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Thread: Presidential debate thread

  1. #556

    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    Quote Originally Posted by alexey View Post
    I was not able to find any information about what Romney plans to replace ObamaCare with, and there are only 3 general paragraphs on financial regulation (pages 35-36)

    (edit: looks like you just posted those 3 paragraphs)
    Here's where you'll find Romney's outline for healthcare:
    http://www.mittromney.com/issues/health-care

    I'm not sure if those bullets are meaningful to you (not trying to be dismissive, I just work in that industry so I'm familiar with the jargon), but that's the framework for a very different healthcare system.

    There are less details about what he'd replace Dodd-Frank with, but he did indicate his problem with the open-ended government authority in Dodd-Frank and generally with what he deems as onerous requirements on small and mid-size banks.

    Also, in the debate, he talked about his support for things like a leverage ratio (forget the term he used) and for clarifying for banks what meets the definition of a good loan. The first point here is very important because it's probably the most fundamental thing that had to be addressed after the banking crisis. The second is important to getting the banks to issue more loans again.
    Last edited by Wrong Direction; October-5th-2012 at 03:45 PM.

  2. #557
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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    They need to put back in Glass-Steagall just as it was.

    This is what sent us down the road to the financial collapse
    Last edited by HOF44; October-5th-2012 at 03:47 PM.

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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Wrong Direction View Post
    Here's where you'll find Romney's outline for healthcare:
    http://www.mittromney.com/issues/health-care

    I'm not sure if those bullets are meaningful to you (not trying to be dismissive, I just work in that industry so I'm familiar with the jargon), but that's the framework for a very different healthcare system.

    There are less details about what he'd replace Dodd-Frank with, but he did indicate his problem with the open-ended government authority in Dodd-Frank and generally with what he deems as onerous requirements on small and mid-size banks.

    Also, in the debate, he talked about his support for things like a leverage ratio (forget the term he used) and for clarifying for banks what meets the definition of a good loan. The first point here is very important because it's probably the most fundamental thing that had to be addressed after the banking crisis. The second is important to getting the banks to issue more loans again.
    In healthcare, I see the following dynamic. There are tons of sick people who cannot pay for their care. Options are:

    1) Screw them.
    2) Somehow we help pay for their care.

    If we go with option 2), we have following options:

    1) Government pays with tax payers' money.
    2) Healthy people and sick people share a risk pool.

    I do not like option 1) for a number of reasons, so I prefer option 2). That's ObamaCare, RomneyCare, etc. What other options are there? Single payer is one, for example, but our country is not a good fit for it (or maybe just not ready for it).

    There is also a huge problem with tying healthcare to employment. We need to get free market forces into health care and we need to get economies of scale working in the individual health insurance market. We need standards to do that. ObamaCare sets standards for coverage and a mechanism for the individual market. What other options are there?


    Do not even get me started on financial regulation. I think we need to really clamp down on Wall Street "creativity". Break up the too big to fail banks, impose taxes on high speed trading, and so on. There appears to be a HUGE disconnect between Wall Street doing well and our economy doing well.

    Government employees who do oversight of the financial industry should be able to fully understand every financial instrument that's in play.

    Safety of the system >>>> Creative financial instruments
    Last edited by alexey; October-5th-2012 at 04:02 PM.

  4. #559
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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    Quote Originally Posted by alexey View Post
    Which part of better financial regulation and market-oriented, patient-centered health care reform don't you understand?
    It's not that Romney hasn't said he will do things.

    It's the that he hasn't explained how he will do things.

    He'll repeal Dodd-Frank and replace it with something else. Great! What will he replace it with. Because going by the debates, he's either going to repeal Dodd-Frank and not replace it with anything, or he's going to repeal Dodd-Frank, and replace it with something that is identical to Dodd-Frank, only without all the bad stuff Obama put in it, except with some of the stuff Obama put in.

    He's going to repeal Obamacare. Okay, what will he replace it with? He's either not going to replace it at all, or he's going to replace it with a plan that includes all the good parts of Obamacare, except, wait, no, his campaign immediately walked back the whole "kids will be able to stay on their parents health insurance until age 26 and there will be no discrimination based on pre-conditions" thing, and that what he did for Massachusetts should be a model for the nation on a state by state basis, except wait, no, in December he said that what he did in the Massachusetts would not be a model for the nation on a state by state basis because it wasn't perfect there, , even though he's been touting how awesome Romneycare was again lately.

    And he has refused to explain how he's going to balance the budget, outside of saying he'd end the subsidy to PBS. PBS, need I remind you, is basically a bunch of change in the couch. So he's somehow going to do a significant tax cut across the board, increase military spending, put the money that Obama took out of Medicare back into Medicare, get rid of the capital gains tax and investment taxes, and somehow be revenue neutral and balancing the budget.


