SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : John EDWARDS for President

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Ann Corrigan who wrote (362)2/21/2004 6:24:06 PM
From: Raymond Duray  Read Replies (1) of 1381
 
Hi Ann,

It is perhaps some indication of how skewed the politics of the U.S. have become that I strike you as a leftist. In Europe, I'd be considered a centrist.

One of my favorite political commentators is Thom Hartmann whose motto is "Uncommon Sense for the Radical Middle". My choice for President this year was Howard Dean, who had a record as a fiscal conservative and who drove the progressives in Vermont batty by constantly keeping them in check and not expanding government social programs to unsustainable levels.

So, it is only on the perversely skewed political spectrum in the dangerously right-leaning America that I come across as a leftist.

You know what. I'm proud of it. I think that the current fashion for stripping community assets from public ownership and privatizing everything from water supplies to sewer system to schooling is nuts. For centuries we've known that public systems were better managed, better constructed and better for customers. But a madness has taken over the right wing who want to privatize everything in the world, all for the sake of greed. You can see the insanity of this from the riots in Cochabamba, Bolivia, where Bechtel tried to force the citizens to cease collecting rainwater from their own roofs to Bochum, Germany were a sewer system became a tax scam for Wachovia, an American bank that cheated the American taxpayer by privatization schemes.

I don't expect you to reconsider your antipathy for the UN. But I do hope that you will think about how you are being cheated as a taxpayer by schemes like Wachovia's, which are becoming fashionable throughtout all of corporate America.

Here's a couple links for the background:
marketplace.org

Segment: "Tax Me If You Can" series - America's largest corporations shelter all of their income
A study by the nonprofit Institute for Taxation found some of the largest companies in America are paying no taxes at all -- but unraveling the deals that allow these firms to elude the IRS isn't easy. Enter Cary Allen, an IRS agent who discovered one of the largest illegitimate tax shelters in the last 10 years. At the heart of the shelter scam was a complicated system of foreign leases made by U.S. companies. Problem is, even though the IRS has made some of these deals illegal, the same companies are at it again.
Reporter: Hedrick Smith

Frontline: "Tax Me If You Can"
pbs.org

*******
I, for one, understand exactly what Eleanor Roosevelt and her generation were thinking about and hoping for with the creation of the United Nations, and I find the goals to be noble and benign. What I cannot understand is the great antipathy to the UN among American conservatives.

Clearly, conservatives didn't want to become part of the International Criminal Court, because they feared prosecution.

Conservatives didn't want to be part of the Kyoto Protocol because of greed and a lack of concern about future.

Conservatives don't want to be part of the Nuclear Non-Proliferation treaty because they want to proliferate a new generation of nuclear weapons.

Why don't they want to be part of the United Nations? My guess is that it boils down to greed, lust for foreign resources and a disdain for "the lesser races". But it could be more. Or it could be less.
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext