It Can't Get Any Worse?

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Keeko

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Feb 13, 2008
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It Can't Get Any Worse?

By David Bueche


Idling behind a Lexus this morning I saw the latest bit of agitprop from the Obama campaign -- a "Got Hope?" bumper sticker. The first question that popped into my mind was, "How bad can it be if you're driving an ES 350?"


It seems that the racially polarized, economically dysfunctional country our Obama supporter is so keen to change has treated him pretty well. Maybe he's in it for the other guys. You know - the 95% who keep making their mortgage payments on time, the record breaking numbers of college graduates, the millions of Americans who consume Ipods, flat screen TVs or hundreds of other accoutrements of a society so wealthy it has no historical parallel.


I hate to burst the dystopian bubble the Leftists have persistently inflated during the nightmare known as The Bush Administration, but people have never had better food, medicine and housing than they do at this very moment. A typical home in America today has central heat and air, the cheapest car is a paragon of safety and efficiency compared with its ancestors, and people are routinely treated for, and survive, conditions which were fatal less than half a century ago.


Yes I'm aware that there's a mortgage crisis -- if by crisis you mean a lot of people buying houses way beyond their means while a sub-set of financially myopic lenders goaded them on. But looked at another way, for those of us who didn't drink the Kool-Aid and purchase radically overpriced real estate so we could use the equity to finance trips to Vegas, what's so horrible about falling home prices? For many, when speaking of housing, couldn't we reasonably substitute the word "consequences" for "crisis"?


Yes I'm aware there's an insurance coverage crisis -- not medical access, (which is available to anyone who presents themselves in a emergency room), or quality, (which no one really debates is still the benchmark for the world) But I do find it puzzling that the majority of the people you see in public emergency rooms can somehow afford cell phones and top of the line running shoes.


As a matter of fact, the U.S. Census bureau estimates that 20% of the uninsured can actually afford insurance, and another 25% are eligible for government coverage, bringing the estimated total of 47 million uninsured down to 26 million. An issue to be worked on, most definitely. But a county that current does, or can, provide access to the best health care in the world for 91% of its population, (including a large percentage of non-citizens who significantly skew the statistics), is, by definition, not a country with a health care crisis.


As to the issue of food, do you know what the food crisis looked like in the early twentieth century? It looked like a lot of very thin, hungry people. No talk of banning trans-fats I can assure you. As Greg Easterbrook points out in "The Progress Paradox", if you traveled back in time and spoke to your not so distant relatives about the crisis of obesity in poor people, they would be completely confused because in their day being poor meant going hungry. If there is any crisis surrounding food in the United States it is the result of incredible prosperity and abundance; all in all, not a bad problem to have.


When you look at these "big picture" issues you can generally divide society into two opposing worldviews; the romantic and the tragic.


The romantic looks at the United States, compares it to perfection, finds it wanting, and demands that we start over from scratch. Arguments for moderation and caution are dismissed as greed or indifference. "Obviously anyone who can accept the wretched state of healthcare in this country is an idiot or a monster".


Romantics are generally the ones you see with the communist-inspired art advocating one word solutions like Hope or Change. It doesn't get much more transparent, (or vacuous), than that.


The tragic perspective takes exactly the opposite approach. Instead of saying, "What a mess, how can I make this better?", the response is something like, "Thank God this works so well, lets be careful not to screw it up!"


And when you think about it, there's a hell of a lot we can all be thankful for.


Thank God I was born here and not in North Korea. Thank God I've never seen a tank come rolling into my town. Thank God there's so much to eat, and so many jobs, such access to information, and on and on.


There are many things, even in our "crisis" areas that work very well in the United States of America. This is not pre-ordained.


It's perfectly possible for self-righteous, na?ve idealists to destroy an excellent system in the process of "improving" it. Anyone who doubts me should take some time and read up on the imposition of socialism to British healthcare. How about Stalin and collective farming, Mao's Great Leap Forward, and Pol Pot? Don't evenget me started on the Schwarzenegger Administration...


Even though liberals like to see themselves as the thinking man's alternative, anyone with moderate intelligence and the willingness to do even minimal research will inevitable conclude that there is much, much, more right than wrong about present-day America. The glass is, most assuredly, well more than halfway full.

Next time you feel hopeless and swept up in an emotional desire for change remember the ultimate conceit in the words - "It can't get any worse".


Trust me: it can.
 
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djv

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It Did, It Has. The guy should open his eyes. Maybe try to get a real job. Or stop at the grocery store. Might even price insurance or stop for gas. Or see if that guy in that 50000 car can get money for a trade. TV's you can buy there giving them away compare to a year ago. Just check there stock prices. Profits are in the chitter.
 