    I wish conservatives would just be honest and admit this to themselves;

    I don't care that nothing Mitt Romney says makes sense. I don't care that none of the math adds up, I don't care that nothing he has proposed seems like it'd solve the huge problems facing our nation, I don't care that he changes his positions. I don't care. I just don't want Barack Obama to be President.

    At least that would be honest.

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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    I think McCain said it best when he rightly pointed out that Obama was unused to tough questions when the compliant media has been serving up underhand softballs to him the past 3+ years. The second and third debates should be interesting. Apparently close to 70 mil tuned in for the first one.
    In a land of freedom we are held hostage by the tyranny of political correctness. ~RGIII~

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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    Quote Originally Posted by DaveMason View Post
    If Romney were wrong or lying, it's Obama's job to explain why he's wrong or where he's lying. Why didn't he do that?
    I agree, but he also has to be careful not to look like a "scary angry black man" to Middle America voters, especially old ones.

    After all, that was the narrative that Fox and the Daily Caller right was pushing just that morning, with the "shocking" video of Obama speaking at a historically black college in 2008.

    I suspect Obama overreacted by not being aggressive enough in the debate that evening. Score one for Tucker Carlson.
    Last edited by Predicto; October-5th-2012 at 05:32 PM.
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  7. #562

    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    Quote Originally Posted by alexey View Post
    There is also a huge problem with tying healthcare to employment. We need to get free market forces into health care and we need to get economies of scale working in the individual health insurance market. We need standards to do that. ObamaCare sets standards for coverage and a mechanism for the individual market. What other options are there?
    I think your wants are compatible with Romney's plan. I'm leaving right now so I have to leave it at that. Based on my plans for the next several days, I doubt I'll spend more than a few minutes no this site (maybe until the week after next). Sorry, not trying to leave you hanging.

    Do not even get me started on financial regulation. I think we need to really clamp down on Wall Street "creativity". Break up the too big to fail banks, impose taxes on high speed trading, and so on. There appears to be a HUGE disconnect between Wall Street doing well and our economy doing well.

    Government employees who do oversight of the financial industry should be able to fully understand every financial instrument that's in play.

    Safety of the system >>>> Creative financial instruments
    Years ago, I thought I knew a lot about politics with the exception of healthcare. Than I got a job in that industry that makes me follow a ton of issues, so now I'm well informed, but I don't expect 95% of people to understand all of the complexities. It's about 1,000% more complex than social security, for example. People are better informed now than ever because of the debate over the last few years, but most (including politicians) are still pretty uninformed.

    I'm sort of in that category now with financial reform. I don't think almost anyone understands the details of those mechanisms. I understand simple concepts like the level of risk associated with mortgage portfolios, but the larger debate on this issue, from both sides, has been at the 100,000 foot level, in my opinion.

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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    Quote Originally Posted by Wrong Direction View Post
    I think your wants are compatible with Romney's plan. I'm leaving right now so I have to leave it at that. Based on my plans for the next several days, I doubt I'll spend more than a few minutes no this site (maybe until the week after next). Sorry, not trying to leave you hanging.
    I think that a lot of things are compatible with the Romney plan because the Romney plan is so wonderfully unspecific. He wants to keep the good parts, remember?

    I do not even think that he wants to repeal ObamaCare. It would be too much trouble and too much of a political liability. At best he would make it look Ike he tried and blame the Democrats for it... but if we take him at his word, then we have to conclude that he wants to repeal it and replace it with a happy pink cloud made of everybody's wishes.

    Quote Originally Posted by Wrong Direction View Post
    Years ago, I thought I knew a lot about politics with the exception of healthcare. Than I got a job in that industry that makes me follow a ton of issues, so now I'm well informed, but I don't expect 95% of people to understand all of the complexities. It's about 1,000% more complex than social security, for example. People are better informed now than ever because of the debate over the last few years, but most (including politicians) are still pretty uninformed.

    I'm sort of in that category now with financial reform. I don't think almost anyone understands the details of those mechanisms. I understand simple concepts like the level of risk associated with mortgage portfolios, but the larger debate on this issue, from both sides, has been at the 100,000 foot level, in my opinion.
    I see the financial sector as the grease and the oil of the economic engine. It is very much needed, but getting creative and pouring oil into your gas tank will lead to trouble.

    I am very much troubled by messed up incentives where the best and the brightest people are driven to Wall Street to squeeze money out of super complex mathematics or to skim the market using genious algorithms that rely on getting market information exta nanosecond earlier than some other guy. I understand the important role of financial markets in the economy. However, I also understand that if the financial side of things a can take too big a bite out of the pie, it will readily do so, walk away with bazillions, and the whole system will go to ****.

    So I think it is a huge problem if only the smartest people in the room understand these financial instruments, and all the smartest people in the room happen to wink wink work for the same industry and have similar incentives. It is simply not a risk that I think we should take.

    I am a huge beliver in free markets and in people following incentives. I have no doubt that an ability to make money by screwing people will necessarily lead to people getting screwed, regardless of long term consequences.

