      Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
    15. Re:It is a start. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If he gets there and was able to pass 1/10th of what he is proposing, it will be more than multiple decades of the last Presidents have achieved - COMBINED.

  39. knee-jerk by starmonkey · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Ron Paul seems like an intelligent, thoughtful man. Let's avoid a knee-jerk reaction to this "news". Maybe he has an idea to continue providing the core public services of these departments while cutting bureaucratic complexity. I don't think there's enough information here. Then again, it's a lot more fun to get indignant!

    1. Re:knee-jerk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes! A secret plan! Because Dr. Ron Paul is a smart man, and not a glassy-eyed ideological zealot!

    2. Re:knee-jerk by tbannist · · Score: 1

      He's a libertarian. His goal is simply to cut the size of government. I'm reasonably sure that he believes that if people actually need the services, they will pay for them out of their own pockets. I'm also pretty sure that he believes whether that costs more or less, it's morally better.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    3. Re:knee-jerk by Mindcontrolled · · Score: 1

      What's with the Paulites always using his Dr. title when speaking of their god and master? Haven't seen this with anyone else. Has a nice cultist ring to it, guys.

      --
      Ubi solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant.
    4. Re:knee-jerk by Zaphod+The+42nd · · Score: 1

      Then again, it's a lot more fun to get indignant!

      And you've just hit the political nail on the head.

      --
      GCS/MU/P d- s:- a-- C++++$ UL++ P+ L++ E+ W++ N o K- w--- O M+ V- PS+++ PE Y+ PGP t+ 5- X R++ tv+ b++ DI++ D++ G+ e++ h-
    5. Re:knee-jerk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul seems like an intelligent, thoughtful man. Let's avoid a knee-jerk reaction to this "news". Maybe he has an idea...

      Say, it just so happens that I have a wonderful opportunity for a smart young man like yourself to invest in shares of the Brooklyn Bridge. I know what you're thinking: it sounds too good to be true, but you should avoid a knee-jerk reaction to my news until well after I've swindled you out of all your money and led the most powerful nation on Earth into a shithole of robber-baron corporatocracy.

    6. Re:knee-jerk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He believes the earth is 6,000 years old. That is not intelligent or thoughtful.

    7. Re:knee-jerk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've seen it with the occasional other politician. Most notably with whatever congressional Republican asshole that was who took the forefront with trying to force Terri Schiavo to stay alive; I think he was from Tennessee or thereabouts.

    8. Re:knee-jerk by sammy+baby · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul seems like an intelligent, thoughtful man. Let's avoid a knee-jerk reaction to this "news". Maybe he has an idea to continue providing the core public services of these departments while cutting bureaucratic complexity. I don't think there's enough information here.

      Then again, it's a lot more fun to get indignant!

      Man, if only there were a way that we could find out... oh, look! The actual plan, as released by his campaign! Here, take a look yourself, it's not like it's that long. According to the announcement on his campaign web site, that's the plan, "in full."

      If his explanation to how to continue providing the "core public services of these departments" is in any way materially different from "the private sector," I'll eat my hat.

    9. Re:knee-jerk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Of course, it's typically to PRIVATIZE.

      Private sector
      Private sector
      Private sector
      Private sector

      That's his agenda. Could it work? Maybe. Is it sustainable? Flat out no.

    10. Re:knee-jerk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, his plan is if the services are important enough the states should do them. It's my understanding is that a lot of this comes down to an ideological argument of who should pay for what.

      But I don't think that's reasonable for agencies like National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration or the National Institute of Standards and Technology. And comes across as a PR stunt to me as much as anything.

    11. Re:knee-jerk by PintoPiman · · Score: 1

      What's with the Paulites always using his Dr. title when speaking of their god and master? Haven't seen this with anyone else. Has a nice cultist ring to it, guys.

      Uh - it was the sarcastic hater that called him Dr. Ron Paul. The voice of reason grandparent left it out.

    12. Re:knee-jerk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering even the news articles biased against it can only point out 1-2% of his cuts as being bad? Yes, people are complaining about 10-20 billion worth of cuts in a 1000 billion document.

      Hurricane warnings are most likely just overlooked.

    13. Re:knee-jerk by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Get to eating. Most of those services are taken over at the local or state levels.

    14. Re:knee-jerk by Keen+Anthony · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul may be an intelligent, thoughtful man, but he's wrong. And he's been wrong for the 30 years that I've listened to his rants. He has never offered a solution for anything that wasn't based on the assumption that the free market will automatically pick up the slack.

  40. Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constition? by GodInHell · · Score: 2

    The Federal Government has a constitutional mandate to regulate interstate and international commerce. But hey, fuck that right? Pass me a heroine needle and that copy of Atlas Shrugged, it's Ron Paul's world now.

    -GiH

  41. Which is what, exactly? by xxxJonBoyxxx · · Score: 1

    > What private corporation is going to do what the US Geological Survey does?

    Which is what, exactly?

    In terms of mapping rocks and whatnot, there are great incentives for energy and mineral companies to perform this kind of research internally.

    On earthquake research, there are a number of universities (many of which claim to be privately funded/endowed) that compete with each other on prestige that would likely continue this research.

    It's nice to have a federal agency with a nice web site, but at some point in the past we may have hit a point of diminishing returns on additional spend here.

    1. Re:Which is what, exactly? by MightyMartian · · Score: 5, Informative

      You are aware, I trust, that the USGS is responsible for a large number of monitoring programs. Basically, killing it would essentially leave the West Coast of the United States without tsunami, earthquake or volcano alerts. I'm sure the people that live along that very geologically active strip of turf will be happy to know that Ron Paul considers them essentially expendable in his quest for ideological purity.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:Which is what, exactly? by jandrese · · Score: 1

      Sorry, education got cut too, so those Universities are going to have to spend that money on salaries and whatnot. Who else is going to do earthquake research?

      The "Oh, private universities can pick up the slack" is a handwave of epic proportions that falls apart under even the smallest amount of scrutiny. It's an epidemic problem with Ron Paul, he's a "big ideas" man, but never follows through with the details.

      --

      I read the internet for the articles.
    3. Re:Which is what, exactly? by SuricouRaven · · Score: 3, Insightful

      "In terms of mapping rocks and whatnot, there are great incentives for energy and mineral companies to perform this kind of research internally."

      There is also great incentive for them to keep that data secret and never publish any of their research, because doing so would allow their competitors to benefit.

    4. Re:Which is what, exactly? by ArcherB · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You are aware, I trust, that the USGS is responsible for a large number of monitoring programs. Basically, killing it would essentially leave the West Coast of the United States without tsunami, earthquake or volcano alerts. I'm sure the people that live along that very geologically active strip of turf will be happy to know that Ron Paul considers them essentially expendable in his quest for ideological purity.

      Why should the people of North Dakota pay for tsunami monitoring for California? If the west coast wants earth quake and tsunami warning, they can pay for it.

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    5. Re:Which is what, exactly? by PeterM+from+Berkeley · · Score: 3, Interesting

      OK, then North Dakota should give up ITS share of Federal subsidies too. California gets less back from Fed on its taxes (as a fraction) than small podunk states like North Dakota. Which leaves Californa footing more than its share of the tax bill. How about North Dakota paying its share instead of sponging off of CA (and other big states)?

      --PM

    6. Re:Which is what, exactly? by truthsearch · · Score: 1

      "I have what I need, so everyone else can go fend for themselves."

    7. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are aware, I trust, that the USGS is responsible for a large number of monitoring programs. Basically, killing it would essentially leave the West Coast of the United States without tsunami, earthquake or volcano alerts. I'm sure the people that live along that very geologically active strip of turf will be happy to know that Ron Paul considers them essentially expendable in his quest for ideological purity.

      I wouldn't be so dramatic. California and Texas can exist without the rest of the US. California is like the 8th economic power in the world and Texas the 15th economic power in the world. The question is wether the other continental states can exist without the federal government. So if Californians and Texans want their independence I guess they should push for this guy's agenda. Leave the rest of the US to rot while you still have the upperhand guys.

    8. Re:Which is what, exactly? by cdrguru · · Score: 2

      The problem is that it is coming to a choice: medical care for the poor or USGS. Housing for the poor or USGS. Investigation into the mating habits of obscure owls or USGS.

      We cannot convince China to continue to finance the US spending forever. Sooner or later they are either going to say no or start having a hand in what gets funded and what does not. That will mean the US President starts needing to ask China's permission to do anything that spends money.

      Maybe we need to trim some stuff before that happens, huh? I guess the other choice is the one a lot of other countries have made: 70% taxes on anyone with money, 0% taxes on anyone without a job. So far, we haven't seen that proposal, but you can be sure it is coming. Sure, we can tax the "rich" except in the world we are looking at anyone with a job is "rich" and everyone else is "poor".

    9. Re:Which is what, exactly? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Because North Dakota benefits from having a California that doesn't get devastated by tsunamis or earthquakes. The same way that the world benefited from Japan not being completely flooded by a Tsunami.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    10. Re:Which is what, exactly? by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 2

      Actually, he co-founded the Mises Institute, which is chock-full of details. He's published books like Liberty Defined where he breaks his arguments into easily understandable explanations. The real problem is that mainstream media doesn't cover him.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    11. Re:Which is what, exactly? by tbannist · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm sure the people that live along that very geologically active strip of turf will be happy to know that Ron Paul considers them essentially expendable in his quest for ideological purity.

      That is simply untrue and completely preposterous. To make such baseless accusations, you should be ashamed of yourself. We all know that Ron Paul considers everyone to be expendable in his quest for ideological purity.

      --
      Fanatically anti-fanatical
    12. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Spock151 · · Score: 1

      Should the people of California pay to subsidize the roads of many rural states? What about telephone subsidies for those states?

      Ironically, the states that tend to complain the most and produce federal revenue on the lower end per-capita get more return on their federal dollars than the higher federal revenue producing states like California.

    13. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      I'm sure North Dakota doesn't contribute as much to the federal budget as California and Oregon. Also I consider these monitoring programs as essential to providing for a national defense and promotes the general welfare of the citizens in states subject to these types of disasters.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    14. Re:Which is what, exactly? by mr1911 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You just made a great argument for eliminating the federal government agencies that redistribute wealth amongst the states.

      --
      This post comes with a double-your-money-back guarantee!
      Any offense taken to this post is at your sole discretion.
    15. Re:Which is what, exactly? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Unfortunately a little trimming isn't going to get you guys out of this. You're going to have to look at cutting more than a few tenths of one percent.

      Now, there IS a major money sink you guys fund up the wazoo that you could probably cut VERY deeply. This budget item apparently loses (as in, has no idea where it went) more money than the entire savings suggested by Ron Paul, and nobody knows how much funding it actually gets because a good portion of it is secret.

    16. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Reverberant · · Score: 1

      Why should the people of North Dakota pay for tsunami monitoring for California? If the west coast wants earth quake and tsunami warning, they can pay for it.

      The people in North Dakota aren't paying for tsunami monitoring in California, rather it's Californians who are paying for roads, schools, airports and tornado monitoring in North Dakota.http://politics.slashdot.org/story/11/10/20/1541224/ron-paul-suggests-axing-5-us-federal-departments-and-budgets#

    17. Re:Which is what, exactly? by OG · · Score: 1

      Like it or not, the states are not independent. From agriculture to technology, California (really, the whole west coast) and its resources are important to the whole nation. As long as interstate commerce exists, it's in the country's best interest to what it can to safeguard every state and its citizens against natural disaster. Not to mention the fact that the US has federal installations all over (such as military bases), so monitoring programs really are a national concern.

    18. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about spending less on the military ?
      Oh yes I forgot, the US is an empire and like all good empires they will collapse and bring untold hurt upon its citizens for decades or centuries to come. And all for what ?
      Because big daddy Obama (and his predecessors and succesors) wanted to play shoot-the-farmer in some god forskaken part of the world.
      Slash the fucking military spending. Stop spending in military procurements more than the rest of the world combined. You are not in an eternal war against everybody, for christ sakes. WWII ended 65 years ago. Its time to scale back from a war-like economy.
      Invest on what is productive, eduction, infrastructure, new energies etc...

    19. Re:Which is what, exactly? by PoopCat · · Score: 1

      And what makes you think those energy and mineral companies would provide you with the results of that "mapping [of] rocks" ? Even for a fee?

      It's nice to know that you're happy to rely on "likely" to provide earthquake research.

      And additional spend? ITYM spendING.

    20. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Forbman · · Score: 1

      Hmm... so they can still buy their Wal-Mart, Dollar Store and Target crap? So they can still know when blizzards or thunderstorms or tornadoes are about to ruin their days? So that they can export the grains they grow there easily to asia?

    21. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Trolan · · Score: 1

      I'd be surprised if North Dakota doesn't take in more federal funds than it pays out. California, I'd be surprised if it didn't pay out more than it took in. As such, odds are, the better statement would be: why should California pay for tornado warnings for North Dakota?

      Seriously, however, this is a single nation. The larger, richer states help buoy up the smaller ones, which have their own contributions back, as those smaller ones also tend to be where the food is. Putting up fences between groups that are supposed to be on the same overall team is just continuing the crap Congress is doing.

    22. Re:Which is what, exactly? by rgbatduke · · Score: 1

      Right, the people of North Dakota can pay for the monitoring of things like volcanos and earthquakes. And hell, I'm sure that they never use any of the goods or services provided by the people of California and would never miss it if it were gone.

      Of course if you were the moral purist pay-your-own-way libertarian you seem to want to claim that you are, you would instantly log off and cease to use all of the publicly funded services such as "the internet" or "roads". Make sure that you get a good contract with somebody who will come to put out a fire at your house. Figure out what you're going to need to pay for police services -- I hear that hunting down somebody that kidnaps and rapes your daughter and flees across state lines is expensive, and hell boy, I don't want to have to pay to help you out, I only have sons! In fact, let's just plain outlaw doing things collectively. Damn communists anyway! Feudalism is the only way to go! Let the strong prevail over the weak -- that's what Darwinism is all about, isn't it? In fact, why bother with democracy? Isn't it always about making the losers go along with the will of the winners? That ain't right, clearly, especially when the winners force the losers in North Dakota to help out those lazy bums in California that produce a lot of their electronics and orange juice. No true North Dakotan needs orange juice -- they just eat raw elk and winter potatoes!

      Get a grip, man!

      rgb

      --
      Even when the experts all agree, they may well be mistaken. --- Bertrand Russell.
    23. Re:Which is what, exactly? by dr2chase · · Score: 1

      Raising taxes back to Clinton levels would help quite a bit. Cutting defense spending also helps quite a bit. We need to increase the efficiency of how we deliver medical care; there's about 20 examples (other OECD countries) of how we can spend less and get more. They do it, therefore it is possible.

      We're not spending anywhere near a level that would require "70% taxes on anyone with a job". If someone told you that, you were misled.

    24. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      On earthquake research, there are a number of universities (many of which claim to be privately funded/endowed) that compete with each other on prestige that would likely continue this research.

      You should have done your homework before using this example. Universities get their funding through grants issued by NOAA, USGS, NSF, and other agencies. The university system is a partner in the government research program not a competitor.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    25. Re:Which is what, exactly? by FirstNoel · · Score: 1

      Um, because we're all citizens of the same country?

      I personally do not have any need for a tsunami warning system. But I'll be damned if I want my fellow citizens put in harms way if we can avoid it.

      Why can't we all watch each other's backs instead of trying to stab them there?

      Damn. it's not socialism, it's good citizenship.

      --
      "Hmm. I am to metaphor cheese as metaphor cheese is to transitive verb crackers!"
    26. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Before anyone jumps in saying you don't know what you are talking about:
      http://www.taxfoundation.org/research/show/266.html

    27. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Mr+Z · · Score: 1

      The problem is that it is coming to a choice: medical care for the poor or USGS. Housing for the poor or USGS. Investigation into the mating habits of obscure owls or USGS.

      Is there an award for best example of false dichotomy?

    28. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      North Dakota doesn't pay for shit in California, and in fact if it weren't for states like California, states like North Dakota wouldn't have much at all.

    29. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Thuktun · · Score: 5, Informative

      Why should the people of North Dakota pay for tsunami monitoring for California? If the west coast wants earth quake and tsunami warning, they can pay for it.

      North Dakota is not geologically inert. http://earthquake.usgs.gov/earthquakes/states/events/1909_05_16.php

      He also wants to axe NOAA, of which the National Weather Service is a part, which tracks weather events like thunderstorms and blizzards that affect North Dakota.

      Besides, your callous attitude would seem to lead to something like this:
      "Why should I have to do anything to help anyone? Screw 'em." (later) "Eeek, I'm in trouble, why won't someone help me?!"

    30. Re:Which is what, exactly? by shoehornjob · · Score: 1

      Why should the people of North Dakota pay for tsunami monitoring for California?

      Especially because they know when the big one hits they are gonna have some prime beachfront property when the big one hits.

      --
      "We are just a war away from Amerikastan. When god vs god the undoing of man." Dave Mustaine
    31. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Thuktun · · Score: 1

      So much for providing for common defense and promoting general welfare.

    32. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That argument goes both ways.
      Let's say we don't axe USGS. Who is going to pay for it?
      Financing large swaths of our federal government through loans is a handwave of epic proportions as well.
      "Compound interest is the most powerful force in the universe." - Not Albert Einstein

    33. Re:Which is what, exactly? by ravnous · · Score: 1

      Then if the state of North Dakota decides it's in their best interests to pitch in to pay for tsunami monitoring in California, they can voluntarily write a check every month. OR, if North Dakota benefits from California not being overrun by a tsunami, then they won't mind paying a little more for the goods they receive from California, which will be used to pay for tsunami monitoring.

      --
      When does this happen in the movie?
    34. Re:Which is what, exactly? by hierofalcon · · Score: 1

      The Californians, I'm sure, are benefiting from the water, oil, natural gas, coal, wind, and other natural resources that are produced in or come from many of those small rural states. We are interconnected in many ways that you don't usually think about. That doesn't mean we need to have as much federal government as we do. Move critical pieces of government agencies out of departments which are going to be closed down and move on.

    35. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Algae_94 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, anyone that seriously suggests cuts or stoppage to that money sink will get it turned around and used to smear them in any campaign for office. Even if everyone was in agreement that it should be cut, it is used as a political weapon.

      I'm assuming you are referring to the Iraq/Afganistan operations or just defense spending in general.

    36. Re:Which is what, exactly? by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Actually, you can get a pretty good idea of how much funding the DoD gets, even for secret projects -- just not what projects it goes to.

    37. Re:Which is what, exactly? by PeterM+from+Berkeley · · Score: 1

      No it isn't an argument against redistributing wealth amongst the states. I was merely pointing out that "North Dakota" benefits from Federal programs too.

      Also, what's wrong with redistributing wealth among the states? It is NOT wrong for "North Dakota" to help California avoid disaster. Similarly, when a hurricane hits Florida, it's NOT WRONG to "redistribute wealth" from the rest of the country to send aid there to save lives.

      Let me ask you this: why do you HATE your fellow Americans so much that you're not willing to "redistribute wealth" from the fortunate to the unfortunate?

      --PM

    38. Re:Which is what, exactly? by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      Should the people of California pay to subsidize the roads of many rural states? What about telephone subsidies for those states?

      No, they shouldn't. Those states should pay for themselves just like California should pay for itself.

    39. Re:Which is what, exactly? by theArtificial · · Score: 1
      Do you even know which state pays the most? Do you know which state has the largest economy? The most people? Federal tax revenue by state. Maybe when those state(s) actually contribute more than they leech out you can say that.

      As you can see from the list of US state GDP California has a massive economy and subsidizes many other states, such as the Dakotas.

      California ranks 43rd in the country among states in the amount of tax dollars paid to the federal government versus the amount of federal aid that comes back to the state, according to the Washington-based Tax Foundation. The state gets 78 cents for every dollar sent to the federal government.

      Sf Gate. Just seven other states receive a worse deal.

      --
      Man blir trött av att gå och göra ingenting.
    40. Re:Which is what, exactly? by coolsnowmen · · Score: 1

      ahhhhahahaha, this

    41. Re:Which is what, exactly? by hedpe2003 · · Score: 1

      You're right... move all these federal programs to the UN. :)

      --
      Comprehensive solutions via a competition of ideas like no other.
    42. Re:Which is what, exactly? by SETIGuy · · Score: 1

      It's not federal government agencies that redistribute wealth amongst the states. It's Congress, usually driven by the fact that one whiny Senator from a fly-over state can block any legislation until he gets a pay off.

    43. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      No, he basically made a great argument for eliminating the Federal government altogether. Having a Federal government in the first place has certain advantages and disadvantages. Providing certain services (like earthquake warnings) is an advantage to many people, having to tax everyone to pay for them is a disadvantage but by having free trade amongst all the member states it usually works out better for everyone involved. So fine, let's let California foot the bill for earthquake warnings, but in exchange California should be free to impose heavy tariffs on any goods imported from other states, and for certain goods that other states can't make themselves, California can also impose an export tariff to those states.

    44. Re:Which is what, exactly? by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Yes, they should. That is the point.

    45. Re:Which is what, exactly? by tmosley · · Score: 1

      The hobo down the street doesn't contribute as much as to the Federal budget as I do, therefore he should pay for a portion of my insurance.

      I consider having home insurance to be vital to the general welfare of the neighborhood.

    46. Re:Which is what, exactly? by horigath · · Score: 2

      Or perhaps the state of North Dakota could voluntarily enter into a kind of contract that spells out some ways in which the two states will aid one another as well as mechanisms to appoint representatives to modify the contract over time to account for changes of circumstances.

      Oh wait, that's the Federal Government.

    47. Re:Which is what, exactly? by bberens · · Score: 1

      When a person in North Dakota purchases a product that was invented, built, imported in California the price of that product will reflect the total cost of doing business in California which includes California state taxes to pay for things like earthquake and tsunami warning systems.

      --
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    48. Re:Which is what, exactly? by bberens · · Score: 1

      Red states also tend to have higher per capita rates of people in the welfare systems.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    49. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Mr.+Beatdown · · Score: 0

      Which is why we should all support taxing North Dakota for Japan's tsuami detection systems.

      --
      My fellow Americans, let's restore the death penalty for child rapists. Let's do it . . . for the children.
    50. Re:Which is what, exactly? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      "Promoting the general welfare" and "providing the general populace with welfare" aren't the same thing.

    51. Re:Which is what, exactly? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      So much for providing for common defense and promoting general welfare.

      Right! That is spelled out in the Constitution. No one is saying that we should do away with defense. We are saying that if California needs something, then CALIFORNIA should pay for it. Just as North Dakota should pay to salt their own roads in the winter.

      General Welfare? Well, that's kinda vague. But I think we could narrow "General" to mean EVERYONE. That means, again, the government shouldn't do something unless it benefits EVERYONE. The salting of North Dakota's roads does not promote the general welfare of me and my Texan neighbors.

      Let the states pay for what the states need.

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      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    52. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      Thanks to Obamacare, he can! :P

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    53. Re:Which is what, exactly? by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Taxes to the feds aren't an investment, and the dollars don't flow back to the people who paid them - my federal taxes are actually slightly higher in a red state than they would be in a blue one, because I don't get to deduct as much in state and local taxes from my income. Once you count the cost of private education for kids (not deductible), the total cost of living (excluding the base cost of housing) might be the same.

      States that are net recipients are usually so because of the presence of retirees (FL, AZ), military bases (TX, NC), or vast quantities of shit-poor idiots getting welfare.

    54. Re:Which is what, exactly? by ExploHD · · Score: 3, Insightful

      For the same reason that the people in California help pay for flood monitoring
      http://nd.water.usgs.gov/floodtracking/

    55. Re:Which is what, exactly? by triffid_98 · · Score: 1

      The "Oh, private universities can pick up the slack" is a handwave of epic proportions that falls apart under even the smallest amount of scrutiny. It's an epidemic problem with Ron Paul, he's a "big ideas" man, but never follows through with the details.

      No, he's a "small fed" man. There's no reason that the states can't spend their own money or write their own laws about things if they think they're important enough. I expect that California and Hawaii may find earthquake research valuable and fund it, the rest of the states? Not so much.

    56. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Citizens are an obsolete concept. It's clear that the whole concept of civilization has failed and it's time to move back to Wolf-Age survival mode. Just don't turn your back on me. Or anyone else.

    57. Re:Which is what, exactly? by ArcherB · · Score: 1

      Do you even know which state pays the most? Do you know which state has the largest economy? The most people? Federal tax revenue by state. Maybe when those state(s) actually contribute more than they leech out you can say that.

      As you can see from the list of US state GDP California has a massive economy and subsidizes many other states, such as the Dakotas.

      California ranks 43rd in the country among states in the amount of tax dollars paid to the federal government versus the amount of federal aid that comes back to the state, according to the Washington-based Tax Foundation. The state gets 78 cents for every dollar sent to the federal government.

      Sf Gate. Just seven other states receive a worse deal.

      OK, fine. Turn it around. Why should the good people of California have to pay to salt the roads in N. Dakota? Maybe California would be in a better financial situation if they were not paying so much to subsidize those lazy N. Dakotans!

      --
      There is no "I disagree" mod for a reason. Flamebait, Troll, and Overrated are not substitutes.
    58. Re:Which is what, exactly? by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      Why do you assume "fortune" has anything to do with it? I was not born with a silver spoon in my mouth. Quite opposite, as I worked my ass off to put myself through school, build my career, and live a comfortable life?

      Let me ask you this: why do you HATE your fellow Americans so much that you are so willing to take what they worked to earn and give it to those who, far too often, have not worked to better their own situation?

      If you want to redistribute wealth, put up or shut up. Sell your belongings and write a check for your entire net worth to the government so they may give it to the less fortunate. You got all your stuff once and obviously have the ability to do it again.

      Yeah, I didn't think so.

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    59. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Fulminata · · Score: 1

      Why should they then get the benefits of tax revenue generated from California citizens? North Dakota is one of the biggest beneficiary states when it comes to the ratio of Federal spending to taxes, while California is one of the biggest losers. The reason? It's the UNITED States of America. We're in it together.

    60. Re:Which is what, exactly? by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      You have a point, kind of. Congress sets the priorities. The agencies carry out the dirty work. To eliminate the agencies, we need Congress to make it so. Get out and vote!

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    61. Re:Which is what, exactly? by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      Holding up California as a good example is like saying we should put the Greek politicians in charge over here.

      There are already heavy penalties for trying to do business in California.

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    62. Re:Which is what, exactly? by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      Sorry, forgot to add that eliminating the Federal government is not the goal, but weakening it to the point it is almost irrelevant is a good idea, just as the founders intended.

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    63. Re:Which is what, exactly? by CraftyJack · · Score: 2

      Why should the people of North Dakota pay for tsunami monitoring for California? If the west coast wants earth quake and tsunami warning, they can pay for it.

      This has got to be the best discussion ever. This guy here, and the one up there that wants to know what "moral right" other people have to use his taxes for education.

      These are the people that eat all the food on the life raft.

    64. Re:Which is what, exactly? by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      So much for providing for common defense and promoting general welfare.

      Right! That is spelled out in the Constitution.

      "Common defense" is an enumerated power (or rather, there are separate enumerated powers which can be collectively considered "common defense"), but "general welfare" is not. The establishment of "post roads" does fall under Congress' purview, but highways and interstates are much more than mere "post roads".

      You may be able to classify them as a military project, since they were originally designed to enable efficient movement of troops and military equipment, but in that case they should be funded entirely out of the defense budget.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    65. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Mullen · · Score: 1

      Sorry, forgot to add that eliminating the Federal government is not the goal, but weakening it to the point it is almost irrelevant is a good idea, just as the founders intended.

      You have anything to back that up? Also, the Founding Fathers live in the 18th Century, which is MUCH different than the 21st Century. Just because a bunch of dead white guys who owned slave wanted something, does not mean we should have it today.
      Societies evolve and move forward. Looking to how Societies were in the past, really does not gain you any insight into how we should do it today.

      --
      Linux O Muerte!
    66. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      And if California can't generate enough revenue to track and prevent disasters and they get wiped off the map, the rest of the US doesn't suffer at all?

    67. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Sorry, forgot to add that eliminating the Federal government is not the goal, but weakening it to the point it is almost irrelevant is a good idea, just as the founders intended.

      Yep, they tried that, and what did it get them? They had to throw out the Articles of Confederation because the states were fighting with each other and erecting trade barriers, and then they had the bloodiest war in history when some tried to break away.

      The Europeans are trying the weak-government thing now with the EU, and it isn't working out too well for them either.

      I only see two answers: 1) a large, strong centralized government run by a cabal, like they do in China, where the government is NOT popularly elected, but basically run by a committee of elites, or 2) staying in small, independent countries with homogeneous populations where there's little infighting, and then dealing with the consequential trade restrictions and costs due to dozens of different currencies.

    68. Re:Which is what, exactly? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Eeeh, wrong. What ends up happening is that North Dakota purchases from places that don't have to do extensive tsunami and earthquake monitoring. In essence, specific geographic regions get a leg up because they don't have to deal with certain natural disasters. Places that do suffer from natural disasters are permanently disadvantaged compared to other areas. In other words, people are either lucky and are born into the right places, or they have to pay money in direct and opportunity costs to move there.

      Nice to see that libertarians are still the same "sucks to be you" sociopaths they've always been.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    69. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should the people of North Dakota pay for tsunami monitoring for California? If the west coast wants earth quake and tsunami warning, they can pay for it.

      For the same reason the people of California subsidize roads, agriculture, and phone lines in North Dakota. The nation as a whole benefits from the economic, cultural, and intellectual output of the constituent states. I guess if we're ending federal programs, as a Californian I'd be willing to fund the CAGS instead of corn in Iowa with my tax dollars. We'd be getting the better deal, I suppose, but it would be pretty hard on a national economy predicated on cheap food made from federally subsidized corn syrup.

    70. Re:Which is what, exactly? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      The problem isn't that Ron Paul is short on details. It's that the details are so ludicrously wrong, morally offensive and philosophically untenable that no one is paying attention to him. No one outside a small group of people who think they'd be kings in Paul's universe.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    71. Re:Which is what, exactly? by finarfinjge · · Score: 1

      Actually, there are very strict rules that absolutely require them to publish every single bit of information. In Canada, it is called National Instrument 43-101. In the US, there are similar laws. Search for "Bre-X" for the why. Search the laws at the Securities and Exchange commission for US equivalents, that are as strict.

    72. Re:Which is what, exactly? by DriedClexler · · Score: 1

      So, which tax was the world paying for Japan's tsunami detection, thereby providing the implied substantiation it gave your argument?

      --
      Information theory is life. The rest is just the KL divergence.
    73. Re:Which is what, exactly? by bberens · · Score: 1

      Eeeh, wrong. If anyone wants a product imported to or exported from somewhere across the pond they'll have to hit a coast at some point and the price of that product will reflect that cost, and it's usually cheaper to hit a coast even if you're going from North to South America. If it can be sourced cheaper by some other route, then that's a good thing.

      --
      Check out my lame java blog at www.javachopshop.com
    74. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Nemesisghost · · Score: 1

      Fine, so why does Texas have to pay for it? If they want geological surveys done, there IS enough corporate interest in Texas to do them.

    75. Re:Which is what, exactly? by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      When is following the rule of law wrong? What is morally offensive, a secret list of citizens for whom due process does not apply? What is philosophically untenable about studying and learning from history? What 'small group of people'? Paul has the broadest support among the Republican candidates with the second highest number of contributors. In Paul's universe, there are no kings.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    76. Re:Which is what, exactly? by PeterM+from+Berkeley · · Score: 1

      Actually I DO pay a fair amount of my income to help the less fortunate.

      Telling me to "put up or shut up" for not giving ALL of my income and worth to the less fortunate is BS.

      Am I willing to pay more tax than people of lesser means than myself? Yes, and I do! I want to help fund the educations, for example, of children of welfare moms. I'm HAPPY to pay more than "my share" (1/300millionth of the total cost) to do so.

      I hate freeloaders too, but I am NOT willing to cut off help to the unfortunate because SOME people freeload!

      And as to you being "NOT BORN WITH A SILVER SPOON IN YOUR MOUTH", did YOU PAY for your own elementary school education? Middle school? High school? Did YOU PAY for the police and fire protection you enjoyed before you "built your career"?

      Just HOW do you think you would have fared had you been born in Ethiopia without all of society's infrastructural support, which, incidentally, I'm happy to pay more than my share for? Ask most Ethiopians and I'm sure they'd be happy to say you were born with a silver spoon in your mouth!

      --PeterM

    77. Re:Which is what, exactly? by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      Who defined your fair share? You? Why do you get to define my fair share? I defined my view of your fair share and you didn't like it. Do you understand how percentages work and that "the rich" already pay far more than everyone else?

      Define unfortunate. You recognize that "the poor" in America have it pretty well. There are certainly people in need, but by the definitions used, the poor have it very well compared to the Ethopians you compare to. By the way, you do realize Ethopia is not a state, correct?

      You do also realize that taxing "the rich" more to continue funding expanded entitlement programs for the "poor" is not the same thing as funding public education, right?

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    78. Re:Which is what, exactly? by LibRT · · Score: 1

      For starters, insurance companies which cover the perils of earthquake, floodings, etc are highly motivated to cultivate this data themselves, and create alert systems. As it is, there are companies who make a very fine return by packaging up government data and selling it to insurance companies, and their returns are subsidized because they are getting their data for "free", where here "free" means that you pay for their input costs via your taxes (companies like RMS who sell earthquake modelling systems to insurance companies). In fact, the entire idea for "fire departments" started with insurance companies, who had their own fire departments and would only respond to those fires affecting or threatening their customers (their customers were given plaques to hang outside their homes to inform the fire department they were covered).

      In general, a lot of government policy surrounding catastrophe management actively encourages people to put themselves in harms way. For example, hurricane Katrina could not have done anywhere near the damage to property and lives in the absence of a government flood insurance pool, because no private market participants were willing to offer flood insurance in those regions where there was little doubt a significant flood/hurricane event would occur, and lenders are unwilling to lend to borrowers who cannot obtain insurance to protect the asset against which the loan is being made - the vast majority of people simply would be unable to live in ultra high risk areas. This was seen as a "problem", and "fixed" with a taxpayer funded federal flood insurance pool, which got the lenders lending and the people building houses and living in very dangerous areas. The same things goes on in California with earthquake insurance pools and regulations. And what does the government do when catastrophe strikes and cities are destroyed (as they are predicted to be by that same government's scientists)? They commit to use taxpayer money to rebuild in the very same spot! It is a "bailout", pure and simple.

      I guess some people are comfortable with the idea that they (and their neighbors, who may not agree) should be forced to pay for the imprudent decision of another person who chooses to live in a high hazard zone, but it would be far less likely for a person to be able to live in those kinds of areas absent government intervention.

      In short, there are a lot of very negative consequences, and more importantly, lives lost, because of government's role here. And while I can appreciate the self-interested appeal of forcing people (because it is not voluntary) by way of government to pay for research you find interesting or useful, it is hard (for me, at least) to describe that as "fair".

    79. Re:Which is what, exactly? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      So the long and short of it is that you're trying to say depopulating southern California, much of Oregon and Washington state is what's really needed here. Wouldn't want the Feds encouraging anyone to live there.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    80. Re:Which is what, exactly? by bames53 · · Score: 1

      Besides, your callous attitude would seem to lead to something like this:
      "Why should I have to do anything to help anyone? Screw 'em." (later) "Eeek, I'm in trouble, why won't someone help me?!"

      That's a common misconception of libertarian philosophy.

      It's not an issue of not caring if bad things happen. It's an issue of the morality of using violence to take away someone's ability to voluntarily choose whether or not to do something. When you refuse to use violence, force, and threats to take that choice away from an individual it's not the same thing as saying any choice they make is equally good.

      There's another breed of libertarian that focuses on utilitarian arguments, such as moral hazard and unintended consequences. For example one might oppose government flood insurance on the basis that forcing people not subject to the risk of flooding to take on some costs of those that choose to take that risk will cause more people to build and live in high risk areas. In essence the involuntary nature of the insurance causes more destruction and suffering in the event of a flood, than would have otherwise occurred.

    81. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Why should the people of North Dakota pay for tsunami monitoring for California?

      Because it's the right thing to do?

    82. Re:Which is what, exactly? by bames53 · · Score: 1

      I'm guessing you're talking about the DoD? This budget is cutting $1 trillion, which is more than the DoD misplaces. This year's budget deficit is around $1.6 trillion, so a cut of $1 trillion really is on the order of the cuts needed. Also this budget proposal does cut some of that military spending you reference. So I think calling this "a little trimming" is disingenuous.

    83. Re:Which is what, exactly? by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      When is following the rule of law wrong

      When the law is not legitimate.

      What is morally offensive, a secret list of citizens for whom due process does not apply?

      It is morally offensive to condemn people to die in misery when they did nothing wrong.

      What is philosophically untenable about studying and learning from history?

      When you do not study from history, make up facts about history and refuse to learn from events that you are aiming to duplicate.

      What 'small group of people'? Paul has the broadest support among the Republican candidates with the second highest number of contributors.

      That's why his support rate is in the same range as the loony bin candidates.

      In Paul's universe, there are no kings.

      In Paul's universe, king's are not only guaranteed, but unassailable. Revolution is the only way to change the system.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    84. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

      Because the people of North Dakota like Avocados, fresh fruit and wine too?

      --
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    85. Re:Which is what, exactly? by ljhiller · · Score: 4, Insightful
      How are the people of North Dakota supposed to ship their wheat to China when a tsunami takes out a west coast shipping port?

      Alright, I want every small-government proponent to make a list of 100 things they want to fund, personally? Take a moment, I'll wait. Was drought-proof wheat on your list? Probably not. Do you need drought-proof wheat? If you don't what to be buying your food from Siberia, you sure do. Is there incentive to develop drought-proof wheat? There sure is. Is anybody going to follow that incentive? No. Why? Because it wasn't on your list or anybody else's. You didn't think of it. Or you (wrongly) believe it's not important. Or that somebody else will do it. Who funds drought-proof wheat research? Department of Agriculture research programs.

      Alright, now, I want you to make a time budget. How many hours in a day are you going to spend evaluating who should receive your private funding. And be sure you do your research, we don't want Solyndra fraudsters getting it. The DC bureaucrats do this all day, but now YOU have to do it. What's that, you want to delegate it? To a company that takes your money and decides for you, and keeps a chunk of it for itself? Sounds familiar?

      Oh but your system is voluntary. Except you don't actually have time to do it.

      Do you really WANT to pay the free-market cost of education? Do you want everybody else to? Just how many burger flippers and drug dealers do you think this society can support? Do you want your cancer operated on by somebody who learned from Khan Academy of Medicine on Youtube?

      Do you want clean water? Do you think there are incentives for private companies to keep water clean? Environmental protection is expensive, it's true. Turns out making small settlements and dragging out legal cases with in-house council is a lot less. The true incentive is to not keep the water clean. You live in a free society, but your child is DEAD. Oh well.

    86. Re:Which is what, exactly? by SuricouRaven · · Score: 1

      We are discussing the hypothetical implications of Ron Paul's brand of libertarianism. Such laws would be in violation of that political position.

    87. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You sound just like a third-world grandee ("I owe the peasants nothing"). Do you realize that?

    88. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps because bullshit broken down in to small parts is still bullshit.

    89. Re:Which is what, exactly? by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      Your comment displays that you have no knowledge of anything that Paul discusses, nor much else.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

    90. Re:Which is what, exactly? by sarysa · · Score: 1

      They're also involved with roughly estimating natural resources in a region. Remember that story awhile back where it was discovered Afghanistan is rich with various resources? That was the USGS' doing.

      It's not something we like to talk about, but there's a tactical advantage to knowing these things...

      --
      Charisma is the measure of someone's ability to lie with a straight face.
    91. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      There are already heavy penalties for trying to do business in California.

      And somehow, they manage to lead the nation in technology with the Silicon Valley. I certainly don't see any cities with leading-edge technological talent and industry in places like North Dakota, Mississippi, etc. California alone has either the 6th or 8th largest economy in the world (I forget which), all by itself.

      Northern California would probably do better if it split away from southern CA however.

    92. Re:Which is what, exactly? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      What tsunami has devastated California? More to the point, what good does an earthquake warning do, even (falsely) assuming one could be made? Ca. has building codes for earthquakes. A day's worth of warning would result in no changes in anybody's activities. 30 minutes warning would probably get a lot of people outdoors, and might save a dozen lives a decade. What with numerous false alarms, the net in effort expended would probably exceed the value of lives saved.

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    93. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      Californians get 78 cents in federal spending for every dollar they pay in federal taxes, north dakota gets $1.68 for every dollar they pay in,

      "commie"fornia would do fine if they were seperated fiscally from north dakota and the other red/welfare states would be the ones who would be in trouble

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
    94. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you have any idea what percentage of the goods you purchased come from California?

      Or how important California is to the national economy?

      If you don't think California or Washington are worth protecting, you should stop using the internet, stop using your computer, stop using your iPhone, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera...

    95. Re:Which is what, exactly? by LibRT · · Score: 1

      Yes, to your second sentence.

      I'm not suggesting government needs to "do" anything in terms of inserting themselves into the decision where people choose to live, which is what the government currently does and which costs taxpayers money and results in deaths and destruction. Rather, I'm saying that, in the absence of government, those high hazard areas would not get so densely populated (if you eliminated all the subsidies, catastrophe bailouts and other government mechanisms that permit people to live in these areas they otherwise couldn't afford to, yes: the areas would depopulate).

      My points were really meant to convey two things, in response to yours:

      - other entities do have a motivation under a free market to engage in things like geological surveys and early alert systems; and

      - the government's current involvement in these things extends to programs which actively encourage people to put themselves in harm's way.

      I find it odd that the government should employ scientists to determine a region geologically dangerous, and instead of saying, "we very strongly recommend you do not live here, and if you do, we will not impose upon others to pay for the consequences of that decision", they say, "the market will not permit you to live here, therefore we will subsidize your decision to live here, and if anything goes wrong, we will further get your more prudent neighbors in other parts of the country to pay for any resultant damage".

      Really, your second sentence is spot on: is there a compelling reason a federal government should involve itself in any way in terms of where people choose to live?

    96. Re:Which is what, exactly? by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      You help pay for my tsunami, earthquake and volcano warnings and I'll help pay for your hurricane, tornado and blizzard warnings.

    97. Re:Which is what, exactly? by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      +1 Insightful

    98. Re:Which is what, exactly? by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      They already are. The main tsunami detection system for the Pacific Ocean is the Pacific Tsunami Warning Center operated by NOAA.

    99. Re:Which is what, exactly? by smelch · · Score: 1

      Or maybe the danger of living in earthquake and hurricane zones should come with a penalty in the form of local taxes, which make it unattractive to live there so people don't insist on living in shitty locations and making everybody else pay for their right to choose dangerous grounds to live in. Lots of land out there, we don't all need to live where the weather will continue demolish shit. Federal government is like insurance companies. Since they're footing the bill, I want your to MRI my knee because it twinges when I run 5 miles. If you had to pay the $300 you probably wouldn't spend the money unless it was worth it.

      --
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    100. Re:Which is what, exactly? by datavirtue · · Score: 1

      About ten years ago I saw a listing (on Speer's website) that touted approval from the USDA for loans to establish a weapons manufacturing plant or research site for anyone considering leasing the buildings and land. The site was owned by Speer who makes a great deal of munitions (for rifles to tanks), part of that particular site was idle at the time and they had it up for lease. I will never forget that, at the time I was evaluating USDA loans for housing. The USDA certainly needs examined.

      --
      I object to power without constructive purpose. --Spock
    101. Re:Which is what, exactly? by daoine_sidhe · · Score: 1

      The problem with thi, is that these large states (let's call them "blue" for the sake of the conversation) generally support the programs that support these smaller ("red") states who keep screaming about entitlement programs that are the only things making these "red" states livable.

    102. Re:Which is what, exactly? by daoine_sidhe · · Score: 1

      Because we all pay taxes, we are all citizens of one country, and your argument just falls apart as you follow it to it's logical conclusion (why should I pay for a school in the poor part of town, I don't even live there!) We tried the Articles of Confederation, it was a miserable failure.

    103. Re:Which is what, exactly? by daoine_sidhe · · Score: 1

      If I have a choice between starving to death, or stealing from you (who for the sake of this argument have an excess of food), I will cheerfully steal your food, by force if necessary, rather than die. Scale this up, and you have society. And there is nothing wrong with this. You don't have any more "right" to sit on excess than I have a "right" to steal it. Greatest good for the greatest number, this is why we don't still live in fucking caves.

    104. Re:Which is what, exactly? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      Again, I put my post back to you. We're talking about one of the most highly populated areas of the United States, one that is critical to its economic wellbeing, as well as have a lot of US citizens.

      There is no profit in monitoring seismic activity of fault lines. There's no profit in maintaining a constant watch on outgassing of volcanoes. There's little enough profit in keeping banks of offshore sensors watching for seismic activity in the Pacific Rim to predict potentially lethal tsunamis. And yet, what purpose could a nation state ever have but at the most basic level to pool resources to allow such activities, often quite expensive, to be carried out.

      Do you actually think the electorate of the west coast of the United States would let Libertarians like you strip away those protections? In a million years can you ever imagine what would happen to Ron Paul, if, on the incredibly small chance that he ever became President, attempted to dismantle the USGS's monitoring along the Pacific coast, or NOAA's satellite and radar monitoring in the Pacific and Atlantic? Congress would cut him off at the knees, because he would be chief of the Executive, not a king who can just unilaterally cut the Federal Government to ribbons at his pleasure.

      What Ron Paul suggests would threaten millions of lives, would anger large portions of the population, and would scare other parts of the population, who while perhaps not receiving the direct benefits, would know they would be next in this bizarre dash to turn the Federal Government into some pre-Civil War shell.

