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2nd Term Part VIII - The Thin Red Line

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Re: 2nd Term Part VIII - The Thin Red Line

Just saw on Twitter that Rick Perry has been indicted on corruption charges. All Obama's fault, I'm sure.
 
Re: 2nd Term Part VIII - The Thin Red Line

Wow. 109 years in prison? They don't take corruption lightly in Texas

The Soviet Constitution guaranteed full civil liberties. It's not the law, it's the execution. I suspect it will be virtually impossible to convict Perry, if only because of the threat that he can likely credibly implicate 75% of the state leg.
 
Re: 2nd Term Part VIII - The Thin Red Line

This is a true what the--. Michelle Nunn endorsed by Zell Miller. He's either gone senile, was best buds with her father, or (most likely) he's an attention whore trying for 15 more minutes.
 
If Paul were to win, that would rehabilitate conservatism in my eyes. The libertarian message is facile and callous, but it isn't insane. There's a reason most intelligent males go through a libertarian phase in their teens -- it seems to hang together and it seems just. Once you enter the real world, have a family, and start observing people as more than dots on a scatter plot the inanities of libertarianism become obvious, but when your life experience consists of math, science fiction, and a smattering of superficial social psychology, it looks like the most efficient solution to an engineering problem.

If only all conservatism were that benign. The virtues of the libertarian mindset, as distinct from the more malevolent brands of conservative thought, are: it leaves racism, sexism, and homophobia behind; it attempts to follow a "first, do no harm" principle (in reality it is lethal, but the people who follow it can't know that yet, they're too sheltered -- they're not monsters, they're just naive); it is an honest attempt to adhere to America's best instincts about the inherent equality of everyone.

Yes, it is irreparably infected by big money interests as well as a gender skew that ought to give pause to even its greatest adherents. Yes, it is yet another Utopian solution, which the world has had about enough of after the failure of the other Great Schemes. And yes, it in incredibly uncaring in the face of real world suffering, out of condescending True Believer bluster that the "great leap forward" always involves great pain (though, conveniently, not to them). But compared to the Neocons and the Theocons, it is the least poisonous form of current conservatism.

I hate responding to posts of yours that I disagree with. I feel like a first-year physics student who noticed an error on a chalkboard in a professor's lecture.

I agree with the reasons why a lot of math/sciencey males are libertarians. That makes a lot of sense. But the rest I disagree with. There's a balance to be struck between libertarianism and realism. I strive to hit that sweet spot. I think a libertarian society would be my utopian society, however I understand it's not feasible in the real world. That's where I like to "compromise" the libertarian principles. I think pot should be legal but cocaine shouldn't. As an example. I also think things like the flat tax are an oppressive joke. The environment should be protected and I truly believe the best solutions will come from he marketplace. But I also think you need to nudge he marketplace in the generally right direction.

With regards to the -isms you mentioned, I won't disagree that these things exist, but things like affirmative action need to go away. Naive? Maybe.

I don't think libertarianism has all the answers but I think it has the "most best" answers when compared to the other parties and subparties out there.

Edit: also, trying to type up long responses to long posts is an absolute chore on an iPhone and this terrible mobile interface on USCHO.
 
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Re: 2nd Term Part VIII - The Thin Red Line

He's already acquitted Perry because he did nothing wrong. The Socialist Kenyan Muslin is guilty of all kinds of things though.
This is a ticked off DA from the other party who decided to get revenge because the Gov wanted her out of office and used the power of the purse to do it.
 
Re: 2nd Term Part VIII - The Thin Red Line

This is a ticked off DA from the other party who decided to get revenge because the Gov wanted her out of office and used the power of the purse to do it.

It's not the DA that brought the matter to the grand jury. It's a special prosecutor (from San Antonio).

The undercurrent behind this is that her office was investigating Perry's business buddies and pet slush funds, and I think if she had resigned, he would have appointed her replacement.
 
Re: 2nd Term Part VIII - The Thin Red Line

This is a ticked off DA from the other party who decided to get revenge because the Gov wanted her out of office and used the power of the purse to do it.

Good thing he doesn't have a Richard Scaife to do the media dirty work, or it could really get out of hand.
 
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