Just curious.
Do you see them tied together or as completely separate issues?
Just curious.
Do you see them tied together or as completely separate issues?
No, yes, yes.
I look at each as individual concerns.
Abortion: I dont believe the Federal government should have jurisdiction at all on the subject and that it should be a state concern exclusively (like murder is). I am personally 100% against all abortions as I consider the unboarn as individuals who have the exact same rights as you and I.
Welfare: Believe it or not, I am not totally against welfare. What I rail against is the welfare system and the fraud, misuse, and waste that comes with it. I believe that welfare should be reserved for the truly helpless and that if someone needs a very temporary boost to get though a difficult patch in their lives then they should receive that benefit. I think that strict time horizons should be mandated for any beyond the handicapped, elderly or children.
SCHIP: I think that it is 100% uneeded and that kids whos parents could and should have gotten their own insurance should be rersponsible for paying the bills. medicaid covers the children of the poor already, why would we need an expanded prohram of waste on top of it? Hawaii's schip program caused massive problems yet oor "leaders: chose to ignore that fact and push the beast through anyway. It was a gpood way to gain votes from the masses in the spiroit of faux compassion.
Conservatives cant trust Republicans
I don't know. I see them as highly interactive. Unwanted pregnancies lead to welfare. Poverty leads to the need for medical support. Welfare abuse can lead to additional pregnancies, etc.
Sure, those aren't the only reasons why someone lands on welfare or why all people get an abortion and not all people who get an abortion are poor, but it seems to me that there is a cycle of cause and effect. That each feeds on the other to a degree.
Abortion...No... I am opposed to the taking of life w/o a compelling reason.
There are of course instances where rights to life must be balanced.
I am opposed to tax payer subsidies for it.
Welfare ...Yes. in it's present form
There is certainly a need for a humanitarian safety net,and workfare programs that help to get people to be productive parts of society.
schip...Yes
I think establishing a network of free/low cost clinics nationwide would do better...and provide basic care
The idea someone making $60 k a yr needs my tax money to buy ins is ridiculous,as is the level of coverage.
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No, depends, and no
first one is mostly about the liberty of the mother over her own body
the second depends on restrictions
third is important, may prevent much more costly problems down the line
I'll agree that there are other factors involved, but I think the inclination to see them as separate more of a cognitive defense strategy than anything else.
Some don't want to see people abort/kill babies, but are alos opposed to mechanisms to help/support/raise the baby that they don't want aborted and simultaneously are opposed to providing health support which feeds into desparation, promoting a sense of hopelessness and anger which leads to drug abuse, violence, etc which takes us back to the beginning of the dance and it repeats on and on.
Mind you, clearly, the structure we have isn't working either because there are too many unwanted pregnancies, too much anger, dispair, violence, and abuse, but that may be another thread. (Then again, if we could solve the problem in this thread think what that could mean!)
There is a very strong case to be made for the negative correlation between abortion and crime.
Read it in a book called Freakonomics. It was very compelling. Fact is unwanted pregnancies often lead to unwanted babies which lead to uncared for babies which grow up to be uncared for teenagers etc.
Last edited by SkinsHokieFan; February-12th-2009 at 07:48 AM.
The hotter the heat, the harder the steel, no pressure no diamonds, we compete, we win
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I dont know, man. I work heavilly in statistical analysis (I actually teach it to executives). I honestly have very little trust for correlation studies of 2 factors alone. Too many other influences for my personal trust in what relationships the data shows. Dont take that as an outright rejection because I certainly have seen where a true relationship is validated, but lets just say I have misgivings.![]()
Conservatives cant trust Republicans
Abortion: Depends on the situation. If its a rape victim that is trying to get an abortion then yes or if it involves the health of the mom or child. Other then those situations I would be against it.
Welfare: I believe that some people abuse the system. I see welfare as an oppurtunity for people that were laid off to get back on there feet and find a job. Some people would much rather be on welfare all their lives then go out and get a job or try to get an education. There should be a time limit on how long someone should be on welfare.
SCHIP: I guess I'm indifferent about it
Its such a crazy correlation for one. Freaknomics, while a fascinating book that I really enjoyed put two separate events together and tied them together
Why else did crime go down? Maybe better access to education for the poor in the 90s because of pell grant increases.
Or more people in the ghetto started to go to church.
The rise of the internet gave something for people to do.
To say that we were aborting babies and crime went down is just as absurd of an argument as any that I made
The hotter the heat, the harder the steel, no pressure no diamonds, we compete, we win
We are the next decade of the Washington Redskins
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