      Lincoln won, the United States is not the Republic it was in the beginning. Get over it.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    105. Re:Which is what, exactly? by aiken_d · · Score: 1

      And why should inland areas on the west coast pay for Tsunami warnings? It doesn't affect them. And why should anyone whose house doesn't burn down pay for a fire department?

      In civilized countries, there is an understanding that shared risk comes with shared reward. People in California pay for floods in the midwest. People in Florida pay for earthquakes in California. By spreading the risk, we help each other with greater resources than smaller areas can come up with.

      What you're basically saying is that social contracts and social fabrics are over-rated, and we need to be more every-man-for-himself and dog-eat-dog. It's a fairly sociopathic view, in the most literal sense. I am really glad that people with your views are in the minority.

      --
      If I wanted a sig I would have filled in that stupid box.
    106. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Let me ask you this: why do you HATE your fellow Americans so much that you are so willing to take what they worked to earn and give it to those who, far too often, have not worked to better their own situation?

      You're still talking about North Dakota, right?

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    107. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do you think Californians should pay for North Dakota snowplows? If not, why not?

      It's not a "callous attitude" to allow certain parts of the country to cheaper/more_expensive than other parts of the country due to regional safety issues. It's an attitude of fairness and realism. Nobody's saying coastal region inhabitants should fuck off and die; they're saying that if you decide to live with some very real increased risk, you should bear the expenses that go with that. Or conversely, if you happen to find some mild boring place which happens to need less protection, you ought to benefit from that choice.

      (All that said, weather is complicated and doesn't respect state borders. I don't hate the idea of feds doing weather in general. And they have, through federal obligations, indirect interests in the coast (e.g. if there's a US aircraft carrier in a coastal port and it's damaged by a storm or tsunami or whatever, well, North Dakota, that was your aircraft carrier just as much as it was California's). The military alone is probably enough reason all by itself, constitutionally, for federal taxes to be paying for weather forecasts, and I bet there are others.)

      But please don't call it callous to try to regionalize regional expenses as much as makes sense. It's not callous, it's fair. And fairness is the path to efficiency.

    108. Re:Which is what, exactly? by sunspot42 · · Score: 1

      Or they could simply go back to taxing their rich people and regulating their banks, like they did in the 1950s when the United States had a functioning industrial economy, rock-bottom unemployment rates, a massive (and expanding) middle class, and world-class infrastructure.

      Naaaaaaaah!

    109. Re:Which is what, exactly? by sunspot42 · · Score: 1

      These are the people that eat all the food on the life raft.

      Yes, but on the plus side, then the other people on the life raft kill and eat them. Pigs get fat, hogs get slaughtered, as the old saying goes. So to some degree it's a self-correcting problem.

      I have a feeling we're approaching just such a correction point.

      Pity all the troops are overseas engaged in a massive war profiteering operation for the benefit of the 0.1%. Who will defend the hogs when the 99.9% come to slaughter them?

    110. Re:Which is what, exactly? by LibRT · · Score: 1

      Well, as I mentioned before, there is indeed profit in monitoring fault lines, and that profit is being made daily by providers of modeling systems to insurance companies. Likewise, insurance companies who provide coverage for such things as supply chain disruptions and contingent business interruption have a vested interest in monitoring volcanic activity (when a volcano blows and disrupts the supply chain, it can trigger coverage under some policies). Insurance companies rely heavily on geological data to help determine pricing for earthquake insurance coverage, where freedom to set prices still exists. I can tell you for a fact there is indeed a lot of money at stake on this data: I know first hand of companies walking away from tens of millions of dollars in premiums because the risk didn't make sense economically. I'm just suggesting these companies, or whoever else finds the data valuable, pay for its gathering themselves.

      I won't comment on what the west coast of the US would or wouldn't do politically, because the people of those regions have shown an unfailingly consistent ability to preferentially select inept representatives. But don't you think it is the responsibility of people in those regions to handle these issues, perhaps at the state level? In other words, to your view, do you believe it is impossible for any entity other than the federal government to manage these responsibilities, if I grant for the moment that they are governmental responsibilities?

      Where I think we'll agree is in your assertion that government's role is to protect people when it is outright impossible for the free market to offer adequate protection (ie the justice system, military defense (but not military offense), policing, etc.). I also think the points you are making aren't bad ones, because you are questioning items that may or may not be a fundamental role of government, and you have a strong argument that they may indeed be. This differs substantially from a lot of the debate, which centers around things which government was never permitted to do in the first place and which are unnecessary (see Dept of Ed, etc) and which US taxpayers certainly can no longer afford.

      I do believe you are incorrect in equating the closure of certain Departments with the elimination of all services they provide. You do not necessarily need a Department, with all the bureaucracy it entails, to carry out these functions.

      I have many more unkind things to say about FDR than I do about Lincoln, but we can agree to disagree on that :)

    111. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Reservoir+Penguin · · Score: 1

      You are on a life raft and there is not enough food and water for all. It would be only logical to get rid of other people (or wait until fools like you offer to sacrifice themselves for the good of all).

      --
      US-UK-Israel: The real Axis of Evil
    112. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the big states like Connecticut and Vermont are supporting all the little states like Florida and Texas?

    113. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      California also provides a Cyber Safety council for children, Board of Chiropractic Examiners, an Acupuncture Board, Board of Barbering and Cosmetology, are currently paying 9,111 people over 100k per year in pensions, a Naturopathic Medicine Committee, and a Railroad Museum. Where do you draw the line? When person A is forcing person B to pay person C, it's pretty easy to be magnanimous.

    114. Re:Which is what, exactly? by JabberWokky · · Score: 1

      Actually, Ron Paul is very keen on gutting the Department of Defense. He wants to close all bases outside US soil and cut way back on our standing military, letting go of a large portion of military personnel. I think he wants to cut military research as well (well, federal funding thereof), but I could be wrong about that part. I've seen him speak about it many times. He's pretty much an isolationist who wants zero foreign involvement by the state.

      He and Kucinich both pitch it together now and then.

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
    115. Re:Which is what, exactly? by Keen+Anthony · · Score: 1

      Because this is the UNITED STATES of America, and as such we actually are in this together. Ergo, it would be nice if states cooperated for the common good, and even nicer if states like North Dakota understood better what it means to them to have a state like California producing as much wealth for the nation as it does.

    116. Re:Which is what, exactly? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      He's extreme in everything hey? You guys don't need to become isolationists, just scale things back. You don't really need to be able to take on the entire rest of the world.

    117. Re:Which is what, exactly? by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      I didn't call it a little trimming, the GP did.

      I missed the one line at the end of the article about stopping foreign wars. He still wants to keep defence spending though. If you spent a population-proportional amount (or even twice or three times that) on defence you'd probably have a pretty hefty surplus.

    118. Re:Which is what, exactly? by mr1911 · · Score: 1

      That made me laugh. I'd give you mod points if it were possible for me to do so on this thread.

      --
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      Any offense taken to this post is at your sole discretion.
    119. Re:Which is what, exactly? by bames53 · · Score: 1

      You don't have any more "right" to sit on excess than I have a "right" to steal it.

      Instead of using an amorphous concept like a right I'll put this in terms of when the use of force is justified. I don't agree that your example is a case where the use of force is justified.

      I do agree that it's wrong for the individual with excess not to be charitable or to put that excess to good use, but that's not the same as saying it's okay to use force to take that excess and be 'charitable' or do good with it.

      Greatest good for the greatest number, this is why we don't still live in fucking caves

      Yes, absolutely. And this is best achieved when people recognize that it's not right for them to just take what they want from other people, even when they think they need it more than the people that have it. This rule of law is indeed an important pillar of civilization.

    120. Re:Which is what, exactly? by bames53 · · Score: 1

      Well, as I said, he is cutting military spending substantially, and using those savings to avoid having to cut even more severely elsewhere.

      Completely eliminating the DoD wouldn't actually give us a budget surplus, I don't think, or at least not a 'hefty' one. And certainly the growth of the rest of the budget would eventually run us into huge deficits again.

    121. Re:Which is what, exactly? by JabberWokky · · Score: 1

      Who is "you guys"? I just watch C-Span now and then. I'm not a Ron Paul supporter. I just dislike disinformation, no matter who it is about, and you were implying that he wasn't for cutting the defense budget, which is something he regularly advocates.

      I'll support an honest presentation about any political position or figure. While I am not educated on all fronts, it does irritate me when people make assumptions and engage in arguments without having a basic, cursory knowledge of the position that they are arguing against.

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
  42. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Theolojin · · Score: 1

    Yeah, that 1% really does a whole lot.

    I know this is /. but the article does state that eliminating this spending is part of a trillion dollars in cuts in his first year. Five departments would be eliminated entirely while several more would be greatly reduced in size. So, yeah, twelve billion isn't a lot, but a thousand billion is.

    --
    Life is short; think quickly.
  43. Duplicated departments by flyingfsck · · Score: 1

    The Feds have duplicated many functions of the states - education, health, research and many other things do not belong in the federal government.

    --
    Excuse me, but please get off my Pennisetum Clandestinum, eh!
    1. Re:Duplicated departments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If we let the states do everything they want, we'd still have slavery.

    2. Re:Duplicated departments by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      If we let the states do everything they want, we'd still have slavery.

      But if you don't like what the state your living in is doing it is *much* easier to move to a different state it is easier to move to a different state then to move to a different country.

    3. Re:Duplicated departments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But states have nowhere near the resources a national government does. Splitting these efforts into 50 different parts makes no sense.

    4. Re:Duplicated departments by DigiTechGuy · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Much of Ron Paul's reasoning for eliminating these federal agencies is because they are duplicates on state level functions. The states will handle most of these functions themselves, as they do now and have done before those federal agencies existed, and wahtever is left that has value will be taken over by private companies, who may already do such things. I wholeheartedly support Ron Paul's plans. Cutting federal spending, and taxes too, is the only way to fix this economy.

  44. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It does do a lot. That's how compounding works. It's incredibly dumb, but would save a lot of money in the long term.

  45. Don't forgot: Ron Paul is a fucking moron by SlappyBastard · · Score: 0

    Oh, and a racist. So, about that . . . um, fuck Ron Paul.

    --
    I scream. You scream. I assume that means we're both acquainted with the problem. We proceed.
  46. Why not ... by PPH · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... the DEA and ATF. Move their law enforcement functions into the FBI. Move their regulatory (drugs, alcohol, tobacco) functions into the FDA and Dept of Agriculture*. You could combine NOAA and the USGS. There's probably some remote sensing, mapping, tsunami/earthquake/tornado/weather/whatever warning functions that could be combined.

    * I see he's not touching the Dept of Agriculture. Too many farmers on the gov't dole vote, I guess.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
    1. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why not because the NOAA and USGS are really similar I mean one deals with the ground and one deals with the sky. I mean how different could they be?

      This is how W. gets elected, by idiots.

    2. Re:Why not ... by Thelasko · · Score: 1

      Because that would make too much sense. While your at it, don't forget to combine the CIA, NSA, NGA, etc., as there is a lot of overlap there too.

      In the business world this kind of management would never fly. Why not merge similar departments and share overlapping resources?

      --
      One of our competitors trademarked the term "hypothesis". From now on, we will call them "boneheaded ideas".
    3. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most of NASA's mission these days should be done by NOAA, if not someplace else (NASA is tracking Africanized honeybees... why?)

      http://honeybeenet.gsfc.nasa.gov/Honeybees/AHB.htm

    4. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Woooaaaa, you need to slow your roll here, don't you you know the only valid answer to any problem is all or none, I mean come on your response sounds too much like a thought out compromise. In this country we take sides and go balls to the wall left or right, there is no room for reason in our society don't you know?

    5. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      FTFA:

      Paul would also end funding for all research programs at the U.S. Department of Agriculture

      See also Dr. Paul's own site:

      Cuts of this scale will also be accomplished by a Paul Presidency abolishing the Transportation Security Administration and returning responsibility for security to private property owners, abolishing corporate subsidies, stopping foreign aid, ending foreign wars, and returning most other spending to 2006 levels.

    6. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So keep doing the same thing with the same people. Except you make a large one-time expenditure reorganize offices and structures. And invest existing duties in people who aren't competent. And you split the knowledge pool between department when you move people. Yeah, that's a good long-term strategy for maintaining level of service while saving money.

    7. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once upon a time, the FBI really did handle those functions -- think of the stereotypical G-Man chasing after Rum Runners during the days of Prohibition.

      The ATF and DEA were spun off into small law enforcement agencies simply because of the scale and scope of the work. The US is a big country, and there are a lot of drugs---and guns. If the FBI spent all of their time chasing down small- and mid-level dealers then they wouldn't have free time to do much else. Ditto for the ATF -- enforcing gun, booze, and tobacco laws would take up a surprisingly large amount of time. Amalgamating all of the agencies into the super, old school FBI wouldn't necessarily reduce spending, just put them all under one house -- and take a good look at how Homeland Security handled that. Better integrated? Yes. Leaner and less in your face? Nope. Tacking them onto the FBI will do is either lead to a larger, more bloated FBI -- with the budget of all three combined -- or a situation where FBI agents who should should be going after major criminal kingpins, spies, or missing children are now going after mid-level pot movers instead.

      If you really want to cut spending at these agencies then you need to legalize or deregulate (to a degree, anyway) drugs, alcohol, tobacco, and guns.

    8. Re:Why not ... by Gnomy · · Score: 1

      ... the DEA and ATF. Move their law enforcement functions into the FBI. Move their regulatory (drugs, alcohol, tobacco) functions into the FDA and Dept of Agriculture*. You could combine NOAA and the USGS. There's probably some remote sensing, mapping, tsunami/earthquake/tornado/weather/whatever warning functions that could be combined.

      * I see he's not touching the Dept of Agriculture. Too many farmers on the gov't dole vote, I guess.

      Actually he is touching the Department of Agriculture; hes not eliminating it, but he's wanting to put a spending freeze on them and eliminate a couple of things they do. Food for Peace II grants, Research and Education Activities and Foreign Agriculture Service, and a few more. Please read the actual plan.

    9. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Education in the US has improved so much since the US Dept. of Education was created in '79. Would really hate to see that one go........

    10. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearms should not be the name of a federal law enforcement agency. It should be a list of things available at your local convenience store.

    11. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should see all the people getting paid to not raise pigs.... or grow corn... or {whatever}

    12. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, the plan completely cuts funding for the FAS as well as the total elimination of ARS and all education funding. That is huge. What about NASS? Good luck having stable commodity markets. Not to mention that Ag research has a higher return on investment of any major areas of science. But I guess the free wheeling markets and inability to make commodity forecasts that have led to ruin and hinger in the past don't matter. Bottom line--please stop taking this guy seriously.

    13. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dept of Ag will follow, eventually. It hurts our nation and infringes upon liberty. The reason for prioritization is that it will take a bit of time for many Americans who have always grown up with these departments and the income tax and the entitlements to understand that we will still have agriculture, homes, schools, and roads when these departments no longer exist on the Federal level. Most Americans that I know actually think that the reason we have public schools is because of the Department of Education. Ridiculous. In my experience, just because something is named something people value doesn't mean it actually helps. Patriot Act anyone? Department of Homeland Security? no?

    14. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pay 'em not to grow pot (move DEA function into Dept of Ag).

    15. Re:Why not ... by sjames · · Score: 1

      To stay true to his platform, surely DEA should be on the chopping block (and no transfer of functions, just chop it).

    16. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Ron Paul has talked in the past about ELIMINATING the Dept. of Agriculture. He's supporting what he believes in and he's not pulling any punches.

    17. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His plan cuts the Dept of Agriculture by half

    18. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DEA and FBI both report to the Attorney General presently. Their divisions of responsibility are fairly clear. Merging two subdepartments of the Justice department would not necessarily eliminate redundancy. But your point that he ignores Agriculture, that great midwestern vote slush fund, is telling.

      You know a sacred cow is truly sacred when even Ron Paul won't attack it.

    19. Re:Why not ... by ljhiller · · Score: 1

      I bet you all thought combining the coast guard, customs, immigration and federalizing the airport gropers into DHS was a great improvement. Now it's effective and efficient, right? And how's that Director of National Intelligence working out?

    20. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To many farmers in Texas, actually! Probably in his district as well. Can't irritate those who got you your seat to propose ill-conceived answers to real problems.

      What a moron.

    21. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...the DEA and ATF. Move their law enforcement functions into the FBI. Move their regulatory (drugs, alcohol, tobacco) functions into the FDA..."
      Or just legalize/deregulate them, step back, and let evolution and/or "the free market" sort it all out?

    22. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's in favor of legalizing drugs and ending the War on Some Drugs, so the DEA would necessarily get the boot.

    23. Re:Why not ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the Reagans' astrologer still available?

  47. Ignorance is Strength by StefanJ · · Score: 0

    It says so right in the Bible. Take my word for it!

    Without interference from the government and people who actually know things, free enterprise will be able to create more marketable, affordable, and Job Creator-friendly realities for today's busy consumers.

    1. Re:Ignorance is Strength by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Exactly! No business or businessman would work towards maximizing income from customers, to the point it impoverishes them and also run down their business, just to make a personal profit.

    2. Re:Ignorance is Strength by operagost · · Score: 1

      So Ron Paul's some kind of wacky fundamentalist, now? That's one heck of a leap.

      --

      Gamingmuseum.com: Give your 3D accelerator a rest.
    3. Re:Ignorance is Strength by Qzukk · · Score: 1

      No business or businessman would work towards maximizing income from customers, to the point it impoverishes them and also run down their business, just to make a personal profit

      Too much work. Embezzling is faster.

      --
      If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    4. Re:Ignorance is Strength by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      He sure is. Except his church is Atlas Shrugged, and his messiah Ayn Rand.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  48. Link to actual Plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf

    Graphs and everything.

  49. this is fact by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    in order for our current system to continue to function we will need to dramatically increase taxes on all individuals and dramatically decrease spending in all aspects of government.

    this is not partisan, this is reality.

  50. Even Simpler Solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Axe the department of defense...

    1. Re:Even Simpler Solution by zzsmirkzz · · Score: 1

      And watch how fast our enemies invade us. Great plan!

    2. Re:Even Simpler Solution by gmuslera · · Score: 1

      Which enemies? World domination will be finally achieved when the rest of the countries signs the ACTA treaty.

  51. If you're for a balanced budget, be for gov't. by GodInHell · · Score: 2

    1) Gov't Research reaps massive returns on growth, which spurs gov't income through growth (rather than higher taxes). Look at the moon mission, indirectly responsible for everything from plastic to palm-top computing. 2) For gov't institutions to be efficient they need to be run by talented and reasonably motivated people. Shitting on gov't as wasteful and "the problem" every two years in order to gin up bullshit and votes -- not a winning governance strategy.

    -GiH

    1. Re:If you're for a balanced budget, be for gov't. by siride · · Score: 1

      This. People don't realize how massively useful some of these programs are (not talking about dept of education, though) and how little they actually cost and how little axing them would help with the budget problem. You only ax the small stuff when axing the big stuff isn't enough. It's like pending hours optimizing a function that gets called once during program execution, while ignoring an inner loop that the program spends 80% of its time executing.

  52. So? by Angst+Badger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This is about as newsworthy as Ron Paul declaring that he plans to remodel my kitchen. Barring a long series of astronomically unlikely events, he's not going to get anywhere close to having the authority to do so. Providing passing entertainment on Slashdot during a slow news day may well be his high water mark.

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    1. Re:So? by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      It does bring out all the sociopaths and morons who are his supporters

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:So? by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      When you find you don't have a toaster, microwave, stove, fridge, have saved buckets of money on electricity and gas bills, don't understand why the receipts for all the meals you've had to eat at restaurants have cluttered the floor where the trash can had always been, you will have found out Ron Paul remodeled your kitchen.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    3. Re:So? by tmosley · · Score: 1

      I'm sure you mean "detractors".

    4. Re:So? by BetterSense · · Score: 4, Interesting

      It does provide the United States with a candidate (however unelectable, and I do plan to vote for him, and I have voted for him), who has an actual plan. His plan cuts spending, leaves most entitlements in place, and increases government revenue. Those are the only ways to dig us out of our hole. In a world where "electable" politicians squabble endlessly over cutting miniscule spending, at least somebody has a reasonable (IMO--drastic is reasonable in desperate times) plan.

    5. Re:So? by ChrisMaple · · Score: 1

      It also brings out the sociopaths who think that people are evil unless the government prevents them from being so (as clear an example of projection as I've ever seen.) It also brings out those who deliberately misrepresent his views, trying to get their lies past those they believe to be morons.

      --
      Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
    6. Re:So? by ianare · · Score: 1

      This plan isn't drastic, it's irresponsible. Drastic would be cutting back on the military in a meaningful way and drastically lowering health care costs. Why? Because that would actually make a difference in the deficit. And I agree, no "electable" politician has shown the ability or desire to do this.

      But depriving taxpayers of valuable services, which are actually pretty cheap given all the advantages they bring, for no real gain is just ... stupid and irresponsible.

      You want a car analogy ? This is like making a race car lighter by removing the steering wheel and brake pedal.

    7. Re:So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Drastic is reasonable in desperate times? Hardly. Drastic remains drastic, and voting for someone with a clear, simple plan containing grave errors is just as bad as voting for someone with a nebulous plan. Paul's appeal is that he targets what you think is wrong, sparing voters the need to actually step in closer to the pointilism painting that is the big picture and examine what color the little dots actually are. "Desperate times call for desperate measures", or any variant thereof, is the slippery slope to everything from abrogation of rights to outright tyranny, and is the rallying cry of every military dictator on his way up.

  53. No Military cuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I love how his plan doesn't decrease defense spending. What a joker, no wonder he has no chance at the presidency.

    1. Re:No Military cuts by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1
  54. Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by jasno · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Yeah ok, Ron Paul's ideas are a little crazy, but he's the only one who seems serious about dealing with our impending financial doom. He's also the only one who really gives a damn about freedom, fairness, and transparency.

    Please - give him one term. Let him trim the federal government - you can always build it back up in a few years. Think of it as a giant refactoring project.

    Right now we've got an immensely complicated federal government. It's beyond the comprehension of an average American. If they can't comprehend it, they can't make wise decisions as voters. Let's tear it down so we can build it back up with the lessons we've learned.

    We've got the Microsoft Windows of government - slow, poorly designed, with duplicate features - many of which you don't want, and prone to spectacular failure when you need it most. It's inner workings are opaque and it's behavior is oftentimes hard to anticipate.

    We need a Unix-like government: efficient, fast, responsive, cleanly designed, compartmentalized, and well documented. People need to feel like they can participate and have a voice, because when you don't have that people end up rioting in the streets.

    --

    http://www.masturbateforpeace.com/
    1. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by ticklemeozmo · · Score: 2

      We need a Unix-like government: efficient, fast, responsive, cleanly designed, compartmentalized, and well documented. People need to feel like they can participate and have a voice, because when you don't have that people end up rioting in the streets.

      It's a good goal, but this is near impossible. There's no way that information can travel from department to department being as well-documented as you want in a efficient, fast and responsive manner. The problem is the PEOPLE. A grade 36 bureaucrat is not going to be efficient, fast and responsive.

      --
      When modding "Informative", please make sure it both has a source and IS actually informative.
    2. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      Hell no. In four years, the only thing he'll manage to do is to throw a giant monkey wrench into the working of the federal government. In four years, he won't close anything, won't reduce the deficit by any meaningful number, but he will cause total and utter chaos.

      In other words, he'll create an environment where we still have to pay for all of the government institutions and their contracts, but we won't receive any of the services. Awesome.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    3. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by fermion · · Score: 1
      The problem with Ron Paul is that like so many other people their conviction tend to mimic their own interests, and when the conviction and interest don't intersect, they ignore them.

      For instance, Ron Paul gave tax payer money to promote shrimp. He is supposed to be libertarian, but when push came to shove he caved into his own interests and promoted his fishing buddies products. Why should others in the seafood industry be attacked by an allegedly libertarian person. Should consumers not make the choice without government coercion?

      He also gave tax payer money to build a million dollar bus stop for bribe the voters who chose to live in the middle of nowhere. Now this is a personal decision of the people, and there is no reason for me to subsidize that decision. I have no reason subsidizing busses to go out there and get them, thus keeping their stinky cars off my roads, but there is no reason why i should have to build them a palatial bus stop. They could do that themselves if they wanted to.

      Then there his training. Like so many conservatives he used government money to get training, and government money to get rich, but now that he is rich he wants to stop the flow. Frankly if he and his kids paid for what they have taken from the tax payers, along with everyone else who has gotten rich of tax payers, we have no deficit. What Ron Paul wants, and many others, if for the US to be a third world country where a few people have money, and everyone else is their servent.

      And I am talking as person who thinks that Libertarianism can be the basis of a society, but won't be because most people think they are chosen to be the one's who decide what is and is not government control.

      --
      "She's a scientist and a lesbian. She's not going to let it slide." Orphan Black
    4. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You might as well wished Steve Ballmer to manage Linux kernel development for four years. If it turns out not working, we can back out, hire back the good guys (who have left in disgust and are busy with their new jobs now), and build it back up, right?

      At least building Linux kernel doesn't involve hurricane warnings.

    5. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by l0ungeb0y · · Score: 1

      Please - give him one term. Let him trim the federal government - you can always build it back up in a few years. Think of it as a giant refactoring project.

      You do realize that we live in a Republic and not an Autocracy, right? If we gave Ron Paul a term, we'd have 4 years of fuck-all getting done because both sides of the isles of Congress would stand staunchly against him. One does not simply get elected President, wake up in the morning of their 1st day in office and say "Today I proclaim the end to these Congressionally mandated departments of Federal Government".

      Ron Paul's "plans" are way too extreme to get a popular backing, which means he wont get elected, and even if a snowball did make it through Hell, and he did somehow get elected, these plans of his would be eaten alive in Congress.

    6. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by Microlith · · Score: 1

      Let him trim the federal government - you can always build it back up in a few years.

      Burning down things like the USGS and NOAA only to try and rebuild them four years later would be a ridiculous waste of money, let alone the drop in efficiency and knowledge.

      Ron's suggestions would be of limited usefulness, since they omit obviously malignant sectors (ATF, DEA) and refuse to look at the enormous elephants in the room in need of reform and cuts (DoD, Social Security.) Get back to me when he gets on about those, and maybe we'll talk if he hasn't come up with some other asinine suggestion.

    7. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by unimacs · · Score: 1

      You realize that pesky government regulation, - like the ones that broke the ties between Western Union and AT&T and eventually forced AT&T to licenses its patents on UNIX to universities is largely responsible for the rise in popularity and open-ness of the OS right?

      You also realize that MS Windows was developed by a private corporation right?

    8. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by kehren77 · · Score: 1

      Please - give him one term. Let him trim the federal government - you can always build it back up in a few years. Think of it as a giant refactoring project.

      Electing Ron Paul wouldn't change anything because no one in Congress would be stupid enough to pass any of his crazy-ass ideas, except maybe Michelle Bachmann and hopefully she'll be out after the next election.

    9. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      We need a Unix-like government: efficient, fast, responsive, cleanly designed, compartmentalized, and well documented.

      No we don't. We need a mainframe OS government - big and robust and carefully calibrated to do its job as well as it possibly can. The reason we need a mainframe OS for the US government is that a responsive government of a country the size of the US has to do a huge amount of stuff.

      Consider, for instance, the laws against fraud. Those laws are needed to make contracts at all useful, and the government needs to be the one to enforce them if we don't want contracts to be irrelevant if you don't have a private army to enforce it, so even the most libertarian-minded generally consider laws against fraud to be necessary. Well, lo and behold, in the recent financial crisis, there's substantial evidence that companies like Goldman Sachs and Bank of America have committed fraud on a massive scale. However, the Department of Justice has a grand total of 24 FBI agents to investigate all fraud on Wall Street. There's no possible way for those 24 agents to come close to doing their job, and the job they need to do is unquestionably complex. Also, in cases of securities fraud, you can't easily compartmentalize between the FBI's role (gathering evidence and prosecuting crimes), the SEC's role (ensuring that the stocks on the market are what they say they are), and the Federal Reserve's role (ensuring that the financial system doesn't collapse).

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    10. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Please - give him one term.

      No. Next question?

    11. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      "In other words, he'll create an environment where we still have to pay for all of the government institutions and their contracts, but we won't receive any of the services. Awesome."

      That's the end game of the right wing. They know they can't actually shut things down, but they can sabotage, and use the result as affirmation of their world view "see government can't do anything right" (which is false) "so vote for my people again".

    12. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Trim them until they are. If they aren't fast, efficient, and responsive, then we don't need them. Let the States take over those duties.

    13. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      I always thought this was a lame conspiracy theory, but the longer I'm watching Tea Partiers, libertarians and sundry neo-cons at work, the more I'm convinced that I might be wrong.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    14. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Except that it's not serious. The departments he's talking about come to $12 billion, a pittance, a rounding error.

      He's not looking for the best bang for his buck, or seriously buckling down to cut the deficit. He's picking a few ideological enemies and eliminating them wholesale while doing fuck-all to the deficit and vast damage to the actual economy.

      I'd love to see a serious re-think of government services, one that considers return-on-investment and produces a smaller, more streamlined result. This is not that plan. This is ideological warfare that's designed to disenfranchise people he doesn't like, not streamline government.

      We're in debt to the tune of 14 figures. When he starts looking at 12 and 13 figure budget items, he'd be making a dent in the the debt. When he's fiddling around with 9 figure items, he's just pissing down your back and telling you that it's raining.

    15. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by PoopCat · · Score: 1

      I think the GP's point was we do away with grades 2-36 of bureaucrat.

    16. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by Yunzil · · Score: 1

      Let him trim the federal government

      You are aware that Presidents can't do this stuff by fiat, right? That Congress would have to approve all this? And that there's no chance in hell that they actually would?

      We've got the Microsoft Windows of government - slow, poorly designed, with duplicate features

      We need a Unix-like government: efficient, fast, responsive, cleanly designed, compartmentalized, and well documented

      These are almost backwards these days.

    17. Re:Thoughts from a 'four year' libertarian... by muckracer · · Score: 1

      > You might as well wished Steve Ballmer to manage Linux kernel
      > development for four years.

      YEEEEEEEEEEEAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

  55. Aren't the Tea Party Crazy's all about Patents? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The USPTO is part of the Commerce Department. Although as largely a self-funded agency it could likely survive without being apart of the commerce department.

  56. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Also part of the Department of Commerce: the Census Bureau, fulfilling a duty specifically mandated in the constitution. For the life of me I don't understand why people take Ron Paul seriously.

  57. Corporations... Right by bazald · · Score: 1

    Try depending strictly on yourself and entirely corporate-provided goods for a month. Ignoring the fact that you're able to breathe the air without taking in a lethal dose of toxic fumes, I think you'll find it very expensive to get goods shipped to you without using government-built and maintained transportation services. You death would be swift too. Make no mistake.

    --
    Insert self-referential sig here.
    1. Re:Corporations... Right by chill · · Score: 1

      Considering the shipping (sea & barge), air, freight rail and trucking industries in the United States aren't government built or maintained, you might want to reconsider that. Regulated, yes. Built and maintained, no.

      Yes, the roads are, but believe it or not, stuff got shipped and delivered before the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways got built. And many of the roads in this country are still built and maintained with city, county and State funds.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    2. Re:Corporations... Right by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Actually, it would be pretty easy. We're talking about the federal government, here, not state and local ones. I can easily use city streets and the (private) railways to supply my needs.

    3. Re:Corporations... Right by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      "are still built and maintained with city, county and State funds."

      I'm not an American, but it was my impression that cities, counties and states (not sure what a State is) all have governments?

    4. Re:Corporations... Right by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      No, I don't think so. The fact that I may consume goods that are provided by a corporation does NOT preclude my ability to complain that they have been given too much power already, or that these measures would give them far much more.

    5. Re:Corporations... Right by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      Yes, the roads are, but believe it or not, stuff got shipped and delivered before the Dwight D. Eisenhower National System of Interstate and Defense Highways got built. And many of the roads in this country are still built and maintained with city, county and State funds.

      And believe it or not, it was far slower and far more expensive to ship things around. Once government stepped in, it became far more efficient and cheaper to ship things around the country by road.

    6. Re:Corporations... Right by Capt+James+McCarthy · · Score: 1

      But the downside to your city streets (county roads, state roads included) were subsided by the federal tax dollars swayed in front of the city/county/state officials so the Fed can better control those supposedly separate entities. Federal funding is much more far reaching then most folks realize.

      "Considering the shipping (sea & barge), air, freight rail and trucking industries in the United States aren't government built or maintained, you might want to reconsider that. Regulated, yes. Built and maintained, no."

      Whenever anything is "Regulated" there has to be enforcement which is where the cost is. Not the writing of regulations. Enforcement of said regulations is where the cost is.

      --
      There are no loopholes. It's either legal or it's not.
    7. Re:Corporations... Right by chill · · Score: 2

      You're not an American, so the implied context is lost on you. Sorry, I'll clarify.

      Ron Paul is a fairly staunch Libertarian, but not an Anarchist. His objection isn't to government, but rather to the doing the things our Constitution explicitly says is the responsibilities of the States.

      The idea being the closer the government is to the people (and visa versa), the more responsive it will be. And, in turn, the more participatory they can be.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    8. Re:Corporations... Right by s73v3r · · Score: 1

      You mean the railways that were granted rights-of-way by the FEDERAL GOVERNMENT? And better get maps as to which streets were redone with FEDERAL GRANT MONEY, because you can't use those either. I suppose you can't consume any food that was checked for safety by the FEDERAL FOOD AND DRUG ADMINISTRATION. Better get off Slashdot, as the internet was largely sponsored and created by the FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.

      On a second note, I honestly don't get this retarded disconnect between federal and state governments. For some reason, people like you seem to forget that state government is still government, and can take away your rights just as easily as any federal government.

    9. Re:Corporations... Right by Remus+Shepherd · · Score: 1

      Huh? Railroads and airports are heavily subsidized by the government. Government has nothing to do with the manufacture of trucks (unless they're american built; GM needed government help to keep from going under), but trucks aren't worth much if you don't have roads.

      The only completely non-goverment means of transportation are the sea lanes. Good luck if you're not living on the coast.

      Not to mention the other stuff that government does, like regulation to keep rivers from being poisonous and the air from choking people to death, or police forces that keep the hungry from storming your corporation's factories and headquarters like a plague of zombies, or firefighters that keep your corporate buildings from burning down, or an army that kept us from being part of the Axis empire, or power generation without which your factories couldn't run, or basic research that designed the technology that you depend upon.

      Given the choice between no corporations and no government, I'd much rather live in a world without corporations. A world without government would be a dark age hell hole. A world without corporations would be, at worst, like soviet Russia -- not somewhere I want to live, but at least it wouldn't be the dark ages.

      --
      Genocide Man -- Life is funny. Death is funnier. Mass murder can be hilarious.
    10. Re:Corporations... Right by chill · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I'm not going to rise to a 75-year old argument with you. This is essentially the "rail vs roads" argument all over again.

      A very credible case can be made for you being wrong, at least in regard to long-haul trucking versus rail freight/barge shipping.

      I agree the Interstate System improved personal travel and helped open vast areas of the country to commercialization. However, the road system is also specifically authorized in the Constitution. (Article 1, Section 8, Paragraph 7)

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    11. Re:Corporations... Right by chill · · Score: 1

      No one was arguing for no government. Ron Paul argues for a government limited to the powers granted by the Constitution.

      Freight rail is what I was talking about, and it is *not* heavily subsidized by the government. Amtrak is passenger rail.

      I can't separate out airline passenger vs freight for subsidies, and an argument could easily be made that the feds didn't need to provide airport subsidies for freight, but it would be weak.

      --
      Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
    12. Re:Corporations... Right by demonlapin · · Score: 1
      I don't live out west; the lands the railroads have around here, they bought. And I don't need the FDA to get safe food; I can (e.g.) look for one of the Kosher marks to identify something that meets basic food quality standards. Just like I buy appliances that are UL listed - UL isn't a federal agency. And it's worth noting that the Internet exploded... just after the NSF got out of the backbone business and pulled the anti-commercial AUP.

      state government is still government, and can take away your rights

      Yeah, but it's pretty easy to move from one state to another. Moving to another country is a lot more difficult.

    13. Re:Corporations... Right by dondelelcaro · · Score: 1

      I can easily use city streets and the (private) railways to supply my needs.

      Except for the fact that almost all of the highways and railways have had federal subsidies. Good luck disentangling them.

      --
      http://www.donarmstrong.com
    14. Re:Corporations... Right by scot4875 · · Score: 1

      And many of the roads in this country are still built and maintained with city, county and State funds.

      Oh, right, and those aren't part of the government. <rolls eyes>

      Want to continue pointless mental masturbation over who provides what and how long you could live without one or the other, or discuss something that actually matters -- like fixes for systemic problems?

      --Jeremy

      --
      Jesus was a liberal
    15. Re:Corporations... Right by BoberFett · · Score: 1

      So you figure the best way for local streets to be maintained is to send all the money to Washington, have them send some of it back to the state while keeping a chunk for themselves, then having the state send some of that back to the city while keeping some of it for themselves? Sounds truly efficient.

      If we as a country didn't send 20% of our GDP to Washington, we'd be able to spend more locally, maintaining our local economies as we see fit, and with less chance of backroom deals to divert that money to specific corporations with ties to corrupt federal politicians.

      If I don't like the way my city is spending money, I can go to a city council meeting and complain. So you can you. When is the last time either you or I was invited to speak in front of the US Congress?

    16. Re:Corporations... Right by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, but then you have the vocal 'have nots" complain about the "haves" not being sympathetic to their needs.

      And I do not agree to give the Fed a blank check as it has happened over the last 30+ years (regardless of administration). I'm just saying that all public services cost money. And that money will come from you and I. So we either send 20% to the Fed where some comes back, or you give it to your local governments. Does anyone really think that taxes will ever go down? Even when there was a supposed surplus in the Fed, did anyone get money back from that? Governments are not business and should not have a large surplus. Ever. Nor should they have large deficits like the one that is facing us today. Most folks have had to make concessions in their lives with the current economic situation, but for some reason the Fed doesn't. The elected officials are so worried about getting another term, that none of them are willing to eliminate Government services. And the populace isn't very smart either, everyone says "cut programs, just not the ones that affect me."

      I say a 15% cut on all departments, no exceptions. That way no particular group can bitch. And folks need to stop looking for the Fed to lead/feed the population and realize that it was designed to be the other way around.

    17. Re:Corporations... Right by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Freight rail is/was heavily subsidized by the Federal government since that was how they got the right-of-ways to build their rail lines. Even oceanic shipping is subsidized by the port facilities they use that are at least partially government supported.

    18. Re:Corporations... Right by riverat1 · · Score: 1

      Freight rail got their right-of-ways mostly by Federal Government grants. Shipping and barges use government built facilities extensively. Here in Oregon the Port of Portland and the shipping on the Columbia River wouldn't be possible without the government dredging of the lower river and the dams with locks upriver from Portland.

    19. Re:Corporations... Right by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

      I was replying to your post where you were replying to the guy who said you couldn't live for a week relying only on corporate services. Nothing about state vs. federal powers.

      Your own post said that the roads ARE government maintained, then claimed that prior to the building of the Interstate system goods travelled on state, municipal and local roads. Which seems completely irrelevant since those are ALSO government maintained.

      So are you agreeing with the OP that nothing works without government services or not?

  58. He's living a fantasy by FyberOptic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That's the thing about Ron Paul. He makes a few good points once in a while, but he's such an extremist that he just wants to wildly slash everything in government with a machete. That's not the solution to anything. Most of the organizations he wants to destroy actually do good things and serve important roles, but may need to simply be restructured to better serve those roles instead of just throwing money at them in their current form. And that's not to mention the literally thousands of jobs he would be cutting to serve his agenda.

    Ron Paul's mind is still a hundred years in the past. He's regularly citing things from far back in the country's history. Things that worked back then won't work today. Society's complexities and modernizations require some degree of management or oversight. Paul doesn't see that because all he can see is the fantasy of small government he envisions of yesteryear.

    The USA isn't a western. Let's stop trying to treat it like one.

    1. Re:He's living a fantasy by MightyMartian · · Score: 1

      This is a guy who seems to think Abraham Lincoln was a bigger criminal than Jefferson Davis.

      --
      The world's burning. Moped Jesus spotted on I50. Details at 11.
    2. Re:He's living a fantasy by Chapter80 · · Score: 1

      And that's not to mention the literally thousands of jobs he would be cutting to serve his agenda.

      I'm surprised you don't see the issue in this statement.

      Generally, tax funded jobs are not jobs that you should want to preserve. If tax funded jobs are such a good idea, why not have full employment now, having the federal government hire all of the unemployed? Simply raise the tax rate to cover it.

      See the issue there?

      Tax-funded jobs should be the rare exception, where private industry is less efficient or unmotivated to serve the same function. If we cut the federal labor force dramatically, and cut the federal tax rate, there would be plenty of demand and cash to support these people in "real" jobs.

    3. Re:He's living a fantasy by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      He's not an extremest. He just believes that the debt is more of a threat to our national security than Afghanistan or Iraq.

    4. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thinking our Government can continue to function the way it has been indefinitely is the fantasy that you seem to be living in. "Most of the organizations he wants to destroy" are unproductive agencies the government is recklessly spending money on. At the time of this post, the US is almost $15 trillion in debt, growing at a rate of tens of thousands of dollars every second. Something dramatic needs to change, and Ron Paul's philosophical approach to our problem is a step in the right direction at least.

      And when he cites facts from history, he is trying to get people to understand that having an overextended, bloated government isn't the only way a government can function.

    5. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes Freedom is pretty old fashioned these days.

    6. Re:He's living a fantasy by mojo-raisin · · Score: 1, Interesting

      By your logic, since society is becoming increasingly "complex" we should have more and more government involvement (tax). I disagree. I don't think government should continue to increase in size. I don't think forcing people to pay for programs "for their own good" is sustainable.

      Governments *will* shrink. (See Greece) Do you want to do it the easy way or the hard way?

    7. Re: He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And what do you base your hypothesis on? (that the modern world needs bigger governments?)
      Bigger governmetns = bigger nexus between corporations and governments. 4 years back, Ron was against the bailout. Wallstreet funded media (and other candidates like Obama and McCain), and other Keynesian economists pushed it saying "it's the only thing that will save the economy". 4 years down the line, the bankers got their bonuses off that money, and we are potentially facing a deeper crisis.
      Ron Paul might not be perfect, but hell, he is way better than anyone else. At least he would legalize Cannabis.

    8. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, because it's not like we're doomed to repeat history. History has no bearing on today, just because empires collapsed from over-extending themselves in the past doesn't mean it'll happen to us. The US is unique and totally infallible. This argument that we just have to 'restructure' existing departments and tinker with funding to get our nation back on track sounds oh so reasonable. But it's absolutely false. We need to cut a LOT of spending EXTREMELY fast. Like trillions, and Dr. Paul is the only one serious about it. If all these 'moderates' get their way we'll never cut enough fast enough and our econmy will collapse just like it did with the soviet empire, the British empire, the roman empire, etc.

      Ron Paul is not living in a fantasy for wanting to cut so much, we are living in a fantasy for thinking we don't have to cut that much.

    9. Re:He's living a fantasy by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Funny, so you are saying that this time is different?

      Trimming the budget to levels last seen ten years ago is "extremist"?

    10. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Abolish the TSA !!! Yes, he has my vote. Cut the other garbage too.

    11. Re:He's living a fantasy by Boona · · Score: 1

      >And that's not to mention the literally thousands of jobs he would be cutting to serve his agenda.

      Don't worry he'll be passing out bricks to break some windows to help stimulate the economy.

    12. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This. Things are different now. People are smarter and technology makes the world too complex for a small government. How can any politician not think first of the jobs that s/he can personally save - government jobs! Nevermind that it takes roughly 20 private jobs to fund one government job; s/he needs to fix what is in her/his direct span of control! Seriously, there is no progress without change, and all change is Progress. QED.

    13. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the thing about Ron Paul. He makes a few good points once in a while, but he's such an extremist that he just wants to wildly slash everything in government with a machete. That's not the solution to anything. Most of the organizations he wants to destroy actually do good things and serve important roles, but may need to simply be restructured to better serve those roles instead of just throwing money at them in their current form. And that's not to mention the literally thousands of jobs he would be cutting to serve his agenda.

      Ron Paul's mind is still a hundred years in the past. He's regularly citing things from far back in the country's history. Things that worked back then won't work today. Society's complexities and modernizations require some degree of management or oversight. Paul doesn't see that because all he can see is the fantasy of small government he envisions of yesteryear.

      The USA isn't a western. Let's stop trying to treat it like one.

      You could let your economy implode, and lose ALL of it. Would you prefer that scenario? It very well will happen at this rate of fiscal decline.

    14. Re:He's living a fantasy by notnAP · · Score: 1

      Then why waste time on these small programs and go after the military?

    15. Re:He's living a fantasy by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      He's living in a fantasy only if you believe his thinking on all these issues is as skin-deep as your reaction to them.

      In other words: He doesn't want to just "wildly slash everything". You are aligned against a libertarian mindset, so you don't care to know the details. You see the headline, and pull a hammy jerking your knee so hard.

    16. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fantasy is that we can continue to pay for all this stuff. It's going to break one way or another. At least he's trying to break it in a controlled manner. We owe more money than our economy makes in a year (this does not even consider unfunded liabilities which some estimate at more than 50 bn). We're broke.

      And to address the military spending, he would bring everyone home and end the undeclared wars.

