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"Gunner" wrote in message
... On Tue, 12 Aug 2003 00:18:18 GMT, "Jeff McCann" wrote: "Gunner" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 11 Aug 2003 17:13:41 GMT, "Jeff McCann" wrote: I'm top posting without snipping because what you quoted (the part below your cites) is so exactly correct I don't want anyone to miss it. In fact, I'm going to use it as a handout in my healthcare law class. "Gunner" wrote in message .. . On Mon, 11 Aug 2003 08:27:31 GMT, "Jeff McCann" wrote: refusing to take their meds, or go to outpatient clinics etc. Basicly..,the Libs created the homeless situation in California, and in doing so, are responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of mentally ill folks whom died and are still dying on the streets, not to mention those that are killed, raped etc etc by the more vicious members of the homeless nutcases. Sounds like typical revisionist neo-con spin to me; blame everything on the "Libs." Cites? Jeff Simply cannot accept that the Libs would do that to people? How many did Stalin kill? Stalin's mass murders are connected to the mainstream beliefs of American progressive politics how, exactly? Such an obviously overblown smear is really beneath a man of your intelligence, Gunner. Hint..your criteria is flawed at its root. There is NO mainstream belief in progressive politics. By definition, progressive politics are Leftist at best, and the US is not by any stretch of the imagination progressive in its mainstream beliefs. Hint: Stop listening so much to El Rushbo. America is progressive in it's soul. That progressive character has manifested itself in everything from worker's health and safety laws, to free public schools, to social security domestically, and ideas like the Nuremberg trials and recognizing basic human rights internationally. At the turn of the last century, the Conservatives and their corporate overlords had to be brought to heel by Theodore Roosevelt and the progressive movement in the Trust-Busting era to move the country forward. We may see something similar in reaction to the current Far Right Administration, Supreme Court and Congress. Snicker..I listen to Larry Elder, and seldom bother listening to Rush. However..it may behove you to spend a little time listening to both of them. Actually, I listen regularly to Rush, but I understand that he is just an entertainer, not the fount of all wisdom. I also listen to Sean Hannity and watch Faux News and Joe Scarbourough (we once worked together), so I stay pretty current on the Right wing view of things. Few Libs have ever heard about the Law of Unintended Consequences, nor would they ever admit that their way is not the Perfect way..... Oh, like cutting taxes on the rich while paying $1+B per week for a highly dubious war and offering no rational plan to control bloating deficits and the resulting drain on the economy is wise, prudent, the product of careful foresight, and the perfect way to help the economy. It seems to me that plenty of neo-cons are actually stupid enough to believe their own rhetoric. The current situation in Iraq is the perfect illustration of the Law of Unintended Consequences, or the effect of neo-con wishful thinking and the triumph of ideology over reason. One should note..that the Recession, while cyclic in nature, started under the auspices of the Clinton Administration, and had little to do with Neo-cons. The Dems were bellied up to the trough right along side of the Republicans during the Dot Com bubble. One should note..that the economy is starting to move along just fine, GDP is up, manufacturing is up and the markets are strong. It's kinda tough to spend over $1B a week and NOT see an increase in GDP. The millions of jobs destroyed under George II are another story . Which millions are those? The ones that went tits up as a result of the Clinton Administration? Btw..how long was Enron going on..and whom was at the helm during that time? Hummmmmmmmmm? Do try to stop blaming everything on the Clinton Regime, will you? It's becoming a tiresome refrain. The plain fact is that there was steady job growth under Clinton and steady job loss under George II. As for Enron and the like, it seems to me that the current administration is settling the theft and fraud cases for pennies on the dollar, letting the wrongdoers keep most of their ill-gotten gains. They are also watering down or stalling real efforts at reform while putting on a few show trails of mid-level crooks like Martha Stewart. While the Iraqi situation may or may not have been prudent..no one has flown airliners into buildings since 9/11..which is a good thing, and Bush hasnt bombed asprin factories either....and there is no Monica or Wag the dog .... Ah, the Polestar of the political Far Right. "At least we aren't Clinton!" Can't you guys ever justify yourselves on your own merits with reference to Clinton? Sure can, but its lots of fun using YOUR guy as a counter when you blokes start spewing the DNC party line. Clinton definitely wasn't MY guy. As for wag the dog, are you referring to Reagan's invasion of Grenada to distract public attention from the hundreds