  9. #564
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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    Quote Originally Posted by alexey View Post
    In healthcare, I see the following dynamic. There are tons of sick people who cannot pay for their care. Options are:

    1) Screw them.
    2) Somehow we help pay for their care.

    If we go with option 2), we have following options:

    1) Government pays with tax payers' money.
    2) Healthy people and sick people share a risk pool.

    I do not like option 1) for a number of reasons, so I prefer option 2). That's ObamaCare, RomneyCare, etc. What other options are there? Single payer is one, for example, but our country is not a good fit for it (or maybe just not ready for it).

    There is also a huge problem with tying healthcare to employment. We need to get free market forces into health care and we need to get economies of scale working in the individual health insurance market. We need standards to do that. ObamaCare sets standards for coverage and a mechanism for the individual market. What other options are there?


    Do not even get me started on financial regulation. I think we need to really clamp down on Wall Street "creativity". Break up the too big to fail banks, impose taxes on high speed trading, and so on. There appears to be a HUGE disconnect between Wall Street doing well and our economy doing well.

    Government employees who do oversight of the financial industry should be able to fully understand every financial instrument that's in play.

    Safety of the system >>>> Creative financial instruments
    Wanna make the country healthier?

    Stop food subsidies. We over produce stuff like corn so we have to turn it into something—most of it unhealthy.

    These things are not God-given, unalienable rights. People will just need to pay more for them if they want them.

  10. #565
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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    SNL's parody of the first debate sucked.

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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    Quote Originally Posted by DaveMason View Post
    Can't tell if you're kidding or not, Bang, but I don't think USS is talking about "looks" as in visuals. If we're talking strictly visuals, then they are both reasonably handsome, well-dressed guys.

    The truth is, Obama was unprepared for the debate. I don't necessarily buy USS's argument that it's because he's arrogant or surrounded by yes-men or whatever (sometimes, **** happens. Nobody wins every single time. I expect him to do a lot better in the town hall debate)...but yeah, Obama was certainly unprepared. Romney had better answers, he delivered them with more confidence, and just generally knew his stuff. I don't think superficial looks had anything to do with that...
    I'm not kidding.

    It's been shown over the last several days that most of what Romney "knew" was a load of bull****.

    and people still claim he "won".

    So yes, it's all about looks.
    We have shown this week to be slow, ignorant, and happily so.

    because this
    If Romney were wrong or lying, it's Obama's job to explain why he's wrong or where he's lying. Why didn't he do that?
    Is wrong.
    Yes, it is Obama's job in a debate to call him on it.
    But it is ourt job as voters to say it's bull**** whether it is called by the debate opponent or not.
    We should not be so happily ignorant as to continue to proclaim victory because he LOOKED more confident while LYING.


    I don't care if it's Romney or Obama who did this. WE SHOULD DEMAND BETTER. Yes, Obama should have been better prepped for the debate, but that isn't the point.
    The point is we're sitting here this week lauding a person who "won" because he LOOKED like he won.
    No other reason.
    None.
    We should BURN DOWN the media whores who have concinved us that THIS is what we're expected to swallow.

    But we do NOT.
    We gladly accept their 'analysis' of what consituitues a win or a loss in a presidential debate.
    "Call me on my lies or I win" does us NO SERVICE.
    LOOKING RELAXED IS NOT IMPORTANT
    A HALF SMILE IS NOT A QUALIFICATION TO BE PRESIDENT.

    We should NOT accept it.
    But we do, because we are a WEAK MINDED, PLASTIC, IGNORANT, and ARTIFICIAL PEOPLE.


    And i'm not kidding even slightly.We may as well turn our political process over to American Idol.
    Anybody that doesn't like hearing that can open up their ears to the rest of the week. Don't arguie with me over it, argue with the country that has accepted this bull**** as reality. It's disgusting.



    ~Bang
    Last edited by Bang; October-7th-2012 at 08:24 AM.

  12. #567
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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    That was absolutely awesome, Bang.

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    Default Re: Presidential debate thread

    Quote Originally Posted by DaveMason View Post
    The first point, for instance: Obama claims Romney is providing a 5 trillion dollar tax cut. Romney says there are no cuts of that kind of scale, on his plan.

    Tax center analysis says that by 2015, it'll cut $480 billion which will account for 5 trillion over the following 10 years. So by 2025, it'll be 5 trillion? I guess anything can be a 5 trillion dollar tax cut, if you wait long enough...
    This is not a silly issue. It's probably the central issue of the campaign really. If Romney goes through with the plan he's been promising in his campaign, it will either explode the deficit or screw over the middle class.

    Romney's 5 trillion dollar tax cut is in addition to his plan to make the Bush cuts permanent which is another cool 1 trillion and add 2 trillion dollars in unwanted military spending. His plans add 8 trillion to the deficit. There is nothing trivial about that.
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