    17. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Looks pretty much like the wild west with a hint of Stalinism from over here. :P

      Yours,
      Germany

    18. Re:He's living a fantasy by FyberOptic · · Score: 1

      There isn't a single federal program which Ron Paul has ever voiced support for keeping when asked. If that's not wildly slashing everything, I don't know what you call it.

      To the contrary of your own knee-jerk reaction to my statement, I've watched quite a bit of interviews and debates of Ron Paul. There were times I found him promising until I learned more and more of his strict constitutionalist positions and realized how unrealistic it is. The country may be in severe debt, but the one Paul proposes is a country which wouldn't function.

    19. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Odd, I think he's trying to stop the _Federal_ gov't from being involved in a bunch of stuff they don't need to be. It is highly likely that most if not all of those services are duplicated on a state, county and city level. Honest, we don't need a huge bureaucracy to manage Education... How do I know this? We didn't have one until Carter created them. We didn't have them. You know when all those Nuke plants got built? Before we had a Dept. of Energy.

      Ford's Cabinet members:
      http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0101266.html

      Carter's Cabinet members:
      http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0101268.html

      Frankly, city, county and state gov'ts are far better suited to do most of the leg work that those Federal Agencies currently do. I don't know about you, but my city (Omaha NE), has a Health and Human Services, and so does my state. I'm pretty sure the county does, but I'm not sure. What do I need a bunch of folks out in DC to do for me that the folks who likely consider my state "Fly Over Country" to do for me? I actually stand a chance of enacting change at the city and state levels.

    20. Re:He's living a fantasy by StingingNettle · · Score: 1

      His slashing is actually a restructure. Departments would be slashed, and fazed out. Other departments then may pick up any duties that were left. I don't think people realize just how big government has gotten. What we have been dealing with has been extreme.

    21. Re:He's living a fantasy by cod3r_ · · Score: 1

      it sort of is the solution.. they've fucked it up beyond repair.. we gota cut it down to size and start over.. the worst part is the politicians are all the same.. they blame the other side.. never agree to shit because it was the other sides idea.. bi partizan has killed us. now its time to cut it all down and rebuild it.. otherwise every program will inevitably just go broke like HUD is already doing.. and the programs will have sucked so much out of us that we will be in an even deeper hole than we are already in.. the current approach is not working.. its the same shit as during bush era.. time to actually change..

    22. Re:He's living a fantasy by Virtucon · · Score: 1

      Things that worked back then won't work today. Society's complexities and modernizations require some degree of management or oversight.

      That's one of the core reasons we have such a huge Federal Bureaucracy. While I wouldn't advocate getting rid of a lot of essential things out of the Federal Budget, there are redundancies everywhere that have been pointed out. You see with every new administration that comes into DC, there's this need that is felt that can only be solved by adding more departments or increasing these bloated organizations who just become like so many pigs trying to feed at the trough. Here's another stark example, along with the Federal Budgets that are spent in DC, the District also has a budget of almost $9 Billion Dollars. That's more than a lot of countries with larger land masses and more people and it is also in an area where the Federal Government and its departments own most of the land!

      I'll give you an example: How many Police Departments are there in Washington DC? Departments that enforce laws and arrest people? If you think the number is less than 5, you're wrong. Here's just a small list of Police Departments that operate in the District of Columbia:

      1) Amtrak Police
      2) Capitol Police
      3) Secret Service Police
      4) Government Printing Office Police
      5) National Park Police
      6) WMATA Police (Metro Police)
      7) Metropolitan Police (DC Cops)
      8) Federal Protective Service
      9) State Department Police
      10) Bureau of Engraving and Printing Police
      11) Pentagon Police Department
      12) Housing Police
      13) Naval District Police

      There's more.

      All of these act as Police but have different jurisdictions and boundaries all in an area of approximately 36 square miles with the exception of the WMATA Police which cover the Metro and the WMATA bus lines out into the suburbs of DC. The Amtrak Police also cover the NEC. Do we honestly need all of them with their organizational structures? All of the office space? All of the police cars? Are some of them truly police and not just security guards? That wasn't meant to be insulting, but if they're not arresting people and enforcing laws, then they aren't police, they're security.

      So while Ron Paul *sometimes* makes sense I agree that he can come off like a crack-pot at times but unfortunately if you haven't seen how DC operates, sometimes you have to propose radical thinking to change things and to shake things up as well. Do his proposals go too far? I don't know but at least he's offering a proposal. Maybe there's some things in there that can be eliminated, but that will take a committee and then they'll need office space in DC and maybe their own police department... and ..

      --
      Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
    23. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ron Paul's mind is still a hundred years in the past. He's regularly citing things from far back in the country's history. Things that worked back then won't work today.

      What, you mean the Constitution?

      I know, what an idiot, rite!?

    24. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We can do it deliberately or we can go bankrupt. I would prefer it is done with deliberation. By reading the various comments about Dr. Paul here, it is clear that few actually know anything about him or his positions. This is truly sad; as, unlike so many other politicians, he had taken the time to detail much of his thinking and the motivations behind it. For example, he has written a book (Liberty Defined: 50 essential issues that affect our freedom) detailing his position on the critically important issues of the day. This is great pre-election reading. Whether you agree with his final positions or not, he is engaging, thought provoking, and respect worthy. As a left leaning liberal, I was surprised at how I can relate to his thinking, particularly with regard to ending warfarism.

      It's easy to cast him as a throw back as where you state "Things that worked back then won't work today". When did they stop working then? Ron Paul is not a simpleton, someone who rejects his ideas so uncritically is. Read "End the Fed". Nobody seems to understand the economic cycles of the past century or how they relate to the mess we are in today. He has been explaining it for 30 years. Is having a sound monetary system one of these tired 19th century ideas. How about a society where individual liberty is truly valued, or do you like the recent extension of government intervention in you life (prosecuting victimless crime, Patriot Act, monitoring internet traffic). People act like taking these thing away from the federal government means they won't be replaced at a state or private level. This only show me how right Ron Paul is and how tragically conditioned people have become to dependency on the State.

    25. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because he knows history and you don't I won't hold it against him. What people like you don't understand is that command economies work worse with larger and more complex societies. You can run your home like a command economy, no problem. Anything larger, even a small commune, starts having problems the more you rely on non-market forces to coordinate peoples plans.

      The current crisis is all about governmental interference in market processes (we have central planning of the money supply) causing distortions in interpersonal plan coordination. The government screws with market prices (interest rates) via various schemes (government guarenteed loans, federal reserve bond purchases and sales, etc) then you get a mess just like this.

      The old time depressions were also associate with central bank operations. Even Tulip Mania was due to Hollands central bank goosing the money supply.

      The solution is to enact and enforce laws against finanical fraud. This should not involve regulation but actuall banning of fraudulent practices. One of those fraudulent practices is maturity mismatching, and it is the ultimate cause of the business cycle. Maturity mismatching is where a financial institution borrows short and lends long.

      The claim is that institutions that do this can use huge pools of individuals to make the maturities match. This is nonsense. It actually behaves as any pyramid scheme would with a temporal component. The pyramid eventually collapses when new depositors cannot be found. During the expansion period of the pyramid scheme everyone thinks they are getting rich, and during the collapse phase the damage done by the pyramid scheme is exposed.

      Programs like the Fed, FDIC insurance, Fannie/Freddie, only tend to enable the pyramid scheme to be prolonged and suck in larger quantities of victims, and to shift losses onto taxpayers.

      To fix the system we don't need to "regulate" such practices but to ban them.

    26. Re:He's living a fantasy by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      He does both.

    27. Re:He's living a fantasy by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      What, you mean the Constitution?

      What about it? General Welfare which is mentioned twice? Or the Bill of Rights that Paul doesn't believe applies to the states? Meaning if your state bans guns and starts a payroll tax that tithes to the Mormon Church, Paul would be just fine with that?

      Are you?

    28. Re:He's living a fantasy by Osgeld · · Score: 1

      I am not a paul tard, but

      "Ron Paul's mind is still a hundred years in the past. He's regularly citing things from far back in the country's history."

      So are the republicans, for example

      "The GOP congresswoman is the first presidential candidate to sign a pledge that calls for banning all forms of pornography" (Michele Bachmann) Yay for 100 years ago victorian thinking whoo hoo!

    29. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      AFAICT, Ron Paul is the only candidate willing to speak straight about the situation the country is in, and what it's going to take to get out of it.

      All of the other candidates (including POTUS) speak in vagaries, cooked up numbers (like "savings" due to reducing the amount of planned overspending in the future), and non-specifics that will quickly fade away once they get into office.

      Yes, there is much good being done by these agencies. But the federal govt can't afford it (even by "taxing the millionaires").

      The concepts Ron Paul is espousing are in the Constitution for a reason: they are the only thing that will prevent America from following the path of every other has-been super-power (Turks, Romans, several European empires, etc). The Founders were acutely aware of what caused these societies to fail, and limited powers through the Constitution to save this country from that future.

      Unfortunately, most of us are so disconnected from that history we think our modern society has progressed beyond those antiquated ideas. I'm sure that people in every other failed superpower thought the exact same thing.

    30. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wait, it's extremist to think the government should work the way it is supposed to? That people actually follow the rules that are still on the books instead of ignoreing them or making new ones up on the fly? What we have now is extremist ... what Paul is talking about is sanity.

      You didn't even bother reading the proposal ... you only looked at a vast over simplification of a news blurb on this site and thing you know everything. First of all, he wants to fold many of the duties of these departments into other departments. Second, the cutting of a trillion dollars of spending will allow for far more job growth then the ones that are lost by cutting these cancers out.

    31. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since you're an expert in political history maybe you could enlighten us on how Clinton managed end up with a massive federal surplus during the 2 terms he served? From what I recall, Clinton gave the middle finger to most government offices including the military for years, and shockingly he was a Democrat too!

    32. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like when the First Bank of North America was shut-down by Jefferson, yet the central bankers continued to press for a re-formation of the same? Looks like it is time to shut it down again.

    33. Re:He's living a fantasy by tmosley · · Score: 1

      If you find the Constitution to be so stifling, why do you live in a country with one? There are plenty that don't. Living in a country that has laws but chooses not to follow them because they are inconvenient sounds like a recipe for disaster to me.

    34. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Would you accept his plan if he instead said "every Government agency and role cut by 15%"? I feel like you'd say that's irresponsible too.

    35. Re:He's living a fantasy by FyberOptic · · Score: 1

      There's nothing stifling to me about the constitution nor do I know how you got that impression from my comment.

      Just because the constitution doesn't say something, however, is no justification for eliminating the service or program. The constitution doesn't say anything about roads, for example, but if government hadn't stepped in, we would have never gotten the interstate system when we did. The constitution didn't say anything about space travel, but if not for the government, we would have never made it to the moon when we did, which also had a political benefit as well. The government's job is to do what the people want. If the majority of people want a federal program, then there's rarely anything in the constitution which says they can't do that.

      So we should follow the constitution, sure, but we shouldn't turn into the equivalent of religious zealots about it either and only follow it word for word. The fact that the constitution has a number of amendments following it acknowledges the need for change over time as society moves forward. There was no preconception of commercial air travel or worldwide communication networks back then, so society has to learn how to deal with and govern these things when necessary.

      This is why the idea of Ron Paul dragging the country in reverse and destroying pretty much every program which makes the country what it is today a terrible idea. There's a serious need to cut spending, but certainly not in the manner that he suggests. The public generally supports most of the programs Paul suggests cutting as well, so he would have a very hard time actually accomplishing such an agenda unless he himself violated the constitution in attempting to override what the people want.

    36. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A hundred years in the past, things were working better, economically. It seems quite clear to me that government should take care of law and order and the protection of private property, and nothing more. Regarding everything else, it is handled best by a free market. Please study the litterature (e.g. the main works by von Mieses, Hazlitt, Freeman) before replying. Government works on taxation, which removes wealth from where it does the most good (in the free market). A very delightful read about the effects of taxation through history is http://www.amazon.com/Good-Evil-Impact-Course-Civilization/dp/1568331231, highly recommended.

    37. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It’s not “history” to Ron Paul. To him it’s “just like yesterday”.

    38. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh and the current "modern" view is SOOOOO effective right? Do your homework dude. You are no different today than people from 200years ago. Your argument assumes that the world is not based upon the same humanit or principals it was before these "modern" times. You have no sense of perspective!

    39. Re:He's living a fantasy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > That's the thing about Ron Paul. He makes a few good points once in a while, but he's such an extremist that he just wants to wildly slash everything in government with a machete. That's not the solution to anything.

      True. Solutions in politics require "compromise". Which implies that you won't get what you bring to the table. Which implies that, in order to get something acceptable, you "overshoot the mark" to begin with, so you have "fall back" room.

      That's how politics works. I'm surprised you didn't know that.

    40. Re:He's living a fantasy by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      Do you have any idea what kind of jurisdictional and logistical issues would be involved if every incident involving a crime or misdemeanor on a train had to be handled by the local authorities? Most of Amtrak's police operate on the trains themselves, and they're independent so they can go about their business without having to stop the train and disrupt the travel of everybody on it until the local authorities showed up to handle it. When somebody commits a crime on a moving train, Amtrak's police deal with it while the train keeps moving without having to worry or care about what municipality the train happens to be located in right this instant.

      Could they use local police for stations? Probably. But since they have their own in-house law enforcement agency anyway, why should they pay a premium to hire off-duty local police officers at overtime pay rates when they can just hire a few more police officers of their own and pay them normally? In most places, it's actually quite difficult to get dedicated police officers earmarked for your organization's exclusive use, even when you're paying 100% of their salaries on behalf of the host municipality. If Amtrak paid the salaries of 10 Baltimore police officers, the agreement allocating two members of the BPD to their station at all times would inevitably give the BPD the right to send them out to handle some other local problem if they deemed it necessary. Ergo, it would be silly and pointless political masturbation for Amtrak to screw around with local police departments instead of just handling station police duties themselves.

    41. Re:He's living a fantasy by Virtucon · · Score: 1

      I agree with that and with the instance of the WMATA police as well since they operate transportation services in two states plus DC and in multiple counties within those jurisdictions. But you do bring up a good point about Amtrak police and their responsibilities. I doubt however that the Government Printing Office Police or the Bureau of Engraving and Printing police have the same issues.

      As for Amtrak, I give them about a year and it won't be an issue any longer.

      --
      Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
  59. Way to make it sound insignificant.... by gQuigs · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I get it, they are reporting what they want to see kept (I want to see them kept too). They are a drop in the bucket compared to the 1 Trillion dollar the plan cuts.

    Or in the plans on words:

    "Cuts $1 trillion in spending during the first year of Ron Paul’s presidency, eliminating five cabinet departments (Energy, HUD, Commerce, Interior, and Education), abolishing the Transportation Security Administration and returning responsibility for security to private property owners, abolishing corporate subsidies, stopping foreign aid, ending foreign wars, and returning most other spending to 2006 levels."

    "Makes a 10% reduction in the federal workforce, slashes Congressional pay and perks, and curbs excessive federal travel. To stand with the American People, President Paul will take a salary of $39,336, approximately equal to the median personal income of the American worker. "

    He also goes to lower taxes which I don't like, which he can actually "afford" in his plan. The plan is certainly not what I would want, but it's the first serious plan I've seen from the Right in a long time.

    Read more. http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/ron-paul-plan-to-restore-america/

    1. Re:Way to make it sound insignificant.... by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      returning responsibility for security to private property owners

      Awesome. Only the rich will be able to defend their property. Just fucking awesome. Is he aware why central governments became in vogue in the Far East and in Europe? Or how the places operate that are already returning responsibility for security to private property owners?

      The guy is a god damn lunatic. And all his followers are as well.

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
    2. Re:Way to make it sound insignificant.... by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      Another statist who can't see past his own nose.

      Don't you think airport owners would pay to secure flights traveling into and out of their gates?? Don't you realize private airport security works fine everywhere else on the planet?

      No, you're so certain in your own tunnel vision that to actually attempt to understand the argument would be to admit your own inadequacy.

  60. Not the right way by gerardrj · · Score: 1

    While these departments probably do need to be scaled back, this is not the way to solve the deficit/debt issues.

    Current US budget deficit is about $1,500 billion
    Total cuts proposed: 11.4 billion

    That's only a reduction of a very small fraction of 1%. Absolutely negligible. It's about as effective as going to a regional flood, taking away a bucket of water and saying "there, I fixed it."

    The military budget hovers around $700 billion. Reigning in the military so they are once again simply charged with protecting the continental United States from foreign attack and shrinking the budget appropriately (lets say 30%) would be immensely more functional as a remedy at about $220 billion in savings.

    Healthcare totals about $1,600 billion in the federal budget. Get tort reform and mal-practice sorted out, reign in the absurd salaries that hospital executives can make and you can cut 30% out of healthcare as well for another $480 billion in savings.

    Lets see, I'm up to $700 billion, half the deficit already.

    Eliminate the Federal Reserve Bank system, go back on the gold standard and you eliminate another $200 billion in interest payments the governments pays just to have dollars in circulation. Not an easy task, I know.

    --
    Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    1. Re:Not the right way by RobinEggs · · Score: 1

      reign in the absurd salaries that hospital executives can make

      So with all the places career executives can work you want to make hospitals, of all places, less attractive? Anyone who excels in managing the people and facilities who save lives and successfully controls costs while doing so deserves a damn high salary indeed. They need some new merit-based pay rules, clearly, to make those two goals major priorities in their work, but again anyone who can do those two things well is an irreplaceable asset.

    2. Re:Not the right way by goldspider · · Score: 1

      So with all the places career executives can work you want to make hospitals, of all places, less attractive?

      Considering that "career executives" have a nasty habit of running organizations into the ground and jumping ship with a golden parachute, I think I'd prefer our hospital administrators be more interested in providing better health care than getting rich off of it.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    3. Re:Not the right way by Chapter80 · · Score: 1

      That's only a reduction of a very small fraction of 1%. Absolutely negligible. It's about as effective as going to a regional flood, taking away a bucket of water and saying "there, I fixed it."

      So regional floods are about the equivalent of 150 buckets of water?

    4. Re:Not the right way by brit74 · · Score: 1

      > "Healthcare totals about $1,600 billion in the federal budget. Get tort reform and mal-practice sorted out, reign in the absurd salaries that hospital executives can make and you can cut 30% out of healthcare as well for another $480 billion in savings."
      The US spends more money on healthcare than any other country in the world. If US healthcare costs (per capita) what the second-highest spending nation spends on healthcare per capita (i.e. Norway), it would save $750 billion dollars. (In actual numbers: the US spends $2500 more per capita than Norway. $2500 x 300 million = $750 billion.)

    5. Re:Not the right way by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul is cutting $902 billion in the first year (compared to baseline), including military cuts:

      http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/ron-paul-plan-to-restore-america/

    6. Re:Not the right way by DisKurzion · · Score: 1

      Link to source: http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/ron-paul-plan-to-restore-america/

      That military budget you talk about slashing? Yea, he does that.
      You are aware the plan totals over 1 trillion slashed? It's just the mentioned departments that got zeroed out. Most everything else also took a 15-40% cut.

      It's probably one of the best budget plans proposed in decades, from the perspective of actually spending less than you earn.

    7. Re:Not the right way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      RTFA. Total cuts proposed: 1 trillion.

    8. Re:Not the right way by zill · · Score: 1

      The military budget hovers around $700 billion. Reigning in the military so they are once again simply charged with protecting the continental United States from foreign attack and shrinking the budget appropriately (lets say 30%) would be immensely more functional as a remedy at about $220 billion in savings

      The Department of Defense would see $832 billion disappear from its budget during Paul’s first term in office, most of which would stem from Paul’s plan to end all foreign wars and foreign aid.

      $220 billion * 4 = $880 billion

      Interesting how your number is within 5% of his proposal.

    9. Re:Not the right way by tmosley · · Score: 1

      I know this is slashdot and all, but the actual budget Ron Paul proposes cuts the budget by a trillion dollars in the first year. $200 billion comes from the DoD.

    10. Re:Not the right way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Current US budget deficit is about $1,500 billion Total cuts proposed: 11.4 billion

      That's only a reduction of a very small fraction of 1%. Absolutely negligible. It's about as effective as going to a regional flood, taking away a bucket of water and saying "there, I fixed it."

      Hmm, this is not quite the right metaphor. This is more like going to the Texas drought, pissing on a homeless orphan and saying "There, I fixed it."

    11. Re:Not the right way by bames53 · · Score: 1

      Current US budget deficit is about $1,500 billion
      Total cuts proposed: 11.4 billion

      The plan cuts $1 trillion, not just the $11.4 billion pointed out in this article. Did you actually take a look at the plan?

    12. Re:Not the right way by ianare · · Score: 1

      You forgot raising taxes.

    13. Re:Not the right way by RobNich · · Score: 1

      Did you even bother to read the plan? It cuts spending by 1 trillion. And schedules further cuts for the next three years, causing a budget surplus in the third year.

      And it cuts the Department of Defense budget by 15%, freezes it there, and ends all war funding.

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    14. Re:Not the right way by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please take the time to read the actual documents published by Ron Paul 2012... It's only 11 or 12 pages long.

      The examples cited by the editor total 11.4 billion. The entire plan encompasses 1 trillion. The plan does indeed call for "Reigning in the military so they are once again simply charged with protecting the continental United States" as well. Specifically, ending foreign occupation, foreign aid and cutting an additional 15% of defense spending on top of that.

      Most of the "bigger concerns" people are expressing are, in fact, considered. The totality of gov't spending is extremely sharded (with one admitted exception) and ANY plan to cut debt is going to require many "insignificant" amounts to be shaved.

  61. I'd love to see a libertarian airline by Chirs · · Score: 1

    Just cut out all the security before the flight and issue a taser to each passenger over the age of 18.

    1. Re:I'd love to see a libertarian airline by yurtinus · · Score: 1

      Bad idea... I'd be tazing the shit out of people left and right. Sometimes it'd be to shut up that damn baby two rows back, sometimes it'd be to keep the guy who demanded a window seat from getting up to stretch his legs for the fifth time, sometimes it'd just be for fun.

      --
      +1 Disagree
    2. Re:I'd love to see a libertarian airline by mr1911 · · Score: 2

      Just cut out all the security before the flight and issue a taser to each passenger over the age of 18.

      That is a closer description to where you are going under the TSA and DHS.

      Every in-flight threat since 9/11 has been stopped by the passengers on the plane. Allowing someone to board with their pocket knife (or even, God forbid, 3.5oz of shampoo) is not going to create a plane full of people stabbing one another. It would, however, create an environment that 5 jackasses with box cutters will never take control of again.

      Put you head back and the sand and keep telling yourself that big government groping children and grandmothers is about keeping you safe.

      --
      This post comes with a double-your-money-back guarantee!
      Any offense taken to this post is at your sole discretion.
    3. Re:I'd love to see a libertarian airline by gfxguy · · Score: 1

      Every in-flight threat since 9/11 has been stopped by the passengers on the plane.

      Followed by some government idiot proclaiming "see? The system works!"

      --
      Stupid sexy Flanders.
    4. Re:I'd love to see a libertarian airline by Dhalka226 · · Score: 1

      It would, however, create an environment that 5 jackasses with box cutters will never take control of again.

      That environment was created on 9/11/2001 -- and no, I don't mean after the attacks. Remember United Flight 93, which heard of plane hijackings being turned into weapons on phone calls and attempted to re-take the plane. Granted, this plane still crashed, but it never accomplished its mission.

      By the time cockpit doors were ordered reinforced and locked, the problem was completely solved. I honestly can't think of any changes beyond that that weren't just part of some elaborate security theater. I don't mind pilots having guns; I don't mind air marshalls on random flights; I don't even mind the federalization of screeners per se (though I also don't think it's an improvement relative to its cost) -- but the rest strikes me as both ineffective and invasive.

    5. Re:I'd love to see a libertarian airline by shutdown+-p+now · · Score: 1

      No, taser is issued to those under the age of 18. Over 18 you get a handgun, chambered in .357+ for preference.

  62. That should do it! by Altus · · Score: 1

    That should solve our unemployment problem right there.

    --

    "In America, first you get the sugar, then you get the power, then you get the women..." -H. Simpson

    1. Re:That should do it! by muckracer · · Score: 1

      > That should solve our unemployment problem right there.

      Yeah. Sucks that the PHB's were so keen on exporting our jobs to India ("Hello! My Name is Cindy..." "NO, IT ISN'T, YOU LYING BITCH!!"), gave our Know-How to China and our Production to Taiwan and Bangladesh. Perhaps normal Americans should finally wake TF up and start buying things made in their own country again to secure their OWN jobs, not Rajiv's!
      (Btw., got no beef with Rajiv or other folks from around the world. Not their fault, that we're fucking ourselves economically into oblivion.)

  63. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually the total quantity of the cuts would be 1.2 trillion which would put us at balanced by 2015.

  64. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I suggest you read his whole plan to cut $1 Trillion

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970203658804576637633052916922.html

  65. This is phenomenally dumb by sean.peters · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You do realize, right, that all those private companies who are "more apt at the weather stuff" are doing it based on... weather data that they get for free from NOAA, right? Jesus, I wish the "seasteading" movement would get going, so we could export all our libertarians.

    1. Re:This is phenomenally dumb by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Only if we get to watch it via live webcam so we can see all these "self-reliant" libertarian types trying to survive on their own. That would be unbearably hilarious.

    2. Re:This is phenomenally dumb by blueg3 · · Score: 1

      Well, of course they'll charge you for watching the webcam. Come to think of it, that will probably be their chief export.

    3. Re:This is phenomenally dumb by Azghoul · · Score: 1

      Jesus, no private company would ever pay for weather monitoring if it wasn't hand-delivered for "free".

  66. REDUNDANT DEPARTMENTS? by willworkforbeer · · Score: 1

    Why are we paying for a Federal Department of Education when we are already paying for a Department of Education?

    --
    Pretending this is my office full of bitter coworkers..
    1. Re:REDUNDANT DEPARTMENTS? by willworkforbeer · · Score: 2

      (My 'insert state here' got dropped) We are already paying for a STATE Department of Education.

      --
      Pretending this is my office full of bitter coworkers..
  67. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

    You do realize that the USG pays almost 0 interest right?

  68. NIST, really? by Chirs · · Score: 1

    I would have thought that even in a loosely-knit group of states like the USA, you'd want to have some standardization of weights and measures.

    1. Re:NIST, really? by sloth+jr · · Score: 1

      After you've standardized them - what's the department to do? Can't cost that much to operate an atomic clock.

    2. Re:NIST, really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, without NIST, those crazy fuckers in say, Oregon, will start using grapefruits as their standard unit of weight.

    3. Re:NIST, really? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, their budget is somewhere under a billion dollars a year.

      May seem like a lot to you and me, but remember, they are serving a whole country of 300+ million people.

    4. Re:NIST, really? by Virtucon · · Score: 1

      Nope, a Texas 2x4 is bigger than a Massachusetts 2x4. ;-)

      --
      Harrison's Postulate - "For every action there is an equal and opposite criticism"
    5. Re:NIST, really? by RogerWilco · · Score: 1

      No, I think this is exactly the way to go for the USA. Speed limits would then be in Nevadas/Reno for example. Or even better, you could sell it to the highest bidder for sponsoring. So then your car would go 60 Googles/KFC.

      It would be awesome, people would have to buy new cars every time the rights are leased for a new term, as their speedometers would show values no longer valid.

      Sounds exactly like the American Way.

      --
      RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
  69. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by kevinNCSU · · Score: 2

    The amount of work and planning that would go into closing those 5 departments, their assets, and signed federal contracts under those departments, would most assuredly increase costs for that first year.

  70. U.S. Is Not Ready for Rehab by nothousebroken · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul is on the right track. Unfortunately, I don't see any chance he'll get elected. The U.S. is like an alcoholic that hasn't hit bottom yet. We're going to have to go through a lot more pain before we're ready for rehab.

    1. Re:U.S. Is Not Ready for Rehab by erroneus · · Score: 1

      While I generally agree and was about to say the same general thing, I have to say that SOME programs are useful.

      What's more, radical change scares the hell out of people... especially voters. He won't get elected on a platform of radical change. He might get elected on a platform of "serious government reform" and that's what I think he should be doing.

      He doesn't have to change his goals. He needs to change how he plans to execute them. For example, he should plan to axe anything. He needs to plan to scale back the range and scope of what these departments do and who they act on. For example, the IRS would go back to what it was originally for -- for companies to pay taxes and leave individual people out of it. If they want a "social security system"? Great! Let employers pay for it as they have and let employees voluntarily contribute to an ACTUAL retirement account which the government can't touch. And you know what? I wouldn't be against the government skimming a little interest off of that... you know, the support the cost of the program and stuff.

      But we absolutely need science and research, standards and regulatory bodies. And we DEFINITELY need infrastructure maintained and built.

      I plan to vote for Ron Paul. Currently, I don't think he's electable because the masses are afraid of what they don't understand and are afraid of radical change. He represents radical change and change that people don't understand... and what's more, he represents something even more threatening -- a change of BELIEF. Belief is something people are very unwilling to change.

      Ron Paul knows what's good for this country, but he doesn't understand people very well I think. He's more of an engineer than a marketer.

    2. Re:U.S. Is Not Ready for Rehab by damburger · · Score: 1

      Right on track? I presume you want to demolish the Department of Education because you yourself were unable to benefit from it?

      --
      If we can put a man on the moon, why can't we shoot people for Apollo-related non-sequiturs?
    3. Re:U.S. Is Not Ready for Rehab by nothousebroken · · Score: 1

      Actually, I did not benefit from it. It was created after I graduated. You should have picked a better example. Like DoE. I disagree with RP on this one. Some of the their DoE research efforts are worth the money and eliminating them would be a huge mistake.

      The point you appear to be missing is that we must scale down government spending. We're on a wild drunken orgy of spending and our kid are going to be stuck with the hangover. We're spending money we don't have and we must make some painful cuts. Many of the programs that will be cut are good and worthy. We just can't afford them.

  71. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    $12 billion is not a lot?!!?!??!?!

    perhaps it this kind of thinking that lead to the whole mess in the first place.

  72. Can we axe... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...whatever department the Patent system is in?

  73. Redundant by LoudMusic · · Score: 1

    Yes, this post is redundant. But I'm compelled to say, this dude is fucking crazy. No need to go into details.

    --
    No sig for you. YOU GET NO SIG!
    1. Re:Redundant by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      Crazy or not, he's the only one with a plan. Think about that. The only person working on a solution is a crazy ole bastard.. Be afraid.

    2. Re:Redundant by elsurexiste · · Score: 1

      Amen to that. :P

      --
      I rarely respond to comments. Also, don't ask for clarifications: a brain and Google are faster, believe me!
    3. Re:Redundant by Boona · · Score: 1

      But I'm compelled to say, it's much easier to attack the man then argue the facts. It will avoid me having to do any kind of research and it's easier emotionally to maintain my current worldview.

      FIFY

    4. Re:Redundant by Seven_Six_Two · · Score: 1

      I can only cope with reading 250 comments. /. needs a way to filter out the comments that have a score of 5, because it seems that points are being given out for being an idiot. As for LoudMusic's comment, there is a need to go in to details. Your comment is not only libelous, but also offensive, ignorant, and totally undeserving of mod points. Without details, you are giving up your ability to make an informed decision. In my opinion, any individual that is willing to ignore facts is undeserving of the right to have his or her voice heard. My challenge: Tally the number of spelling, grammar, and logic errors in this thread for both pro and anti-Paul replies.

    5. Re:Redundant by RogerWilco · · Score: 1

      From this side of the Pond, that seems to be true for most of the US political system.

      The most important problem I see in US politics is the regional/district system with first-past-the-pole. It highly favours incumbents, thus making change though the system almost impossible. Thus you get weird things like the Tea Party being both a separate movement and part of the Republican party. In a democracy with proportional representation, there is much more room for the new to replace the old.

      --
      RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
  74. Paul is smoking crack by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As usual, Ron Paul is smoking crack. All of those departments are important, and could be funded forever with a few military cuts. It will be the warfare state that bankrupts this country, not the welfare state.

  75. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by BarefootClown · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ahem. "The Congress shall have Power To..." is authority, not a mandate. The Congress can choose not to exercise its power in a given area if it wishes. In fact, in some circumstances, the fact that Congress has chosen not to legislate may itself be considered a form of regulation, and not subject to further regulation by the states.

    --

    "Make it ten--I am only a poor corrupt official."
    --Captain Louis Renault (Claude Rains), Casablanca

  76. No more public education? by unassimilatible · · Score: 1

    Tell me, what exactly does the Department of Education do? I've been a college professor at a public school for 13 years, and I don't have a clue. I'd love my state to keep all it's education money instead of sending it to DC to be squandered.

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:No more public education? by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Seriously? They pay your salary by administering the Federal student aid program. And what state are you in exactly? Are you that sure your state pays out more money in education funds than it gets back?

    2. Re:No more public education? by More+Trouble · · Score: 1

      Here, take 3.5 minutes out of your very busy schedule and minimally educate yourself:

      https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/United_States_Department_of_Education

      Pay special attention to:

      https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/United_States_Department_of_Education#Functions

      You might also be interested in:

      https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/United_States_Department_of_Education#Establishment

      if you're laboring under the illusion that federal involvement in education dates from 1979 (as opposed to 1867).

      https://secure.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/wiki/United_States_Department_of_Education#Opposition

      is interesting if you'd like to understand what a punching bag ED is. Understanding why would requiring understanding the dog-whistle of conservative US politics.

    3. Re:No more public education? by zill · · Score: 1

      Public education, duh. Before it was created in 1979 there was no public schools in America.

    4. Re:No more public education? by PoopCat · · Score: 1

      it's education money

      Hopefully you're not an English professor.

    5. Re:No more public education? by spopepro · · Score: 1

      The Dept. of Ed typically runs and coordinates special programs, and the funding for them. They are called by their Title # relating to what part of the policy they are under. Like Title 1, better known as No Child Left Behind these days, which is tied to funding for schools with significant low SES students. (Little known: if you don't take title 1 money, then you can tell the feds and the state to fuck off as far as the penalties for not meeting the requirements. Not done often, but I was at a site where we made the choice to refuse the money). There are other decidedly less sexy titles as well. The reality is that most public school do not take much money from the feds, the money they do take usually has restrictions, and often there is some ideological influence that the feds are trying to influence (see NCLB, abstinence only sex ed, etc.).

  77. Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly STUP by SlippyToad · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ron paul's economic ideas are head-crushingly, fucking stupid.

    There is no practical acknowledgement of the role of government in his world-view. He's one of those fucking crazy idiots who thinks that economies magically regulate themselves. We've got 30 years of history demonstrating that he and all libertarian fetishists are DEAD WRONG regarding that subject.

    Why the fuck is anyone listening to this doddering old fool?

    --
    One day I feel I'm ahead of the wheel / the next it's rolling over me / I can get back on / I can get back on
  78. Jobs Plan by Sir+Realist · · Score: 1

    Was that his budget plan? Or his jobs plan? How many employees is that anyways? Well, not counting the follow-on jobs created by their activities, and only looking at their direct employees:

    Energy: 116,000
    Commerce: 44,000
    Interior: 70,000
    Education: 5,000
    HUD: 11,000

    So not even counting the economic impact of ceasing their activities, or the cost of dismantling those departments and paying off their workers contracts (or, of course the humanitarian and societal effects of the loss of their activities - but this is Ron Paul we're talking about, so I assumed we would ignore those) he's cost the country a quarter of a million jobs before he could even take office.

    I'm not saying all of those activities or jobs are necessarily justified, I'm just saying that they exist; you can't wave your hand and make them go away and pretend that that won't have an effect on the country.

    1. Re:Jobs Plan by labradore · · Score: 1

      The jobs that these people do is harmful to the economy.

      I'm not saying that we shouldn't continue some of the programs that are currently administered by these departments. Some of them obviously should be continued (I believe that there is a place for government in funding science and research. There are, however, other things that the government shouldn't be operating. The network of weather satellites should be sold off to private interests and the government should put out contracts for gathering weather data. The data itself should be made available to the public by the government (and the right to do so should be enforced in contract terms) but there is no reason to have a bureau that operates these things.

      EDU: The federal government has absolutely no concern with funding or regulating education at any level. It's not interstate commerce. It's not national security. It's just an excuse to medal and win political points with naive voters. It is each citizens own responsibility to pursue his own education. That's not a function of government, be it national, state or local. The only thing that the loans and the grants, the regulations and the national standards do is make the whole business more expensive to manage and operate and create opportunities for waste and abuse. Every major function of EDU is duplicated by or originated in private institutions already. We waste money paying people to work for a department whose only practical function is to make education more expensive and less accessible.

      HUD: This is the analog of the department of education which primarily serves the interests of the real estate and construction industries.

      Energy: This is a bureaucratic black hole into which we dump money for pet projects and graft. It exists to serve giant energy companies and the military-industrial-national-security leviathan.

      Interior: Other than the national park service, the USGS, fish and wildlife, it's hard to say what useful work goes on here. Many of the regulatory services exist to serve entrenched interests. Some of them are doing absolutely no useful work (this is the department that rubber-stamps oil rigs, pipelines, etc. leading to such disasters as the recent gulf oil spill). I can pretty much guarantee that Indian affairs has no legitimate use. That's a function for the state department.

      Commerce: This is where made-up government economic statistics originate. They also specialize in interfering with trade.

  79. North Korea is BEST Korea! by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    is advocating closing the majority for our foreign bases (ie, Japan, Korea).

    I'm sure that's a plan China would support.
    Don't forget Taiwan, either. They won't.

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:North Korea is BEST Korea! by Lawrence_Bird · · Score: 1

      I forgot Taiwan long ago as it is not my concern.

  80. Not far enough. by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

    We should eliminate the Police Departments, Fire Departments, close all penitentiaries, and remove all restrictions on the purchase of firearms. If there are no restrictions protecting the poor, the middle class, or future generations not destined to receive a trust fund, we should not be forced to pay taxes in any shape or form. If the wealthy do not want our taxes to be used to protect us, do not want to pay taxes themselves, and do not want to protect the world we live in, why should we fund institutions to protect them?

    --
    Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    1. Re:Not far enough. by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      Really. The Federal Police department and the Federal Fire department?

      Why are you twisting the reduction in Federal organisations into a reduction of local ones?

      Are you one of those people who can't tell the difference between Illegal and normal immigration?

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    2. Re:Not far enough. by Bardwick · · Score: 1

      Yep, that's about exactly what's coming during an ecomonic collapse. Oh, wait, sorry, you were making a joke. Which of the above services will be provided when no one buys our treasury bonds because we can't afford the interest? Cute little sig. Now compare "poverty" in the United States to "poverty" in a hundred other countries.. Getcha some perspective on what spoiled little bitches we've become. Not many folks outside the US that are in "poverty" get a steady income/food/shelter/education/internet/library/transportation/schoollunch/cellphone/heat...

    3. Re:Not far enough. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      You could certainly bring that up at your local city council meeting, but police, fire, etc are not the purview of the Federal Government.

    4. Re:Not far enough. by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      In what way did I claim they were federally funded? Two words. Reading comprehension. I'm pointing out that what is lost is protection for the 99% and the people that will follow. If they are going to get rid of protection for the common folk, the ones that actually pay for things with their money and their lives, they need to get rid of protection for the 1%.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    5. Re:Not far enough. by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      Ah yes. The "Americans are lazy/spoiled" argument. Then again you might judge everyone by comparing them to yourself. Regardless, I've actually been to other countries. Some have serious problems with poverty. They all have a common thread. The wealthy use the government to separate themselves and their money from the general population. While the common folk work to build and maintain the country the wealthy avoid contributing like the plague. The 20% that latch their mouths to the cocks of the wealthy are the government. If you want to see someone that perfectly fits that profile go here: Richie Rick

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    6. Re:Not far enough. by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      In what way did I claim they were federally funded? Two words. Reading comprehension. I'm pointing out that what is lost is protection for the 99% and the people that will follow. If they are going to get rid of protection for the common guy, the ones that actually pay for things, they need to get rid of protection for the 1%.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    7. Re:Not far enough. by ErikZ · · Score: 1

      We're talking about federal funding and federal taxes!

      Go take your misdirection somewhere else.

      --
      Democrats or Republicans. They are both taking us to the same place and they are not afraid of us anymore.
    8. Re:Not far enough. by RobNich · · Score: 1

      Police and Fire departments are locally funded. Penitentiaries are state-funded for the most part, while there are federal prisons for those who commit federal crimes. The federal government is not the only government, and the states, counties, and city governments can provide things too. Having one large government run everything leads to enormous inefficiencies, because nobody can keep track of what the government is doing with their money and only a very few people can rise to positions of power enough to do something about it. At a local and state level, things can be inspected and people held responsible for their negligence.

      --
      Hello little man. I will destroy you!
    9. Re:Not far enough. by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      We are talking about a plan "Ron Paul suggest" to close "axing" publicly funded agencies "5 U.S. Departments (and budgets)". Again, reading comprehension.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
    10. Re:Not far enough. by sgt+scrub · · Score: 1

      Are you trying to convince someone that publicly funded means something different if the agency or service is under local, state, and federal jurisdiction? Does one level of government magically function without funding? I'm happy for you that you prefer the government to be more localized. However, State rights versus Federal rights has nothing to do with a comment stating that if there should be protections for people it should be for all people. If the few wish to remove the benefits designed to protect the many then the many should remove the benefits designed to protect the few.

      --
      Having to work for a living is the root of all evil.
  81. Is This a Tech Site or What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I visit the site and in the first few entries I see:

    US Student Loans Exceed $1 Trillion
    Reuters Reports Death of Gaddafi In Libyan City of Sirte
    Ron Paul Suggests Axing 5 U.S. Federal Departments (and Budgets)

    Have I visited the wrong site?

  82. Imagine for a moment.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Armed Chinese Troops in Texas! http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XKfuS6gfxPY

  83. Good start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The government shouldn't be doing all this crap anyway. They're borrowing 40 cents on every dollar spend and inflating the money supply like crazy. GOVERNMENT SPENDING NEEDS TO BE CUT. Quit yer bitchin!

  84. Speak for yourself by unassimilatible · · Score: 1

    At my private school, 98% of the students went on to college, and I can assure the scores were a helluva lot higher than public schools. Maybe you mean charter schools?

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:Speak for yourself by SkimTony · · Score: 1

      Private schools are allowed to screen attendees - most in my area have/had entrance exams. When you are not required to serve the lower few quintiles of the student population, it's much easier to have high average scores. Private schools also effectively screen for income level (maybe not explicitly, but they do). That shows a whole other set of disparities.

      The top students at the private schools don't perform any better than the top students at the public schools, but the averages are higher because the lower performing students just aren't there.

    2. Re:Speak for yourself by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      I didn't say that private schools don't get better results, only that the improvements in their students are no different. The main exception is that at Catholic schools the worse of the worst tend to do a lot better than they would otherwise do.

    3. Re:Speak for yourself by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      In Australia, most non-mature-age students who start postgraduate degrees attended private schools. But most non-mature-age students who complete postgraduate degrees attended public schools.

      Make of that what you will.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  85. As a former DOE employee... by bcrowell · · Score: 2

    ...I would support elimination of DOE. DOE does a random collection of stuff. One of the things it does is support physics research, which is what I was doing -- it sort of plays the same role as NSF does in the life sciences. The thing that most non-scientists don't understand about science is that the vast majority of scientific papers are both (a) correct and (b) utterly unimportant. Researchers get tenure or permanent jobs by publishing as many papers as possible. Quality matters, but quantity is also mandatory. Because DOE does so many different things, I can't comment from personal experience on all of them, but I would be 100% in favor of closing the DOE lab (Argonne National Lab) where I worked. It would have absolutely no impact on the amount of important new scientific discoveries coming out, only on the number of scientific papers coming out. There is really sort of a conservation law at work in science. At any given time iin history, scientific techniques are capable of doing certain things, and people will use those techniques to do the obvious, important things. If you hire ten times more scientists, they'll just continue using that technique to do more of the same.

    I currently work in education, and I would say ditto for the department of education. I teach at a community college, and we get 100% of our funding from state and local taxes. Education is not a traditional or proper field for the federal government to be involved in. The federal government does fund research at universities, but that's not education, it's research. (Yes, the two do overlap, but only partially.) If we ever needed a demonstration of what can go wrong when the feds get involved in education, NCLB was it.

    1. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's because everything the federal government does is inefficient. It's like the movie Office Space where you have 8 bosses. The people making the decisions are so far away from the people doing the actual work that everything costs 5x as much and goes 5x as slow.

      Know why it takes a friggin year to rebuild one road in your local town? it's because the federal government mandates that the local government pick the absolute cheapest bidder for the project, even if the local government knows the bidder will fail or take forever to get the job done.

      Local governments are capable of handling themselves in many aspects. This is in fact how the United States of America was created, it wasn't the United Federal Government of America that this country was founded on. It's the states that should govern themselves and the less money that goes to Federal, the less money gets wasted.

    2. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You don't understand the mission of the Dept. of Education. It is two-fold: gather data on education and enforce federal education anti-discrimination laws. They aren't in the business of funding schools or teaching children. And i dont think they fund university research, either

    3. Re:As a former DOE employee... by the+gnat · · Score: 1

      I would be 100% in favor of closing the DOE lab (Argonne National Lab) where I worked. It would have absolutely no impact on the amount of important new scientific discoveries coming out, only on the number of scientific papers coming out.

      The Advanced Photon Source at Argonne is one of the most powerful synchrotrons in the world, and is used by biotech and pharmaceutical companies to solve crystal structures of proteins bound to drug candidates. (Yes, they pay a premium for this.) Of course academics use it too for more basic research on protein structure. If you think that knowing the 3D structure of fundamental cellular machinery is unimportant and has no relevance to our lives, you need to go back to school.

