Posted on 09/27/2001 9:32:09 AM PDT by gopno1
Here we go again.
Now I am being forced to read a bunch of anti-80's crap in my English Composition class.
This instructor is a pure Commie-pinko. I can't stand her, and have had it out with her numerous times. Remember, I am 6-7 years older than anyone in my classes, so I have the upper hand on all of the students as far as political knowledge.
We are being spoon-fed liberal propaganda in the form of this book: "Signs of Life in the USA, Readings on Popular Culture for Writers." Authored by Sonia Maasik and Jack Solomon. I think it was edited by Marx.
To get to the point: we are to discuss this outloud tommorrow and I need some pro-Reagan, pro-1980's ammo to combat this "Decade of Greed" crap. I was only 12 when Reagan left office, so my memories are quite cloudy.
I let no liberalism slide in ANY of my classes. I have gotten advice to just take it and get out of there and be done with it, but I just can't do it. This needs to be combatted. Thanks for all of your help. BW
Ask your teacher if she thinks that the minority populations, specifcally blacks, should give all the gains back to suit her white liberal values. (Black income gains were huge during the Reagan years)
With a wink: Now, mrs x, are you saying that greed is bad? Greed is a very emotive emotionally charged word that a partisan would use. What your reeeeeeeeaaaaallllyy sayin is you are against individual responsibility.
For example: I make $100, you make $10. If my income increases by 10% and yours increases by 30%, then I'm at $110 and you are at $13, so the gap still widens, even thought you have a much higher percentage increase.
I'm going to keep looking for these stats ...
As far as the 80's vs the 90's in comparison. if 80's are greed, then the 90's is the decade of Greed and corruption. Bill Clinton was bought and sold by money.
Give them all a test to see which decade was worse, just Greed or Greed and Corruption: Give them a choice between Reagan and Clinton.
What President sold the Lincoln bedroom for campain contributions?
What President spent more days fundraising then actually in the White house?
What President pardoned American Traitor Marc Rich for money before he left office?
What President was involved in fundraising scandals?
What President took illegal campain money from the Communist Chinese?
What Vice-President illegally accepted money from Buddist monks who swore an oath to poverty?
What Vice President headed up Airline safety, rejected a $4 increase tax for anti-terrorist measures and was rewarded with DNC contributions for his Presidential bid from TWA, United and American Airlines in 1998?
Which President murdered 4 people in a bogus cruise missle attack in order from keeping his girlfriends testimony off the front page?
What Administration is considered the most corrupt in American History? (if they say Reagan, demand list of all of his scandels vs. Clinton.
Which Law Professor President was impeached for lying under oath and later fined $80 grand and disbarred from practicing law?
If Iran-Contra was soooo terrible, why wasn't Reagen Impeached for it like Bill Clinton?
Then go for the throat
If Greed is soooooo bad, why are you all going to collage in order to get a degree to get a higher paying job? Why not all be noble and work for minimum wage for McDonalds? After all, more money just means more greed does it not?
REMEMBER: Thoses that can do! Those who can't Teach!
I have gotten advice to just take it and get out of there and be done with it, but I just can't do it. This needs to be combatted.
Well, if you enjoy banging your head against the wall, carry on. Understand, your professor, rightly or wrongly, considers you to be inferior to her. Nothing's going to change her mind on this point. And, following the logic, nothing you say is going to change her leftist views.
Ever heard of Hillsdale College?
I would also suggest you do some research on the Spanish philosopher Jose Ortega y Gassett, particularly his works from the 1930s regarding the people he called the "modern barbarians." His outlook is basically as follows (I paraphrase, making changes to apply it in a modern context):
The modern barbarian is a person who looks just like anyone else -- he gets up and goes to work every day, lives an affluent suburban life, and drives a nice car or two. He is a dangerous man in spite of his professional skills, though, because he is thoroughly ignorant about the complexities of economics, supply chains, and the effort it takes to deliver a finished product to him. He is dangerous because his ignorance leads him to believe that evrything he sees on the supermarket shelf is a part of nature instead of the result of a productive process. He is dangerous because his response to a bread shortage is to burn the bakery down.
One word of warning, though -- as you go through life you are going to be amazed (and disappointed) at just how few "intelligent" people can even comprehend these things and discuss them rationally. My guess is that your current class is geared toward a 12 year-old mind.
During the 1980s, 28,000 for-profit information libraries sprang up in the U.S. alone. Every week more than 50 million people visit these facilities, where they can rent 100 gigabytes of information for only two or three dollars a day.Although these video rental stores faced many of the same problems of standards, intellectual-property protection, and pricing that the Internet faces today, the industry grew from nothing to $10 billion a year in only a decade.
Ask the bozo what their annual video store rental fees were for any of the years of the 1980s. If the bozo rented any videos, they contributed to the "decade of excess" or whatever they are calling the '80s.