of body bagged Marines coming home from his Lebanon debacle? Now, let's look at what you've offered as cites supporting your assertion that the "Libs" caused the problem in California: http://www.psychlaws.org/GeneralResources/article45.htm "In 1967, Gov. Ronald Reagan signed the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act (LPS), which went into effect in 1969 and quickly became a national model. Among other things, it prohibited forced medication or extended hospital stays without a judicial hearing. . . . As a practical matter, involuntary commitment was no longer a plausible option. . . . In 1999, the Legislature finally funded pilot projects in Stanislaus, Los Angeles and Sacramento counties that offered comprehensive treatment for the mentally ill. And they appeared to work. Within the first four months, the $10 million pilot program helped move 1,000 people off the streets and into support systems of care. Last year, Assemblyman Darrell Steinberg, D-Sacramento, sponsored legislation to allocate $54.9 million to expand these pilot programs to 24 counties and two cities during the next three years. . . . " It seems a Democrat (gasp!) was trying to address the problem here. Nothing attributes the problem to "Libs,", so the cited work doesn't appear to support your original claim Lanterman was a Republican btw..and to this day, states quite clearly that it was a huge mistake. Yeah, because community based care was never funded as he intended. Yup. And why not? You Dems have been in charge in California for 36 yrs. So why didnt you get off your asses and do something about the funding? God knows we got taxed enough..... Democrats have a full share of blame, but that's not your original claim. You blamed the entire mess on the "libs." On that point, you were wrong. http://www.psychlaws.org/StateActivi...a/LPSoped3.htm Nothing about "libs" causing the problem there, either. http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/...1streets.story "This week the Assembly Judiciary Committee will consider legislation by Assembly- woman Helen Thomson (D-Davis) that would solve a key part of the problem. AB 1421 would amend the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act, a well-intentioned but ultimately misguided law passed in the 1960s that bars doctors, judges and counselors from compelling seriously mentally ill people to be treated unless it can be proven they are at imminent risk of harming themselves or others." Another Democrat trying to address the problem. Note..that law came into effect in 1967...36 yrs ago. What took you guys so long? There were efforts at reform during that time. It's not like the Republicans gave a rat's ass, we're STILL waiting for them to do something for the mentally ill, other than build more prisons, etc., I mean. Why bother with the Republicans? California has had a Democratic Majority for nearly 36 yrs, with only a couple Republican Govs, whom didnt veto any funding initiatives. How come its only NOW that the Dems are climbing up on the ride? Hummmm? At least somebody is. http://sftimes.editthispage.com/stories/storyReader$82 That's a story about (Democrat) SF Mayor Willie Brown's efforts to address the problems in San Francisco, caused by the Legislation Gov. Reagan signed back in '67 Note..that law came into effect in 1967...36 yrs ago. What took you guys so long? There were efforts at reform during that time. It's not like the Republicans gave a rat's ass, we're STILL waiting for them to do something for the mentally ill, other than build more prisons, etc., I mean. Why bother with the Republicans? California has had a Democratic Majority for nearly 36 yrs, with only a couple Republican Govs, whom didnt veto any funding initiatives. How come its only NOW that the Dems are climbing up on the ride? Hummmm? The Democrats have merely demonstrated that they are quite as capable as the Republicans when it comes to mismanaging government. This surprises you somehow? ;-) http://www.namisonomacounty.org/reflect.htm " 'The passage of California's Lanterman-Petris-Short (LPS) Act in 1967...made rational treatment for the mentally ill increasingly difficult.' (Out of the Shadows, Confronting America's Mental Illness Crisis, E. Fuller Torrey, M.D. , John Wiley & Sons, Inc., N.Y. 1997. pg 10, pg 143)" Nothing about the "libs" here either, I'm afraid. Yet it seems clear that the Lanterman-Petris-Short Act was the source of the problem, or rather was the source when combined with the lack of funding for community-based care, according to your own cites. Gov. Reagan, a Republican, signed the Act. Frank Lanterman, a Republican, chaired the committee responsible for the legislation, so he controlled what went into the Act. Nicholas C. Petris and Alan Short were Democrats. All of them later expressed disappointment that the funding for follow-on community based care was not provided. That was not their intent. In 1967, the California Legislature was divided almost equally between Democrats and Republicans, with a 1 member Democrat edge in the Senate and a 2 member edge in the Assembly. Any legislation would therefore require bipartisan support and could not be passed over a governmental veto. Furthermore, Gov. Reagan enjoyed the power of a "line item veto" over expenditures in the State budget. This was the year that Reagan actually increased the state income tax rates on the wealthy (he did so again in 1971 IIRC); he was in a budget crisis and was more than happy to unburden the state budget from the cost of mental health care by passing the buck to county and local governments that had no hope of meeting the needs of the newly de-institionalized mentally ill. Your assertion that "[b]asicly..,(sic) the Libs created the homeless situation in California, and in doing so, are responsible for the deaths of hundreds of thousands of mentally ill folks whom died and are still dying on the streets, not to mention those that are killed, raped etc etc by the more vicious members of the homeless nutcases[,]" doesn't seem to be borne out by the facts, does it? Oh, I'm sure the liberals of that era played their part, but it's neither fair nor accurate to blame them for the resulting mess. Jeff Sure it was fair and accurate. Reagan HAD to sign the legislation as part of the Sop to the Dems for the tax increases. Yep. Governors, unlike Presidents, can't just run up huge deficits and let the grandkids worry about it. Chuckle..would you care to say the magic words...Gray Davis? Ayup. So, who you gonna vote for to replace him? You are also forgetting the politics of 1967...I remember them well..Power to the People! (raising a fist) and Death to the Pigs..... The hippie radical left was on the outside, looking in, and not in power. The "Establishment" was calling the shots, remember? Really? ROFLMAO! Tom Hayden etc had no effect..right? Hint..I live in California..and I know personally some of the players in that rat ****..and to this day, they all say Lanterman was a mistake. Hint: So did I. Good, then we are in agreement that Lanterman was a rat ****. It was the Left whom pushed the law, and its been the Left, whom for 36 yrs have not corrected its horror, as California has been a Democrat run state for at least that long, with a large surplus for much of that time. Common Democrat fallacy. Good intentions aren't enough. But the Republicans bear their full weight of responsibility for the resulting horror, as well. I don't care for Democrat screw-ups either. Don't confuse my very deep concern and occasional abject horror at the current regime's doings as blanket approval of the alternative. Jeff |
does anybody here really know?
On Sat, 9 Aug 2003 18:53:09 -0400, "Gary Warner"
wrote: "Carolyn Louise leigh" wrote in message ... No Brainer! OIL. Toss out all the smoke and mirrors. Every argument GWB made for War with Iraq was an echo of the 60's. My how short memories become....:) Operation Iraqi Liberation = OIL Oh, wait, we better not call it that... Operation Isralie Lackeys Oy vey, ve kan't call it zhat either. . . __________________________________________________ ____________________ Posted Via Uncensored-News.Com - Still Only $9.95 - http://www.uncensored-news.com The Worlds Uncensored News Source |
does anybody here really know?
"Ignoramus14603" wrote in message ... In article , leon skunkers wrote: ...why the hell we invaded Iraq? I'll admit I can't come up with anything that makes sense. My guess is, as to what went behind the closed doors, is that there were two reasons: 1. Steal Iraqi oil and enrich Haliburton, etc, and lower oil prices in time for the next election. The old "liebensraum" (living space) concept. 2. Occupy Iraq and use it as a fixed aircraft carrier in the quest for world dominance. The thinking goes, occupying Iraq, it will be easier to get Saudis or Iran or whatever other nation might be "next". Unfortunately, it turns out that the Iraqis are not eager to pump out their oil to enrich us, and also that instead of a good platform for a conquest, Iraq consumed much of the US military manpower to the point that it is much harder to mount more victorious blitzkriegs elsewhere. You forgot: 3. It was Osama's wish, and a way to accede to his demand that we leave Saudi Arabia yet still feel like we had a presence in the region. Note: we have given in to essentially all of his post-911 demands. Way to go George! 4. It was a way to forestall the changeover of the valuation of oil to Euros, instead of USDollars. A true win-win if there ever was one. Dan |
does anybody here really know?
"Gunner" wrote in message ... On Mon, 11 Aug 2003 18:27:47 -0700, "Dan" wrote: "Jeff McCann" wrote Hint: Stop listening so much to El Rushbo. America is progressive in it's soul. That progressive character has manifested itself in everything from worker's health and safety laws, to free public schools, to social security domestically, and ideas like the Nuremberg trials and recognizing basic human rights internationally. Don't forget those dusty old chestnuts, the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, and the first part of the Declaration of Independence. As recently as 2 1/2 years ago, people at least paid lip service to them... Dan Yup, sure did. Too bad none of them were Dem Politicians. Amazing. His lips hardly moved... Dan |
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