    4. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Federal Aid is a huge section of a ton of colleges and generates massive amounts of funding.

    5. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

      I currently work in education, and I would say ditto for the department of education. I teach at a community college, and we get 100% of our funding from state and local taxes. Education is not a traditional or proper field for the federal government to be involved in. The federal government does fund research at universities, but that's not education, it's research. (Yes, the two do overlap, but only partially.) If we ever needed a demonstration of what can go wrong when the feds get involved in education, NCLB was it.

      You may want to reconsider what you just said. The department of education just issued another round of grants totaling over $500 million to community colleges for targeted training and workforce development. Not to mention, your community college benefits from your state's four year colleges ability to solicit alternative sources of funding. Otherwise, the budget amount that supports your community college will shrink due to more money going to the four year institutions. I think you'll find that your state places a higher priority on funding the four-year institutions than they do on the two-year institutions.

      Don't take my word for it. Consult your representative of the American Association of Community Colleges (AACC) or its affiliated National Council of State Directors of Community Colleges (NCSDCC). Better yet actually visit the department of education website using keyword community-college.

      --
      These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
    6. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And just who, pray tell, would you like in charge of the nuclear stockpile? There is a reason that nuclear weapons research and sustainment is not in the Department of Defense.

    7. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're missing the hundreds of millions of dollars that the federal government awards to K-12 school districts and community colleges in the form of grants (competitive and need based). These grants are essential to the operating budgets of many low-income, urban school districts. I used to teach in one such district and although much of our funding came from the state and local tax payers, the money for programs such as the free and reduced lunch for students below the poverty line was funded with federal dollars. Without this money, the district would have to choose between supporting vital educational programs and feeding at-risk students.

      We're definitely in agreement over NCLB! Want to save money in education? Stop paying so much for so many standardized tests! My 6th graders took anywhere between three and five standardized tests each year, the shortest of which was five days. That added up to 12-30 days of lost instruction in our curriculum areas. All of this was thanks to our state's interpretation of NCLB.

    8. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is another important output of DOE's science research funding --- scientists! A large fraction of the people who receive DOE funding at some point in their education or career work outside of DOE labs now. Sounds like you would be an example. I think that more is better when it comes to scientists. It is debatable where they should work to best benefit society though, and it may be that we don't need more working in DOE labs. But if office of science is eliminated, will its education mandate just go away?

    9. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Polo · · Score: 1

      People don't realize that the department of education is not some long-standing government institution -- it started operating in 1980.

    10. Re:As a former DOE employee... by J-1000 · · Score: 1

      I wish I could mod you up. Even if you're wrong, you said something really interesting.

    11. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So you are saying that Federally subsidized student loans and Pell Grants come from local and state taxes?

    12. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      You may want to reconsider what you just said. The department of education just issued another round of grants totaling over $500 million to community colleges for targeted training and workforce development.

      So, what would happen, instead of the Federal politicians collecting taxes from you and sending it to their cronies, your state politicians collected it and sent it to THEIR cronies.

      Maybe, the state cronies would be more likely to live closer to you and actually give you a job. Maybe, the state politicians would have a better insight into what was needed and wanted in the state, because, I don't know, THEY LIVED THERE!!

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    13. Re:As a former DOE employee... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I don't know much of the DOE and what it does or doesn't do, I'd be worried given how some states tend to out-do one another, or that could be just me looking at all the Republican primary races and the joke that is getting to be in regards to when they would vote.

      Anyway, if DOE doesn't exist, what would happen to all those college classes one took at a certain university and transferred to another university? Would the standards still be maintained or would one state require that a student have to retake all those classes again from another state that they feel may not be up to their standards? Not sure if removing the DOE would affect things like that but it is just one of many things that it is nice to have certain standards apply to everyone in the US instead of a hodgepodge of different laws, education, marriage laws, etc, based upon the state that you are in at the time.

    14. Re:As a former DOE employee... by tmosley · · Score: 1

      And where did that money come from? Taxpayers. You know who else has the ability to tax? The states. You know who can administer programs like these more effectively? People who actually live in the places affected.

      They take a billion in tax revenue, and give $500 million in programs. The other half is gobbled up bones and all by the bureaucracy. Further, such grants are not necessarily merit based, meaning they are promoting mediocre performance. This is why we have fallen so far behind in the education game.

  86. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    The Constitution says that Congress shall have power to regulate interstate and international commerce. It does not say anything about the President (the Commerce Department functions subordinate to the President) regulating commerce.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  87. If the government isn't there to feed you... by iceperson · · Score: 1

    will you still eat?

    Just because Uncle Sam isn't doing something doesn't mean that is can't/won't be done.

    I imagine the States that are threatened by those things are more than capable of paying for the warning systems out of their own budgets.

    Some of the people here remind me of my children when they were very little. If they couldn't find the remote they thought they couldn't watch TV. It's like the concept of getting up and walking across the room to change the channel was so foreign to them they couldn't wrap their minds around it.

    1. Re:If the government isn't there to feed you... by brit74 · · Score: 1

      > "I imagine the States that are threatened by those things are more than capable of paying for the warning systems out of their own budgets."
      So, you're advocating the usual "pay for it out of State tax dollars not Federal tax dollars", and then pretend this is any better for taxpayers?

      > "Just because Uncle Sam isn't doing something doesn't mean that is can't/won't be done.... Some of the people here remind me of my children when they were very little."
      Says the man who wants "Uncle Florida", "Uncle Georgia", "Uncle Carolinas", and "Uncle Louisiana" do something instead of "Uncle Sam". That's an *awesome* argument when you're advocating a different level of government do the work.

    2. Re:If the government isn't there to feed you... by iceperson · · Score: 1

      Your idea of family differs a bit from mine. My aunts and uncles weren't responsible for raising me. Neither were my grandparents. I wonder, in your family does your grandparents take $$$ from your parents and their siblings and redistribute it to you and your cousins?

      If you can't see why California making decisions and taking financial responsibility for local issues in California is better than Florida and New York making those decisions for California then there's really no room for discussion...

    3. Re:If the government isn't there to feed you... by Antisyzygy · · Score: 1

      Apparently you haven't looked at California's budget lately. They are so bogged down by pensions and other deficit spending they are pretty much screwed. You can work as a prison guard for 5 years and get a pension there. That just is an example of how bad they are with entitlements. Theres also the problem of people wanting too many government services and not having a plan to pay for them.

      --
      That brings me to an interesting point, / . is just "the ramblings of socially-inept, technology-literate news-mongers".
    4. Re:If the government isn't there to feed you... by PoopCat · · Score: 1

      Really? You can reduce an argument about the evils or goods provided by a government, to a statement that anyone who defends the role of government is unable to feed themselves? You don't think that's just a little desperate-sounding?

      GP: Government provides services.
      You: So without government, you'd starve?

      I imagine you had more that a little to do with the fact that your kids didn't understand how the TV works.

    5. Re:If the government isn't there to feed you... by PoopCat · · Score: 1

      "*than* a little to do". Damn fingers.

    6. Re:If the government isn't there to feed you... by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      > "I imagine the States that are threatened by those things are more than capable of paying for the warning systems out of their own budgets."

      So, you're advocating the usual "pay for it out of State tax dollars not Federal tax dollars", and then pretend this is any better for taxpayers?

        Do you think there would be the "bridges to nowhere" scandals if it weren't for the incentive of using other people's money to build them? Alaska and Michigan would say, "Hell no! Nobody lives there!!" if those funds had to come out of their own budgets. This same dynamic is at work all over the country, and is best fix by making the people most responsible the most affected.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  88. Ron Paul claims to be a constitutionalist... by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

    But he is flat wrong here.

    All of these cabinet level departments deal with interstate issues and so are the responsibility of the Federal Government.

    1. Re:Ron Paul claims to be a constitutionalist... by darjen · · Score: 1

      Using your logic, pretty much anything can be defined as the responsibility of the Federal Government.

      I could be wrong, but I don't think your interpretation lines up with the original intent of the document.

    2. Re:Ron Paul claims to be a constitutionalist... by Wyatt+Earp · · Score: 1

      The Preamble, Commerce Clause and Enumerated Powers cover all five of those departments.

      "We the People of the United States, in Order to form a more perfect Union, establish Justice, insure domestic Tranquility, provide for the common defence, promote the general Welfare," (HUD)
      "To regulate Commerce with foreign Nations, and among the several States, and with the Indian Tribes;" (Department of Commerce and Interior)
      "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;" (Education, Energy and Commerce)

      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Preamble_to_the_United_States_Constitution
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commerce_Clause
      http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enumerated_powers

  89. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Really? I'd love to see where you've found evidence from 30 years of trying the libertarian route. The entirety of human history has been dominated by overbearing governments. Libertarianism has never been given a fair chance. From a Libertarian point of view, the past 30 years in the US has been closer to socialism.

  90. He never said that by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

    I'm not a Paul supporter... his foriegn policy views have too much Truther nuttiness to them... but what makes you think eliminating these agencies would get rid of all of what you listed? Has it ever occured to you that much of this could still be done by consolidating the work of some of these departments in other agencies? Why couldn't we move things like geographic surveys to the Department of the Interior? Why do we have to have a seperate agency for that? It just adds another level of bueacracy, and thus cost. Why would eliminating the Department of Education kill public schools? Didn't they exist for over a hundred years before we had a department of education? Aren't public schools run at the state and local level, anyway? So eliminating the Department of Education would mean public schools would dry up and blow away? And are you seriously suggesting that roads would no longer be built if these agencies were eliminated?

    The federal government is way too big, does way too much, and the essential stuff can be done in smaller or merged agencies. I'm all for his government reduction plan (except for the POTUS pay cut... I think that's just symbolic silliness). Next, he needs to add some cuts to DOD, where there are a lot of redundancies (why do we have a "national reconaissance office", "national geospatial intelligence agency", "Marine Corps Intelligence Activity", etc). Look up Wikipedia's page on the US Intelligence Community. You're telling me that all this can't be done with CIA, Army Intelligence, and Navy Intelligence? We've got 16 intel agencies and a layer of bueacracy above them.

    Liberals want to cut the military, and conservatives want to cut civilian departments. The truth is, we should cut both.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
    1. Re:He never said that by DerekLyons · · Score: 1

      Why couldn't we move things like geographic surveys to the Department of the Interior? Why do we have to have a seperate agency for that? It just adds another level of bueacracy, and thus cost.

      If you're referring to the USGS - it already is part of the Department of the Interior. So, no added bureaucracy, no added cost.
       
      It has a separate name for the same reason Purchasing has a different name from Accounts Receivable - they can't all be "those guys over in the corner".

  91. Downsizing Government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A lot of Ron Paul's plan comes from the CATO Institute's sight http://www.downsizinggovernment.org/

  92. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You mean the 30 years of government intervention, bailouts, etc? We have never had a free market where people who make bad decisions actually fail instead of being bailed out by political Allies.

  93. I don't see federal teachers or road crew by jbov · · Score: 1

    If the federal government is funding education from my tax dollars, then why do I pay thousands of dollars to the school district for property taxes each year? Why do my niece and nephew send me fund raisers for the school district year round? I have no kids in school. If I were to have kids and send them to a private school, I would not get a tax credit.

    If the federal government is funding roads and bridges, then why do I pay 31.2 cents per gallon of gasoline to my state to pay for road and bridge maintenance and construction?

    Low income housing - cut me a break. That is a scam to absurdly overpay politically favored contractors. They build housing, on the tax payer dime, to house more non-taxpayers and non-contributors. These are persons who will not pay property taxes, yet have plenty of children in school. This results in lower property values, higher taxes, and more diluted education for the taxpayers. Recently, our local government spent $3.8 million to turn an old hall into 12 low income apartments. That is $316,000 per apartment. In this area, I could buy a new construction 3000 square foot home built on an acre of land for less than $300,000. Something stinks.

    Parks -> state parks. Easy one.

    Energy research - I think Ron Paul may be making a mistake here. I think he's also screwing up by getting rid of USGS and NOAA.

    1. Re:I don't see federal teachers or road crew by geekoid · · Score: 2

      WIthout federal backing, state parks will be gone in a decade. What about parks the move across several states?

      "If the federal government is funding education from my tax dollars, then why do I pay thousands of dollars to the school district for property taxes each year? "

      Different missions. The DoEs goal is:
      " to promote student achievement and preparation for global competitiveness by fostering educational excellence and ensuring equal access." meaning : Education for everyone.
      This is a good goal, and needed. An ignorant population is more dangerous, and less productive.

      When Bush added NCLB, it's budget shot up dramatically. from 14B to what is project to be 71 Billion.
      Get rid of NCLB. and you will save far more the RP will.

      "Why do my niece and nephew send me fund raisers for the school district year round? "
      Becasue school expensic go up, but no one wants to pay for them, so they nede other avenue of revenue.

      I think this approach is wrong. I also think going to parent to hepl with class room itrems is wrong.
      IT hides the growing cost until it get to big, then suddenly its a massive problem instead ogf a growing concernt hat culd ahve been planned for.

      "I have no kids in school."
      And you still reap the benefit of an educated society.

        If I were to have kids and send them to a private school, I would not get a tax credit.
      Nor should you. Please bear in mind you would have the right to participate in all extracurricular activities.

      "If the federal government is funding roads and bridges, then why do I pay 31.2 cents per gallon of gasoline to my state to pay for road and bridge maintenance and construction?"
      Because not all roads are federal roads.

      "Low income housing - cut me a break. That is a scam to absurdly overpay politically favored contractors. They build housing, on the tax payer dime, to house more non-taxpayers and non-contributors."
      you think that's bad? try living with all those people on the street.
      Maybe I'm biased because I lived in public housing; which allowed for an education and now I am better off then my mother was.
      Or I could have lived o the street with no education and still be a drain.

      And contractor are monitored and regulated.

      "Something stinks. "
      You're ignorance.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  94. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is the same logic used by to avoid repealing the Bush tax breaks on the top tax backets.

    It will only bring in an extra 700 Billion dollars the debt is trillions of dollars, so something else should be done.

    There is no 1 thing that can be really be done to resolve the issue at this point.

    Take 1% here, 2% else where, another 1% there and eventually all of the small changes that won't do any good combine to do some good.

    I'm not saying I agree with his plan, but at least he is putting forward a plan.

  95. Halliburton? by Bananatree3 · · Score: 1

    Try Raytheon.

  96. About Time! by DarkOx · · Score: 1

    While I do think the government has an interest in making some investment in basic research, having all these little grants done under all this little departments is a stupid way to do it.

    The rest of what those departments do, is stuff the federal government should never have been doing in the first place. I am all for this plan. I do think we might want to then consider (not necessarily do), debate anyway there merit of creating a national physics and research department that would make investments in science, and vet grant requests etc. That way we could at least have a clear understanding of what we are really investing in science and what sort of returns we are really getting for it.

    --
    Repeal the 17th Amendment TODAY! Also Please Read http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/right-to-read.html
  97. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You do realize that your the one that pays the result of there being almost 0 interest right?

    Maybe it's almost free for the government to print more but it's not free when your pay stays the same and everything costs more.

  98. Just another blowhard? by fredrated · · Score: 2

    If he isn't gutting the military-industrial-spy complex then he is just another fraud and blowhard.

    1. Re:Just another blowhard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is 'gutting' them by ending the wars, foreign aid and militarism.

    2. Re:Just another blowhard? by Mike · · Score: 1

      Of course Paul is dead-set against the Military Industrial Complex. If you think otherwise, you simply haven't been paying attention.

    3. Re:Just another blowhard? by DisKurzion · · Score: 1

      Good news! He is!

      I would say almost 50% reduction in military spending (given current spending trajectory) would be considered gutting.

    4. Re:Just another blowhard? by BassMan449 · · Score: 1

      Have you even looked at his plan? His plan cuts 15% (approx. 200 billion) from DoD in the first year alone. About halfway through this interview he talks about his feelings on the military industrial complex. His plan cuts approximately 1 trillion from the fed budget and 20% of that is from the DoD.

    5. Re:Just another blowhard? by J-1000 · · Score: 1

      He's cutting from the DOD, but not the CIA or FBI.

    6. Re:Just another blowhard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Read his budget. He want's to cut it by 100 billion dollars, freeze it's spending, and end all the wars, and bring home the troops for Germany, Japan, Korean, etc.

    7. Re:Just another blowhard? by zwede · · Score: 2

      And if you had bothered reading his plan you would have known that he is also including the military in his cuts. Close most foreign bases, end all undeclared wars and cut overall military spending at least 15%.

    8. Re:Just another blowhard? by tmosley · · Score: 1

      The budget for the DoD is cut by $200 billion on day one. Something that was likely left out of the article on purpose.

    9. Re:Just another blowhard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He is. He complains about the CIA and overseas wars all the time. The Military-Industrial Complex is actually his first target.

      Check out http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1G6gZuOFsaw at 1:55 or so.

      Ron Paul: "I say cut $500 billion from overseas war-mongering and never cut domestic programs until we get our house in order."

    10. Re:Just another blowhard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "He is" as in He is gutting the Military-Industrial Complex, I mean. Whoops.

    11. Re:Just another blowhard? by BetterSense · · Score: 1

      He plans to cut DOD by 15% and end "all war funding" and redirect the balance, probably to domestic defense projects and research.

      RTFPDF
      http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf

    12. Re:Just another blowhard? by Eightbitgnosis · · Score: 1

      Maybe you should figure that out before you post?

    13. Re:Just another blowhard? by bames53 · · Score: 1

      The plan does include substantial cuts to the DoD and many of the other areas outside the DoD which are still military spending.

    14. Re:Just another blowhard? by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Not when you consider that our military budget is $1.2 trillion. The "official" figure is far less, but that's because they cheat and leave out spending that's obviously military spending. Like the VA Department, the DoE managing our nuclear stockpile, interest on past war spending, etc.

      And considering that we're surrounded by the worlds largest oceans and two friendly nations, and that the last time we faced an invasion was 200 freaking years ago....we could lop a trillion off our annual defense budget and still be massively overprotected.

  99. Agree. by mikewelter · · Score: 1

    The Dept. of Education never educated one single child. The Dept. of Energy never produced one drop of oil. HUD, by failing to oversee Freddy and Fanny, got us into the mortgage mess we're in now. I'm just sorry the EPA isn't on his list. That agency is totally out of control.

    1. Re:Agree. by SlippyToad · · Score: 1

      The Dept. of Education never educated one single child

      Do you just pull these useless nuggets out of your ass randomly, or did someone spoon-feed this propaganda into your eager little right-wing brain?

      HUD, by failing to oversee Freddy and Fanny, got us into the mortgage mess we're in now

      NO, FUCKTARD, the mortgage mess was caused first and foremost by the securitzation of bad loans, which were MASSIVELY ENCOURAGED by the Republican administration at the time via Bush's Ownership Society. Hell, if you were even being a tiny bit intellectually honest you could bother yourself to google Bush Touts Home Ownership and see the numerous articles of the GOP drooling all over each other about how great fantastic it is that every 'murkin is gonna have a house.

      IT WAS THOSE bad loans that collapsed the mortgage industry, moron. PLEASE DO bother your lazy ass to get the facts straight before you just FART OUT some ignorant propaganda that you're rebreathing out of Rush Limbaugh's diseased asshole.

      --
      One day I feel I'm ahead of the wheel / the next it's rolling over me / I can get back on / I can get back on
  100. We don't have the money! by Kraftwerk · · Score: 0

    All of these programs are good, or are good in spirit, but we simply don't have the money. We are nearing 200 billion dollars per month in deficit spending, that's 2.4 Trillion dollars per year, which we have to borrow and print to make up for. Would you get loans equal to 76% of your pay, per year to help your favorite charities?

    1. Re:We don't have the money! by geekoid · · Score: 1

      We did have ther money.

      Remove the loop holes in corporate taxis that ahve been put in place in the alst 20 years, and let the busgh tax cuts expire..as they were designed to do.

      Hey, look at that, the vast majority of the money issue are now gone.

      The lets tax trades on walls street 7 pennies for 1000 dollars traded. Since the people trading on wall street can cause such an enormousness impact to the country as a whole, they need to bear some of the burden of the impact of emotional trades, and short term gains.

      Remove the Child Tax Credit -something I benefit from, but seriously. How about we stop that and start a better planned parenthood program?

      Shit gets more expensive. Cutting programs, and not raising taxes is STUPID.

      The current problem exists because people who sue wall street screwed everyone else.

      "Would you get loans equal to 76% of your pay, per year to help your favorite charities?"
      Strawman, stop it.

      Please learn what deficit is.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  101. Re:Dept of Edu by kb1cvh · · Score: 2

    If we got rid of the Dept of Edu -
    would my two high functioning autistic kids get any kind of free and appropriate public education ?

    They are a pain to deal with sometime, but what else will society afford ?

    --
    Peter AI6PG
  102. What about the DEA? by istartedi · · Score: 2

    What about the DEA? It's a total waste of money. Not only that; but legalizing and taxing marijuana would be revenue positive. RP is showing that he has at least a modicum of political savvy. He knows that would never sell in the party in which he has chosen to house himself.

    --
    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    1. Re:What about the DEA? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      No, the DEA is not a total waste of money. Some of the laws they need to enforce is a waste and takes funds from actually problems.

      So yeah, legalize marijuana.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:What about the DEA? by dkleinsc · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul is (or at least has been) in favor of marijuana legalization.

      --
      I am officially gone from /. Long live http://www.soylentnews.com/
    3. Re:What about the DEA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He does want to git rid of the DEA. He thinks the war on drugs is a complete waste of taxpayer money.

    4. Re:What about the DEA? by istartedi · · Score: 1

      You and the other reply are missing the point. He's cast aside his stand on individual liberty for political gain. The saying "Libertarianism for corporations, statism for everybody else" may also be applicable here. I like "some parts of the government are more expendable than others".

      --
      For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
    5. Re:What about the DEA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually Paul has clearly stated he supports the legalization of Marijuana. You can find an old video of him debating one of the Baldwin brothers on the issue, Baldwin being the conservative.

  103. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by DesScorp · · Score: 1

    Congress can't regulate commerce without a Department of Commerce? Funny. They did just that for many years.

    --
    Life is hard, and the world is cruel
  104. ahhh, the good old days... by Thud457 · · Score: 1

    If we let the states do everything they want, we'd still have slavery.

    But if you don't like what the state your living in is doing it is *much* easier to move to a different state it is easier to move to a different state then to move to a different country.

    not if you were a slave.
    we're all talking in 19th century terms, right?

    --

    the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff

    1. Re:ahhh, the good old days... by TC+Wilcox · · Score: 1

      we're all talking in 19th century terms, right?

      I was talking about present day terms. Even going back to the premise of the original post here it is I think ridicules to think there would still be slavery in the Southern states if not for the involvement of the Federal government. Slavery at the level that was happening in America in the 19th century ended all around the world a long time ago. There is no reason to think that the way we ended it here is the only possible way we could have ended slavery.

  105. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, that 1% really does a whole lot.

    It much more than 12 billion - you only added the few specific programs mentioned. You're not accounting for every program, contractor, and employee.

  106. That is one way to look at it by Shivetya · · Score: 1

    another way is to understand that a lot research we fund today is already in the best interests of the groups getting the funds to do so. Many large corporations receive hundred of millions if not billions to develop technology they are already working on, selling, and profiting on. Another large part of funding goes to politically connected friends to companies that had no future but sound damn good until you look under the covers.

    HUD condemned thousands of families into high rise squalor after local politicians took over their homes for politically connected friends to build into office towers and industrial parks. The cover up was getting out of their homes which were defined as ghettos and the like and saving them by putting them prison style in cement monsters. By the way, they have only existed since 1965

    The Department of Energy has overseen what great advances? Started by Carter in 1977 and presided over the death of US Nuclear energy programs and practically no progress on any other fronts for how many years? Most of the advances to coal and such came from trying to overcome restrictions imposed by other agencies.

    Department of Education, again founded during Jimmy Carters Presidency has overseen explosive growth in costs for educating the children of the US with what results? Horribly poor results.

    So while it is easy to do a hit piece on Ron Paul (believe he has lots of other ideas that can be labled kook ville) there are areas where he is right. Research won't stop when these government organizations go away. We already suffer from a lot of duplicate/triple/etc number of efforts all within the government. Hell we have departments which undermine each other.

    So don't laugh it off with a cute one line phrase, that cheapens the discussion. The truth is, the US government has grown too large to manage. An example, there are over TWO THOUSAND aid programs available to provide the needy with money and other support - TWO THOUSAND. We spend SIX TRILLION DOLLARS or more per year when you combine all levels of government in the US and for what?

    So go look at each department he wants to axe, then ask yourself. Can it be done under another department. Can it be done at the state level. What has this department given us and at what cost. Far more productive than a snide one liner

    --
    * Winners compare their achievements to their goals, losers compare theirs to that of others.
    1. Re:That is one way to look at it by Darth+Snowshoe · · Score: 1

      For a long time, I unhappily lived with the fact that I was a "buffet Catholic" - meaning that while I called myself a Catholic, I thought I could choose among the various doctrine whichever were palatable to me, and leave the rest behind. Ultimately I had to confront the notion that I really no longer a Catholic by any conventional definition. I think we've arrived at a moment where we are surrounded by buffet Americans.

      Buffet Americans feel like they're real Americans all right, but they don't need to care at all about cities or the people in them, or certain minorities that annoy them, or different generations, or federal departments that they are not immediately benefiting from, or states that seem to have different problems or concerns than the place they grew up. Basically if you know you'd be arguing the opposite side of the coin if only you were born under different circumstances, maybe it's not such a great argument.

      WRT DOE, maybe Ron Paul could use wikipedia to find out the purpose of the departments before he proposes doing away with them;

      "The United States Department of Energy (DOE) is a Cabinet-level department of the United States government concerned with the United States' policies regarding energy and safety in handling nuclear material. Its responsibilities include the nation's nuclear weapons program, nuclear reactor production for the United States Navy, energy conservation, energy-related research, radioactive waste disposal, and domestic energy production. DOE also sponsors more basic and applied scientific research than any other US federal agency; most of this is funded through its system of United States Department of Energy National Laboratories." - Wikipedia

      So I for one am not really ready to cede nuclear reactor and nuclear waste regulation to the states or to individual corporations, for instance. ("Well ok maybe we could move those parts to another agency.") DOE's National Nuclear Security Administration monitors other country's nuclear abilities, works nonproliferation issues, manages the safety and security of our own stockpile of nuclear weapons [...] ("Geez, I guess we need somebody to be looking after that stuff.") Groups like the Southeastern Power Administration manage the sale of power from hydroelectric plants ("just sell all this stuff outright - who cares if all the dams are private") There's a group that looks after the power grid - pushes industry for higher efficiency, better security and reliability, analyzes blackouts ("well we could trust all that to corporations, couldn't we?") Etc.

      I could make a defense of each department Mr. Paul wants to do away with, but its not likely to convince readers here, I see. But you know, if you're supporting this initiative of his, its really worth your time to at least take a swag at actually figuring out what each of those departments does before you vote to chuck them. I'm pretty sure most of the people in these departments don't think the whole thing is a scam - they at least are trying to do the tasks ascribed to these departments for the benefit of the nation.

  107. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    RTFA - More like a trillion in the first year.

  108. I can only hope... by stazeii · · Score: 1

    That this might get some in the nerd crowd to stop falling over themselves saying how great Ron Paul is. He's nuts, like the rest of them, just a different flavor of nuts. He's useful for encouraging discussion. Beyond that...

  109. and Department of Justice by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Does the Department of Justice really support citizens in fighting Drugs and Copyright issues?
    These issues are not critical to citizens or the economy.

  110. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by stazeii · · Score: 1

    Hear hear.

  111. Don't get it, do ya? by digitalsolo · · Score: 1

    I find it pretty hilarious that people are either to dense or misguided to realize that Paul doesn't want these things destroyed, he wants control of them taken away from the FEDERAL government. State and local governments can do a much better job of controlling the usage of these funds vs. the federal government, and, as a bonus, if you don't like what your state is doing, move to another state that you do agree with. Novel concept.

    This is really mental masturbation anyway, we aren't changing our path in the US at this point, until we hit rock bottom, and we've still a long way to go on that front.

    --
    Just another ignorant American.
    1. Re:Don't get it, do ya? by geekoid · · Score: 1

      A) Few states ahs the funding to do that
      B) The ones that do will be duplicated federal level efforts.
      C) The funds in those department ar used opretty damn tightly.

      Really? you can just move to a different state? yeah, that's pratical.

      The change we need isn't butchering the things that give us the infrastructures to be a first class country. The change need sto be paying the appropriate amount of taxes.

      The problems is we became bunch of fucking cheapskates.

      " State and local governments can do a much better job of controlling the usage of these funds vs. the federal government,
      wrong, wrong, wrong. As someone who has read many, many reports and studies on this issue, the federal government is substantial better at managing funds. Better then states, and better then any large corporations. It is all controlled, monitored, and watch dogged.

      So tired of people who haven't even done a comparison of project budgets and efficiency as measured by waste and goals saying the federal government doesn't manage money well.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    2. Re:Don't get it, do ya? by digitalsolo · · Score: 1

      You didn't make a single substantiated statement in that entire diatribe.

      A) Removing the federal government from touching those funds doesn't eliminate the funds, it puts them in the states hands.
      B) There is no duplication if the federal departments are removed, which is, you know, the POINT.
      C) Even if they are used tightly, the simple fact of duplication of efforts means they are not used EFFICIENTLY, which is the important part.

      As far as just moving to a different state, it's far simpler than attempting to force the ideology of those around you to match your own.

      So, keep raising taxes and doing as we have been (which means, raising spending). We would need to increase our tax intake nearly 75% just to cover our current shortfall, and more like 150% to make a reasonable plan to pay off our current debts. I would prefer not to live in a cardboard box, but if 50-80% of my salary suddenly becomes due in taxes, just to continue the current level of government support, that's where I'd be.

      I'm so tired of people who clearly can't do basic mathematics lecturing me about my lack of awareness. Bust out a damned abacus man.

      --
      Just another ignorant American.
    3. Re:Don't get it, do ya? by DrXym · · Score: 1

      Control taken away at federal level and for what purpose? So that the states can implement their own half assed equivalent for additional expense and there be a patch work of implementations that corporations and individuals can run rough shod over. It is the most stupid ill conceived idea yet from a person who keeps them coming.

  112. THe EPA? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where is the EPA

    That would be my first Axe ... those ass holes need to GO.

  113. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by gearsmithy · · Score: 1

    The Federal Government has a constitutional mandate to regulate interstate and international commerce. But hey, fuck that right? Pass me a heroine needle and that copy of Atlas Shrugged, it's Ron Paul's world now. -GiH

    Your strawman is boring.

  114. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by darjen · · Score: 3, Informative

    You are the one smoking crack if you honestly believe we had libertarianism for 30 years. There are so many things wrong with your idiotic assertion I don't even know where to start.

  115. Chump change to $16 trillion in secret bailouts by jbov · · Score: 1

    Well, at least he wants to get rid of the fed, who secretly gave $16 trillion to bailout corporations in less than a three year period. That is more than 10 times greater than the national deficit, and more than the entire national debt accrued by the US in it's 200+ years of spending.

    http://www.unelected.org/audit-of-the-federal-reserve-reveals-16-trillion-in-secret-bailouts

    When I am short on money, it isn't a matter of cutting spending on things I don't want or need anymore. I want or need everything I spend money on, otherwise I wouldn't be spending it. Still, I have to cut somewhere. Every penny counts, right?

  116. Wasn't Ron Paul last election's hero on /.? by randomErr · · Score: 1

    I thought everyone loved Ron Paul last election's cycle? His policies haven't changed, so what has?

    --
    You say things that offend me and I can deal with it. Can you?
    1. Re:Wasn't Ron Paul last election's hero on /.? by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

      Your first mistake was assuming /. is a hive mind of people who all agree on everything. The fact is that last election cycle not "everyone" here loved him.

    2. Re:Wasn't Ron Paul last election's hero on /.? by asher09 · · Score: 1

      I was wondering the same thing....

      --
      Some were yelling one thing, some another. Most of them had no idea what was going on or why they were there. Acts19:32
  117. Ron Paul by Mullen · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul should just change his election tag line to "Ron Paul; the Biggest Fucking Narrow Minded Asshole in the USA Government!".

    Yet, another stupid idea from the man from Texas who really lives in La La La Land.

    --
    Linux O Muerte!
    1. Re:Ron Paul by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      I heard he thought about it, but is afraid you'll try to run someday, and doesn't want to make you look like a copy cat.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    2. Re:Ron Paul by Rob+the+Bold · · Score: 1

      Ron Paul should just change his election tag line to "Ron Paul; the Biggest Fucking Narrow Minded Asshole in the USA Government!".

      The dude lost that title quite a few years back.

      I disagree with Paul's ideas on most things, but he's become the most rational-sounding candidate in the field. And it's not because he's changed, either.

      --
      I am not a crackpot.
  118. why antiPauls need to be extreme by cinnamon+colbert · · Score: 1

    We measure reasonable not by comparision to a std, but by comparision to the extremes
    So, if someone like R Paul or H Cain takes a super extreme posistion, suddenly previously "extreme" things become "reasonable'

    This tactic has worked well for the right in the last 40 years, and instead of arguing with Paul supporters - there is no point, they add 2+2 and get the color of the sound of thunder- I think people should advocate antiPaul posistions, to ensure that the center doesn't change
    So, my proposal is that all corporations are required to remit 10% of gross revenue to the gov't
    All corporations, and officers, are banned from any political activity
    All corporations are required to pay their senior staff no more then 15X the min wage, or no more then 15X the wage of the lowest paid employee or subcontractor or part timer, or, for companies that try to avoid this rule by outsourcing stuff, no more the 15X min wage at the contractor Corporations are not people; they may not publish any information, in any form, not directly related to their sales

    1. Re:why antiPauls need to be extreme by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      So you're posting from Wall Street where everyone is proclaiming that bringing down capitalism is now a "reasonable" protest.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    2. Re:why antiPauls need to be extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      sarcasm aside, OWS includes a lot of people, some of whom will say silly things (although, on my book, not as half as silly as shutting down the EPA, a view annunciated by the GOP candidates)

      That aside, OWS has a serious,valid, fact based point:
      In the boom years, a lot of ordinary americans made really stupid decisions, like buying ahouse they couldn't afford, and then taking an equity loan for a vegas vacation. And ordinary americans have suffered, with foreclosures, and lost jobs, and divorces, and lots of kids embarrassed to go to school, cuase they are living in a motel or car,br>
      and the bankers ? did anyone at wamu or any of the other mortgage originators even get indicted, much less go to jail ?

      did anyone at goldman or Citi or JPM or Lehman even get indicted for breaking the law and selling worthless securities (and don't give me that crap about how they didn't know; even if that is true, ignorance of hte law is no excuse; a guy sells you a real rolex for 5 bucks, you can't complain the cops charge you ...)
      At least, that is my take on OWS; they are good people, a lot better then either Obama or Bachmann or Paul

    3. Re:why antiPauls need to be extreme by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Wowee, if you do that, about 20% of corporations will fold instantly, as they make their profits at the margins. Many more, probably more than 50% would be gone in a couple of years. The remainder would likely all move overseas because they don't want to be forced to accept 15x the $50 Pedro the Once a week janitor gets every week. They certainly won't work 60 hour weeks for $12.50 an hour.

      lol, talk about extreme positions. You know less than nothing about economics, and here you are advocating class warfare rather than recognizing actual root causes of financial crises, ie the people in charge of money issuance, ie the Federal Reserve.

      Note that you said nothing about the extreme wage disparity that has emerged between the private and government sectors. How about limiting politicians and bureaucrats the same way? No, no, they "deserve" their money.

    4. Re:why antiPauls need to be extreme by Pfhorrest · · Score: 1

      This (the idea of a balance of extremes, not the "extremes" you "suggest") very nicely sums up my stance on the existing political parties.

      We in America do not have a left party and a right party. We have a moderate party in the Democrats, and a fascist party in the Republicans. As a result, what gets called a reasonable compromise in this country is moderately fascist. I criticise the Democrats for not being libertarian enough, but when their supporters get up in arms I have to clarify that I also criticise them for not being socialist enough.

      What I would really like to see is a true libertarian party and a true socialist party dominating the political scene, so we get, at worst, a moderate compromise between the two, and at best, some kind of clever collaboration toward a more ideal libertarian socialism.

      But a good short-term stop-gap would be, as you suggest, to throw our weight toward the socialist corner to counteract this fascist trend. We would have to be very mindful going forward, however, to pull back in a libertarian direction once the socialist momentum takes off.

      --
      -Forrest Cameranesi, Geek of all Trades
      "I am Sam. Sam I am. I do not like trolls, flames, or spam."
    5. Re:why antiPauls need to be extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I;ll stipulate to the remarks about 10% to the govt
      re 15X wages - you know, there are alot of good, hardworking people looking for jobs that pay 20grand X 15 = 300,000 dollars a year
      every single senior person wants to resign, I don't see an issue; anyway, most of these people got where they are cause they are driven internally by demons (or more politely, by strong desires) that although expressed as desire for money, can be satisfied in otherways; in other words, it is a complete and total myth that people need to be motivated by money, at least once you have basic needs satisfied, which in 2011 american, is certainly occuring at 300K/year/household

      Re govt wage limits - you are totally right, I forgot that one, sorry, would amend original proposal to include all gov't and gov't paid contractors to no more then 3X median household income (~3 X 56,000 dollars in 2011)
      I;m not sure where you get the "deserve" from , that is an inference on your part that turns out to be wrong

  119. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why would anyone listen to you? He has the highest education level of anyone, but he's the fool...

  120. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by ceoyoyo · · Score: 1

    Now THERE's a step in the right direction. Don't throw away the things that make your country great (which are only 1% anyway), toss the big line item that doesn't really do you any good anyway.

  121. 10 billion? by geekoid · · Score: 1

    He want's to butcher the most important thing for RnD and hope for maintaining a technical leader to save 10 billion?

    Another step in the Ron Paul plan to return us to a pre 1929 country.

    I look forward to the new rise in slum lord and slave wage overlords.

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    1. Re:10 billion? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      His entire plan cuts more than $1 trillion, but Slashdot wants to focus on federal agencies which are a drop in the bucket when you consider the big picture.

      But it ultimately doesn't matter, because we all know Americans are too proud to do voluntarily reduce their standard of living, and the federal government will only cut expenses when the dollar becomes worthless, the US debt rating is in the toilet and interest rates are so high that borrowing becomes impractical.

  122. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I suppose your awareness of how the financial crisis came to be is pretty limited then. The systematic dismantling of the Great Depression era legislation limiting the amount of risk taking by financial institutions, done in the name of the libertarian 'less regulation, financial markets should be cared for by the great invisible hand' probably means nothing to you.

    On an unrelated note, it's interesting how low key the /. crowd reacted to the idea of dismantling NIST. It's one for the history books, but it just goes to show how unaware people are of the importance of standards. Amazing stuff.

  123. HOOORAY FOR KNEE-JERK REACTIONS! by kelarius · · Score: 1

    It should be noting that Ron Paul is planning on cutting off spending on Iraq/Afghanistan wars and that is where the vast majority of his 1 Trillion in spending cuts would be coming from. Having said that he also plans on lowering corporate taxes to ~15% and extending (again) the bush tax cuts, not doing either of which would probably get us another trillion. I think alot of his ideas are good ones but he's got WAAAAAAAAAY to much kneejerk reaction in his planning for me to ever take it seriously, for fucks sake part of his agenda is to basically abolish financial oversight (his plan includes repealing SOX) and that just wont fly without some more SERIOUS thought about what we can/cant do without.

    --
    Personally I'd rather have my idiots at home glued to the TV than out doing idiotic things
  124. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Articles of Confederation, ratified by the colonies in 1781, contained the clause, "The United States in Congress assembled shall also have the sole and exclusive right and power of regulating the alloy and value of coin struck by their own authority, or by that of the respective states—fixing the standards of weights and measures throughout the United States— ....". Article 1, section 8, of the Constitution of the United States (1789), transferred this power to Congress; "The Congress shall have power ... To coin money, regulate the value thereof, and of foreign coin, and fix the standard of weights and measures"

    hmmm... so, I assume he'll see to transferring that last function elsewhere after abolishing NIST? Sure, mission creep has them doing more now, but at least they can point to the constitution as a reason to exist.

  125. Slashdot comments == Fox News comments by gearsmithy · · Score: 1

    Why is it that whenever a non technology article is submitted to slashdot, the comments devolve into childish name-calling and strongman arguments? Why don't we just stop calling each other stupid and offer an intelligent explanation of our position? Why not debate opposing views in a civil manner? Why not try to learn something from the opposing side?

    1. Re:Slashdot comments == Fox News comments by darkwing_bmf · · Score: 1

      I'm more worried that our elected officials are doing the things you complain about.

    2. Re:Slashdot comments == Fox News comments by gearsmithy · · Score: 1

      Not going to disagree with you there, but just because our elected officials are acting like toddlers doesn't give us an excuse to follow suit.

  126. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by acoustix · · Score: 1

    $12 billion is not a lot?!!?!??!?!

    perhaps it this kind of thinking that lead to the whole mess in the first place.

    Exactly. I remember being told that if I watched my pennies then the dollars would take care of themselves. In the same way if we watch our billions then the trillions will take care of themselves.

    We nickled and dimed ourselves to death. Over decades to get to this point. The longer we wait to get serious about our debt the more it is going to hurt. People need to stop acting like we can make serious cuts and improvements in our debt overnight. It will take us years and decades to reverse the trend - which is what is needed to do it right.

    --
    "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
  127. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    700 billion dollars is orders of magnitude apart from 12 billion dollars, and no one would (honest) make the argument that the Bush Tax Cuts do not significantly contribute to the deficit. Let's try this out...

    700 billion divided by 1.3 trillion is 53.8%
    12 billion divided by 1.3 trillion is .923%

    See the difference?

  128. slavery is good by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    0% of federal income tax goes to fund government, we pay it as interest to service the federal reserve notes in circulation that were lent to us to use as currency by the gracious federal reserve bank. anyone see anything wrong with this?

  129. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by sarhjinian · · Score: 1

    Nose. Face. Cut off. Spite.

    --
    --srj/mmv
  130. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    30 years of history from where, the USA? Whose absolutely retarded policies over the past 30 years have formed the current mess? Look at economies that work (like Canada, until Bill C11 is crammed up every Canuck asshole) and Brazil (until Dilma Roussef dims their light) and think about learning a thing or two.
     
    Abortions like the DoA should have been euthanized decades ago before they brought upon us the GMO situation we're in, right now. You can replace and rebuild easier&faster than trying to root out the corruption in such a monstrous edifice like the US Fed.

  131. Libertarians: The Underpants Gnomes of Politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    ...I can only assume that in addition to electing Ron Paul as President, you intend to elect Ron Paul to super-majorities in both houses of Congress, and also replace five members of SCOTUS with Ron Paul.

    This is why I simply can't take libertarianism seriously: the movement as a whole believes that ideal solutions can somehow be applied directly to real-world problems without having to actually travel the real-world paths that change requires. I have yet to have a conversation with a libertarian where they've proposed a serious, workable plan to transition from the government we have now to the government they'd like us to have; the most common refrain I've received is "well, if we elect Ron Paul, things will change!"

    The hard, cold, unpleasant truth that libertarians never seem willing to grapple with is that Ron Paul would almost certainly make a miserable President. He can't magically force Congress to enact the Watch The Country Burn From The Safety Of My Porch in Galt's Gulch Act of 2013. He can't hope to force genuinely unpopular (and frankly insanely risky) ideas, like eliminating the Fed and returning to the Gold Standard, without meeting vicious pushback from all sides of the political spectrum.

    Give Ron Paul one term and he won't get squat done. The man has virtually no allies remaining in Congress, and would need Republican super-majorities in both houses to even begin contemplating the kinds of foundation-level changes he wants to enact. The only reason he hasn't been torn to shreds by oppo research is that he's never reached the point where the opposition has needed to take him seriously. The second Paul won the nomination, the country would be learning a whooooole lot about the John Birch society--and that's just for starters. Paul holds enough radical opinions on enough issues that sizable numbers of Americans could fairly easily be convinced that he is, in fact, bat-shit insane.

    There are countless real-world barriers to doing the kinds of things Paul is proposing, but not a single ounce of thought seems to be given to that. With libertarians, it's always about how we should be someplace different. It's never about how we would actually get there. Running a country of 300 million people is 99% shit work, minor shifts, and unpalatable compromises--a task which modern libertarians, frankly, aren't up to.

  132. Great. Welcome to the new Dark Age. by kheldan · · Score: 1

    Sure. Go ahead. Elect this nutball, and help hasten the descent of the U.S. into a new Dark Age and into Third World country status.

    --
    Are YOU using the TOOL, or is the TOOL using YOU? Think about it!
  133. Please stop with the American politics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am American... and it bores (rather saddens) me to tears. Can't imagine the depths of some outlanders apathy.

  134. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    30 years? There has never in the history of the world been a purely captialist society. So no, there is no evidence it doesn't work. There is plenty however that corporatist, socialist and fascist economies do not.

  135. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice knee-jerk reaction there... You didn't cite any specific reason why you disliked his plans/ideas. You don't even appear to understand them.

    1. Here is a question for you.. with all of the regulations we have had in the banking (and other) industries that made it plainly illegal to do certain things... How many executives have gone to /jail/ or been personally held liable for their actions? Having regulations only works when they are enforced and if they are sane. We have never had a truly free market - corporations have always been in bed with government, now far more so than in the past.