From http://www.businessweek.com/1999/99_40/b3649004.htm -- The Internet Economy: the World's Next Growth Engine -- "... Japanese cars took a large share of the U.S. market in the early 1980s..." Did the bozo know anyone working the auto industry -- they didn't have it so good in the beginning of the 1980s. Who made the bozo's car? Betcha its foreign-made.
From http://www.fcc.gov/Speeches/Kennard/2000/spwek019.html --
In the 1980s, government broke up AT&T and opened up competition in long distance services. Investment flowed into long distance, laying the foundation for the Internet backbone.And when technologists began to use the telephone network for "enhanced services" in the 1980s, we declined to regulate those services, paving the way for the unregulated Internet. Like our equipment decisions in the 1970s, we said that old laws should not automatically be applied to new technologies.
Ask the bozo if they use any other phone service provider other than MaBell, and if they use the Internet, and if they use any Microsoft products. If the answer is yes to any of these questions, the bozo helped contribute to the "decade of excess".
Tell the bozo that they are obviously part of the problem, being as they contributed so much to the "decade of excess". And maybe they should make a reservation on Mr. Peabody's WayBack Machine, and stop themselves from renting "Reds" every weekend in the 1980s.
After listening to Bill Clinton's speech last night I was reminded of a famous quip by Mark Twain: first get your facts straight, then you can distort them all you like. Now we remember why they call him Slick Willie.
Last night Bill Clinton took credit for a long wave of economic prosperity that began ten years before he was elected and for a balanced budget that he fought tooth and nail to prevent after Republicans took Congress. To borrow a phrase from Joe Lieberman: that's chutzpah. Well here are the undistorted facts:
1) The National Bureau of Economic Research reports that we are now in the 18th year of one long wave of prosperity. It began in 1982 with the supply-side policies of Reagan - tax-rate cuts, sound money, deregulation, free trade, and victory in the cold war. Michael Cox of the Dallas Federal Reserve Board has found that over the past 200 months, since the Reagan prosperity began, the economy has been in recession just eight months, or just four percent of the time.
2) The bullish stock market began in 1982, not in 1992. Then, the Dow Jones was at 800. Today it is at 11,000.
3) It is also instructive to examine the stock market during the Clinton presidency. From 1993-95 the Dow rose from 3,200 to 3,800. But from 1995 to 2000 the Dow rose from 3,8000 to 11,000. About 90 percent of the gain in asset values happened after the Republicans took control of Congress and the markets were assured that Clintonomics would be curtailed.
4) Interest rates and inflation began their long-term tumble in the early 1980s. In 1980 mortgage interest rates hit 20 percent and the inflation rate hit eleven percent. Since the early 1980s inflation has fallen by roughly a half a percent per year. There were three people responsible for the lowering of inflation and interest rates: Reagan, Paul Volker, and Alan Greenspan.
5) Clinton boasts that his world record tax increase in 1993 caused interest rates to fall. Actually, from 1993 through November of 1994 (when Republicans won control of Congress), interest rates rose by 50 basis points.
6) When Bill Clinton entered office the economy was growing at a four percent rate (4th quarter of 1992). After Clinton's tax hike, the economy stalled to a 2.6 percent rate.
7) After two years of Clintonomics, the budget deficit was still well over $200 billion. In early 1995 the budget deficit was projected by the Congressional Budget Office to remain over $200 billion for as far as the eye could see. So much for the idea that Clinton's $500 billion tax hike balanced the budget. What changed this gloomy outlook on the budget? The GOP balanced budget plan in 1995. Who can forget 1995? In that year Bill Clinton closed down the government twice to avoid the Republican's balanced budget and the White House was forced to submit five budgets until he finally proposed one without a deficit.
To be sure, Bill Clinton does deserve some of the credit for this astonishingly resilient expansion. Where his policies have been most productive - for example, in promoting free-trade agreements, signing the Republican welfare reforms, cutting the capital-gains tax, and allowing Alan Greenspan to smother the last remnants of inflation in the financial system - he has sensibly followed the economically liberating path laid out by Reagan.
It's the Reagan economy, stupid. And the American voters know it.
Consider transferring to Hillsdale or Grove City College.
As to the comment about Ozzy... Well I'm alive, at work -being productive (sorta)... and I'm wearing my Ozzy Rules t-shirt from Ozzfest.
(I liked the jab at Tipper too. hmmm. guess this was a bit off-topic. oh well.)
Generally, the best way to wage war is with allies and in an organized militia; occasionally but rarely the loner can get some licks in, but it is better for the loner to be under the command of a higher authority so he can be directed at the richest targets and doesn't foul up or get in the way of one of the militia's ops.
Transfer to a conservative, or religious, institution of higher learning, and take your money with you. Don't be foolish enough to think that you can fight these guys alone.
That's a pretty good line... Who cares about the grade? Someone needs to knock these academia idiots back to reality now and then.
GPA doesn't mean squat after your first job out of school...
Looks to me like the 00's are instituting a brand new greed wrinkle: GROUP GREED - check out the demand for reparations, etc.
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