    2. Ron Paul is for removing the power of the /federal/ government to 'play favorites', and instead he favors regulation through the states and the court system. Specifically, if someone commits fraud at a corporation, that company (and if applicable, that company) is held accountable. If a corporation pollutes common resources or causes harm to anyone, the courts can hold them accountable. Further, he believes most regulations should be a 'states rights' issue. While many will contend there are laws that should be universal, many regulations are not a one-size-fits-all.. Better to provide them at a more local level in most cases.

    3. Ask any teacher - the federal department of education is a nightmare, nearly all teachers want control at the local level.

    4. His plan roles the 'important' parts of the various departments into other departments.

  136. The whole thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Instead of just focusing on one part of his budget proposal and calling Ron Paul names, maybe a rational discussion of the entire proposal would be more in order:

    http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf

    I certainly don't agree with parts of it (I don't see any reason to sell Federal lands, for instance), but it's tough to cut a trillion dollars out of a budget and not make some decisions that people don't like.

    I'm sure we'll be able to borrow or print money forever, so why should we worry our little heads about something as trivial as trillion dollar yearly deficits.

  137. NO MORE FED != NO MORE SERVICE by MasaMuneCyrus · · Score: 1

    I don't have a lot to add to this conversation, but I want to say what is horribly lacking in 99% of these comments:

    Cutting the Department of Education does not mean no more public education. Cutting even the USGS does not mean no more earthquake and tsunami research. In addition to the United States Geological Survey, there is a California Geological Survey, Mississippi Geological Survey, etc. The states already do virtually everything the federal government does to some degree. Even the interstate highways are handled by the individual states' Department of Transportations, albeit with money and quality standards issued by the US Department of Transportation.

    Ron Paul's idea would be a dramatic change in recent US history, one of reducing centralized power and putting the power back into the individual states. It would not be the end of the world, it would be a return to bygone eras. Most of these departments are relatively recent in US history, and some have been good, and some have not produced the results we hoped. There are certainly areas where states do better than the feds (and vice versa) and we could live without the redundancy of some of them (drug laws, anyone?).

    1. Re:NO MORE FED != NO MORE SERVICE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The era you talk about didn't have mega corportations who can only be kept in check by the power of big government. So no, eliminating the USGS, the EPA etc... are not done to cut government but as gifts to the big corporations who then will do what the hell they want.
        And it doesn't matter if they pollute the water, the air etc... because we can all go to another planet yes ?

    2. Re:NO MORE FED != NO MORE SERVICE by Mullen · · Score: 1

      I don't have a lot to add to this conversation, but I want to say what is horribly lacking in 99% of these comments:

      Cutting the Department of Education does not mean no more public education. Cutting even the USGS does not mean no more earthquake and tsunami research. In addition to the United States Geological Survey, there is a California Geological Survey, Mississippi Geological Survey, etc. The states already do virtually everything the federal government does to some degree. Even the interstate highways are handled by the individual states' Department of Transportations, albeit with money and quality standards issued by the US Department of Transportation.

      Ron Paul's idea would be a dramatic change in recent US history, one of reducing centralized power and putting the power back into the individual states. It would not be the end of the world, it would be a return to bygone eras. Most of these departments are relatively recent in US history, and some have been good, and some have not produced the results we hoped. There are certainly areas where states do better than the feds (and vice versa) and we could live without the redundancy of some of them (drug laws, anyone?).

      It might a stretch for you puny brained Ron Paul supporters to understand, but maybe States and Fed Government should have their own departments? California Geological Survey serves the State of California by serving its specific needs. Needs that do nothing for Arizona or Nevada. The Fed Geological Survy does the whole country, looking out for the interests of all of the United States Geological Surveying needs by crossing state lines, helping the states, and giving the Federal Government insight to Geological Survey issues across the whole country.

      --
      Linux O Muerte!
    3. Re:NO MORE FED != NO MORE SERVICE by Shotgun · · Score: 1

      Yes. We've had mega corporations since the East India Company. Obviously the Dept. of Ed. hasn't done much for education.

      --
      Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
      Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
    4. Re:NO MORE FED != NO MORE SERVICE by frank_adrian314159 · · Score: 1

      In addition to the United States Geological Survey, there is a California Geological Survey, Mississippi Geological Survey, etc.

      And, if you had worked at one of those places (like I did for a few years, for the Illinois State GS), you'd know that a quite a bit (actually, the majority) of their funding comes via contracts from the USGS. And, if you think the situation has gotten less like that in the twenty-five years since I was there, think again. With the amount of funding states are able fund dropping, those federal contracts are what are keeping these places going. No USGS, no contracts, no state geological surveys.

      --
      That is all.
  138. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Phrogman · · Score: 0

    Because in the US, the politician that sounds like they have strong ideas - no matter how brain shatteringly stupid they may be - is the one that the sheep will elect. Plus he sounds very right wing to me, and the US as a whole is *extremely* right wing (so much so that most of you don't seem to see it). RP obviously believes that Big Business will solve all problems - even the ones that actually cost money without providing some means of making profit - and that government serves no purpose whatsoever.

    If a politician pushes ideas that will help big business screw more money out of the common people, then they get the backing of business interests. Remember, the 1% not only control 95% of the money, they also control 95% of the politicians.

    --
    "The first time I got drunk, I got married. The second time I bought a chimpanzee, after that I stayed sober" Arian Seid
  139. South America too.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  140. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Hotweed+Music · · Score: 0

    http://mises.org/

    He doesn't believe in magic economies, he believes in sustainable ones.
    But I'm sure you're more knowledgeable than anyone else on the matter.

  141. Remove tax deductions for churches and charity by G3ckoG33k · · Score: 1

    Remove tax deductions for churches and charity. Why should churches be exempt when other companies aren't? Apple, just to name one, has more loyal followers than most registered churches. The money stream from "charity" to the needing is spurious and motivated by _any_ whim. Ron Paul needs to shave somewhere else, http://www.ronpaulsalon.com/.

    1. Re:Remove tax deductions for churches and charity by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      The idea is to remove the need for taxes, not expand the tax base. No one is arguing Apple Kool-Aid drinkers aren't religious zealots.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  142. Re:Dept of Edu by pecosdave · · Score: 1

    As someone with a light does of the spectrum myself I went to public school from the early 80's to 1996 with absolutely no appropriate education for my learning differences. The department of education was founded well before I was born. I don't see where removing the federal aspect would do any more to hurt.

    --
    The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  143. Please stop posting this type of commentary by labradore · · Score: 1

    My initial reaction was to categorize your remark as meaningless noise due to the following scoring:
    -1 Tone: Shouting, Belligerent, Rude
    -1 Name Calling
    -1 Making up a "fact"

    However, I realized that this is about on par with the general level of "political" discourse in the U.S. So your post is now useful insofar as it is an example of how not to discuss an issue. Finally, I should note that there are no points given for minor creativity with phraseology such as "head-crushingly stupid". That stuff has no value when you're honestly trying to communicate to solve a problem or understand an issue. It only gets the attention of those who have no real interest in a legitimate discussion.

    Please consider this before you make your next contribution to the topic. Otherwise, shut up. We can easily find meaningless, know-nothing shouting and banter on any of the scores of TV and news networks offered up by the mass media. The rest of us here would like to have an adult discussion.

  144. Cabinet level Departments by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    The Cabinet level Departments are: State, Treasury, Defense, Justice, Interior, Agriculture, Commerce, Labor, Health & Human Services, Housing & Urban Development, Transportation, Energy, Education, Veterans Affairs and Homeland Security.
    I may be wrong, but I think that most people would agree that the first four (State, Treasury, Defense, Justice) are essential functions of the Federal Government (perhaps oversized, but in some form a necessary part of the federal government).
    Then we get into one's that there can be some debate about. I think that both Interior and Agriculture are outsized, but serve a useful function at the federal level (although if you disagree, I would not argue with you very much).
    Commerce and Labor should be one department since from the perspective of the Federal government, labor is just a subcategory of commerce (in any way that it is not, the federal government doesn't really have authority anyway).
    Health & Human Services and Housing & Urban Development, in my opinion, do not really belong. Each of them have areas where the federal government may have a constitutional role. Those areas could be moved into either Interior or Commerce & Labor.
    Transportation and Energy should have their functions moved back into the Department of the Interior (after the stuff it has picked up that shouldn't be there is eliminated). Some aspects of the Department of Energy should go back into the Defense Department (which I would change the name of back to the Department of War).
    Education, the Federal government should only have marginal involvement in education, most education issues are better handled at the state or local level. Whatever functions in the Department of Education that are legitimate for the Federal government can be handled by one of the above departments.
    Veterans Affairs are definitely a Federal government issue, but I am not sure why that is a cabinet level department. I would put it in the Department of War with its head answering to the Secretary at the same level as the Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff.
    Finally, Homeland Security, most of its functions should be put back in the Department of Justice with a few going into the Department of War.
    Additionally, in a lot of these there should be major downsizing.

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  145. Re:Dept of Edu by Mike · · Score: 0

    Why should "society" pay for your children's education?

    By what moral right can one demand that others give up some of the fruit of their labor for the benefit of your children?

  146. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    More than anyone other plan. Actually other candidates don't have plans.

  147. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    There is no practical acknowledgement of the role of government in his world-view. He's one of those fucking crazy idiots who thinks that economies magically regulate themselves. We've got 30 years of history demonstrating that he and all libertarian fetishists are DEAD WRONG regarding that subject.

    That's ok, we've got 80 years of history to indicate that big government makes the problem worse than simplistic libertarianism.

    I don't necessarily agree with Ron Paul, but thinking that the size of the current federal government is acceptable is equally ridiculous.

  148. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by ScentCone · · Score: 1

    There is no mandate. There is the power, as needed, to do so. Of couse, you know that, and you're just trolling for the fun of it.

    --
    Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
  149. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah the closer we approach it the worse things get. That means it MUST be the answer.

    Oh yeah. There's always an exception that's the reason deregulating lowering taxes, and leaving public health safety to the guiding invisible hand leaves things in crummy shape. The exception that forces the market to adjust not through a magic invisible hand, but through regulation put in place by elected government and their appointees.

    Libertarianism: The "No True Scotsman" of economic theory...

    You ain't smoking crack you are dropping acid.

  150. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nice well thought out answer there...

    * Any important parts of the closing departments would be rolled into other departments.
    * While you are correct that the federal government does regulate interstate commerce, why do you think there is a need for the department of commerce to be as large as it is? Many of those responsibilities are to be put on the legislative branch, why is a cabinet level department /that large/ needed?
    * Have you actually read/researched what the department of commerce does? There is a lot of 'fat' so to speak -many of the responsibilities can be (and currently are) handled by the state level (or via private organizations) in a much more useful way. With that said, certain departments within the department of commerce are required (census, etc) and would be rolled into another department.

  151. Of all the nations to serve as an example by Sentrion · · Score: 1

    why do the tea partiers insist that Somalia is the best example of the type of government the US should emulate? I would have thought Japan, Germany, or maybe even China might have been a better choice to model from.

    1. Re:Of all the nations to serve as an example by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Oh, I don't know... why do you insist that Nazi Germany is the best example of the type of government the US should emulate?

    2. Re:Of all the nations to serve as an example by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      Dude - wake up and read your history. WWII ended more than 60 years ago. I've been to Germany several times and I've never meet a single Nazi. If I want to meet a Nazi I have to fly back to America and attend a white supremacist rally.

      It's funny that Japan and Germany were both rebuilt by America and the Allies under the Marshall Plan. Too bad these guys weren't let lose onto the US system when they came back. We're still stuck with English units of measurement while the rest of the world is on metric.

    3. Re:Of all the nations to serve as an example by Quila · · Score: 1

      How many Muslim tea partiers are there? Somalia is run under Sharia law with a strong current of feudalism. I haven't seen any tea partiers supporting that as an example.

  152. Im afraid it is too late. by SuperCharlie · · Score: 1

    When the first thought is that if the federal govt doesnt do "X" it will not get done, when the initial reaction is that the govt's main function is to coddle and bubble wrap us from every possible evil and ill, then the mass media and the global powers have finished their plan.. you are nothing more than a slave whimpering at the doorstep of your masters.

  153. Criminy! by zieroh · · Score: 1

    Criminy, there's a whole lot of stupid in this thread. Smart people playing dumb to make a stupid and controversial point is just pointless.

    --
    People who say "sheeple" have about as much sophistication as an AOL user, and in fact are probably actually AOL users.
  154. Is Ron Paul Really "Serious" Or Just "Passionate"? by EXTomar · · Score: 1

    I believe Ron Paul is earnest and really believes what he espouses really will work but that doesn't mean anyone should believe it is practical let alone try to implement what he suggests. Just listening to his talks about how he thinks money works should give you enough indication of the impossibility of what he talks about.

    People keep mistaking "passion" and "determination" for "throughly thought out planning" which as many even in this have pointed out is completely bonkers. Ron Paul is passionate but often what he says has not been thought out. For instance the side effects of dismantling the Department of Energy has far reaching effects where Paul just hand waves and says "Look at the savings" which doesn't answer "Who is going to be responsible to handling/licensing/processing X?"

  155. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because he's been damn consistent for 30 years in everything he says and does. For once I'd like to try a politician that doesn't go around telling us about all the change he'll bring, then not do a damned thing different than any other congresscritter. Paul has got some seriously bad ideas, but at least I know what he'd be working towards. I've still got enough trust left in the system that the congress wouldn't let him do anything too stupid.

  156. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Funny how you say that but don't even mention the elephant in the room - Obama's economic policies of digging our debt hole much deeper are an even bigger disaster.

  157. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Keep reading, you'll come to a dozen or so statements that begin "No State shall.."

    You don't get to cherry-pick Constitutional passages, especially if you're claiming to be an "originalist."

  158. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by royallthefourth · · Score: 1

    He's one of those fucking crazy idiots who thinks that economies magically regulate themselves.

    This is why we need the gold standard to provide crucial stabilization and prevent inflation.

    *turns away from computer*
    *goes back to eating feces*

  159. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by TonyXL · · Score: 1

    They don't need a $10B bureaucracy to do it.

  160. What's wrong with slashdot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would expect /. to be more supportive. These are ideas to decentralize and bring power over these decision back to our state and local governments where they belong.
    Our government has never been truly successful at anything. Their crowning achievement will be destroying the greatest nation on Earth.

  161. So Piracy For All? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Dept. of Commerce is in charge of the Patent and Trademark Office. So if DOC is gone, then no patents (or trademarks)... hey that would definitely help US become a worldwide tech haven and probably wouldn't destroy any World Trade Agreements.

  162. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Bardwick · · Score: 1

    Cause we're broke and no one else has come up with a plan? We're damn close to running out of other peoples money. Who's plan is better?

  163. There are other differences by unassimilatible · · Score: 1

    Private schools don't teach the PC nonsense of public schools, like CA's recent gay and transgender silliness. The three "R's," Readin', 'ritin', 'ritmatic, beat your but with a hickory stick. There is discipline and respect for teachers in the classroom. In public schools, you have to murder a teacher to get kicked out. They don't put up with that crap in private schools. The worst thing to happen to education in the US was making it a "right" instead of a privilege.

    And BTW, the lower quintiles should be learning a trade in woodshop or metal fabrication, instead of dragging the good students down with the Marxist eqality-of-outcome thinking of the liberal teachers' unions.

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:There are other differences by SkimTony · · Score: 1

      The worst thing to happen to education in the US was making it a "right" instead of a privilege.

      And BTW, the lower quintiles should be learning a trade in woodshop or metal fabrication,

      I will tentatively agree with you on the former point (it's definitely bad, but I don't know that it's necessarily the worst thing). I definitely agree with you on the latter point. Trade and vocational schools are sorely under-valued in this country, and it's not really woodshop or metal-working these days (those jobs barely exist in the US anymore). You could easily teach elementary programming, sales, IT, plumbing, electrical, HVAC, etc. as two-year trade programs and eliminate the glut of college "educated" people who can't find work because no one told them that college was about learning to think, not learning to do.

      As a side benefit, it would reduce the demand side of the college equation, theoretically making college and university tracks cheaper for those who want to pursue real research. (Yes, I realize the idea of the price of tuition ever actually decreasing is laughable, but the real price of education could go down as the dollar continues to depreciate).

    2. Re:There are other differences by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

      I will agree with you that California is a failed state. We need stronger federal regulation of schools!

  164. Other things Slashdotters would agree with by AceJohnny · · Score: 1

    "Cuts of this scale will also be accomplished by a Paul Presidency abolishing the Transportation Security Administration and returning responsibility for security to private property owners, abolishing corporate subsidies, stopping foreign aid, ending foreign wars, and returning most other spending to 2006 levels."
    Source, his campaign website

    I'll scream bloody murder for abolishing the Dept of Education and Energy, but I can see where Ron Paul-supporters are coming from.

    --
    Misleading titles? Inflammatory blurbs? Keep in mind that Slashdot is a tabloid.
    1. Re:Other things Slashdotters would agree with by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is what I wish more people would see. There is a lot to argue about, but some of the things Paul wants are those things, like ending the wars, ending corporatism, and getting rid of the TSA and other creepy big-brother stuff. Restoring personal liberties is the main thrust of his campaign and I haven't heard anything about restoring personal liberties from any other candidate. Hell, Romney wants to increase(!) defense spending.

  165. Ron Paul asked for government energy loan subsidy by mspohr · · Score: 2
    Front page of today's Washington Post points out and inconvenient fact that three years ago both Ron Paul and Rick Perry pressured the Energy Secretary to grant a federal loan subsidy to a Texas based nuclear energy company...

    These political scumbags are all hypocrites.

    --
    I don't read your sig. Why are you reading mine?
  166. Department of Science -- why not? by concealment · · Score: 2

    These programs are filed under the wrong parts of government. We need a department of science to aggressively advance all scientific discovery, not just those convenient for politicians.

  167. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because listening to Obama got us ass raped.

  168. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by TonyXL · · Score: 1

    The last 30 years have seen the biggest increase in regulation. Look at the size of the federal register.

  169. Get the overview from his website by trevelyon · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.ronpaul2012.com/2011/10/17/ron-paul-announces-ambitious-%E2%80%98plan-to-restore-america%E2%80%99/

    Above is the link to his website directly. Some notable tidbits that the article (along with some slashdot commenters) seemed to miss:

    "Cuts of this scale will also be accomplished by a Paul Presidency abolishing the Transportation Security Administration and returning responsibility for security to private property owners, abolishing corporate subsidies, stopping foreign aid, ending foreign wars, and returning most other spending to 2006 levels."

    Full plan is here: http://ronpaul2012.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5fe6ba5e2c7e9376850ed45ac&id=bfc0992023&e=8c0ac983f9

    So as part of this plan he will get rid of:
    -Entire TSA
    -Corporate (including Oil) subsidies
    -End the wars (likely the largest single current expenditure/drain on the economy)
    -End foreign aid (which I suspect will keep the U.S. out of more wars and significantly reduce the terror threat to the U.S.)
    -15% of military spending (on top of complete ending of war spending)
    -Keeps Social Security and Veteran care in place but allows young people to opt out of social security (basically, ending the Ponzi scheme and recognising the debt owed from it).

    I will agree that some things he wishes to cut are not things I would choose to get rid of BUT can anyone point out a single other candidate that has a plan in plain, simple terms like his to actually do something? I sure haven't seen anything like this from other candidates. Then again I feel they are all talk. Real problem solvers would have at least a moderately detailed plan up on their website with rough numbers on how to accomplish things. If anyone finds such from other candidates please post in reply. I'd be very interested in seeing other plans even at as high level as this one is.

    The plan is extreme but note that even with everything he is removing and reducing it only ends the DEFICIT (i.e. we stop borrowing more) by year three. Most people seem to not realise or accept how much pain the U.S. will have to endure to climb out from the mountain of debt without defaulting. Much like those that make $40,000 and have $40,000 in credit card debt it's a long suffering process. Much more borrowing at the current rate and defaulting on debt is almost an assured result (hence the lowering of the U.S. credit rating). I should point out European nations, most local governments, etc are all in the same situation. Borrowing to get luxuries you can't afford is endemic in the western mentality currently.

    I suspect this will also reduce the corruption considerably since there will be many fewer lucrative grants to bribe senators and congressmen to get. That is, if it passes at all. You'll likely need to toss the bulk of republicans AND democrats out to get anything like this through since it will dismantle many of the incentives for funnelling money to them.

    1. Re:Get the overview from his website by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will agree that some things he wishes to cut are not things I would choose to get rid of BUT can anyone point out a single other candidate that has a plan in plain, simple terms like his to actually do something?

      Maybe because the solution IS NOT plain and simple?

    2. Re:Get the overview from his website by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is all shit. 12 years ago there was a budget surplus and a booming economy, it can happen again. There's no need for destroying the Federal government in favor of more local government. It will simply lead to a race-to-the-bottom on who can spend the least on education, social programs, infrastructure, research, etc. It would be pure economic cannibalism with no future for the country as a whole in a world that is filled with other large centralized players ready to eat our lunch. Go jerk off on your libertarian nightmare and stay out of public discourse. To survive as a world player with a high standard of living the US needs to maintain a strong Federal government. Put simply: the idea sucks in any practical measure.

    3. Re:Get the overview from his website by randyleepublic · · Score: 1

      Boy, you hit the nail on the head! Ron Paul's ideas are often wrong, (the worst is his advocacy of the gold standard), but at least he has some. And at least he actually would attempt to do what he pledges to do. Comparing him to the other candidates is like looking at a feather from an angel's wing sitting on a pile of shit.

      How any of you could possibly consider voting for anyone but Ron Paul boggles the mind - are you all really that blind?!

      --
      Social Credit would solve everything...
    4. Re:Get the overview from his website by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Cuts of this scale will also be accomplished by a Paul Presidency abolishing the Transportation Security Administration and returning responsibility for security to private property owners

      Ha ha ha ha ha...oh wait, he's serious.

      This results in one of two things: 1) private security armies when those can increase profits (look up the fun things that were done with those in the US in the 1800s, kids! - the Google phrases that pay are "railroad bull" or "company store" or "strikebreaking") or 2) absolutely no useful security at all when that will increase profits (Sony, I'm looking RIGHT at you).

      We're computer professionals. We KNOW that corporations won't spend money on security! That's the world we all freakin' work in every day.

      Jesus. How can people on /. fall for this when their personal career experiences say it's utter BS?

    5. Re:Get the overview from his website by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      returning most other spending to 2006 levels

      2006? Really? Why not 2000 when we still had a balanced budget?

    6. Re:Get the overview from his website by Tancred · · Score: 1

      Oh, everyone would attempt to do something, just not so radical as Ron. Lucky for us, not everyone is so fringe, so his ideas wouldn't pass Congress.

      For all the libertarians out there, if you want to try something like Ron Paul's grand libertarian experiment, you're going to need to point to some evidence that it'll work. So pick some things you want (e.g.: no public education, no income tax, abortion illegal, etc) and then check around the world and see where countries match up to your ideal policy. When I do that with the Paul policies, the closer the match, the worse the result. I would not want to live anywhere that implements his policies as a whole. I do give him credit for being against the Bush invasions though, and living in a country that didn't kill foreigners so much would be nice.

  170. It has started already by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    In my state at least, the USGS water monitoring stations have dropped measuring precipitation. Their suggestion was to use the storm / hourly totals provided by NOAA radar stations; hardly point-source accurate.

  171. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by darjen · · Score: 1

    deregulation... no true scotsman... lol, you really have no idea what the fuck you are talking about. I stand by what I said.

  172. Re:Dept of Edu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They are a pain to deal with sometime, but what else will society afford ?

    You must be autistic yourself to believe that by having multiple children with a severe condition you have the right to demand proper care for them. Here is someone that did the right thing, you should follow her example:

    Margaret Jensvold, Maryland Mom Who Killed Son Ben Barnhard, Agonized Over School Costs

  173. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    actually his plan cuts $1trillion dollars in the first year. so given a $14trillion deficit that's a 7% cut in the first year.

  174. Re:Dept of Edu by LehiNephi · · Score: 1

    As a parent of a high-functioning autistic kid, I also enjoy the extra services which are required by federal law. However, I don't agree with the idea that such services are required on a national level. Let the school districts and states compete for the students and their tax dollars. If those services were to go away in my area, I would then need to choose whether to spend the extra time/money/effort to procure those services on my own, or go somewhere else. Why should I feel entitled to it?

    --
    Help find a cure for cancer. Join the [H]orde
  175. Don't accept premise by Bardwick · · Score: 1

    There is no math you can come up with where the government can create a job. It is not mathmatically possible. They have to take money from the individual to hire a government employee. Companies pay zero taxes. Not one penny, never have, never will. It all comes from profits of the individual. Hiring a government worker does not cost the government ANYTHING. However, your personal pay does go down (assuming you pay taxes). There is only ONE way that the government affects job creation and that is regulation.

    1. Re:Don't accept premise by Sir+Realist · · Score: 1

      And yet, if you close down those 5 departments, a quarter of a million people who currently have jobs - and pay for other peoples jobs by buying groceries, gas, etc. with their paychecks - will be out of work.

      Again, I'm not claiming that its a good way to make jobs in the first place necessarily, but I don't see how anyone can claim that closing those 5 departments of the government will not cause at least a quarter of a million people to go from employed to unemployed. So maybe the job was never "created by the government" in the first place by your definition - fine. They're still jobless if you kick em out; I'm thinking the fine distinctions of terminology won't matter much to them or their families.

  176. Do we REALLY need to slash our deficit right now? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Take a look at UK. They have implemented kind of budget cuts that will make mr. Paul drool. They kept they AAA+ rating. AND they find themselves in far worth shape then US. There is no economy growth. There is no employment growth. The only thing which does grow is inflation.

  177. Re:Dept of Edu by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

    Why should "society" pay for your defense?

    By what moral right can one demand that others give up some of the fruit of their labor for the benefit of your safety?

  178. Does not he? by PaulBu · · Score: 4, Informative

    15% slash (right there, top line on the second page here: http://ronpaul2012.us2.list-manage.com/track/click?u=5fe6ba5e2c7e9376850ed45ac&id=bfc0992023&e=8c0ac983f9) AND defunding all (undeclared) wars, resulting in immediate pull-out from all, what is it now, 5,6,7 places?

    And, since most libertarians agree that national defence is legitimate function of Federal government, and knowing weather and coast around your country has obvious military uses, I would see nothing wrong with NOAA and USGS being funded from DOD budget.

    "Fix weights and measures" is explicitly constitutional, so, I'd guess, NIST would be also safe under Dr. Paul's watch.

    Paul B.

    1. Re:Does not he? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      so he is proposing increasing the DOD budget to take on weather forecasting or does that magically become free now?

    2. Re:Does not he? by PaulBu · · Score: 1

      I have to qualify my statement -- it was just my opinion, obviously, NOAA is not explicitly mentioned in Dr. Paul's proposal, though he said elsewhere something along the lines of "small but useful units will be transferred to other Departments".

      He is *decreasing* DOD budget, by 15%. I would propose funding NOAA and USGS from *that* decreased budget, since they do have obvious military uses (but then, I suspect, military collects all that data anyway, but with alternative, and much better, "birds" ;) ).

      Paul B.

    3. Re:Does not he? by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Well, he wants to cut those departments, so obviously he wants absolutely nothing in them done anywhere else, Federally or not.

      Or maybe that's just the fear-mongering that is the product of any proposed change. If you're throwing out the bathwater, you must be planning to throw the baby out as well. I mean, you didn't explicitly state you wouldn't be throwing the baby out, so it should immediately be assumed you're evil and are planning exactly that.

      So it goes with partisan US politics.

    4. Re:Does not he? by steppedleader · · Score: 1

      Here and on other forums, I keep seeing people making the claim that Paul doesn't actually intend to cut things like NOAA. Well, NOAA takes up about 50% of the DOC's budget in non-census years. If he is just planning to shuffle NOAA around then the claim that he would eliminate the DOC is just a lie. If that is the case he may as well just change the department's name and say that means he eliminated it. As crazy as I think this budget plan is (crazy enough that I can no longer even consider supporting him), Paul is actually the one current notable politician that I trust not to do something so misleading.

      Also, for anyone who thinks he just intends to shuffle the duties of things like NOAA, USGS, and NIST to other departments, they would do well to read Paul's interview with Wolf Blitzer from a few days ago: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2011/10/17/interview_with_presidential_candidate_ron_paul_111725.html

      In the interview Blitzer mentions how many jobs would be eliminated in each of the departments he intends to cut, and Paul's response is simply "yes, but [those jobs] are nonproductive". There seems to be zero room in a blanket statement like that for him to take a more nuanced position where things like NOAA are worth saving.

    5. Re:Does not he? by PaulBu · · Score: 1

      And?

      Still, why those jobs can not be performed by the military personnel, if they are crucial for the survival of this country? As I said, under Ron Paul's budget, DOD still has 500B out of 700B currently, while soldiers and officers are safely home. Total of NOAA, USGS and NIST (latter, admitted, is constitutional, in my view, but not explicitly military-related) is less than 1% of the old budget, and a bit more than 1% of the proposed one.

      IMHO, Ron Paul was surprisingly non-radical in his proposal (as in, I would advocate cutting more, not less!), he morally knows that the promises made to individual people need to be kept despite the country being broke (SS/VA/Medicare/Medicade).

      I am sorry you can not longer consider supporting him (whom would you support instead, then, if I may ask), but I definitely will!

      Paul B.

    6. Re:Does not he? by dargaud · · Score: 1

      And, since most libertarians agree that national defence is legitimate function of Federal government, and knowing weather and coast around your country has obvious military uses, I would see nothing wrong with NOAA and USGS being funded from DOD budget.

      That's the case in Italy: weather forecast depends on the Aeronotica Militare. Unintended consequences: the guy who does the forecast on TV does so in full military dress, and archives of weather data are classified and difficult to get access to !

      --
      Non-Linux Penguins ?
    7. Re:Does not he? by steppedleader · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying that the jobs couldn't be moved to a different department, just that I've seen no evidence of that being a part of Dr. Paul's plan. Since he himself said he thinks the jobs are nonproductive, I don't see why he would want to keep them around. Also, the country itself could probably survive just fine without NOAA -- after all, it survived before 1870 when the weather bureau was established. The problem is that a lot more of the country's citizens wouldn't survive without the work NOAA does. I don't see how Paul can claim the jobs are nonproductive after the amount of severe weather that occurred last spring. The death tolls in those events would have been much, much higher if NOAA didn't exist.

      As for who I would support instead of Paul, well, that is a good question. I'm a civil libertarian and I agree with him on foreign policy issues, but I'm a centrist on economic issues, so that has always been a bit of a hangup in my ability to really get behind him. I don't know of any notable politician that I agree with on all 3 of civil liberties, economics, and foreign policy, though. Paul has 2 out of 3, but if he comes with proposals like this, 2 out of 3 ain't good enough.

    8. Re:Does not he? by PaulBu · · Score: 1

      I really liked how Fjandr replied to my initial comment, here: http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=2486114&cid=37782706

      Paul B.

    9. Re:Does not he? by steppedleader · · Score: 1

      So I should vote for him simply on the hope that he doesn't actually mean what he said? No thanks. And having the states take over NOAA's operations is a bad idea for technical reasons. If one state decides to cut funding for an observation system, it will degrade forecast quality in the surrounding states. Also, if the states take over, which one pays for satellites? Or do all 50 of them launch their own satellites when a single satellite could cover the entire country? A similar problem would exist with weather models. Some things just work better (and cheaper) when the federal government does them, no matter what ideologues say.

    10. Re:Does not he? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually we're in over 500 places... 7 is shooting a bit low.

  179. How about this: by geekoid · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul is god dammed retard! QED

    --
    The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  180. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We've got 30 years of history demonstrating that he and all libertarian fetishists are DEAD WRONG regarding that subject.

    Which 30 years of history without government regulation are you talking about?

    Just curious.

  181. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As Justice Scolia mentioned in the most recent Senate Judiciary Hearings, congress can empower (through law) an executive (designee under the President, in the executive branch) to have rule-making powers (generally on the order of regulations, rather than statutes); what it cannot do, is empower private entities to have rule-making powers.

  182. What he's actually saying by TechGooRu · · Score: 1

    No more federally funded energy research, no more federally funded parks, no more federally funded public education, no more federally funded low income housing, no more federally funded roads & bridges.

    Individual states are more than capable of managing public education, parks, low income housing, roads, bridges, hurricane warning systems, etc. themselves. The idea that these things won't exist if the federal government doesn't give each state handouts for it is ludicrous.

    State and local government is more efficient at managing the true needs of its residents than the federal government.

    When the federal government funds these programs, there are strings attached. One glaring example of this is no child left behind. Ask the teachers and school administrators if they think no child left behind is good policy and they'll overwhelmingly agree it detracts from student education, yet it's national policy.

    Another example: medical marijuana. The residents of many states have voted to legalize its use for specific purposes, yet the federal government refuses to listen to the voice of the people in these states and continues its crusade against it with force.

    When you only listen to half of the man's message and act like you're an expert you're doing yourself and everyone else a disservice.

    The simple truth is that D.C is as far out of touch with the rest of the people of this country as the British government was with the colonies. The idea that D.C. knows what we need better than our state and local government doesn't hold water.

    He's simply advocating state government over federal government, and I for one agree with it.

    1. Re:What he's actually saying by Miamicanes · · Score: 1

      > The idea that these things won't exist if the federal government doesn't give each state handouts for it is ludicrous.

      OK, I'll bite. Compare the cost of building Interstate 80 through northern Nevada to its current standards to its actual importance as a road to the actual taxpayers of Nevada. I-80 through northern Nevada is very important to the economies of California and states further east, because it provides a direct route between them. I-80 does almost nothing useful for taxpaying citizens of Nevada, the overwhelming majority of whom live in Las Vegas and could easily go their entire lives without ever setting foot in the northern 2/3 of that state.

      Much of I-80's value comes from the fact that it's a single, high-quality road that runs from literally the Atlantic to the Pacific (or close enough to matter) without interruption, as a high-quality freeway every inch of the way. If I-80 were a patchwork of freeway segments here and there, with miles of lower-quality roads in between, it would be substantially less useful to everyone along the way. The same can be said for some of the most expensive rural bridges in America along the same interstate highways. In most cases, the people who actually live in their immediate vicinity don't benefit from them nearly as much as people and businesses hundreds of miles away.

      Before anyone brings up tolls as an alternative, keep in mind that the very fact that most interstate highways have always been free to use was itself a major factor driving explosive economic growth across much of the US during the 70s and 80s. Most toll roads worldwide that get built with 100% private funds end up being INCREDIBLY expensive to use, especially in the years immediately following their completion. Why? Because that's the point when they have the highest debt load and the lowest number of users. The ability of a government to just swallow a huge chunk of that initial debt and go from "doesn't exist" to "exists, kicks ass, and it's free to use" induces nearly immediate use and demand that would have otherwise taken years or decades to develop -- if it ever developed at all.

  183. Good luck with that extremist crap. by Beelzebud · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul lays bare for all to see, exactly why he'll never hold higher office. As much as I agree with him on a few issues, his problem is that he keeps talking.

    Most people don't literally want to be back in the 1800's.

    1. Re:Good luck with that extremist crap. by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Most people don't understand the effect the small government of the late 1800's had on the economic and industrial progress of the same era.

      If they did, they would all be screaming for those policies to be reinstituted. Sadly, most people just don't get it, and probably never will. This is why the US is likely doomed to decline and dissolution.

  184. IRS does what Congress tells them by peter303 · · Score: 1

    Congress could pass the 9-9-9 plan tomorrow and shrink the IRS 90%. But it wont.

    1. Re:IRS does what Congress tells them by mbkennel · · Score: 1

      "Congress could pass the 9-9-9 plan tomorrow and shrink the IRS 90%. But it wont."

      How would it possibly shrink the IRS?

      All the complexity of the tax code is in defining what exactly is and is not income---the rates are a trivial lookup-table. Ever get a K1 form from a partnership? Some of the complexity can be lowered, of course, but much of it is actually there to prevent fraud----translating by trickery what should be income into non-taxable anything. That's what drives the complexity of the code and IRS.

      Now, add in a national sales tax---the federal government now has to define and enforce exactly what are sales. It will need auditors and IT systems for an entirely new kind of tax which it has never collected in its history. The IRS is going to shrink too?

    2. Re:IRS does what Congress tells them by jonwil · · Score: 1

      If you get rid of all the loopholes and deductions and funky stuff, figuring out what is "income" becomes easier.

      For example, eliminating capital gains tax and taxing capital gains as income means you no longer need complex mechanisms and laws to figure out whether something is a "capital gain" or whether its income.

      Eliminating all the deductions makes the system simpler too since all you need to do is to list all your income for the year and which category it falls under (e.g. "wages", "gambling winnings", "dividends", "

      Another idea would be to eliminate the complexity surrounding contest winnings/giveaways/gifts and to say that those no longer count as winnings. Like that guy who won a once-in-a-lifetime trip to space but couldn't take it because they couldn't afford the huge tax bill it would have left them with. Or those people who get given cars on Oprah and then have to declare them as income.

      Keep the tax on gambling winnings and require the casinos/betting shops/lotteries agents to remit the 9% income tax to the government directly before you get your winnings.

      Corporate tax would be simple too, it would just be a flat 9% on whatever number is listed in the "profit" column after whatever gets classed as "income" gets taken out (so money paid to owners of the company and taxed at the 9% income rate doesn't get taxed at the 9% corporate rate)

      Figuring out what constitutes a "sale" is easy too, you just tax everything people buy. Buy a couch? 9% tax. Buy a car? 9% tax. Buy a house? 9% tax. Buy a candy bar? 9% tax. Buy a beer? 9% tax. Buy a haircut? 9% tax. Buy a restaurant meal? 9% tax. Buy services from a plumber? 9% tax. Buy internet service? 9% tax. Buy a stay in a hotel room? 9% tax. Buy a hotel? 9% tax. Simple as that.

      Require the 9% tax to be calculated and collected at the time of purchase and listed on invoices, receipts etc and then remitted to the government by the seller.

      Because its a flat 9% on everything, its simple for any business/entity to work out how much tax they need to give the government, whether they are a part-time eBay seller or a multinational corporation.

    3. Re:IRS does what Congress tells them by Eunuchswear · · Score: 1

      Corporate tax would be simple too, it would just be a flat 9% on whatever number is listed in the "profit" column after whatever gets classed as "income" gets taken out (so money paid to owners of the company and taxed at the 9% income rate doesn't get taxed at the 9% corporate rate)

      So profits would always be zero. Very clever.

      --
      Watch this Heartland Institute video
  185. Jesus rode a donkey by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And you are being an Ass!

  186. The high-bar income of home schooling by ThatsNotPudding · · Score: 1

    For all practical purposes, one if not both of the parental units has to be home enough to at least meet state-required minimum teaching hours. This means single-parent households and paycheck to paycheck two income households (the vast US majority) can literally not afford this luxury. So home schoolers fall into one of two categories: religious psychopaths, or members of the Upper-Upper Middle Class. Both are enclaves and neither really help sustain a free, rational, multi-cultural society.

  187. MOD Parent -9999999999, Inconvenient Facts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    N/T, which means no text. I have to put crap like this in because of the aptly named "lameness filter"

  188. Re:Dept of Edu by squizzar · · Score: 2

    You are arguing that we shouldn't have society? What is best for society and best for an individual are not always the same thing. It may be best for you not to pay for other people's education - I presume you paid for yours? - but it is better for society for people to be educated.

    In the case of people with difficulties the moral argument is that we can afford, as a society, to help those who are less fortunate. Tell me: if you ever lose your job will you and your family starve to death on principle, because you can't morally justify accepting support that society may give you?

  189. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Percent invective: 100
    Percent rational discourse: 0
    Percent evidence: 0

    I didn't know I'd directed my browser to Foxnews.com ...

  190. Cut out mercenaries and the private intel comps. by plopez · · Score: 1

    First off mercenaries (the more politically correct term being "Security Contractors") are more expensive than real soldiers. And he doesn't address the Military Intelligence Complex, even scarier than then Military Industrial Complex since their budget are a "black box", another word for "black hole". See "Frontline" and NPR for an analysis.
    Some references:
    http://thecaucus.blogs.nytimes.com/2011/10/17/paul-plan-would-eliminate-cabinet-departments-to-cut-1-trillion/
    http://www.npr.org/2011/09/06/140056904/the-top-secret-america-created-after-9-11
    http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/shows/warriors/view/

    --
    putting the 'B' in LGBTQ+
  191. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Mike · · Score: 1

    Apparently you're of the mindset that throwing around a bunch of pejoratives somehow lends credence to the myths you propagate.

    We've had nothing but government meddling and fascism for the past 30 years. We've had corporatism, not capitalism.

    And yet people like you clearly get this mixed up, and blame the free market and capitalism for today's problems, when we've had none of either.

    And this "doddering old fool" and his [Austrian] school of economics have accurately predicted the booms and busts we've been dealing with. People like him and Peter Schiff went on CNBC in 2004 and went up against all the talking heads who said the economy was fine and the housing market was in a permanent uptrend, and laughed in Paul's and Schiff's faces when they said it was all going to crash. Economists like Mises and Rothbard have plenty of writings that explain clearly why we're in the mess we're in, and if you didn't know better, you'd think they were clairvoyant. But it's simply that the Austrian school of economics understand reality, unlike today's Keynesians.

  192. you guys don't get freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't think a private company could foracast hurricanes and weather at a fraction of the cost? Ron Paul is the only candidate serious about balancing the budget. Yea, it's going to be painful for some, but a fraction of the pain we all feel several years down the road when the dollar collapses and your paycheck no longer buys your groceries. Someone needs to make some tough decisions. It's sad that in America we no longer understand freedom and liberty, and the one candidate who truly understands liberty is labeled a kook.

    1. Re:you guys don't get freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > You don't think a private company could foracast hurricanes and weather at a fraction of the cost?

      Factoring in the cost of launching, operating, and replacing a constellation of weather satellites, on top of the cost of flying recon missions to survey the hurricane's current state when it's over open water?

      No. Fucking. Way. In. HELL.

      A company like AccuWeather could barely afford to pay for the ongoing ground support costs of NOAA's satellite constellation, let alone afford to replace and upgrade them on a regular basis, and keep enough spares safely tucked in parking orbits on the other side of the earth to guarantee that a bad solar storm wouldn't leave us with crippled orbital surveillance capabilities for literally *years*. Yes, I said "Years". You don't just go to Amazon.com and order a new, ready-to-run satellite. Even if you have the satellites built and sitting in safe storage, it takes *months* under the best case imaginable to get them into a useful orbit.

      Take a peek at NOAA's line-item budget sometime, and try not to gasp too hard when you see how much of it is satellite-related. Satellites are "astronomically" expensive to build, launch, and maintain. To describe it as a natural economy of scale would be an understatement.

  193. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by alphatel · · Score: 1

    But my friend told me I am the other 99% !

    --
    When the foot seeks the place of the head, the line is crossed. Know your place. Keep your place. Be a shoe.
  194. Re:Dept of Edu by Mike · · Score: 1

    Personally, I don't think they should.

    Apparently you've made an assumption about my beliefs that isn't true in the least.

  195. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For the same reason they are listening to Gingrich, Santorum and Bachman. They haven't run out of money yet. Just give it a primary or two.

  196. You don't pay much attention, do you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Paul is actually against foreign wars, foreign involvement in other countries, and pretty much an isolationist. He (rightly) calls for a standing military for national defense, but would not approve of that military being used outside our borders for any reason. Given those views, I think you can safely say that he would cut defense spending precipitously.

    If you don't believe, take his own words for it:
    Press conference

  197. Re:Dept of Edu by count_zero451 · · Score: 1

    Because "society" is going to pay for it one way or the other. Would you rather have "high-functioning" children on the autistic spectrum that grow to become productive members of society, or for these same children to flounder without society meeting their needs early in life. It has been shown that early intervention can have a huge impact upon the final outcome of these kids. (IAAP - I am a pediatrician, and I know first hand) So yes, you will pay for it. Would you rather pay a little up front, or pay a lot later on caring for autistic adults that cannot take care of themselves? Or would you like to ignore them, and increase the number of homeless with mental health issues because they cannot fit into society? Your choice.

  198. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by mfwitten · · Score: 1

    Actually, we have 30 years of history demonstrating that centrally-managed economies and monetary policy produce horrendous boom/bust business cycles; the system is entirely too complex for humans (at their present stage) to attempt to turn their forcasts into policy (it's as if the weatherman gets to pick your clothes for you everyday, and the weatherman has a corrupt relationship with various clothing companies).

    Ron Paul's view of government is extremely practical in that it makes government well-defined: The government should be as local to communities as possible and enforce property rights and the contracts to which parties agree.

    On a similar note, much of a government's power derives from the government's supply of money. This is why the U.S. Constitution specifically mandates that state and federal GOVERNMENTS (to say nothing of citizens) use only gold and silver as legal tender; the government runs unchecked if it is able to print money whenever it likes, and that is exactly what we've seen happen to the U.S. over the last HUNDRED years (since the introduction of the Federal Reserve banking system).

  199. not all programs would be eliminated by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're making assumptions. He explicitly said that some programs would be transferred to other departments. Don't criticize a change that the candidate didn't actually propose. I don't know if there are details available on what programs would be spared when their departments go away.

  200. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yes, because the heavily regulated industries (medicine and air transportation, for example) has been doing such a tremendous job of cutting costs and increasing services right? It's stunning that people can look at that and say "Oh, no problem here", or look at extreme levels of government bureaucracy and regulation and not even recognize it.

  201. Re:Dept of Edu by Taevin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Is this a joke? Education correlates positively with productive value for society and negatively with burden on society. Put simply, without society paying for childhood education we'll be left with a bunch of drooling half-wits that cost us way more to support than it would to simply give them a K-12 education. If you must see it that way, it's very much self-serving to educate children. In all likelihood, I will never have children of my own so I'm not even talking about it from that angle. Someday when I'm old the current batch of students will be running things and personally, I'd like it if they were at least semi-functional insofar as the average human can be.

    There, no moral discussion needed (a blessing since any that puts "moral right" and "fruit of someone else's labor" in the same sentence will always devolved into some mind-bending justification for how it is noble to exploit human beings).

  202. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can you please elaborate on your criticism of him and stop with the ad hominem's. You make it sound like his libertarian views are not excepted by fiscal conservatives, independents, democrats, and republicans alike, when it fact they do. What kind of government would you like? You seem to think that because these departments are being abolished that it's the end of the world, which is not true. What do you think the role of the states are? The economy should be regulated by the businesses selling a product so that the consumer can have options depending on the prices. If one company sells a product at a certain price a competitor can set a price at a more affordable price now we have competition. The company selling at a high price will have to cover its loss and if they can't they go bankrupt. When the Federal Reserve is able to price fix, it is not doing it in the best interest of the free markets but for the special interests. That's what we have been witnessing with what is going on in this country recently. He is fighting for sound money, not money that is inflated because of printed money that is not backed up with anything with value. He wants competitive currency which is why he endorses the gold standard. Competitive currency, do you know what that means. It means giving the people the option to choice. Freedom!

  203. One more suggestion by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    get rid of the IRS

  204. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 1

    Imagine, if we had 500 hundred departments we could strip from the Federal Government. Too bad that so many cutable agencies were consolidated under the Homeland Security Department.

  205. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So, more bureaucracies and more government spending? Is that what we need right now?

    Ron Paul may be an idealist but he's not a moron. He'a not going to advocate instituting the law of the jungle and holding no-one accountable. The fact is we have way too much government spending, too much government overreach, and centralized planning where we would be much better suited with stronger local and state governments.

    The Dept of Education is a deterrence on public education, not a benefit. Many other departments just serve to dole out over-priced contract work to government cronies. We would benefit greatly from de-centralizing a lot of these things.

  206. He did. And does. All the time. by jmactacular · · Score: 1

    I like your standardized units. Just to add, he talks about slashing military spending more seriously than any other candidate. In every debate, he is a strong proponent of closing bases and bring troops home from around the world, ending wars, etc...

  207. I guess that explains.. by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    The economic powerhouse that is Somalia. Let's face it son, you are noting more than a spoiled brat that doesn't want to pay to live in a civilized society, or have the grownups stop you from screwing everyone else over for your own self-serving ends.

  208. Don't touch my NOAA. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As a kayaker, I trust them with life-or-death decisions. Their service is worth what they cost. Divide their cost by 300M americans, and what you pay is just a few bucks a year.

  209. Just what we need by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    is some ignorant bible banging southern white trash determining what gets taught to their kids. McDonalds couldn't build enough stores to hire all of the morons this would produce.

    1. Re:Just what we need by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      bible banging southern white trash

      What makes you think it's all whites? Blacks are even more socially conservative than whites in the South (and generally nationwide, from what I understand).

      More to the point, you seem to think that it matters. You know, On the Origin of Species was published in 1859 - something like 500 years after the Renaissance hit full swing. Britain had had nearly 100 years of the Industrial Revolution up to that point. Belief in creationism even a large portion of society, silly though it is, isn't really that big of a deal.

  210. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by gumbi+west · · Score: 1

    I think you might want to retake Econ 101.

  211. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yep, these last 30 years of the libertarian reign of terror have got to come to an end!

  212. That's right by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    Only parasites like you don't feel like paying for it and want to sponge off of the rest of us.

    1. Re:That's right by vvaduva · · Score: 1

      The P word....you must be a Rush Limbaugh dittohead.

  213. Any other candidate with a balanced budget plan? by aarongadberry · · Score: 1

    Telling people they can't afford something is never popular.

    But guess what.

    We can't afford it.

  214. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by DeathPenguin · · Score: 1

    Actually Ron Paul outlined a very detailed plan on slashing $1T in his first year, balance the budget, and make significant inroads toward paying the nearly $15T debt: http://www.ronpaul2012.com/the-issues/ron-paul-plan-to-restore-america/

  215. They pay by publiclurker · · Score: 3, Insightful

    because the rest of us pay for their tornado monitoring. Just because you can only think of yourself does not mean that the civilized members of society know how to do whats best for the entire group. Hopefully you'll realize this when you grow up.

  216. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  217. that's going a little too far by publiclurker · · Score: 1

    I'm sure he doesn't consider himself to be expendable. I'm not too sure about is immediate family, however.

  218. Ron Paul's budget ax is excellent! by Independent_forever · · Score: 1

    It's about time someone gets back to the Constitution that our country was founded on. For those of you who think we need government intruding into our lives...go pick another country to live in if you love socialism and communism so much. For that matter, many in this country need to go back and read the Declaration of Independence and Constitution. In case you forgot, America was found because of the British tyranny over the colonists. All these Statists (i.e. govt is everything) need to be squashed once and for all and put back in their place. They are ruining this country now and for generations to come and we can thank good old Roosevelt for his shady govt programs and deceit of the citizens at that time...he took advantage of people when they were most desperate and pushed many government entitlement programs and set them up so people would become addicted to entitlements. it was brilliant in an of itself but now look at us...half the country truly believes the government has their best interest at heart...what planet do you live on? I bet you think the government actually has a Social security trust fund too...wake up people!! You may not agree with Ron Paul or even like the guy but his solutions make sense for this country--LESS GOVT, LESS TAXES, LESS REGULATION!! That is the ONLY way this country moves forward...not going to happen with this administration.

    1. Re:Ron Paul's budget ax is excellent! by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      And while we're going back to 1776, repealing taxes and regulation as we go, let's also reinstate the tragedy of the commons http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tragedy_of_the_commons, such as the overgrazing of the open range that lead to the starvation of entire herds of cattle and bankruptcy for many large cattle operations, or the hunting of American bison to near extinction, or the pollution of municipal water supplies from untreated sewer water. If you expect the states to pick up the slack then you are just shifting costs and taxes. You'll have more state government, more state taxes, and more state regulation. And then we will have 50 states agencies for every possible concern and each system may be completely incompatible with the others. If you're "taxed enough already", just wait til the party gets started.

      I'm getting a little tired of hearing about the glory days of the Constitution before all those "darn amendments". Sorry, but slavery, the unprovoked invasion of Native American nations, cholera from polluted water, and debtors prisons are not my idea of progress.

  219. Who will keep our nuclear materials safe? by gotfork · · Score: 1

    Maintaining and caring for old nuclear weapons and facilities is almost half of the DOE's budget. It's not like we can just lock the doors to all the facilities and abandon them....

    1. Re:Who will keep our nuclear materials safe? by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      We can privatize the nuclear weapons and facilities. The corporations can sell them to the highest bidder. There are no problems that free enterprise can't solve. The market demand for nuclear weapons in the Persian Gulf and the Korean Peninsula is higher than ever, and such an economic stimulus would create more jobs at home as people scramble to hire contractors to build fallout shelters and stock up on provisions.

  220. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You call the past 30 years a free market? Are you of the same ilk of people who endlessly cry about bail outs and subsidies? So, which is it? A free market or a market pushed and pulled with tax payer funding?

  221. Re:Dept of Edu by Mike · · Score: 1

    "Society" simply means people living together as a community. It doesn't depend on a governmental body that strong-arms its will on its citizens.

    What's best for an individual (longer term) always benefits society as a whole.

    The argument you make regarding "people with difficulties" is that only government can help them, by stealing from the fruits of my labor to give to them. Of course that's preposterous, since the U.S. is the most generous nation on earth in terms of charitable donations. Just think how much more people would be willing to give up if ~50% of their earnings wasn't given back to the government already.

    But regardless, nobody, regardless of circumstance has a "right" to education. You want want the right, but it doesn't make it so.

    If it's illegal for me to steal $10 out of my neighbor's pocket when I'm hungry, it should be illegal for the government to steal $10 out of my neighbor's pocket to give it to me.

  222. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Can you please elaborate on your criticism of him and stop with the ad hominem's. You make it sound like his libertarian views are not accepted by fiscal conservatives, independents, democrats, and republicans alike, when it fact they do. What kind of government would you like? You seem to think that because these departments are being abolished that it's the end of the world, which is not true. What do you think the role of the states are? The economy should be regulated by the businesses selling a product so that the consumer can have options depending on the prices. If one company sells a product at a certain price a competitor can set a price at a more affordable price. Now we have competition. The company selling at a high price will have to cover its loss and if they can't they go bankrupt. When the Federal Reserve is able to price fix, it is not doing it in the best interest of the free markets but for the special interests. That's what we have been witnessing with what is going on in this country recently. He is fighting for sound money, not money that is inflated because of printed money that is not backed up with anything with value. He wants competitive currency which is why he endorses the gold standard. Competitive currency, do you know what that means. It means giving the people the option to choose. Freedom!

  223. What happened to Federalism by scamper_22 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    At least two of these should definitely be cut.
    Education
    Housing and Urban Development.

    I never understood the purpose of the federal department of education. I'm Canadian and education is provided at the provincial level (states). It lets provinces do their own thing. What does the federal dept of education do what individual states cannot? If there is anything that is local, it is education.

    Again Housing and Urban development at the federal level? This is such a local matter which should primarily concern cities themselves... and at most states.

    Some of the other things make more sense at the federal level. Not that I agree with all of them, but they at least have a plausible rational. Especially things like standards and global issues (Atmosphere and ocean)...

    1. Re:What happened to Federalism by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      Today, the Dept of Education exists to provide financial pressure for states to do what the federal government says. For example: The federal government has no power to demand that public libraries install filtering software, or that colleges limit on campus drinking, or ban books. But they *do* have the power to say "if you do not do these things, your schools will not receive federal funding." The states could end this game by all agreeing to give up the funding, and the Dept of education would cease to have any power any longer. But there are poorer states and they really want that money so that won't happen.

    2. Re:What happened to Federalism by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      I never understood the purpose of the federal department of education.

      Probably because you're being willfully obtuse. We have a Federal DoE to....promote education across the country. Leaving it up to the states is, as usual, a joke as some states wouldn't give a shit. Education for those who can afford it, not a basic foundation of society.

    3. Re:What happened to Federalism by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      Canada and the US really aren't that different despite the rhetoric. You say some states wouldn't give a shit... but where it your evidence that the FDoE has improved it? People who don't give a shit... generally keep not giving a shit no matter how high you go in the bureaucratic chain.

      It only began in the 1980s. Aside from the discrimination against blacks, education in the US was pretty decent.

      Most of the issues around education were resolved in other areas (anti-discrimination laws, mandating access to elementary education...).

      The only thing the FDoE gets you is the federal government being able to enact such ridiculous legislation as no child left behind.

      Better a federal system where at most the federal government just writes a cheque with as few stings attached as possible. And you don't need a big department to do that.

    4. Re:What happened to Federalism by TxRv · · Score: 1

      You're missing the point. Paul's plan isn't to "let the states handle it". He wants to privatise. Those agencies are there to protect people. They don't always work perfectly, but they're better than letting corporations take over.

    5. Re:What happened to Federalism by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      This thread is from yesterday, so you likely won't read this...but...

      I've always thought that having a D. of Edu. makes sense because it sets a national standard. It helps prevent 'crazier' states from teaching non-factual things. I'm not sure what types of radical groups exist in Canada, but in the US the far religious right is pushing very hard to change education and it is a constant battle keeping their ideas out of the classroom. Attempts to change text books, banning certain books, banning sex education, pushing creationism, etc.. they are a small, but very vocal and very politically active group.

      At first glance you'd assume that the majority would eventually wise up and stop listening to them, but they don't for several reasons. For one, our primary election system, for historical reasons, takes place in some of those 'crazier' states. Ohio for instance. You can very obviously see all the Republican candidates taking extremely socially conservative views while campaigning in the primaries. That gives the religious right national credibility when most of the candidates are spouting far right talking points.

      And because the far religious right is so embedded in the Republican party now, it attracts big money. And that money, in the form of ads, tv time, etc.. gives a much greater voice to the far right than it naturally would have if the public was only evaluating their message based on merit.

      I'd be more comfortable with removing the department of education if, for at least a generation, we had in place meaningful campaign finance reform to help remove 'big money' influence in elections and a restructuring of the primary system to favor more populated (and of more median ideology) states.

    6. Re:What happened to Federalism by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately, that rarely has the intended result. Hence why federalism is a very practical political process as opposed to the idealized centralized administration.

      In as much as you can 'hope' the federal government can 'control' the crazies... you run an equal risk of the 'crazies' controlling the federal government.

      Look at history or the current situation. It is just very difficult for a central authority to change the local crazies. I'm sure the Russians would love to change the Chechans. But they can't... even with the force they use. I'm sure the Turks would love to change the Kurds... but they can't. I've sure Canada would love to the change the Native Indians... but they can't. I'm sure you would love to change the 'religious right'... but you can't. It's why most sane countries abandon centralization. You can't change people like that in a centralized manner... and if you try... you'll probably run into violence. Social change happens slowly over time.

      With federalism, this does not occur. If some 'crazies' want to do their own thing, they will. But the system as a whole as stronger as the 'sane' states are allowed to pursue their own policies.

      When you centralize things, you invite the crazies to the table and end up compromising the whole system.

      You see the problem. You note they are doing things like attempting to change text books, ban books, ban sex ed, pushing creationism... Right now, that mainly occurs at the state level even in the US. Now imagine a national curriculum and these 'crazies' being at the federal table creating a national curriculum.

      And you cannot exclude them from the table, they will be there. They are people and vote.

      It is very intellectually appealing to imagine a central authority fixing 'crazy' groups. In reality, it just doesn't happen all that often. I for one have come to see the wisdom of letting the crazies be crazy in their own little areas. The more local the crazies can be, the better it is for society.

      I'll just toss this out there. Surely you don't think all the 'crazy' states are filled with 'crazy' people.

      So originally education was mainly local.
      Then surely people said... but what if Shelbyville is filled with crazies... we need to have a statewide education system and a state curriculum.
      Then in time, people saw that didn't solve the problem. The crazies didn't go away. They got a hold of the state education system.
      Then people said... but what if state XYZ is filled with crazies, we need federal oversight...

      If state wide centralization couldn't solve the 'crazy' problem, what makes you think national centralization is going to solve the 'crazy' problem?

      Most liberals will end up regretting their centralization of power in all these fields. Centralization will not only be used by 'your side'. You bring a gun to a fight... eventually the other side will learn to bring a gun too. And in the US, the 'crazies' have learned that they too can use the political system.

    7. Re:What happened to Federalism by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      Thanks for the response. I hadn't quite thought of it that way before, and I think you may have just changed my mind.

      I'll have to think about this some more, but it does make sense that if things stay local, there is no way for extremely vocal radical groups to have national influence.

    8. Re:What happened to Federalism by scamper_22 · · Score: 1

      you're welcome.

      Hey, I used to be a socialist. Everyone changes their mind :)

    9. Re:What happened to Federalism by jwhitener · · Score: 1

      This doesn't seem to be a socialism vs not socialism issue though.

      Some things, like the EPA, still make sense as a national organization to me. We can't have State A pumping pollution into a river that runs into State B. That isn't something I can imagine being solved by pollution only being controlled at a state or local level.

    10. Re:What happened to Federalism by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Canada and the US really aren't that different despite the rhetoric.

      Eh? Canada wasn't affected by the worldwide fiscal crisis that struck the U.S. and Europe. Because they regulate their banks. And Canada passed universal health care decades ago, province by province. Whereas in the United States there's a proposed law in California, and a public option in Vermont that may someday become single payer.

      Aside from the discrimination against blacks, education in the US was pretty decent.

      Education was a fraction of a percentage of the cost it is now. Boomers could attend first rate universities for a few hundred bucks a year. Current fiscal reality is somewhat different for today's students.

      We need a federal government if for no other reason that it provides basic services when many states would not. Without federal spending, plenty of red states would be third world countries right now.

  224. Kerosene prices by Quila · · Score: 1

    No mention of the vast efficiencies introduced by Standard Oil. They used gasoline to run generators when it was a waste product to others, they even sold the gunk that accumulated on the drills as a salve (a.k.a. Vaseline). They also shut down inefficient units when acquiring competition, and got a much lower shipping rate from the railroads. This was all well before the oil boom hit.

    Had Standard Oil never come about, prices probably would have remained about the same under the old, inefficient oil industry.

  225. Fundamental Research by Roger+W+Moore · · Score: 1

    There was no semiconductor market until Intel invented the semiconductor.

    There were no semi-conductors until we understood Quantum Mechanics. How many private companies would be far sighted enough to invest in fundamental research given that the pay-off is 50-100 years away and there is no legal means (thank goodness!) to patent/copyright the fundamental science to ensure a pay out even then?

    1. Re:Fundamental Research by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And absolutely no research is conducted in Universities, it's all in government funded labs in your world, eh?

    2. Re:Fundamental Research by pixelpusher220 · · Score: 1

      it's all in government funded labs in your world, eh?

      Dunno, is it all for profit, private universities in yours?

      --
      People in cars cause accidents....accidents in cars cause people :-D
    3. Re:Fundamental Research by Anguirel · · Score: 1

      You mean the universities using Government grants to fund their research?

      --
      ~Anguirel (lit. Living Star-Iron)
      QA: The art of telling someone that their baby is ugly without getting punched.
    4. Re:Fundamental Research by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And absolutely no research is conducted in Universities, it's all in government funded labs in your world, eh?

      University Research is funded from government grants. Maybe if you attended school instead of having sex with you farm animals you would be smart enough to understand that.

  226. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  227. At least he's got... by some1001 · · Score: 1

    Spunk.

    While I don't agree with much of what he wants to do, guess what? He needs Congressional approval on many of these issues! And you know what's great about him? He is something genuinely different than the SSDD we have had in office for years.

    Bush set in policies that were and are terrible precedents. Obama = change? Ha! Wasn't he supposed to close down Guantanamo? What about the wars? These presidents are just speakers for the people who get them elected; Paul, while a bit crazy, would shake up the pathetic state of government we find ourselves with.

  228. Cost shifting by SgtChaireBourne · · Score: 1

    That's not getting rid of it. That's just cost shifting. It should be gone, period.

    --
    Beta is broken and the link to classic doesn't work. Stop wasting our time or there won't be anybody left here.
  229. Plan cuts spending - not an attack on science by Mardak · · Score: 2

    The overall goal of the plan is to cut spending, and the majority of that is through ending wars ($800 billion over a term). The plan also cuts these departments that happen to provide some science funding, but the goal is *not* targeting science; otherwise, he would have cut NSF and NASA. Ron Paul knows that when the federal government stops doing something, e.g., science funding, the private sector (businesses and non-profits) will fill in -- most likely doing a better job than going through federal bureaucracy. The plan also includes over $500 billion of tax cuts in addition to the $1 trillion cut from spending. These tax cuts will fund the science research without penalizing good companies that get taxed to pay for bad companies that happened to hire the right lobbyists.

    1. Re:Plan cuts spending - not an attack on science by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      But that's like arguing that current budget cuts wont affect Medicare patients, only Medicare providers: disingenuous, because it means the same thing in the end.

    2. Re:Plan cuts spending - not an attack on science by Mardak · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying science funding would be unaffected with the cuts to the department. I pointed out in addition to the listed ~$12 billion cuts to research funding, there's more than $500 billion of tax cuts going to all sorts of companies already providing their own research funding to universities. While I was in graduate school, I saw plenty of research/papers backed by Intel, AMD, Nvidia, Microsoft, etc., and with Ron Paul's plan, those companies would have more money to do research. This also avoids the situation of tax money collected from one company, say Apple, being given to its competitor, say Microsoft, to do research that benefits the competitor.

  230. the plan is lunacy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And at the same time you did nothing to refute the fact that the plan is lunacy!

  231. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Rakishi · · Score: 1

    Actually, we have 30 years of history demonstrating that centrally-managed economies and monetary policy produce horrendous boom/bust business cycles;

    And we've had all of the 1800s to show us that lack of government interventions leads to even more frequent cycles. Except back the things were decentralized enough that such a cycle couldn't take out the whole economy. Now they can.

    Remove the government and the next depressions will have your head on a pike as some charismatic communist leader takes over by killing everyone else. Or some corporation would upgrade itself into a government and you'd get corporate feudalism. Even the Romans understood that bread and circuses are needed to keep a concentrated society stable.

  232. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ron paul's economic ideas are head-crushingly, fucking stupid.

    There is no practical acknowledgement of the role of government in his world-view. He's one of those fucking crazy idiots who thinks that economies magically regulate themselves. We've got 30 years of history demonstrating that he and all libertarian fetishists are DEAD WRONG regarding that subject.

    Why the fuck is anyone listening to this doddering old fool?

    Wait, What?

    There has been 30 years of markets being AFFECTED by legislation and regime changes. Where the fuck have YOU been?

  233. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, the 1% controls 90% of the money. Or have you not been following the news.

  234. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why is it that the political Left loves name calling and personal attacks? When I talk to my friends on the Right, it is very rare for anyone to engage in personal attacks though quite frequent for them to disagree on policy or to believe that someone is corrupt for this or that reason. I have never heard anyone at any political event I have ever attended attack President Obama for his race though the Left loves to say that the Tea Party and all Republicans for that matter are racist. Sean Penn even recently described the Tea Party as the "Get the N... out of the Presidency Party". Weird, I've never heard Republican use the N word in relation to President Obama. I have heard some describe him as a Socialist and despite the fact that he launched his political career in William Aire's house, I'm not sure if that is accurate. (Perhaps close but not accurate as he is more than willing to hand enormous amounts of tax payer dollars to large corporations such as GE and Solyndra who supported his candidacy while penalizing small business.)

    Regarding your DEAD WRONG comment, remember the melt down fundamentally came from bad housing loans. The bad housing loans were caused by regulations passed (and pushed) by Chris Dodd and Bill Clinton that forced the banks to extend housing loans to people who couldn't ordinarily afford a house and could all of a sudden buy a house "no money down" instead of the 10-20% that was required before. Of course, the banks were going to package these loans up and try to pass them on to someone else -- what did you think was going to happen? If the Government had stayed out of the housing market, at least this recent melt down might likely have not happened.

    In the future, you may want to consider having a political _discussion_ rather than ad hominem attacks.

  235. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because apparently we understand economics better than you.

  236. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Correction, we've got an entire human history of governemnts facilitating the wealthy/elite to run the economies of poor nations. That is not free market ideals, that is fascism, economic oligarchy. Our government, and the other governments keep their rich people rich by keeping poor nations poor.

    That's a result of Colonialism and now Neo-Liberalism, NOT capitalism.

  237. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "regulate" in the time frame when the Constitution was written meant "to keep regular" as in, to not impede it, to continue to allow it to occur. Name one thing the Dept of Commerce has done to increase commerce rather than put constraints on it.

  238. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have you read Atlas Shrugged? It doesn't belong in the same sentence as heroine needle. Check your premise, the government cannot and will not solve your problems. All of the things he's "wiping out" can be done and funded privately.

  239. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, that 1% really does a whole lot.

    Your comment proves the failure of the Department of Education and illustrates exactly why it must be done away with.

  240. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We've got 30 years of history demonstrating that he and all libertarian fetishists are DEAD WRONG regarding that subject.

    Please provide references so the rest of us know what the fuck you are talking about. The last 30 years have seen MORE regulation and government then ever. That's worked out well...

  241. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    maybe because we have centuries of liberals always trying their failed feel good policies bigger and harder and failing bigger and harder.

    add to that that the Fed gov has out grown itself and our ability to pay for it and now far exceeds its constitutional authority.

    and to top it off we don't want a bunch of bureaucratic nannies telling us how to live our lives and forcing us to do what they say is best for us.

    RP has a lot of out of MSM ideas but all of his ideas seem to return to the central tenet that federal gov is doing stuff its not constitutionally allowed to be doing and it needs to stop.

  242. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by JayWilmont · · Score: 1

    Dude, all federal agencies are run by the President (aka, Executive Branch) as it is that branch's job to execute (carry out) the laws that Congress passes. Federal agencies can make rules only because congress allows them to for the sake of expediency. Congress can always override rules a federal agency comes up with.

  243. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If anything the last 30 years prove that the CONCENTRATION of economic regulations and oversight into an ever more centralized federal system makes it easier for said system to be BOUGHT OFF. We are not even CLOSE to a free market system.

    In addition thanks to corporate personhood (again given power and recognition via government) and the removal of the original state limitations on corporations
    the system has become ever more mercantilist and fascist.

    The original state limitations made you incorporate for one stated purpose only. I.E. you start a company to make buggy whips. You can't start change and start making things like cars, or even BUY a corporation that does.

  244. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve · · Score: 1

    Why the fuck is anyone listening to this doddering old fool?

    I think that's a great question and I'll try to answer it. I've got a few friends who are hardcore libertarian. I've known others who were similarly minded, but I wouldn't call them personal friends although I knew them. It seems to me that theoretically libertarianism should appeal to certain individuals on the left and right but in reality it's become the last place for very hardcore right wingers to go. Some people have shifted so far to the right that they can't turn to fascism (its association with the Nazis has doomed it as a political philosophy) so they turn to libertarianism. Libertarianism basically has this core idea that "If we just destroy the government so that it is small and weak and it can't do anything at all except oversee the military and do a few things with foreign governments, then everything would be so much better if not perfect." I realized some years ago that some libertarian ideas sound great, but the whole system breaks down because it relies on human beings all playing by the rules. All you need is one guy to take advantage of it, just one, and the whole thing collapses. It's little more in my mind than a variation on anarchy. To be blunt, I think that communism, which has been thoroughly discredited, is more rational political philosophy. That's bad.

    A certain percentage of the American right, I'd guess maybe 20% or so, have a hardcore hatred of government and want it destroyed or made incredibly weak if possible. Part of me wishes that they could get their wish because it would be an absolute unmitigated disaster and it would kill libertarianism forever as a political philosophy but I'd have to leave the country because I wouldn't want to be here when everything starts to go to hell. I have only met one person who was libertarian who had a rational explanation for supporting it. He's a smart guy and I bluntly asked him how he could support libertarianism when he had to be smart enough to understand that for it to work it requires everybody to play by the rules and that won't happen. He told me that he certainly understood that could never happen, but he was tired of people ducking responsibility for everything and blaming everyone else for their problems and a libertarian government would force people to become responsible for their own decisions.

  245. Lot of knee-jerk responses by goldspider · · Score: 2

    I wish people would take more than 5 seconds before replying in these threads to stop and consider what precisely the federal government does better than either private industry or state governments.

    Yes, there are plenty of things that require a national scope, and oddly enough, a lot of those federal roles are defined in the Constitution.

    However when it comes to departments that exist on shaky Constitutional grounds and/or duplicate efforts of state departments, you'll find that they provide the least benefit and are the most vigorously defended.

    --
    "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    1. Re:Lot of knee-jerk responses by Nemo137 · · Score: 1

      I wish people would take more than 5 seconds before replying in these threads to stop and consider what precisely the federal government does better than either private industry or state governments.

      Fund basic research?

    2. Re:Lot of knee-jerk responses by goldspider · · Score: 1

      I'm on board if you can show me what part of the Constitution authorizes the federal government to fund scientific research.

      Assuming that role is not an enumerated power, I'd be 100% in support of an Amendment authorizing the federal government to fund and carry out scientific research.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    3. Re:Lot of knee-jerk responses by Nemo137 · · Score: 1

      Except the Amendment process is so sclerotic that you can be 100% in favor of whatever you want, it'll never get done. So that leaves you either working stuff in the gaps, or throwing up your hands and going "well, someone will do it!" This is straying from the topic somewhat, but there are so many veto points in the Constitution-as-written that the only options are things being absolutely sclerotic and unchanging, or having all your federal government functions on shaky or outright extra-constitutional grounds.

    4. Re:Lot of knee-jerk responses by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Most of the people posting knee-jerk responses immediately assume Federal government == all government, and then proceed to spew straw man arguments based on that assumption.

    5. Re:Lot of knee-jerk responses by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      You already know what authorizes such spending - you just ignore it. Even though it's mentioned twice; first in the Preamble, and then in Article I, Section 8.

      Funny how you guys never complain about the "unconstitutionality" of the Air Force/NORAD/CIA, even though the Constitution only "explicitly" authorizes Congress to fund an Army and a Navy......

    6. Re:Lot of knee-jerk responses by Grishnakh · · Score: 1

      Setting national standards, monitoring nationwide weather, looking for earthquakes (which usually affect much more than just one state), etc., are all things the federal government can and does better than private industry or state governments. There's no profit in these things, and they are of national strategic importance. Managing national airspace and setting regulations and standards for aviation is also obviously a national matter warranting a Federal agency. Privatization is stupid, and never works unless you set up a government agency to strictly regulate the private companies. Unlike, say, power companies that build power plants and provide us with power, the FAA doesn't actually make anything useful; it's an administrative agency that regulates, and regulation is absolutely the job of government. You can't outsource regulation to a private company and expect it to be done right.

      Getting rid of HUD I can agree with; that's obviously a state matter. But many of these are things that make our country a first-world country rather than a 3rd-world one.

      There's a lot of places where much more money could be cut, and I didn't see it in Paul's plan:
      1) military. He only cut a paltry amount there. Close the foreign bases, pull out of the wars, and discharge half the troops (might want to do that over a number of years however to ease the shock). We don't need all the expensive weapons systems, A/C for tents in the desert, etc.
      2) DEA and the Drug War.

    7. Re:Lot of knee-jerk responses by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not much, really. Most public goods (maintain orr, infrastructure) are better provided locally. The rest is mostly unnecessary pork.

    8. Re:Lot of knee-jerk responses by goldspider · · Score: 1

      As I'm certain you know, the Preamble doesn't authorize the federal government to do anything. At all. You also conveniently ignore the relevant part of clause 8 in A1S8 "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries". That's specifically referring to patents and copyrights, not direct funding of research.

      --
      "Ask not what your country can do for you." --John F. Kennedy
    9. Re:Lot of knee-jerk responses by Uberbah · · Score: 1

      Reading comprehension?

      Even though it's mentioned twice; first in the Preamble, and then in Article I, Section 8.

      You also skipped right over the fact that the Air Force and much of the military-industrial-spying complex is just as unconstitutional under a strict reading of Article 1, Section 8. Just like every other so-called 'strict constructionist'.

      It's almost as if you're a bunch of hacks making arguments that only apply to spending that you don't like. Huh, interesting.

  246. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "We've got 30 years of history demonstrating that he and all libertarian fetishists are DEAD WRONG regarding that subject."

    I assume you mean the last 30 years, which have been anything but free market. Health insurance is a great example. There was Medicare and Medicaid, then laws preventing insurance companies from competing across state lines, laws that locked the best insurance rates in for employer-provided plans, rather than consumers buying directly, and of course Obamacare written by insurance companies for insurance companies.

    There are several examples of 30 years of free markets, but they all take place in 19th century. That's the time frame that launched the U.S. into the position where it had 5% of the world's population and 50% of its wealth. Since then, we're still about 5% of the world's population, but are wealth is evaporating more and more every day-- nowhere near where it was.

  247. violates the constitution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Commerce Dept runs the census. Paul has no plans to keep individual departments within the eliminated agencies. Under the constitution, the US must perform a census every ten years.

  248. We do have the money; don't be a sucka; fool! by bussdriver · · Score: 1

    Lets just talk budgeting:
    These programs are TINY; NASA costs more. Even NASA is cheap compared to our stupid military spending which is more than the world combined; it was idiotic during the cold war.... the cold war ended and spending still increased. I'm not even talking about the wars.

    I remember when we were talking about removing the base in Greenland-- Why didn't it happen? It helped the local economy! Free USA money to subsidize other economies... Then we have the bases in South Dakota and other states where they are the primary basis for the state's economy!

    I'm just talking about budgeting priories on a TWO topics because frankly, most people here seem to struggle grasping more than the budgeting problems.

    There is a range of other issues like how the government revenue is almost entirely based upon the economy! DUH! how can people be so stupid?? bad economy = bad tax revenue! Fix the economy = restored tax revenue. Remember, since Clinton left it has all been downhill... then we applied Reaganomics and it got worse...again... Now the solution from the GOP is Reaganomics... again... oh! but it'll work this time we just need to do it longer than a decade so it can turn around! morons...

    Any one of the following short list cost MORE money:
    New massive tax loopholes (corp, rich, investments.) Huge shifts in the tax burden. Bad policies (see Bankruptcy, drug war or war on terrzm.) Privatized monetary policy (Ron Paul nails this issue.) Private contractor overhead (even when not defrauding) - especially egregious when monopolies. GIVING AWAY public property free or cheaply or even paying them to take our property! (mineral rights, airwaves) FARM SUBSIDIZES (rural welfare) The conversion of the economy from REAL business to CASINO games which are hardly taxed. (Not only does this wreak the economy but it removes tax revenue. You profit more from investment gambling than providing capital to real businesses; the big justification for the investment market.) National Laboratories -- as in, the long term cost of NOT properly funding them. 1.2 million green jobs (today) which could be boosted much higher resulting in a net gain; instead we've always undermined it to support the 80,000 coal workers...

    Government is not business; its just currently run by business interests. Its also not your household. Anybody claiming it should be run like either lacks fundamental understanding is trying to fool people.

  249. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Attila+Dimedici · · Score: 1

    The poster I replied to appealed to the Constitution as the basis for the existence of the Commerce Department. The Constitution does not mention the Commerce Department (which was my point, I fully understand how the various executive departments derive their authority).

    --
    The truth is that all men having power ought to be mistrusted. James Madison
  250. Holy cow, dude, consider point = missed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Somalia must be a libertarian paradise" is a straw-man invented by liberals, and "you must think the US should emulate Nazi Germany" is a straw-man invented by me to Godwin this entire stupid argument.

    Geez, you weren't even supposed to try to rebut it, you were just supposed to say it's unfathomably stupid. Don't you know how Godwin's law works?

  251. Re:Dept of Edu by chill · · Score: 1

    It is in the Constitution, which is what our government is based on.

    Schooling, however, is in the various State constitutions and not a matter for the Federal government.

    --
    Learning HOW to think is more important than learning WHAT to think.
  252. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The numbers in the article are the budgets for some of the programs in the department, not the budget for the department itself.

    Here are the numbers that Wikipedia gives for the department budgets

    Energy $24.1 billion (2009)
    Commerce US$9.3 billion (est. 2011)
    Education US$71 billion (est. 2011)
    Interior $20 billion (2010)
    Housing and Urban Development $43.7 billion (2010)

  253. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In my college days, I had a professor of economics that was a Libertarian and in the Libertarian party. At the time, after his lectures and coffee table discussions he had with some students usually during lunch, I was also considering becoming a Libertarian. It was interesting to hear from him about how a lot of the problems are caused by government, and corporations usually will correct its problems because it is bad business and consumers would have the leverage over corporations because they could boycott a corporation's products/services.

    While I never joined the Libertarian party, it took me many years, to come to the realization that a lot of what I was led to believe was a bit simplistic and foolhardy. The ideas sound good but just isn't practical unless everyone was altruistic. Corporations may not be evil, and some of them actually care about the legacy they leave, but those are few and rare, the majority don't care other than what they can do to make the money. CEO's don't get paid huge bonuses in caring for the environment or the welfare of its workers, they get paid huge salaries and bonuses because they are able to reap the corporation profits, either from cutting back on salaries for workers by moving those jobs overseas, cutting benefits, not paying for the necessary cleanup or quality controls to prevent environmental damage, or just gouging the consumer as long as the profits are made.

    Libertarians do make some good points but I think they need to be balanced out by others without so extreme viewpoints. Corporations without regulations is what got us into this economic mess we are currently having, the last thing we need is a Libertarian President.

  254. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

    Ahem. "The Congress shall have Power To..." is authority, not a mandate. The Congress can choose not to exercise its power in a given area if it wishes.

    While we are talking semantics, Congress has the authority to do what the people mandate. If the people believe that the government should regulate interstate commerce then the congress has a constitutional obligation to regulate it.

    The idea behind a republic is that the congress should act on the wishes of the people they represent not what their party dictates. It seems the parties have forgotten what a representative government really means. Now a days, the congressmen seem to represent lobbyists who aren't necessarily within the geographical region they are suppose to represent instead of the voters who placed them in office. And while I'm on the subject, the congressman has a moral and legal obligation to represent the views of all voters within his district regardless of their vote casted.

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  255. ...but what happens next? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok, so Ron Paul wants to slash a bunch of Federal agencies. ....So?

    Just because we've done things one way for the past 100 years, doesn't necessary make it correct, right?

    Do you honestly think we wouldn't innovate new ways to provide these same basic services? I mean, after all, the civilized world didn't just spring into being 200 years ago when we founded this country. Many different civilizations have been providing for the basic welfare of their respective people for thousands of years.

    We elected to federalize/centralize these services, and 200 years later, the people are beginning to widely object to the many different kinds of fallout of that decision.

    Services like welfare, low income housing, helping the poor - these are services that churches and other charity groups have been providing for a long, LONG time. By and large, they've even managed to do a damn good job of it.

    Just because Ron Paul wants to make changes that impact "the way it's always been done" doesn't immediately make his ideas wrong. They're just more scary than the other guy's softer, easier to digest ideas. He's not saying people shouldn't, or wouldn't get the help they need, he's just saying it shouldn't be the Federal government doing it. State and local governments? Charitable organizations? Regional service providers? Sure, why not? At least if you don't like the way your area is handling something, you and your local communities have more ability to affect change.

  256. You are in need of better education by jbov · · Score: 1

    WIthout federal backing, state parks will be gone in a decade.

    Says who?

    What about parks the move across several states?

    I was waiting for this one. I don't really know. I'm sure the expenses can be shared.

    When Bush added NCLB, it's budget shot up dramatically. from 14B to what is project to be 71 Billion. Get rid of NCLB. and you will save far more the RP will.

    Agreed. NCGA ( no child gets ahead ) does more harm than good.

    Becasue school expensic go up, but no one wants to pay for them, so they nede other avenue of revenue.

    I think this approach is wrong. I also think going to parent to hepl with class room itrems is wrong.
    IT hides the growing cost until it get to big, then suddenly its a massive problem instead ogf a growing concernt hat culd ahve been planned for.

    Expenses are going up. Yet the average cost per pupil per year for private schooling, is less than the average cost per pupil per year for public schooling. Arguably, the private education is better as well. The government is unable to efficiently run schools, that is the primary reason for the increased expenses.

    "I have no kids in school."

    And you still reap the benefit of an educated society.

    A common argument. Indeed, property values are also higher in areas with better school districts. The point is, the amount you pay towards a school district should be determined by more than your property value. Somehow the number of children you have enrolled should be accounted for.

    If I were to have kids and send them to a private school, I would not get a tax credit.

    Nor should you. Please bear in mind you would have the right to participate in all extracurricular activities.

    That is your only argument? Those are some darn expensive extra-curricular activities. Why not just a participation fee for those?

    Maybe I'm biased because I lived in public housing; which allowed for an education and now I am better off then my mother was. Or I could have lived o the street with no education and still be a drain.

    And contractor are monitored and regulated.

    I didn't say we don't need any public housing, but I argue the need for more of it. I also argue the cost of building it. Have you nothing to say about the $316,000 per apartment fee for renovating an existing structure to provide low income housing? These end up being pork barrel projects for politicians to hand out to their contractor friends. Then, they are monitored and regulated by the same people that hired them. You completely dodged that issue and took my comments personally, throwing in an insult.

  257. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apparently you're new to Libertarianism. It is an extreme form of conservatism which wants to take out all the regulations in the market and tax code by hacking the Government into peaces, while STILL somehow paying for a Large Military.

    His reference to 30 years of history is in regards to Trickle Down Economics which has led to our current situation now, where 5 percent of the country controls 90 percent of the wealth, and has yet to reinvest that money back into American workers.

  258. Oh, gee thanks, now can you look up by unassimilatible · · Score: 1

    "Rhetorical question" on Wikipedia?

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
  259. If only Ron paul was a little more thoughtful by WaffleMonster · · Score: 1

    I somewhat like his liberterian view but all pure forms of government taken to their idelogical conclusion yield total shit.

    He is too ideologically driven... too quick to invoke abstract ideas when the situation calls for more careful consideration of competing interests.

    1. Re:If only Ron paul was a little more thoughtful by tmosley · · Score: 1

      You say that, but the closest implementation of libertarian economic and political philosophy in the history of the planet occurred in the US upon the end of Reconstruction, and lasted until 1913 (at least), definitively ending in 1971. And what happened to the inhabitants of the US during that time period?

      It was the greatest period of economic growth in human history, turning an agrarian backwater into a superpower. Something similar happened earlier with Great Britain, and later in most of the other countries we now consider "Westernized". This is as opposed to every implementation of every other pure type of government, which inevitably lead to mass death and collapse. Turns out people do a pretty good job of ruling themselves, and that people do a really BAD job of ruling others with force.

      Note also that as those great nations abandoned the libertarian principles that made them great, they also lost their greatness. Their empires (admittedly illegitimate) crumbled as their economy could no longer support the expansion. They did well for some time, slowly consuming the capital they had stored away over the decades, but now it is almost all gone, and here we are.

  260. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by mbkennel · · Score: 1

    "The entirety of human history has been dominated by overbearing governments. Libertarianism has never been given a fair chance. "

    You'll always have Somalia.

  261. Uh, no by unassimilatible · · Score: 1

    All the Federal student aid program has done is make tuition rise far past inflation. The taxpayers of my state and city pay my salary. And yes, California gets a lot less back from the feds than it pays out. How can you possibly believe this giant federal bureaucracy doesn't needlessly squander money?

    --
    Slashdot "libertarians": Small government for me, big government for those I disagree with. -1, I disagree with you
    1. Re:Uh, no by nomadic · · Score: 1

      If there was no federal student loan aid you would likely be out of a job, or be making about half what you make now.

      "How can you possibly believe this giant federal bureaucracy doesn't needlessly squander money?"

      Where did I say that?

  262. RP's plan by wilsonjd · · Score: 2

    I RTFA (I know...) The linked article is an editorial. It links to another article summarizing Ron Paul's plan. That article links to the actual proposal: http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf The plan is actually really interesting. It DOES cut DOD by 200B per year. It makes some deep cuts, and balances the budget by 2015. I don't know if he could get it though congress, but at least he is proposing SOMETHING. We can't keep our heads buried in the sand and spend money we don't have. Even with RP's plan, it shows national debt as 92.5% of GDP in 2013! Getting out of the mess we are in is going to require some hard choices, and sacrifice.

  263. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by mbkennel · · Score: 1

    In other nations, less capitalism in medicine results in lower costs.

  264. Disrespectful airlines by DragonHawk · · Score: 1

    The airlines won't treat their customers with malice and disrespect.

    HAH! Have you ever flown before? :)

    The TSA is easily the worst of two evils, but airlines are notorious for their poor customer service. The big difference, of course, being that you can usually choose a different airline.

    --

    dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
    I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
    1. Re:Disrespectful airlines by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Stop bailing them out and giving them subsidies, and that will rapidly revert to the way it was in the golden age of air travel, only now with modern conveniences.

  265. ALL STOP by libertymatters · · Score: 1

    It is long past the time that people stop the stupidity- being against gunverment science does not mean we are against scientific research. being against the EPA does not mean we do not care about the environment. being against the FDA does not mean we want to eat nuclear waste. The gunverment is not your friend. It hates you with passion and prejudice. You must hate it equally so. Work tirelessly to defeat it. It is not "the people" - not for a long, long, long time- that is fiction still taught in gunverment re-education camps and we all know it. Anyone who cares about science can fund projects they find worthy. If they can't do it alone they can work with others- each taking only from their own wallets to pool their money. The gunverment only funds things that serve its interest- you know, like drone killings of brown people in other countries as target practice so they can start rolling drones out over our "unfriendly skies". This is the true price of your precious gunverment research projects and don't you ever ever forget it! How many brown people you never met so far away had to DROP DEAD to fund your precious project? The "science" it facilitates is political. First they say "we want the science to agree with us" then they buy off the scientists who will parrot it. It is not unlike the washington press core- mere stenographers for the state. Want a seat in the press room? "Repeat after me..." Remember Steven Colberts roasting bush and the press? No one is against real, scientific research. If you are interested, you can seek out the private individuals and private companies doing it- and open up your own wallet. If there is enough interest (validating your ideas) then like any business, it might get off the ground. If not, keep plugging away like Edison. When you have your big "A Ha!" the money will come. People like Light, for example. All taxation is theft. "But I really want to help people but no one will help me and I'm smarter than they are, so I need the gunverment to take their money against their will, so I can do this smart thing that only costs Billions of Dollars"... right. some people freely assist private companies in their research- you may have heard of it- its called Open Source and it does not require taxation. Ron Paul 2012 Google "black this out" Stop the wars Bring the troops home Stop the spending Occupy Wall Street End the FED

  266. You need the government to think for you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    no, you idiots. It would be done via the private sector, outside of your teletubby land nanny state.

    The US government is mis-managing these departments by grossly inflating the overhead needed to run them efficiently and they're not even getting the job done with what they have.

    And here's a free clue for you, government legislation and all the social engineering in the world via mind-jello TV sitcoms won't make homosexuality any less immoral.

    1. Re:You need the government to think for you? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      won't make homosexuality any less immoral.

      What makes homosexuality immoral? The bible? What makes you think a book written by men living thousands of years ago in a different culture and time has any relevance on the matter? God? What makes you think God gives a damn what two consenting apes do? Why would you think God cares what a bunch of hairless, up-right walking apes on a small rock in some corner of the universe? How arrogant can one be?

  267. ...So what happens next? by megashub · · Score: 1

    Ok, so Ron Paul wants to slash a bunch of Federal agencies. ....So? Just because we've done things one way for the past 100 years, doesn't necessary make it correct, right? Do you honestly think we wouldn't innovate new ways to provide these same basic services? I mean, after all, the civilized world didn't just spring into being 200 years ago when we founded this country. Many different civilizations have been providing for the basic welfare of their respective people for thousands of years. We elected to federalize/centralize these services, and 200 years later, the people are beginning to widely object to the many different kinds of fallout of that decision. Services like welfare, low income housing, helping the poor - these are services that churches and other charity groups have been providing for a long, LONG time. By and large, they've even managed to do a damn good job of it. Just because Ron Paul wants to make changes that impact "the way it's always been done" doesn't immediately make his ideas wrong. They're just more scary than the other guy's softer, easier to digest ideas. He's not saying people shouldn't, or wouldn't get the help they need, he's just saying it shouldn't be the Federal government doing it. State and local governments? Charitable organizations? Regional service providers? Sure, why not? At least if you don't like the way your area is handling something, you and your local communities have more ability to affect change.

    1. Re:...So what happens next? by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      THANK YOU!

      It is nearly impossible to get people to see the right answer because they've accepted the wrong one for so damned long.

      Our current system was in answer to an old form of corruption. The old form of corruption was if a competitor sprung up the bigger guy would literally set fire to the business of the new guy during the night and would make sure local authorities were paid off to prevent backlash. Old forms of monopolies pretty much grew up and maintained power in this manner.

      Just when this form of corruption was starting to get under control the Great Depression happened and FDR leveraged it to gain power by trying to create an all encompassing government monopoly by implementing the NRA, the National Recovery Act which in a sense socialized every business that was on board and had a habit of leaving businesses owners that weren't on board with broken legs. The NRA itself was busted up and it's mascot, the blue eagle, was retired. However the way to long of a presidency that FDR had caused an entire generation to grow up thinking his socialist policies were the right way to go.

      We need to go back to the old way of doing things, where people completed on an open and free market, only we need to make sure the bribe the local authorities issue is handled and that people/corporations can't just buy their way out of being punished for infringing on the freedom of another.

      Most federal agencies can be done away with.

      I think one of the few places we should be spending our money is military. I'm not talking about keeping a large military to occupy the world with, I'm talking about keeping a technologically advanced military that we could theoretically conquer the world with, but don't. Increase military R&D, make NASA a military branch, and reduce the actual size of the military. Yes, keep a few bases well stocked with F-22's and better with a pilot for each, keep a few carriers along our shores fully staffed, keep subs on our coast and in our lakes, and keep a bunch of weekend warriors at home ready to defend. Keep every one of those soldiers and vehicles at home except for a few diplomatic and friendly exchanges, such as those with the United States Astronaut Corp. We could cut military spending by 90% and still increase our spending in R&D and significantly increase NASA's funding at the same time.

      Legalize drugs, they same way they were legal 100 years ago (not counting prohibition). This will reduce our prison population, drive down the cost of drugs which will reduce the power of the Mexican cartels and severely reduce petty crimes that are committed to finance drug habits. Use our prisoners in chain gangs to build and maintain our infrastructure, only don't treat it like chain gang punishment. Treat them like employed workers (granted, with chains on). Give them an eight hour work day five days a week with their two 15's and a half hour lunch. Teach them advanced skills for the jobs they will be working complete with the annoying safety and health stuff I have to do at my job. Train them on operating and maintaining the construction equipment they use so they will not only be employable when they leave prison they may actually be desirable in a private work force. (radio controlled kill switches on prisoner operated equipment is a must of course) This doesn't have to be limited to construction, but where construction is utilized it has the potential to save tax dollars.

      There's so much that can be done when you just take the blinders of how they are done off.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    2. Re:...So what happens next? by Nemo137 · · Score: 1

      Services like welfare, low income housing, helping the poor - these are services that churches and other charity groups have been providing for a long, LONG time. By and large, they've even managed to do a damn good job of it.

      Which is why the Victorian era was known for it's high social mobility and lack of squalid, grinding poverty.

    3. Re:...So what happens next? by megashub · · Score: 1

      (note: for the record, I am the OP on this thread, I just forgot to login before posting, and noticed it too late.)

      I never said it was perfect, and poverty has existed in every civilization since humans started forming into groups.

      In a way, judging any given time period by its poverty levels isn't going to be especially telling. Sure, if they're especially terrible or amazing then I can see that, but just saying, "X Time Period had poverty." ...doesn't really say much.

      Poverty sucks. Sure. It's an age-old problem that people have been trying to solve for centuries. I just think a reduced central government means a more reduced federal tax requirement. Less taxes means good people retain more of their money, which would translate into higher charitable giving. Granted, some of the recovered federal tax money would undoubtedly shift to state and local taxes instead, but there's a far more localized potential for wasteful governmental spending, and more power given to the local communities to do something about that waste. In that scenario, if providing for the basic living needs of everyone in your community is important enough to the people in your area, what's stopping you from enacting a policy to spend money on it?

      I think it's a widely accepted truth that what's important to the good people of Iowa is not likely the same as what's important to folks in California. And that's not a bad thing! Basic, fundamental differences (such as Geography, regional imports and exports, etc) shape what a people need and want. So why try to force everyone into one big, complicated mold?

      ...isn't that just plain unrealistic? Trim it down, keep the "big-picture" centralized mold for things that impact us all equally - National Defense, etc.

      Let regional needs stay regional. If you don't like some policy in your region, and can't get enough people to agree with you, at least you can possibly find a way to move to a region with policies more in line with your own.

      If you don't like your entire country's policies but still love your country, what choice do you have?

  268. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Ruatxnjr06 · · Score: 1

    Well.. At least it is 1% in the RIGHT direction. Remember the old adage, 'A journey of a thousand miles begins with one step.'

  269. You're broke. Debt hits 100% of GDP end of October by Colin+Smith · · Score: 1

    This is going to be fun.

    The US has been living on tic for 40 years. China has bled you dry, basically your options are:

    1. Ron Paul
    2. Banana Republic.

    I'm betting on 2 BTW.

    --
    Deleted
  270. giving up on science by Khashishi · · Score: 1

    Paul wants to give up on science. Science is too communist. Everyone on the planet benefits from science. As a physicist who is getting funded by the DOE, I don't like this. I suppose us researchers will just have to emigrate. Maybe to China; they are upping their investment in science.

    1. Re:giving up on science by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      Are doctors against science? Seems to me like Doctors think science is a pretty neat idea that helps come up with cures to diseases.

      I'm sure Ron Paul M.D. actually likes science.

      How much money does Glaxo Smith-Kline make? How much money does Johnson & Johnson make? How much money does Pfizer make?
      I'm pretty sure they can fund their own research into drugs and how to keep people dependent on them.

      How much money does Royal Dutch Shell make? How much money does Chevron-Texaco make? How much money does Conoco-Phillips make? How much money does Exxon-Mobile make?
      I'm pretty sure they can fund their own studies of chemicals, polymers, and how to squeeze the most money out of a drop of oil.

      How much money does Intel make? How much money does Apple make? How much money does AMD make? How much money does Texas Instruments make?
      I'm sure they can fund their own research into improving the transistor and even beyond it.

      How much does an Ivy League University charge for tuition? With some of them charging more for a year of college than I earn in a year per student I'm sure they can fund a little research, especially when they're utilizing students who are paying to be there to do at minimum the mundane routine stuff.

      Why do so many Americans and Europeans think the government is the answer all end all to everything? Sure a lot of the above companies make a lot of money off of government contracts, but many of them did well before they had them also.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    2. Re:giving up on science by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      So, what about pure science? Not all science has immediate applications. Companies are only interested in science applications. You can patent a new drug, but you can't exactly patent a new theory of gravity. Also, some potential research applications are too risky and expensive to be invested in by venture capitalists--e.g. fusion power. Corporate interests skew the funding towards applications which are most profitable, which doesn't always align with which applications are most beneficial.

    3. Re:giving up on science by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      That's what the bottom university mention was about. Who have been our biggest most visible scientific minds? Albert Einstein? Worked for a university. Stephen Hawking? Works for a university. So Carl Sagan did a lot of his work for NASA, if I had my way NASA would simply become a military branch, and probably get more funding that way. Even if he worked for a private space agency and still wrote his books he would have made a good living.

      I don't see where your argument has any real foundation.

      Before these modern thinkers who supported the past ones? I know, you don't want me to bring up the fact that churches provided much of the support for Michelangelo and Leonardo Da Vinci.

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    4. Re:giving up on science by Khashishi · · Score: 1

      University researchers apply for federal grants, which brings money into the university. Without that, the university couldn't afford to do research on expensive projects. Who should pay for that? Certainly not students. I'm not sure why using state taxes is better than using federal taxes. Big projects, like particle accelerators and fusion reactors have lots of collaborations between many universities in many states. I'm at University of Texas, but my experiment is at MIT. Academics don't really care about borders and stuff, just open information and collaboration.

      Imagine running research under a free market system... Let's see, my research group would have to rent time from MIT, and lets say we discover something on the project. It's our intellectual property... your MIT group needs to license it from us.

    5. Re:giving up on science by pecosdave · · Score: 1

      Are you telling me universities would stop playing nice with one another without federal grants?

      Hope you don't mind me using that as a mark against universities. Has anyone every given serious thought to attempting to raise funds outside of the tax system?

      Certainly you can find a way to raise some money once our national debt is paid down a bit and government corruption is under control to point money is flowing freely through the economy again.

      Right now I'm not sure how happy I am with the way research is going anyways. My tax dollars pay for your research which goes into very expensive peer reviewed journals, gets locked up in patents and doesn't necessarily give it's results back to the people who funded it. Gene patents anyone?

      --
      The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
    6. Re:giving up on science by tmosley · · Score: 1

      Or you could seek out private investment? My own research company is funded in large part privately. If we lost all of our grants, but the companies we develop technology for got tax cuts, it would be a net gain for us. You would likely find the same is the case for you as well. Perhaps some of the old research giants would stretch their wings again after being so long dormant. Hell, there are plenty of companies just like mine employing all manner of physicists already.

      But then, I get the feeling that you are a very comfortable, tenured professor of some sort who doesn't want to pull his own weight, relying on his grad students to do all the work. Those kinds aren't well received in private industry. They prefer intellectual welfare.

  271. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by tmosley · · Score: 1

    Not really. Most of those guys don't do anything except tell people who already know what they are doing what to do.

  272. The right never suggests eliminating Agriculture by Animats · · Score: 1

    Nobody on the Right ever seems to suggest eliminating the Department of Agriculture, which operates various welfare programs for farmers. 3/4 of farm subsidies go to the top 10% of farms.There are still tobacco subsidies and cotton subsidies, and those aren't even foods.

    Texas, Ron Paul's state, is #1 nationally in farm subsidies.

  273. Re:Cut out mercenaries and the private intel comps by J-1000 · · Score: 1

    He proposes to cut 15% from the DOD, including ending all foreign wars. No mention of mercenaries in his budget proposal, but I'd never expect such specific language there.

  274. FEDERAL government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    he's such an extremist that he just wants to wildly slash everything in government

    FEDERAL government, not state government. Why do people have such a difficult time grasping this? I have a feeling they simply don't want to -- they would rather twist it into something else for their own benefit.

    According to the constitution, the federal government exists to provide for (1) national defense and border control, and (2) mediate disputes between the states. And that's it. Nothing else. Nada. Everything else is provided by the states, and for good reason: to preserve freedom of choice. When power is consolidated into the hands of the few, rather than distributed and decentralized, oppression is the norm rather than the exception.

    What the political class has turned the US federal government into is -- literally -- the largest, most expensive business that has ever existed. How did they do it? By slowly but surely dismantling the framework which explicitly prohibited them from doing so (the constitution and bill of rights). If you don't see this for the blatant scam it really is, then I can't help you.

    1. Re:FEDERAL government by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      According to the constitution, the federal government exists to provide for (1) national defense and border control, and (2) mediate disputes between the states. And that's it. Nothing else. Nada.

      Don't forget:
      3) regulate international and interstate commerce
      4) coin money
      5) take the census
      6) provide for postal service and roads
      7) effect patent protection

  275. confused by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    well what is he gonna axe them?

  276. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by darjen · · Score: 1

    the size of the federal government and the body of regulation has grown every single year over the past 30 years. furthermore, blaming our current situation on "trickle down economics" is absolutely ludicrous. it is government institutions like central banking and the federal reserve that have caused most of our problems.

    you are truly living in fairy land if you think we have anything even remotely close to libertarianism.

  277. We know what private industry would have done by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Informative

    We know what private industry would have done wrt creating the Internet in the absence of the federal government. Because they did create it. Or rather them.

    Compuserve.
    AOL
    MSN
    Prodigy
    and others.

    Each a walled garden, isolated from and incompatible with the others. Each created to require enforce the idea that customers are clients, rather than allowing arbitrary client/server or peer-to-peer relationships (as business has been trying to do with the Internet).

    We already know what business would have created without the Internet. And they sucked in comparison to the real thing. That's why all of these networks began to wane the second the Internet became available to the public. They turned into nothing more than ISPs with portal websites and they only did that because it was that or disappear instantly.

    In 1995 Bill Gates was saying that the Internet was a fad and everyone would return to the safety of MSN real soon now.

    The idea that if the Internet didn't exist that private industry would have created it is simply a-historical.

    --

    The enemies of Democracy are
    1. Re:We know what private industry would have done by Azghoul · · Score: 0

      Sorry, but this is just proof that a (relatively) free market worked. In this particular case, "public money" created the Internet, but it sure as hell wasn't public money that allowed it to beat the others in the *gasp* free market. It was the local net providers, the little ISPs, that provided a better experience.

    2. Re:We know what private industry would have done by Chris+Burke · · Score: 4, Informative

      Sorry, but this is just proof that a (relatively) free market worked. In this particular case, "public money" created the Internet, but it sure as hell wasn't public money that allowed it to beat the others in the *gasp* free market. It was the local net providers, the little ISPs, that provided a better experience.

      I think you're confused. The topic of discussion is whether or not private industry would have created the Internet if the government hadn't created it for them, and the simple fact is that they wouldn't have because they didn't. They created their own networks, but they were nothing like the Internet.

      And the Internet beat these corporate walled-garden networks among the corporation's own customers. AOL retained an enormous number of subscribers and was the nation's largest ISP long after the AOL Network was completely irrelevant.

      Without the Internet, those small ISPs wouldn't have had anything to Provide Service to. Without the small ISPs, the Internet would have still won over the walled garden networks. We know this because it did win over the walled garden networks even among those who didn't change providers.

      The Free Market -- i.e. the Ron Paul Libertarian version where there's no federal government creating the Internet -- was tried, and it fucking failed.

      --

      The enemies of Democracy are
    3. Re:We know what private industry would have done by vajrabum · · Score: 1

      All of these followed the work on packet switched networks funded by ARPA--all of them.

    4. Re:We know what private industry would have done by Count+Fenring · · Score: 1

      This is exactly what I was trying to say. Bravo.

    5. Re:We know what private industry would have done by c6gunner · · Score: 1

      The topic of discussion is whether or not private industry would have created the Internet if the government hadn't created it for them, and the simple fact is that they wouldn't have because they didn't.

      No, sorry, logic doesn't work that way. "X did not occur before Y, therefore X could not occur without Y" is a fallacy.

      Without the Internet, those small ISPs wouldn't have had anything to Provide Service to.

      Well, actually, yet, they would have. Ever hear of FidoNet? Well before the internet became available to the general public, thousands of BBS's - large and small - were cooperating to allow people on different sides of the planet to communicate, share files, and play games with each other.

      The internet surpassed everything else because the infrastructure was funded by the government, and this gave it a massive advantage over other solutions which were (or may have been) developed. However, to claim that, without government involvement, we would never had anything like the net ... that's just ignorant. It's a statement for which you have no serious evidence, and one which is directly contradicted by the available data. As an 11 year old I was already communicating with people all over the world, using BBS's. When the Internet became the next-best-thing, I didn't get what the big deal was - after all, it was just a small improvement on what I'd been doing for years.

  278. Ron Paul cuts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cutting NOAA is insane. They have a strong research arm, the weather service and are trying to increase the accuracy of the longer term forecasts. The DOE is doing important research in long term energy production which we need. The only thing I like about Paul is his take on the Dept of Defense, which is bankrupting our country.

  279. Re:Dept of Edu by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

    The question was one of the moral right of the individual to demand something of society by way of the government, which is completely independent of the legality of a program providing for said demands in a specific country.

  280. Re:Dept of Edu by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

    Well, at least you're consistent, I guess. Good for you on that front.

    Serious question: did you come to this ultra-individualist (I gather you'd accept that description) philosophy of government independently, and if not, what sources influenced your thinking?

  281. Irrelevant by Danathar · · Score: 1

    People are bitching and moaning. Paul is not going to get elected and the government is not going to cut anything of real consequence. The out of kilter financial system will bring things back into equilibrium when the debt and deficit becomes so large (we may already be past the point of no return) that the U.S. has to default on all or part of it's debt.

    Does anybody REALLY think we are going to pay back 15 trillion dollars with increases at over a trillion dollars a year with no end it sight? It's not going to happen, the bond holders either don't realize this yet or think somebody else will get screwed.

    We will all get screwed once the dollar collapses. At this rate it will not be long.

    1. Re:Irrelevant by Sentrion · · Score: 1

      Once the dollar collapses paying off the debt will be much easier.

  282. Typical Liberal Make Shit Up by tmosley · · Score: 1

    Make us up some more lies. These were to easily dispensed with via a simple glance at the actual budget.

    And we need the FCC for what, exactly? To save us from Jackson Family nipples?

  283. Good ideas now, bad implementations next by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashing federal programs / transferring responsibilities down to the 50 states might be a great idea. We clearly can't agree on anything at a Federal level, perhaps many of the states will have a higher degree of homogeneity. There'll still be states like California that will be crippled by divisiveness, but perhaps some states will be able to have broad consensus on many issues, and be able to move forward.

    The problem then becomes duplication and integration. Surely there wont be a patented, proprietary standard in Florida for measuring the path of an oncoming hurricane, right?

  284. Because they perform public services by Quila · · Score: 1

    One of the ideas is that government shouldn't be doing so much because churches, charities and other groups do some jobs very well already. To tax them makes it harder for them to perform those services.

    However, I would support a strong look at profitable churches that are basically hiding behind the tax exemption.

  285. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Pass me a heroine needle and that copy of Atlas Shrugged, it's Ron Paul's world now.

    So in other words, if heroin were legalized, you would start using it? Honestly, that's unequivocally the STUPIDEST reason I've heard for using drugs...

  286. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ahem. "The Congress shall have Power To..." is authority, not a mandate. The Congress can choose not to exercise its power in a given area if it wishes. In fact, in some circumstances, the fact that Congress has chosen not to legislate may itself be considered a form of regulation, and not subject to further regulation by the states.

    That's true. In fact, the founding fathers put a lot of stuff into the Constitution just for shits and giggles. They were all like, "Hey, as long as we have to write this thing out by freehand with a quill, we might as well put a lot of shit in here that's totally optional. Ben Franklin said this had to be 6 pages single-spaced, right? Put something in there about 'promoting the general welfare'. Nobody will take that seriously in 250 years."

  287. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wrong. they still can't regulate things they have no authority to regulate. the people may want to get rid of free speech for example but they would need to pass a new amendment, not just any random act of congress.

  288. Re:Dept of Edu by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

    Wait, let me back up: is it not that your views on the proper role of government differ much from the norm, but rather that you simply believe its legitimacy is based somewhere other than morality, since that was the specific thing under discussion?

  289. Regardless of the government propaganda.. by Paracelcus · · Score: 1

    Defense (offense) (the ongoing useless, futile wars) and the plethora of secretly funded military programs make up almost 70% of the total budget, but as the governmental pie charts don't even list these expenditures most people innocently believe the lies that Social Security and Medicare are to blame, when, in fact SS is partially funding other activities (off the books) and is solvent for the foreseeable future, medicare is expensive because the gov can't bargain with drug companies or hospitals and MUST pay whatever is demanded! You can thank the crooked scum in Washington for the mess that we're in, remember EVERYTHING the government says should be regarded as a LIE!

    --
    I killed da wabbit -Elmer Fudd
  290. thanks for proving my popint by publiclurker · · Score: 0

    any inbred hick who thinks that believing an invisible sky monster making everything during a crunch week is not a big deal, is actually one of the sources of problems we have to spend all of our time cleaning up..

    1. Re:thanks for proving my popint by demonlapin · · Score: 1

      Much hatred there is in this one...

  291. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Of course regulate, at the time they wrote the constitution, meant that they could make things "regular" between the states. An example of this would have been no tariffs between states which makes much more sense when you think "regulate". This was before a time before "to regulate" meant "we can do whatever the fuck we want".

  292. USGS existed long before NOAA by fnj · · Score: 1

    ZOMG!!!11one. Paul would dissolve the USGS?

    It's bullshit of course. The USGS was established in 1879 for good and sufficient reasons of its own. It predated NOAA by over 90 years, and could be restored to an independent administration just as it was prior to 1970.

  293. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Strangely, he views it as the responsibility of those we elect to regulate those things.

  294. 'Liberal fallacy' by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    No more energy research, no more parks, no more public education, no more low income housing, no more roads & bridges. What a grand utopia he has planned for us.

    The 'liberal fallacy' is defined as "if the government doesn't do it, it doesn't happen."

    I'll bet you who gets men to Mars first.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    1. Re:'Liberal fallacy' by NeutronCowboy · · Score: 1

      The same group who got to the moon first?

      --
      Those who can, do. Those who can't, sue.
  295. Re:The right never suggests eliminating Agricultur by TheSync · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul says: "And why should we have this Department of Agriculture, just to subsidize farmers? You take money from the taxpayers; you subsidize farmers; then, the taxpayers pay for higher prices in the grocery store."

  296. Re:Dept of Edu by Mike · · Score: 1

    I would describe myself as an anarcho-capitalist, and the single biggest source of ideas come from LewRockwell.com and the Mises.org blog.

  297. Re:The right never suggests eliminating Agricultur by pecosdave · · Score: 1

    I've read Ron Paul's most recent book, he has very plainly outlined the problems with that department. Think of it as second wave.

    As for singling Texas out as #1 in farm subsidies remember the shear number of square miles Texas has, especially the number of square miles that count as farm land. Texas has more square miles of farm land than many states have in any kind of square miles.

    Couple that with being a red state that is in the black. Texas sends more money in the federal direction than it gets back.

    Don't try to use the very size of Texas as anecdotal evidence against Ron Paul.

    --
    The preceding post was not a Slashvertisement.
  298. Re:Dept of Edu by Mike · · Score: 1

    Perhaps it's because I didn't sleep well last night, but I'm having trouble understanding your question. What's the "norm"?

    I would say my view on the legitimate function of government varies greatly from what we have now.

    As far as morality, I don't speak of it all that much. But I would say that that everything that is right and proper comes from what is moral. The example I used recently was that if it's wrong for me to take $10 from my neighbor's pocket because I'm hungry, it's wrong for the government to take $10 from my neighbor's pocket to feed me. And it's wrong for you to petition the government to take such action. Government-sanctioned (i.e. legalized) theft is still theft, and still wrong.

    I have no idea if I've even come close to answering your question. :)

  299. Crazy plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah this is crazy. Let's just wait until we're completely broke and can't pay for anything instead, even the important stuff, instead of trying to figure out what's important now and cut the garbage.

    Of course we're going to maintain weather satellites under Ron Paul. Of course we're going to have tsunami and earthquake monitoring. Anybody suggesting that Ron Paul wants to cut this stuff because he didn't specifically say he wasn't in his 11 page summary of the basic idea of the plan is being a moron and/or is simply regurgitating political talking points.

    Look, you want to end the wars right? You want to cut down on useless government spending? This is the only guy with even a sliver of a chance of winning that's going to do it, period.

  300. State agreements by Quila · · Score: 1

    Quite often states enter into standardization or other agreements between them. For example, you've probably heard of the Uniform Commercial Code. Check out the National Conference of Commissioners on Uniform State Laws.

  301. Re:Dept of Edu by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

    Interesting, thanks.

  302. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Bill_the_Engineer · · Score: 1

    wrong. they still can't regulate things they have no authority to regulate.

    You've taken my answer out of context. I was referring that while the original poster said that the constitution only gave congress the authority to regulate interstate commerce, the people mandated that it shall be done.

    Furthermore, Congress should represent the wishes of the people that they represent. It is up to the judicial branch to determine the legality of the legislation passed by congress, and the executive branch also gets a say in the matter too.

    --
    These comments are my own and do not necessarily reflect the views or opinions of my employer or colleagues...
  303. NIST deserves it. by crhylove · · Score: 1

    9/11 was clearly an inside job, yet they make ludicrous claims about pancakes. I say good riddance.

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
  304. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Boona · · Score: 1

    >He's one of those fucking crazy idiots who thinks that economies magically regulate themselves.

    Actually libertarians believe in what's called Public Choice Theory. Public choice is the application of economic principles to the political realm. You see some economists believe that somethings shouldn't be handled by the free-market so they advocate we place those industries in the hands of politicians. The problem with that implicit assumption that the incentives in the public realm are structured in a way that will give better result. Public choice explodes that assumption. The rampant corporatism in the US (and in other nations) drives that point in quite nicely. So it's not so much that markets do it well, it's that they do it less bad.

    So my argument would be that maybe we shouldn't be so quick to think that those who believe in free-markets are doing wishful thinking. There is a lot of theory behind that statement.

  305. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

    That sounds like a solution, rather than a problem!

    --
    Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
  306. Re:Dept of Edu by Fallingcow · · Score: 1

    It does, thanks.

  307. WTF? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Why doesn't he cut the State Department, Military branches, Executive branch, Judicial branch, and all funding for everything else the federal government does?

  308. Re:Dept of Edu by RocketRabbit · · Score: 1

    It is probably your state government that pays for the majority of their education right now.

    But ask yourself this - if their needs are so expensive and difficult to fulfill appropriately, is it moral of you to force others to pay for their education? Or should you or your wife or other partner or friends step up and devote the difference in effort needed to educate them properly?

  309. Re:Dept of Edu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The South Carolina state constitution, for example, requires that the state provide an education for all legal residents. The impact of this is that a public education through grade 12 is provided by the state as required by the state constitution. I suspect other states have similar requirements.

  310. He can NOT do ANY of these things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just to put this out there..
    No president can do ANYTHING about the budget, spending, or allocation of fed resources.
    NOTHING AT ALL....

    Why?
    Because the President does not WRITE FUCKING LAW, BUDGETS OR DIRECT SPENDING.
    He has the power to Veto a bill passed by the congress. This veto can be over ridden by congress.
    That is it!!

    Really, the congress can act without any approval or input from the president and do whatever they collectively want.
    The president can't do jack shit other than blow shit up for a few weeks without Congress.
    Maybe try to make a treaty or trade deal but even that has strict limitations and requires approval by elected reps.
    That is the limit of his power.

    All of this talk, debate, and stupid mud slinging by people running for President is just a side show. A nonsense distraction. Worthless theater.
    There is nothing wrong with stating ideas they would support.
    The kinds of bills they would LIKE to see.. But they act as though once they are in office everything they say can and will be made LAW.

    I am getting really tired of the media, the campaigns, and the public in general acting as though the President is some kind of King, or CEO of a privately held company who can enact what they want.

    Things I hear every day
    "Obamacare "
    "The presidents Budget"
    "The presidents Job Bill"

    ??? WTF? Do you not know how the government works in the USA???
    NONE OF THESE THINGS ARE 'HIS'.
    It is not his job, his right, or in his legal ability to write any law of any kind.
    Congress has the 'purse strings'. He does not have the ability to do any kind of budget.
    For a law, budget, bill or spending change to happen the House of Representatives and the Senate must write, pass, and then reconcile (with a possible other vote depending on Byzantine Congress rules) the bill.
    It then goes to the President to either sign or Veto. If Veto, then the congress can over-ride.

    Where does this basic lack of understanding come from?
    Could it be that the incestuous gang called Congress and their lobbyist friends want to puff up the appearance of power in the executive branch to distract people from the fact that other than War and Diplomacy the president is in fact a completely empty suit, paralyzed by a Congress that is doing what they want but ignoring the will and best interests of the people??
    So that every 4 or 8 years we can blame one man for the failings of the entire Congress?
    So that the people in Congress stay in power, externalizing their failures onto someone who can do nothing to prevent them?

    Just putting it out there.

  311. Why FUS? by OldHawk777 · · Score: 1

    Why do politicians (DemRepInd...) and godmatist (Christian, Muslim, Crazies...) always want to Fuck the United States FUS people?

    Yes, it is a rhetorical question.

    --
    Unaccountable leaders are masters, and unrepresented people are slaves. How do US and EU fare?
  312. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Panaflex · · Score: 1

    He's one of those fucking crazy idiots who thinks that economies magically regulate themselves.

    While your ostensibly right - your also wrong. Regulation has been utterly decimated by the corporate-political partnership over the past few decades. What's left of regulation is used as a competitive barrier by the large corporations.

    For instance, Toyota lobbied in 2007 to keep low CAFE fuel standards in the USA. Why? To keep US automakers at a competitive disadvantage.

    Meredith Baker, former FCC commissioner, was co-opted to approve a monopolistic merger and promptly was hired by the companies she formerly regulated.

    The Federal Reserve bank, itself a private bank, approves mergers and acquisitions while at the same time having those very members on it's own managerial boards.

    When I was a kid I was a firm believer in government regulation and a public-private system of corporate governance... but now all I see is unrestrained and unfettered insanity. To call this capitalism is an insult to Marxist Philosophy.

    --
    I said no... but I missed and it came out yes.
  313. The US hits 100% of GDP in about 2 weeks by Colin+Smith · · Score: 2

    After that, it's Banana Republic time.

    "A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship."

    --
    Deleted
  314. NOAA can go away by Quila · · Score: 1

    Its weather duties do not require a whole agency. Eliminate it, and put all weather duties under the Department of Defense, which already has a legitimate national security reason to know the weather all over the world. Actually there is serious duplication right now, since the Navy and Air Force already employ a lot of meterologists.

  315. The only problem is the corruption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People keep dancing around the real problem: There is corruption from top to bottom in government and it is affecting the decisions that get made and the money that gets spent. We have to fix the corruption.
    One way to do it is for the states to tax federal employees at 100% of their income. Then the state government will pay them based on their performance. If they are acting in the best interest of the state, then they get paid. Otherwise, they can work for free or quit.
    It makes no sense for the People we send to congress and senate to be outside of our control. They must be reigned in. And the easiest and best way to do that is via their paycheck.

  316. Private doesn't invent anything by rsilvergun · · Score: 1

    Do some poking around and you'll find 90% of the ground work in science is laid by gov't funds, mostly in Europe & Asia these days. The 'research' most companies do is figuring out how to monetize gov't funded research.

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
    1. Re:Private doesn't invent anything by MyFirstNameIsPaul · · Score: 1

      Can't argue with that logic: It's in Europe and it's government funded.

      --

      I once took an excursion to Reddit, and later HN. Unlimited up/down voting sucks when dealing with a hive-mind.

  317. So who paid the academics? by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

    and where'd the money for the equipment come from?

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  318. Can't chop Homeland Security by Quila · · Score: 1

    But you can split it back up. DHS contains things like customs, immigration and Coast Guard, which are legitimate, necessary, functions of the federal government.

    However, I guess the Coast Guard could just be made a branch of the Navy. All the different border-related services such as USCIS, CBP, APHIS and ICE should be rolled into one department. Give protection details and anti-counterfeiting to the FBI.

  319. Ron Paul may be a nutjob living in a fantasy world by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But of the candidates in the Republican field right now, he's also been the one that hasn't tried to change his views based on the current political climate. He's had the same views since at least 2008. I'll give him that, as opposed to some of the other candidates, who sometimes pander so quickly you don't even have to dig through archives to find them contradicting themselves.

  320. Let's eliminate the Interior Department! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Because Alaska is only about 70% Federal land. Administered by the Interior Department(Bureau of Land Management, Fish & Wildlife Service, National Park Service, among others).

    Oh, and large parts of California, Oregon, Washington, Idaho, Wyoming, Colorado, and pretty much all of Nevada...

    Source:
    http://www.nationalatlas.gov/mapmaker

    Eliminating the National Park Service would also be a great idea! Who wants to go to the Disney Canyon(formerly known as the Grand Canyon)? I'm sure that would go over well. Or, perhaps we could eliminate all of those pesky monuments in the middle of Washington, D.C. Who cares about the Washington Monument? Or the Lincoln Memorial? Heck, let's just pave over that nice space in front of the Capitol there, also known as the National Mall!

    The problem with this plan is that it cuts (from what I can tell) only discretionary spending. Unfortunately, that's only a relatively small part of the Federal budget. It is important to eliminate waste and duplicate programs, but such a broad cut like this isn't going to work properly.

  321. naked day by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I want to see a 'naked congress critters' day. With our youth/appearance obsessed culture, the occasional lack of pomp and comfort for our ruling-class lackeys will remind everyone that the elite are ordinary and dull too.

  322. Pork is another problem by Quila · · Score: 1

    Politicians won't look at the mission and necessity, but whether the money goes to their districts.

  323. Ron Paul isn't the answer... by Ritchie70 · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul has a lot of interesting things to say, but very few of them make me want him as my president.

    Instead, I like Gary Johnson. Fiscally conservative libertarian, but socially quite liberal. He wants both a balanced budget - and promises to submit one in 2013 - and the legalization of online gambling and marijuana.

    Former 2-term New Mexico governor, term-limited out of office. Grew a construction company from a 1-man handyman company to the largest construction company in NM. Climbed Mount Everest. Rode his bicycle across New Hampshire as part of his campaigning there.

    He's been largely excluded from polls and debates. (If you saw the Florida Republican debate in September, he had the joke about shovel-ready jobs.)

    http://www.garyjohnson2012.com/

    --
    The preferred solution is to not have a problem.
  324. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm really not sure what hair you are trying to split: if congress decides to use its constitutionally-enumerated power to regulate interstate commerce, then it must create a department of commerce of some sort. Therefore, a commerce department is constitutionally allowable.

    Currently we have a commerce department that regulates inter-state commerce that was created by congress, given responsibility by congress to come up with detailed regulations to help accomplish its mission (that can be overridden by congress directly at any time), and this department, like all other federal agencies, is run by the executive branch. This is 100% constitutional.

  325. There's only one departement that should be cut by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DOD budget reprensent 20% of the budget. Cut this by half and suddenly the world will seem lighter.

    1. Re:There's only one departement that should be cut by Brad1138 · · Score: 1

      Agreed, I am sick and tired of being the worlds police, and footing the majority of the bill for keep the world safe (so to speak) Let them all pay their own way.

      --
      If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
  326. Use state taxes to tax Federal Reps at 100% by Marrow · · Score: 1

    It makes no sense for our elected Congressmen and Senators to be outside the control of the states for 4+ years in a row. Tax their income at 100% using the state tax system, and then pay them via State revenues the balance. If they perform. If they vote and can show they are reading and understanding the laws they are voting on. And if they screw up, you have an instant tether to pull them back into line. No money.
    Why are we allowing them to be paid by people who are not us? We might as well let people from other states vote on the elections as well.
    You want to fix problems, make sure they know who they work for. Every other week when they get their paycheck. Signed by the Governor of their state.

  327. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Eightbitgnosis · · Score: 1

    So I take it you didn't read the whole budget proposal in which the country would have a balanced budget by 2015?

    http://c3244172.r72.cf0.rackcdn.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/RestoreAmericaPlan.pdf

  328. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Regulation of commerce does not require a Department (which currently is primarily a lobbying vehicle).

  329. the media already picked romney or perry by cod3r_ · · Score: 1

    so it doesn't really matter.. more the same inc.

  330. Education != Department of Education by pr0f3550r · · Score: 1
    Here you equate getting rid of the Department of Education as an attack on Education. The DE has only existed since 1979! I think it would be quite easy to illustrate the decline of the education system under the watchful eye of the quite recently created DE. Do you think that before the DE that children were not given access to free tax-payer paid schools? Education has always been and should be managed by the individual first and foremost, then at the family with involved parents, then at the community with involved teachers and local administrators and LASTLY at the state level. Getting rid of the DE only gets rid of the bureaucracy at the top and leaves the business of educating the children to the states and the communities which, quite frankly, manages the education today in spite of the DE.

    So I agree with all your sentiment about the productive and beneficial uses of education in society. What I don't agree with is the notion that somehow a federal bureaucracy infrastructure has anything to do with the education of my children other than interference.

    1. Re:Education != Department of Education by snowgirl · · Score: 1

      The Department of Education was created in 1979 by an Act that split the Department of Health, Education, and Welfare into the Department of Education and the Department of Health and Human Services. The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare was created in 1953.

      Are you going to tell me that education has been on the decline since 1953 as well? (Of course you might, because we have this strong notion that everything is always going downhill, so you just might.)

      --
      WARNING! This girl exceeds the MAXIMUM SAFE standards established by the FDA for BRATTINESS
    2. Re:Education != Department of Education by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2

      The Department of Health, Education, and Welfare was created in 1953.

      Are you going to tell me that education has been on the decline since 1953 as well?

      As someone who entered elementary school in 1953 I can assure you that the public education I experienced went downhill from then until I transferred to a non-public school in 1963. B-b

      In particular, about six years later, when "social studies" (dumbed-down history) covered the founding of the US federal government, the textbook didn't bother to actually quote the declaration or the constitution. But it had a cute cartoon of two legislators stretching a scroll to illustrate the "Elastic Clause" and explained how this allowed the federal government to do just about anything the congresscritters wanted to do.

      --
      Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  331. President? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    For a guy that wants to be presidennt, he is not making much of an effort on his campaign.

  332. You are in the majority. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Whenever you find that you are on the side of the majority, it is time to reform." - Mark Twain

  333. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by bames53 · · Score: 1

    The plan actually cuts $1 trillion. The article is only focusing at some of the tiniest cuts for some reason.

  334. Those are sources of Revenue, many Securities. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Just as Ron said so himself about his government: Don't
    Steal, because he hates competition.

    Where else other than America is a worthless peice of paper (Constitution) be pushed at your face by armed thugs (BATFE) as they reason that you should stand-down and Lose in a constitutional Courthouse rather than die protecting your way of life.

    Ron Paul is full of double-speak, just like Alex "certified parade-bullhorn" Jones.

  335. And in stunning news... by Seraphim_72 · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul has come out saying he is going to remodel Angst Badger's kitchen. Stating it was about "Stove's Right's" Ron Paul plans on moving things like heating and cooling to the kitchen. The kitchen will also get its own electrical grid, water main and gas hook-up. "Kitchens can do this cheaper and better" he declared. "This way even the toaster gets a vote on how water should flow."

    --
    Slashdot, where armchair scientists get shouted down and armchair theologians get modded up.
  336. Re:Dept of Edu by Rockoon · · Score: 1

    Would you rather have "high-functioning" children on the autistic spectrum that grow to become productive members of society, or for these same children to flounder without society meeting their needs early in life.

    That depends how much is costs.

    You people seem to want to discuss this like we arent making trade-offs in the process, that apparently money is no object when it comes to "special needs." Explain to me that it only costs twice as much per special needs student per year and I'm all for it, as long as we arent classifying large swaths of students as such.

    --
    "His name was James Damore."
  337. IRS doesn't fund the Government. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's written in every ruling that if you don't File for collection of Income Taxes then you assent when a 30-day Notice of Lien gets replaced by a US District Court "clerk" when they convert it into a lien.

    All taxes are an implement of admiralty jurisdiction.

    IRS isn't collecting taxes for anyone but bankers, to regulate the "productivity" if not production to artificially control the value of US currency in the hands of privateers.

    If you ask me, privateers are what makes fiat currency valuable because currency is nothing more than the government putting a price-tag on your product and given all the limited liability "benefits" of all barter adjustments and trade nominated in US domestic dollars.

    All currency has two faces though, one fiat and one stock, and the Federal Reserve System (foreign non-registered private corporation) has given the illusion that it has lost all traces of itself as a stock but diverted that to regulating the actual production because it has ployed all it's asset valuation onto the Courts as a verry fraud to manipulate the Weights and Measures. How do you conquer a federation of countries if not pretend your price-tag onto everyone and force them to mediate all value of their disputes in your price-tag? Simple: counterfeiting.

  338. Space Privatization Efforts & Outer Space Trea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'll repeat what I've written on the Ron Paul forums:

    We need to integrate our message with Space Privatization efforts and put out spokesmen to advocate free market solutions. We'll need advocates to emphasize how Government regulations impede scientific progress. We are going to need to make relations with companies like Virgin Galactic, Scaled Composites, Bigelow Aerospace, and we might want to start up talks with Lawrenceville Plasma Physics. If we want to go with all cylinders firing we need to PUSH U.S. Withdrawal from the Outer Space Treaty as mentioned by Dr. Paul. We might also be able to find significant support in the National Space Society and the Mars Society. If we want to put forward a solid scientific program then we should explore capitalistic efforts similar to those outlined at Permanent

    Remind them how poor management by the Department of Energy resulted in the cancellation of the Superconducting Supercollider and how the Sandia Z-Machine and NASA are unable to benefit from private citizen donations due to current federal regulations which could have saved programs like JIMO. Also, advocate Enterprising solutions for organizations like the Artemis Project.

    In addition, we must also convince them that issues like Stem Cell Research and even Cloning would be left to the States and so Scientific Research would be protected from Federal Bans and States would be able to increase funding for projects like Growing New Organs if not for excessive Red Tape.

    Also, who profits from the developments of Government research when major bankers are able to monopolize the resources, and patent government research for profit? This goes back to our typical Conflict of Interests that has seized all government agencies.

    The following was written by Ron Paul and so we all need to REMEMBER our free-market space privatization roots here:

    SPACE - INTERNATIONAL POLICY
    Ron Paul Presidential Campaign
    Position Paper
    (1988)
    Our government is not only shortsighted in it's negotiations on space issues, it's downright anti-american. Sometimes it's hard to decide whose principles the State Department is defending. They certainly aren't those of our Founding Fathers.
    About the only anti-property treaty this country hasn't ratified is the odious "Moon Treaty", written by our own State Department. If not for an alert group of citizens (L5 Society), the United States would have ratified this treaty under President Carter and embraced control of all the rest of creation by a World Government. Under "the common heritage of all mankind" space would be the heritage of no one. The vast wealth of resources and energy in our solar system would remain untapped instead of being explored by entrepreneurs who would improve the condition of all humanity. It's time this sick treaty is repudiated once and for all.
    We must also demand a revision or understanding to the 1967 Outer Space Treaty so individual property rights are recognized. If there are no implimenting protocols for property rights within a specified time limit we should withdraw from the treaty entirely. In any case, we should immediately open a land office and accept claims of Americans to specific pieces of land, subject to occupancy within 15 years.
    Back in the late 1950's a project called Orion seriously considered using small nuclear explosions to power a spacecraft. The lifting capacity would have been vast, measured in thousands of tons instead of the miniscule abilities of today's mightiest rockets. This brute-force approach was simple enough to be considered feasible 30 years ago. Unfortuneately, the idea was shelved by the 1963 Nuclear Test Ban Treaty.

  339. Bollocks by Goonie · · Score: 1

    Yes, and letting loose Ron Paul on the US government would be like a company replacing all their Windows desktops with VT100 terminals connected to a server running Gentoo overnight, and telling the secretaries and PHB's that, hey, you've got C and Perl installed, so you can build the functionality you want better yourselves. You clearly have no idea whatsoever of the immense amount of pain and dislocation that would be caused by such a "refactoring".

    --

    Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo
    --Andy Finkel (J. Klass?)
  340. An OK start by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If we merely put the federal and state governments back inside the Constitutional box, our budget problems would be solved.

    If we had the neutral foreign policy the Founders intended, we wouldn't need the $1T for the war machine.

  341. That should read '10x' not '100x' by bames53 · · Score: 1

    That should read '10x' not '100x'

  342. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Shotgun · · Score: 1

    Nice straw man you built there. To bad you have to beat the stuffing out of it like that.

    Have you considered that there are libertarians that understand the need for a Federal government (interstate roads are a responsibility of the Feds, and for good reason), but they also understand that there needs to be restraint on the scope of the central government due to consolidation of power. There is also a need for state and local governments, each with limited and controlled powers. If you think pushing control back down toward the people is crazy, you just need to get out more.

    --
    Aah, change is good. -- Rafiki
    Yeah, but it ain't easy. -- Simba
  343. 50 vs 500 departments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After WW2, we had 50 odd government departments. Today, we have 500+.
    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_United_States_federal_agencies

    Give yourself +1 every time you discover a dupe.

  344. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    For instance, Toyota lobbied in 2007 to keep low CAFE fuel standards in the USA. Why? To keep US automakers at a competitive disadvantage.

    Because Toyota likes selling high-margin SUV's and trucks right along with Detroit.

    When I was a kid I was a firm believer in government regulation and a public-private system of corporate governance... but now all I see is unrestrained and unfettered insanity. To call this capitalism is an insult to Marxist Philosophy.

    Except this is the natural end result of capitalism: consolidation, elimination of competition, regulatory capture, and industry-friendly legislation written by people hired from the same industry. Like the Health Insurance Profit Protection Act signed by Obama last year, for example. Written by a woman who used to head up the lobbying division for Wellpoint.

  345. Common goals by TiggertheMad · · Score: 1

    So what are you going to do when California decides that it wants to run 117 volts AC, Nevada 204 volts AC, and Oregon decides to go DC ? Sure, it isn't an insurmountable problem but it greatly complicates selling products that use electricity or transferring excess power to neighbor states. The same thing applies to roads, rail ways, and a whole host of other public utilities. Having one body setting down standards benefits everybody.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
    1. Re:Common goals by jvonk · · Score: 1

      Having one body setting down standards benefits everybody.

      Sure, but why does this have to be accomplished via coercion under color of law? It seems your argument is predicated under the assumption that entities won't cooperate without government coercion.

      For example, RAM standards are set by JEDEC, which is an open industry coalition. I wouldn't call the industry's experience with DDR SDRAM over multiple generations an example of failure & fragmentation due to lack of governmental control. The x86 ISA (such as it is) has also been a success over multiple evolutionary generations (albeit litigated at some points) despite lack of legal mandate.

      So, while your electrical grid example is a potential threat if standards weren't mandated, it isn't very likely... imagine the PR fallout Oregon would get in your case: "Come to Oregon, none of your electronic devices will work!". There is a natural incentive for compatibility in those cited examples of railroad gauge, electrical gauge, and roads.

      Besides, lack of coercive standards offers the potential for smaller-scale "experiments" that can be paradigm shifting. There is no law that says that DDR SDRAM has to be used on every motherboard, and that allowed the (admittedly vile patent troll) Rambus to attempt to promulgate a different standard that the market could evaluate as a competing standard. Rambus was an idea that was tried and largely discarded, but by the same token should ARM be banned by law because its ISA isn't x86-derived? I believe the market is better for allowing the possibility of experimentation (and possible failure!)

      Furthermore, mandated standards can easily be overreaching. Imagine, if you will, that all roads had been fully standardized long ago: lane widths, lane counts based on traffic formulas, etc. You can easily imagine that such a regulatory regime might have squelched the ability of California to develop HOV lanes in the 1970's.

      It's not the end of the world if there are widespread competing standards that eventually coalesce. When the US South finally decided to convert to standard gauge railroad from broad gauge, they coordinated its rollout quite well (they pulled off the conversion in 36 hours in an impressive feat of coordinated engineering).

  346. Who would vote for this? by therinirwin · · Score: 1

    Even if he was elected president, how would this ever pass in Congress?

  347. Here's the actual budget by mathmathrevolution · · Score: 1

    Ok, let's look at the actual budget for DOE:

    http://www.cfo.doe.gov/budget/12budget/Content/FY2012Highlights.pdf

    Surprise, Surprise! The largest item in there is for the National Nuclear Security Administration which manages our strategic nuclear fleet.

    And the reason we need the FCC is obviously to enforce property rights for the broadcast spectrum. You wouldn't think I would need to explain this to a Libertarian since preserving property rights is ostensibly at the core of Libertarian conception of government. And yet I frequently encounter libertarians who substitute empty sloganeering for serious policy analysis.

  348. Public education by TiggertheMad · · Score: 1

    I homeschool - my kids kick ass and I don't need your fucking State education

    This is where people who don't support public education miss the GODDAMED BUS. You aren't paying to educate just your kids. You are paying to educate everbody's kids, so when your kids grow up, they can live in a nice community full of other educated people. There is a pretty direct correlation between lack of education and crime. Do you want your kids to get murdered by a mugger in twenty years because they have a nice watch?

    I am selfish. I want to live in a country full of interesting, educated people. If you think this isn't important, take you brilliant kids and move to Somalia and tell me how it works out for you.

    --

    HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
  349. In other news by NiceGeek · · Score: 0

    Ron Paul is still nuts

  350. It won't end the deficit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How are you going to end the deficit when you layoff all those people (that work for the TSA, military, etc.)? It will throw us into another depression. Then see how well our deficits do...

  351. Ron Paul 2012 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    REALITY CHECK: For those of you still asleep, what Ron Paul is trying to do is INTELLIGENTLY lead us away from these ball and chains. In case your half-dead and I have to spell it out for you -- THESE PROGRAMS are doomed anyway because America not only cannot afford them, but they are Un-Constitutional and American's want the Constitution restored because that's what makes America, America!

    These programs will die anyway from a lack of funds. So do you want to be caught off-guard, running around like a wild chicken when it happens, or do you want to INTELLIGENTLY plan our way out of this hole? Either way -- these programs will lose funds.

    RON PAUL is a visionary and sees the bigger picture in every issue, across the board.

    HERE'S THE NEWS STORY THEY DON'T WANT YOU TO SEE:
    $5 Billion for the Office of Science??????????????
    Meanwhile..............hundreds of thousands of Americans without necessary housing, and proper nutrition.

    $4.5 Billion for the NOAA??????
    Meanwhile...............thousands of Americans cannot even get a job simply because they are not currently employed.

    Not only are these departments Unconsitutional, they are also a drag on our economy, and do nothing to help the bigger picture.

    Restore the Pursuit of Happiness.........Restore the Constitution.................Restore the Glory of America
    Ron Paul 2012

    1. Re:Ron Paul 2012 by Brad1138 · · Score: 1

      No wonder you posted as AC

      --
      If you could reason with religious people, there would be no religious people
  352. Re:Commerce -- Seriously? What about the constitio by PintoPiman · · Score: 1

    The Federal Government has a constitutional mandate to regulate interstate and international commerce. But hey, fuck that right? Pass me a heroine needle and that copy of Atlas Shrugged, it's Ron Paul's world now./quote> And the Department of Education is engaged in what sort of commerce, exactly?

  353. Education is State Run by KalvinB · · Score: 1

    Education had been state run and progressively getting better up until the 1970's when the feds took it over and it has now flat lined for 40 years.

    Roads and bridges are also paid for by and maintained by the communities / counties in which they run through.

    The Federal Government adds nothing of value to education and minimal value to our roads and bridges.

  354. NOT TRUE! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That if this happened, after the next earthquake or hurricane demolishes a few large metropolitan areas people would be wondering why we had no warning.

    Why did this get modded so high as it's factually incorrect? With earthquakes, you don't get a warning. Apparently, you've never experienced one. The USGS reports quakes after they happened not before and there is no way to predict them ahead of time. If you can find a single instance where they predicted a major quake days or even minutes before it struck then I will apologize for my furious rant.

    As far as Hurricanes or tornadoes are concerned, they too are very difficult to predict but at least they can track their speed, strength and direction but you really don't need a weather man to tell you this. All you need to do is peek outside of your cave and you happen to notice that the weather in your town turned to shit and it's been that way for days, you are likely to be hit bay really bad weather to you should stay put in your cave till the weather gets better. If you don't live in a cave then find one ASAP!

  355. All Right, I'll Plant my Flag Here by Greyfox · · Score: 0
    Ron Paul has a lot of ideas that would only work if we all crapped daisies and unicorns. All those government agencies evolved because we needed them. I really don't want to have to go through figuring out that we need them all over again. I like having the FDA, because we didn't like always finding turpentine and formaldehyde in our food. I like having an EPA, because I don't like it when the air is brown and rivers catch on fire. I like having a department of housing and urban development, because I enjoy having relatively small gangs of homeless people wandering up and down the street. Those departments were created because a lot of other people felt the same way. He says that companies will magically start behaving altruistically in a Libertarian society, but they certainly did not behave that way when they were unregulated before. My prediction is that if his policies are put in place, ShittyBank will start harvesting people for organs. Because no one would stop them, and it's profitable.

    I gotta give him credit for talking a very unpopular talk and for being the only consistent politician in recent memory, but in the end I'm going to have to group him with the rest of the Republicans. They're quite happy to continue beating the "Lets lower taxes and end regulations for corporations," drum, despite the fact that those are the exact things that got us into this situation in the first place. And the Democrats are no better. They all sold us out. They were happy to let banks plunder the economy, happy to let corporate executives plunder pension funds, happy to bail out Wall Street and left us holding the bag. They're happy to let us believe that the country is going to go bankrupt ANY SECOND NOW, and they're happy to give themselves a hefty raise every year while they do this.

    I don't really have a long term plan for fixing this shit, but my short term plan is to vote against incumbents and for third parties until Democrats and Republicans can put up a candidate that doesn't suck. That could end up being my long term plan too.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:All Right, I'll Plant my Flag Here by jcr · · Score: 2

      All those government agencies evolved because we needed them.

      It only takes one counter-example to debunk your statement. My counterexample is the Drug Enforcement Administration. If you're claiming that we need a federal agency to harass cancer patients, then to hell with you.

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    2. Re:All Right, I'll Plant my Flag Here by Greyfox · · Score: 1
      Oh yes? Go read up on what it was like back when cocaine was legal. People decided they didn't want their doctor to be high on cocaine while they were being operated on. I'd be fine with legalizing marijuana as long as I'm not at risk for being exposed to it (Mary Jane and my body don't get along,) but I do want to be sure my doctor isn't high on that or cocaine when he's operating on me. Prohibition never works, so make sure that people who can't behave responsibly aren't put in a position where they have to, and we'll be fine.

      Personally I'd have gone with the TSA. Since 9/11, potential terrorists are handled just fine by other passengers on the plane. I think we could safely have zero security at the airports now, because if you start some shit on an airplane, your fellow passengers will KILL you if they have to. I don't need a 48 year old Harry Tuttle fondling my balls for 5 minutes to stop terrorists. Um Harry... I didn't say "stop"...

      --

      I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    3. Re:All Right, I'll Plant my Flag Here by jcr · · Score: 1

      >Go read up on what it was like back when cocaine was legal.

      I have it on good authority that cops weren't in the habit of staging military raids to serve routine warrants back then.

      > People decided they didn't want their doctor to be high on cocaine while they were being operated on.

      They don't want to be under the knife of a drunk, either. What's your point?

      -jcr

      --
      The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
    4. Re:All Right, I'll Plant my Flag Here by _0xd0ad · · Score: 1

      Mary Jane and my body don't get along

      I'm curious... what do you mean by that?

  356. End Corporate Welfare by Mr.+Lwanga · · Score: 1

    Stop the handouts and quotas for agribusiness, handing out juicy federal contracts to companies that offshore their profits and have a per transaction stupidity tax on financial companies that don't put money away for a rainy day while they engage in highly complex, high risk financial transactions and expect the US taxpayer to bail them out. Then move on to screwing over the little guy.

  357. The Axiom of Non-Aggression by Mike · · Score: 1

    That's easy. I like: "the initiation or threatening of violence against a person or legitimately owned property of another". I subscribe to the Axiom of Non-Aggression (a.k.a. the Non-Aggression Principle):

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-aggression_principle

    http://www.lewrockwell.com/block/block26.html

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3dYNk0QGdBw

    Enjoy,

    -Mike

  358. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, that 1% really does a whole lot.

    It's actually 1 trillion in the first year. That '1%' was the highlights.

  359. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Doubtful. The alternative is to not cut anything, and continue drowning in debt. You all worry about the few hundred thousands of people that would be without a job working in these useless departments, without considering repercussions - we're constantly borrowing money to support them and will have to continue to do so, until USD is worthless, we're all out of jobs and we're all out of houses. Waiting too late to see that it's a problem is a bad idea. You people need to think with your brains instead of thinking all this sh-t is necessary. Not only that, even with them out of a job, they will then search for a more productive job. We will cut spending, stop borrowing, and possibly have inflation for once or at least everyone's savings doesn't devalue any more. And with that comes more jobs, more investing. Alot of folks on here berating RP think in the short term and not the long term. We're broke today, so how do we fix it. Cutting nothing is not the answer and only leads to even more problems.

  360. It makes sense.... by InspectorGadget1964 · · Score: 1

    Well, with an army stealing petrol all around the world, an energy department is not really necessary. Commerce, is not necessary either as the US can force any country into a “free” trade agreement at gunpoint. Education? Who cares about education? You don’t need it to go and die fighting for your country while stealing petrol in Iraq. Housing, almost irrelevant, there is no need to build houses because every body able person should be invading another country. Urban Development are you joking? Nobody needs urban development, just build training camps!

  361. Re:Ron Paul asked for government energy loan subsi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about posting a link - I went to the Front page and could not find the article you mention.

  362. Re:Ron Paul asked for government energy loan subsi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    don't compare ron paul to rick perry. i haven't read the wp story. wouldn't give their hit piece the hit. there's been a concerted effort to completely ignore dr. paul. now that they're being forced, out come the hit pieces. He's explained his actions to his constituents regarding these matters before. this is not exactly an expose. He's been writing to his constituents for a long time while in the house and you can go read them on the infoweb. you can also go look at his lengthy voting record to know he votes his conscience. Most votes he's with one or two other reps in the neigh category.

  363. good, $20 bn saved... only $15 980 bn left to go! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ; )

  364. Re:Ron Paul asked for government energy loan subsi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the online article:

    Through a spokesman, Paul defended his support for the local nuclear project as an effort to spend already-approved funding. He, along with 30 other Republicans, opposed the creation of the federal account in 2005. He also opposed the 2009 stimulus plan.

    “As a Congressman and as President, Dr. Paul will work to eliminate all federal intervention in the energy market. However, until that happens, he will do his best to ensure that the money Congress appropriates is spent in the best way possible,” Jesse Benton, his aide, said in a statement ...

    Paul wrote to Bodman the next day, saying: “I am writing in support of the loan guarantee application filed by NRG Energy, Inc. for two new nuclear reactors at the South Texas Project.” He later added: “Additionally, the construction and operation of STP 3 and 4 will lead to the creation of thousands of new jobs.”

  365. Re:Ron Paul asked for government energy loan subsi by tmosley · · Score: 1

    It's "scum" to get back money that has been paid out in taxes?

    Maybe it's better to dismantle the system that forces people to act in such a way, and to stop lambasting people trying their best to change the system from within without any bloodshed. If this budget issue isn't fixed, their will be blood, and a lot of it. Civil Wars, like divorces, are often started over economic issues.

  366. NUTS by glorybe · · Score: 0

    These ideas are as wrong headed as what we are seeing in Florida. The government of Florida is dumping another 1500 employees due to budget issues. So what will happen is that we will have these 1500 workers with defaults on their mortgages or not paying rent, not making car payments, paying a lot less sales and property taxes, not eating out, not buying shoes, and becoming a burden on the public if they get sick or need emergency housing and food. It probably costs the government more money to lay a person off than it does to pay them and businesses suffer as well from less customers able to spend a buck. When a worker makes big bucks he pays big taxes and spends large. To save a failing nation the idea is to put solid, large pay in peoples' hands even if they do not earn or deserve it. Hand money to a bum and he buys pizza with his drinking and a jacket to keep warm. The spender is the employer in a certain way. We need more spenders.

  367. Interstate highways: military and constitutional. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 1

    Why are we debating the Interstate Highway system? Ron Paul is all about doing things the constitutional way. Interstate roads are explicitly authorized in the constitution (look for "post roads"). Facilitating interstate transportation of people and goods is a legitimate federal function.

    Also: The Interestate highway system (National Defence Highways) was a MILITARY project, promoted during his presidency by former general Eisenhower, as part of the "Cold War" and preparation for hot war. In addition to its uses for transporting industrial products and raw materials and otherwise supporting wartime transportation, it is designed so traffic can be diverted to one set of lanes while the other set is used as a runway for certain military aircraft, which can be hangered under an overpass. In time of war the whole country becomes an airfield.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  368. Federal !== Gov; #mod parent up by ancientt · · Score: 1

    People often forget that most of the things they want from government are not provided by the federal government. Libraries, schools, roads, police and firefighters all get funding from sources closer than the federal government. There are very few (arguably zero) services that cannot be provided by a state and can be provided only by the federal government.

    I can't decide whether to write Ron Paul off as a nut or to admire him for bringing up discussions that other candidates wouldn't dare give voice. On the one hand, this will be widely taken as "Ron Paul will destroy our collective investment in our society" which will effectively end any chance of him being a serious presidential hopeful. On the other hand, if it were seen as "Let the people have more say in how their taxes are used" then it would be a widely popular idea.

    When I pay taxes to my city or county, they go toward funding those things that my neighbors want, except where they pay to follow laws from my state or federal government. My votes have the largest effect at this level of taxation, so I have the most say in how my taxes are used at this level. When I pay taxes to my state, it goes toward the things people in my state want. My votes don't have as much impact as they do locally, but they still have about 50 times the impact they do at the federal level. At the federal level, they go toward the things that my fellow citizens want, but my votes have the least impact and I have the least control of how my taxes are spent.

    TC Wilcox observed that state control of services allows them to try different approaches and see which work better, which is very true. It is also true that what works best in one place is often not the best choice in another. I cannot help but agree with the idea that moving the decisions closer to the voter is a good idea. I suspect that people who prefer federal solutions to state solutions do so because they believe that their own preferences are unpopular in other regions and thus their preferences should be forced on those unwilling people who refuse to realize how right they are. Nothing says freedom so ironically as "you can't move out of the state if you disagree, you have to move out of my country."

    --
    B) Eliminate all the stupid users. This is frowned upon by society.
  369. Re:Dept of Edu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    But regardless, nobody, regardless of circumstance has a "right" to education. You want want the right, but it doesn't make it so.

    If it's illegal for me to steal $10 out of my neighbor's pocket when I'm hungry, it should be illegal for the government to steal $10 out of my neighbor's pocket to give it to me.

    Hogwash. If a society determines that people have a right to education and that society is able to support this right, then it's a right. Libertarians think there is some kind of utopian society based on the free market and a small static set of rights, but that's not historically or anthropologically true at all. Societies have been organized around all sorts of rights situated in varying political and economic organizations. And many of these societies have lasted, and even prospered for centuries, if not longer.

  370. That government is best by 7-Vodka · · Score: 1

    That government is best which governs least.

    --

    Liberty.

    1. Re:That government is best by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most truisms aren't. Think harder.

  371. Straight from the mouth of... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the doctor that doesn't believe in Evolution.

  372. fuck you slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Getting rid of the Department of Education...

    Honestly, of all the spending the US government has, education....

    This is the one area, perhaps out of defense, where there is an unquestionable importance.

    With this, Ron Paul essentially means I will not, in no way support him. He will run this country into the ground if he is given real power.

    It is only our intellectual superiority, which may seem strange to say, the really good Chinese still want to come to the US, thatt is the saving grace of this country.

    Take that away, we are no better than anyone else.

    You want a real plan...

    Flat tax + personal income exemption, lets say ~ 20-30k. No more deductions, no more "payroll taxes". etc....

    This what it would take, but everyone, including those, "intellectuals", on Slashdot, are too thick too recognize it.

    "And you will never know. how it feels to be thick as a brick."

    Thing is, I'm OK with this, so long as people, including those on Slashdot who are incompetent go along with it.... I'm well off, because I'm better than you. I can do what you do, in less time, and better than you can. So, go ahead, vote for Ron Paul, nothing, nothing would be better for me.

    Simple as that... Nothing more I need to say...

    I could say more, but you would, obviously, be too stupid to understand it.

    So, I will leave my "trolling"/insight at that point....

    That point is where people who are truly incompetent, but try to pretend otherwise, get pissed.

  373. Libertarians suck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The most selfish backwards people I have ever come across. They want the old system of a king and his armies and the wild west back. I used to think it was such a clever political ideology, until I actually thought about it and learnt how unpractical it is. Notice any libertarian countries (other than Somalia) anywhere? Why? Cause they dont work. Its as simple as that.

    1. Re:Libertarians suck by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      they dont work because its much easier to have total control and fear with force over liberty , you down with that ? nazi germany , and USSR work better ? So the US was not a "libertarian" experiment ? that hasn't lasted for many years ? , the most selfish people take from others claiming its what they deserve , which is what you advocate..

      Explain what you mean by " How Unpractical it is?" cite resources, studies , real world examples lets have a real discussion and debate...

      China seems to work pretty good , we should just use their model maybe we can have thoughtful discussions. manipulate their currency, remove anyone posting radical ideas silencing them, telling you how many babies you can make.. seems like the best option for the Republic of USA

  374. Or you could pay attention. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His "idea" is to "leave it to the states." And if you happen to live in those states that are too poor or governed by incompetents, it sucks to be you. That's always his been plan. There's nothing "indignant", it's called "knowing who Ron Paul is, and what his platform has always been."

  375. Wrong departments by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Cut the end all US wars and abolish the military and CIA. Huge savings in one fell swoop, and a better world almost instantly.

  376. A bit exaggerated, but agreed by LostMyBeaver · · Score: 1

    1) The departments he's attacking have been a critical central component to the U.S. throughout their existences. Yes, they're huge and financially screwed up and possibly irreparable, but let's face it... they are important. The alternative would be to be entirely dependent on organizations like Lockheed (bet he owns a few stocks there) which would be disastrous. Just because he doesn't understand what's being researched there doesn't mean that some of the most important scientific research in the U.S. isn't occurring there.

    2) The movement throughout many states to force Christianity into the government, the schools etc... at the expense of the freedoms which the U.S. was established upon is hurting the country terribly. Scientists are being viewed as the enemy because they keep coming up with these silly facts that conflict with what was written for a group of uneducated brick layers travelling through the dessert 3700 years ago. Because of that, they are seen as unnecessary by uneducated people. Maybe someone should explain to them that their god sent these scientists to fix all the problems they keep praying for answers to. But, as a result, the Christian movement keeps getting stronger and stronger in government and it almost certainly will push the world (or at least the U.S.) into a new dark age where science is denounced.... well as long as it doesn't cut off their cell phone and TV signals.

    3) Even educational TV isn't that educational anymore. Those networks are trying to get ratings in order to justify the cost of producing programs and broadcasting the signals. TV infrastructure companies keep wanting to pay less and less since they have to support having more channels for the same amount of money to the consumer. This is dumbing down the world as even Discovery is hardly educational anymore and is broadcasting mainly programs like Top Gear (while cool... is more of a sports program or game show than educational).

    4) The secondary educational system is completely and totally broken. For the most part, general education that is required in junior and senior years is an utter waste of time.... at least at that age of the student. While there are students who will certainly benefit from it and appreciate it, for the vast majority, the raging hormones in the age group makes it a ridiculous waste of time at that point. I personally believe that from the end of tenth grade and for two years after, students should be able to choose :
    a) a vocational school
    b) community service (local, military or peace corp)
    c) to stay in school (for the ones who will attend the university

    Then, after those two years, the students will hopefully have matured a bit... maybe even gotten laid a few times to level out their raging hormone problem, send them back to school for junior and senior year courses. It would be the same as making junior college compulsory. In addition, it will help the kids have a little more time to figure out who they'll be for the rest of their lives... a decision they're thoroughly unsuited for making at the age of 16.

    In addition, for students who are interested in an undergraduate level of education, that should be part of the secondary education program in the government. This way, kids can just continue high school for the additional 4 years or switch to a university undergraduate program. Point being that while it would cost a great deal more money to support this system, it'll also generate a much higher amount of tax revenue for the government by making it possible for a much larger population to get a college level education and to choose their path for the rest of their careers at the age of 24 instead of 17 or 18. Additionally, by making vocational school freely available for 2 years during junior and senior years, a great deal more of skilled workers will be available. Kids would have better options available than to work at Walmart or the gas station if they are even slightly motivated.

    The biggest pr

  377. simply a non-starter by ravenspear · · Score: 1

    this is why Ron Paul will not be the nominee

  378. What do you mean i don't care for politics? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No Plan is perfect, and no society is perfect, the 1% solution is to spend more , be taxed more, more deficeit, but it doesn't matter because the 1% make enough to afford the taxes even at 90% of their income.

      How do people argue, what are the actual benefits of all the government departments to the average middle-income family? (vs.) there is no consequences whatsoever to economy, to jobs, to the value of the dollar, the value of a house, or the govt. telling people what to do?

    How could the roles and duties of these departments be done cheaper without fed involvement? Wouldn't it be radical idea, if left to the states and private companies to decide if they require that role or service of government, and tax themselves for the services they require?

    when my state has the lowest amount of government dependence, yet i am paying for someone else's benefits, in another country , or another state...
      I will never get to see those benefits in my lifetime when i would need it the most, and if i do what will it be worth by the time im gone to pass on ? the trend so far doesn't look good over the next 40-30 years for social security.....

      I feel great paying taxes so we can fight wars that never end against any enemy of the state, a single person chooses on what incentives or interests, are worth fighting for... and that won't protect my future at all,

    Hey you agree, its ok to spend billions, i feel great waiting in line at the airport to be treated as a prisoner, the honest truth is we can't protect everyone, no matter how much money or government we have, and its only hurting us in the long run when we think we can fulfill every person's desire with the role of government..

      Attrition , and re-allocating government resources and responsibilities is not an overnight plan, but most were created without much oversight or understanding the consequences of growth and corruption, simply allowed to operate to justify that the american people need protection of some sort, and need to be taken care of by the govt, that personal liberty and property rights cant solve our basic problems in the courts. Basically saying, people can't take care of themselves, the Government can, don't worry they always do their best job! better then you can! they are problem solvers remember?, not doctors, and engineers, and mathematicians..

    You should be saying, the government should work more like a business and claim bankruptcy, then be censored and jailed for perjury, tampering with evidence misconduct, pollution, murders and deaths of thousands of people in the middle east, and hundreds of american soldiers fighting overseas .

        each clown in the circus has been vague on what their "plan" actually is, and won't divulge every single detail... once you start to dig into the economy issue, it is much more complex, then just taxing the rich, and simply printing more money, till nobody will take it.

    so the 1% can mock Ron Paul and his nut case movement and his "vague" plan to actually do some real cuts..

      but the reserve can shell out 16 trillion+ in less then a year or two ? how is this fiscally sound compared to -1 trillion in cuts? , basically the establishment is telling people , its ok we can bail out the companies, other countries who did wrong, and the american people and their children will suffer for it , but that's ok , its their fault really, because this is what and how the government should operate, it drives us into never ending debt, and takes away our freedom, property and sovereignty, we should NEVER think outside the box because its too just too radical ... #OWS we shouldn't have democrazy , simply because there's more crazy people there then sane people.. corrupt governments will eventually collapse, it will take care of itself and find the lowest path of resistance..

  379. noaa too?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is the only solar flare and X-ray warning system earth has got

  380. From the outside looking in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm amazed at some of the comments coming from Americans. I live in the UK and many of my friends and I watch whats going on in the US with fascination. Perhaps is easier to have an objective view when looking in from the outside, but let me tell you, most of us here can see that America is completely and utterly screwed and it is probably too late to save this sinking ship. Perhaps the only hope is Ron Paul as he seems to be the only politician running who gets it.

    The reason everything is so expensive for consumers is exactly because the Federal Reserve keeps printing money. That causes inflation. Printing more money to tackle the debt situation is ludicrous. Even more so when you consider that none of your other politicians have made ANY suggestion as to how they plan to deal with the deficit. Remember, economies around the world are getting crushed by the weight of their debt. Well, how can a government expect to tackle the debt problem without dealing with the deficit problem first.

    I am not an American, but even I understand that he is abolishing these departments at a federal level. The states are still free to do what they like so I don't understand why people are so concerned. Perhaps someone can explain this to me.

    Don't get me wrong though. I also think the UK is screwed. And we don't have the benefit of someone delivering a message like Ron Paul is.

    1. Re:From the outside looking in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      people are concerned in america, because our dollar is rotting away , for the exact reason you mention , printing money , people wont buy a piece of paper if its worth nothing...

      the other is fear, people fear what they dont understand, they have been babied all their life to rely on the US gov, taking from one person and giving it to another..

      most of the comments here , people HAVE NO IDEA what these departments actually do , and speculate that its ALWAYS in their best interests, we did not have an FED audit exposed for many many years, and ron paul got it done, and we are starting to see the real damage of creating money from nothing...

      How would you like it UK took your tax money , and you have no say where that money goes ? or your expected to pay a higher tax , just because other people were involved in bad decisions...

      No offense, but the US revolting against England for one main reason ' TAXATION WITHOUT REPRESENTATION" otherwise , we'd be the united kingdom of states , happy to pay tribute to your queen :)

  381. Great ideas, but will be EXTREMELY difficult by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Washington is a Monolithic structure composed of a homogenous mixture of 50% greed, 30% corruption, 20% contempt for the average citizen. To them we are only numbers and revenue "widgets" literally that is how they think.

    The fact that large scale attempts have been implemented to eliminate Iowa from the first primary status exemplifies this.

    If you are west of the Appalachians and east of the Rockies you don't count.

    The culture of corruption is so great that of the entire federal budget, most of it is to fund Washington itself.

    I respect Dr. Paul’s positions (I say Doctor rather than congressman as that is a much more admirable accomplishment than congressman as it indicates intelligence and the ability to work i.e. Jesse Jackson Jr. is a congressman, as is Barney Frank and Phil Hare who still doesn’t care about the constitution!)

    FIRST thing to do is remove all government pensions, yes ALL and simply compensate via social security. If Social Security is good enough for the “sheeple” it is more than good enough for the wolves in “sheep clothing” aka Washington ruling elite.

    Second, the IRS must not only be abolished, it must be eliminated from existence.

    Third, all the Nixon, Carter, and Clinton Directives and the EPA should be removed

    The EPA has done more to target and destroy small business and small farms than any other agency in existence. It should be eliminated (trees and hay as pollutants???? Come on. People in town and cities collectively pollute more with things like Chem. Lawn and sewer runoff during rain storms than all the farmers combined.

    Gas and Banks should be “re-regulated” and a reasonable amount of retro repayment (10 years) should be done immediately to “recoup” the TARP losses to the country and even the playing field.

    The law on leaving houses vacant for 2 years must be immediately revoked; as the foreclosed properties are being allowed to deteriorate in order to escalate the value of occupied housing.this is happening and must stop. The banks goal to “fix the market” is to tear down foreclosed houses, escalate the value of occupied ones and jack the interest rates on people who follow the rules.

    This includes HUD, EPA, DOE, National Endowments for the Arts, National Science Foundation (been there done that.actually told in D.C. them that if an idea or project appears to have a profit associated with it in the future, they ARE NOT INTERESTED!!!)

    We need to relocate the U.N. out of this country so that the scum of the earth (i.e. Ahmed IamAwhackJob from Iran) doesn’t ever legally enter this nation again. I intentionally misspelled his name as he is a human stain. He was and is a terrorist, and held Americans hostage in 1979-1980 and should be made to pay for his crimes.

    WHY this clod was not captured while in the USA eludes me.

    Fifth and finally, I do agree with Dr. Paul in that the Monroe Doctrine needs to be implemented and enforced. - Yes that includes overthrowing Cuba, Argentina, and any other banana republic in South America peacefully if possible. If we used the same force projection in South and Central America as in the Mideast, frankly we would have a Democratic hemisphere in 3 to 6 months. The people in the Americas are Judeo Christians, and chose life over Allah.

    We need to take back the Canal Zone from China, get rid of the Norinco ports in Florida and California, and return to the basics.

    Between the USA, Mexico and Brazil, we have plenty of manufacturing.

    I am a Herman "Cainiac" but do hold Dr. Paul as my second choice.

  382. Re:Wow, he saves $12 billion, so 1% less deficit.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah but closing out all the wars and shutting out the foreign aid is functionally immediate savings.

  383. Re:Ron Paul asked for government energy loan subsi by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I know its too late to the game to get modded up, but mspohr, if you're still reading...

    Ron Paul has said on several occasions that (essentially) he *is* a hypocrite. His reasoning was that while our current form of "the game" exists, you have to play by the rules of the game...it doesn't work to just walk away and let others take your money (it furthers their dependency on federal $, reducing the chance of reform). Afterall, even wealthy congressional districts fight for funds....they are fighting for their money back!

  384. Re:Dept of Edu by Mike · · Score: 1

    The only way that could be true is if you believed that you had a "right" to the fruit of your neighbor's labor, which is quite the abhorrent notion.

  385. Get rid of NOAA? by Syberz · · Score: 1

    Uh... them be the guys giving weather info to airports and such, they also maintain the air routes for commercial pilots and navigational charts for commercial ships. Yeah, shutting them down is a great idea. You go Ron.

    --
    ~Syberz
  386. Well ... by Rambo+Tribble · · Score: 1

    ... they could axe the Presidency and Congress. That would save trillions! Oh, wait, then it would be Paul who would be out of a job.

  387. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by ianare · · Score: 1

    And you fail at reading comprehension. The GP never said that there has been 30 years of libertarianism. Rather that we have 30 years of data to show that libertarians are wrong thinking that the free market can regulate itself.

    I disagree.

    We have at least 300 years of evidence showing that libertarians are wrong.

  388. Ron Paul must be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Few things in politics are scarier to me than libertarianism. It's the live and let live philosophy of loners. We are a society and we are all in this together. We are an ant hive. Socialize!

  389. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by darjen · · Score: 1

    sorry, but you are dead wrong. you are deluding yourself if you think we had any semblance of a free market over the past 30 years. especially with the financial system.

    there was something close to a free market 300 years ago. but that was soon abandoned, starting with the constitution and going downhill quickly from there.

  390. Nice by luk3Z · · Score: 0

    Anyway I've invented repair program for USA earlier (look in my sig).

    --
    Recipes for USA bankrupt - http://tinypaste.com/0d66f dd = dollar deluge (printed in the infinity)
  391. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by RobNich · · Score: 1

    Ron Paul economic ideas are no-fucking-brainers. We've got 150 years of history prior to the creation of the various social programs, where the US was an economic powerhouse that the rest of the planet was immigrating into. There were no federally-run social programs at that time; why do you think everyone wanted to be here?

    You can't honestly think that his desire to return the federal government to the responsibilities that were laid down in the founding documents is unfounded and stupid. There's no way you can be that ideologically biased.

    And that "old fool" has been saying these same things for decades. Every warning he's given us has come true. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gk3FwJTjVi4

    --
    Hello little man. I will destroy you!
  392. Funny thing by tehcyder · · Score: 1

    On a recent anti-Murdoch story, many conservatives moaned how it was all just political and didn't belong on slashdot. Now every US slashdotter's favourite tax-hating libertarian comes up with a plan to cut government spending, and there's already 2000 posts, most of them pretty much dick-sucking "me too"'s.

    --
    To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
  393. You see that is the problem with libertarians... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    like Ron Paul.

    I listen to them and I'm agreeing with every word they say and then suddenly they go off the deep end into complete absurdity. A lot of of what he says I like and I also like that I believe he really means it and has the courage of his convictions, however, I can't go along with such extremism. I'm basically a Socialist so this is coming from someone that is very far to the left by anyone's standards but I still like Paul. I think the problem isn't too much government but too little value. I would actually prefer more government but I also believe we should get our money's worth - the quality and quantity of services should be proportionate to the taxes paid. However, first we need to get money out of our politics, remove all corporate ties to government, and give the country back to the people first.

  394. Re:Dept of Edu by DavidTC · · Score: 1

    Because society paid for your education, you fucktard.

    --
    If corporations are people, aren't stockholders guilty of slavery?
  395. Re:Ron Pauls' economic ideas are head-crushingly S by Uberbah · · Score: 1

    So my argument would be that maybe we shouldn't be so quick to think that those who believe in free-markets are doing wishful thinking.

    Except that's exactly what they are doing. The natural, end result of capitalism is consolidation and eventual monopolies - which limit choice and prevent new competitors from entering the market, further limiting choice.

    Libertarian policy is faith-based policy, as that's all it has to support it.

  396. Private Industry Benefits by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ultimately private industry benefits from Govt. research and development. These things should be left for private industry. They currently get the benefit of new development without nearly as much investment. Its we the taxpaper that pays for that. The politican benefits by bestowing the contracts acchieve this his to supporter's. Dr. Paul would take this out of Govt. hands. Look what our Dept oif Ed. has accomplished. We have new schools and high paid teachers all over the land but are down the list as far as educated youth. The teaching profession should be private Industry and not Govt. run union with a huge lobbyist presence. Everyone or group has a lobbyiest in Washington except we the average citizen. We have no one watching out for us. We need Ron Paul.

  397. Re:Dept of Edu by Mike · · Score: 1

    False.

  398. Yes, I can by Tancred · · Score: 1

    BUT can anyone point out a single other candidate that has a plan in plain, simple terms like his to actually do something?

    I take that to mean do something about the deficit. Barack Obama has an even simpler plan - get more people working with his jobs bill, raise taxes slightly on the wealthy, reduce spending on wars and cut oil subsidies.

    The current deficit comes from 3 main reasons:
            - massive unemployment and recession caused by unregulated and unaccountable bankers
            - the Bush tax cuts (now the Obama tax cuts, since he renewed them)
            - very expensive wars

    My solution to each in turn would be:
            - stimulus (to help the current situation) and return of glass steagall (to prevent the next banking crisis)
            - return to '90s income tax rates
            - get out of Iraq and Afghanistan
    I'd add:
            - treat capital gains as regular income (why do we value *having* money more than *working*?)
            - breaking up the large banks
            - serious invesitgation and indictment of fraudulent bankers
            - option for all to buy into medicare and allow medicare to be able to negotiate prices
            - publicly funded elections (if it costs us $1Billion or even $10Billion, does anyone think that's more than what we lose to corruption caused by beholden politicians?)

    1. Re:Yes, I can by trevelyon · · Score: 1

      Wow, that took what 1 hour of thought to come up with? Is that really what you consider a "plan" like his? Where are the numbers to go along with it and what are the sources? Let me put it to you this way, if you were investing in a business and someone came in to pitch their ideas to you. One proposal was Ron Paul's with projected numbers (with citations for the sources), a clear statement of intent and specifics on what were to be done and the other was a single sheet of paper that said "Get more people working with his jobs bill, raise taxes slightly on the wealthy, reduce spending on wars and cut oil subsidies" you'd really go with the later? Would you still do it after you found out that person had already led things for 3 years and managed to do none of those things in that time?

      The fact that these one line bits of verbiage are what people consider a plan shows clearly how we got into this mess. Talk is talk, if there's no REAL plan WITH ROUGH NUMBERS then they either haven't done their homework and/or are just guessing that it will have those results.

    2. Re:Yes, I can by Tancred · · Score: 1

      You seem to be comparing my Slashdot comment and the time it took to Ron Paul's running-for-president plan, and comparing only on how much documentation and projections they contain. Pretty silly.

      you'd really go with the later?

      Of course I'd take Obama's plan over Paul's. I'm a realist, not in thrall to Paul's libertarian fantasy.

      these one line bits of verbiage

      Again, my Slashdot comment description of Obama's plan is bound to be shorter than even the first item, i.e. the Jobs Bill currently being filibustered by the GOP.

      led things for 3 years and managed to do none of those things in that time

      It's been 2.75 years. He has done a jobs bill (stimulus, much of it wasted on tax cuts), gave away raising taxes on the wealthy in the debt ceiling hostage negotiation, reduced quite a bit of our presence in Iraq (and today announced we'd be out by the end of his 3rd year), and has talked over and over about cutting oil subsidies, but can't get it done due to Republican obstructionism. If you're honestly for cutting war expenditures and corporate subsidies, you should give him some credit for those, while still disagreeing on many other things. That will make you seem more principled instead of just being against Obama no matter what he does.

      There are thousands of people besides Ron Paul, working in and out of government, doing projections on the effects of various policies. I assume you've seen a lot of that, but if not, try the CBO for good non-partisan estimates of policy effects. If you want to do some reading on economics regarding the current crisis, I suggest Matt Taibbi's Griftopia, Paul Krugman's The Return of Depression Economics and Michael Lewis' The Big Short.

    3. Re:Yes, I can by trevelyon · · Score: 1

      I am not saying that Ron Paul's plan will work in fact I believe if you look at the original post I specifically stated that to get it passed you'd need to toss out most of the democrats AND republicans. All I was saying is he was the only one to put up a rough plan WITH CITED NUMBERS to show exactly how he intends to get there.

      As to giving Obama credit for what he's accomplished please look at this:
      http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/federal_deficit_chart.html

      I think you will notice the significant increase in DEFICIT under his term. All those bailout and stimulus plans cost lots of money and may just be extending the recession instead of getting us out of it. In contrast say Donald Tusk (Prime Minister of Poland) was praised for his handling of the economic crisis which was basically leave things alone and let the markets sort it out (as is the premise of capitalism in general). BTW, Poland was the only EU country to avoid recession in 2009. Odd, isn't it?

      Call me a Ron Paul shill if you like but I ask you once again, point me to a link that shows Obama's plan in anywhere close to the detail of Paul's (one with numbers). If he's as prepared a candidate as you say he is that should be an easy task. I'm not singling out Obama here I'd be happy if you can point me to a plan nearly as detailed for ANY other candidate. I'd really like to think there's more than one out there that isn't just flapping their gums but has a real plan in place and eagerly await a response that can show me a link to one.

    4. Re:Yes, I can by Tancred · · Score: 1

      As to giving Obama credit for what he's accomplished please look at this:
      http://www.usgovernmentspending.com/federal_deficit_chart.html
      I think you will notice the significant increase in DEFICIT under his term.

      Didn't you read the page you linked to? Bush's last deficit was higher than any of Obama's deficits so far. From your own link: Bush -$1.413T, Obama -$1.299T.

      Again, refusing to give Obama credit for doing things you agree with makes you sound like an anti-Obama reactionary and your attacks suspect.

      All those bailout and stimulus plans cost lots of money and may just be extending the recession instead of getting us out of it. In contrast say Donald Tusk (Prime Minister of Poland) was praised for his handling of the economic crisis which was basically leave things alone and let the markets sort it out (as is the premise of capitalism in general). BTW, Poland was the only EU country to avoid recession in 2009. Odd, isn't it?

      I'm no expert on the Polish economy, but how does all that EU development aid for Poland fit into your theory? Sounds like stimulus to me.

      Call me a Ron Paul shill if you like but I ask you once again, point me to a link that shows Obama's plan in anywhere close to the detail of Paul's (one with numbers). If he's as prepared a candidate as you say he is that should be an easy task. I'm not singling out Obama here I'd be happy if you can point me to a plan nearly as detailed for ANY other candidate. I'd really like to think there's more than one out there that isn't just flapping their gums but has a real plan in place and eagerly await a response that can show me a link to one.

      If you're so eager, why didn't you do a simple search for the jobs bill I mentioned?
      http://www.americanjobsact.com/
      Since Ron Paul bases his projections on the CBO, I suppose you'll want to know what they say about the plan:
      http://cboblog.cbo.gov/?p=2875
      And about the economic outlook in general. Pay special attention to what continuing the Bush/Obama tax cuts do to the deficit:
      http://www.cbo.gov/doc.cfm?index=12316

  399. Re:Do we REALLY need to slash our deficit right no by Tancred · · Score: 1

    No, we don't. In a sane system, we'd have surpluses during a good economy and spend it (i.e. use stimulus) during a poor economy. That should be as controversial as storing up food for the winter and then eating it. Stimulus damps the bad economy swings (by hiring, by putting more money in the hands of people that will spend it). Austerity amplifies the bad economy swings (by laying even more people off, taking money out of an already hurting economy).

  400. Downsize DHS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd like to see him downsize the TSA significantly, throw out their junk and cancer airport projects, stop molesting people trying to fly or attend NFL events. I'd like to see FEMA off by itself so it can be serve humanitarian interests exclusively rather be confused with domestic security enforcement. Bring back the National Guard from overseas so they can do their job. I'd like to see the gross glut of federally funded public-private surveillance industry contracts cut out. That way they could just pay cities for junk removal and domestic clean-up programs by removing the CCTV and license plate reader and toll tag urban blight. It also like to see him cut the DoD and Secret Defense black budgets. It's wierd to know there are 17 secret pay grades in national security above the US President. Whoever they are - they're the mob and we can no longer to pay for "protection". So we'll just have to enabled or empowered to defend ourselves from disgruntled ex-intel operatives.

  401. Revenue increase by jwhitener · · Score: 1

    I just read 200 comments and not one mentioned increasing revenue.

    Taxes are at historic lows. The wealthy survived just fine with > 50% taxes for decades. Likewise, all of us (middle/upper middle class) survived just fine with Clinton era rates.

    http://www.cbpp.org/cms/?fa=view&id=3490

    The bush tax cuts, the wars, and medicare part d, combined with the recession, are what is causing the deficit. If we just stop those three things and the economy recovers, the deficit will go away.

    1. Re:Revenue increase by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Taxes are at historic lows. The wealthy survived just fine with > 50% taxes for decades.

      Yes, they did. They all found ways to avoid paying them.

  402. O RLY? by DragonHawk · · Score: 1

    IIRC, in the "golden age of air travel", airlines were heavily regulated.

    --

    dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
    I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
  403. Hey just so y'all libertarians know... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The idea of the government not doing much to provide for the welfare of the people isn't new. It's been the SOP for third world shitholes for pretty much forever, and you're welcome to move to one.

  404. The Demise Of Democracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves largesse from the public treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidates promising the most benefits from the public treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy, always followed by a dictatorship. The average age of the world’s greatest civilizations has been 200 years.

    -- Alexander Fraser Tytler

  405. Phase out Section 8 Housing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about phasing out Section 8 housing which is little more than a subsidy of landlords...???

  406. WTF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What do I think!?!?! THAT'S TOTAL AND UDER BULLSHITE! WTF is wrong with him??!?! As the f***** if my 18K/year with 6 kids family would even consider letting me take any classes at a stupid community college with no support!

  407. Yes and No by VOMIChairman · · Score: 1

    I agree from a macro and idealistic standpoint. Why? Other than for the purpose of creating secure, lifetime jobs for career bureaucrats, the government does a poor job at just about everything that it sinks its teeth into--with the exception of WAR IN SELF-DEFENSE versus WAR OF CHOICE --although, at the onset, it always begins with the best of intentions.

    However, from a realistic standpoint, I disagree. Why? That's because you'd wind up playing a shell game with the American people. Now you see it, now you don't. Politicians just can't help it - it's in their DNA to create huge and bloated bureaucracies as the answer to every problem. Once you create one of these bureaucracies, they tend to take a life of their own, become completely unrestrained, and just BLOAT and BLOAT until they implode under their own weight. The minute you get rid of one bureaucracy, 1-5 more would pop up in its place. The net savings is $0 or a negative $1 trillion dollars.