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Keeko

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It Did, It Has. The guy should open his eyes. Maybe try to get a real job. Or stop at the grocery store. Might even price insurance or stop for gas. Or see if that guy in that 50000 car can get money for a trade. TV's you can buy there giving them away compare to a year ago. Just check there stock prices. Profits are in the chitter.

I know America is so bad and terrible.

How does it feel to be miserbale everyday of your life? I would hate to live that way.
 

Nosigar

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Jul 5, 2000
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It Did, It Has. The guy should open his eyes. Maybe try to get a real job. Or stop at the grocery store. Might even price insurance or stop for gas. Or see if that guy in that 50000 car can get money for a trade. TV's you can buy there giving them away compare to a year ago. Just check there stock prices. Profits are in the chitter.

One would think that of all the people, you, having been through the Great Depression in your twenties, would undertand economic cycles and the improvements made in the past century.

.
.
.
And yet another stellar comment from our resident "Kosar Jr.", the smurphmeister, taking on the issues with insightful opinions.
:violin:
 

smurphy

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Jul 31, 2004
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One would think that of all the people, you, having been through the Great Depression in your twenties, would undertand economic cycles and the improvements made in the past century.

.
.
.
And yet another stellar comment from our resident "Kosar Jr.", the smurphmeister, taking on the issues with insightful opinions.
:violin:

What issue is there to take on? A sticker using the 'hope slogan doesn't mean that person thinks times can't worse. That notion is entirely in the author's head and then he ran with it in a gardenweaselesque spiral.

I'm just happy that Keeko got around to crediting the original author. He SHOULD serve as an inspiration to Raymond, who is quickly becoming the worst thief of political spam on the forum.
 
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jer-z jock

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Jun 11, 2007
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It Can't Get Any Worse?

By David Bueche


Idling behind a Lexus this morning I saw the latest bit of agitprop from the Obama campaign -- a "Got Hope?" bumper sticker. The first question that popped into my mind was, "How bad can it be if you're driving an ES 350?"


It seems that the racially polarized, economically dysfunctional country our Obama supporter is so keen to change has treated him pretty well. Maybe he's in it for the other guys. You know - the 95% who keep making their mortgage payments on time, the record breaking numbers of college graduates, the millions of Americans who consume Ipods, flat screen TVs or hundreds of other accoutrements of a society so wealthy it has no historical parallel.


I hate to burst the dystopian bubble the Leftists have persistently inflated during the nightmare known as The Bush Administration, but people have never had better food, medicine and housing than they do at this very moment. A typical home in America today has central heat and air, the cheapest car is a paragon of safety and efficiency compared with its ancestors, and people are routinely treated for, and survive, conditions which were fatal less than half a century ago.


Yes I'm aware that there's a mortgage crisis -- if by crisis you mean a lot of people buying houses way beyond their means while a sub-set of financially myopic lenders goaded them on. But looked at another way, for those of us who didn't drink the Kool-Aid and purchase radically overpriced real estate so we could use the equity to finance trips to Vegas, what's so horrible about falling home prices? For many, when speaking of housing, couldn't we reasonably substitute the word "consequences" for "crisis"?


Yes I'm aware there's an insurance coverage crisis -- not medical access, (which is available to anyone who presents themselves in a emergency room), or quality, (which no one really debates is still the benchmark for the world) But I do find it puzzling that the majority of the people you see in public emergency rooms can somehow afford cell phones and top of the line running shoes.


As a matter of fact, the U.S. Census bureau estimates that 20% of the uninsured can actually afford insurance, and another 25% are eligible for government coverage, bringing the estimated total of 47 million uninsured down to 26 million. An issue to be worked on, most definitely. But a county that current does, or can, provide access to the best health care in the world for 91% of its population, (including a large percentage of non-citizens who significantly skew the statistics), is, by definition, not a country with a health care crisis.


As to the issue of food, do you know what the food crisis looked like in the early twentieth century? It looked like a lot of very thin, hungry people. No talk of banning trans-fats I can assure you. As Greg Easterbrook points out in "The Progress Paradox", if you traveled back in time and spoke to your not so distant relatives about the crisis of obesity in poor people, they would be completely confused because in their day being poor meant going hungry. If there is any crisis surrounding food in the United States it is the result of incredible prosperity and abundance; all in all, not a bad problem to have.


When you look at these "big picture" issues you can generally divide society into two opposing worldviews; the romantic and the tragic.


The romantic looks at the United States, compares it to perfection, finds it wanting, and demands that we start over from scratch. Arguments for moderation and caution are dismissed as greed or indifference. "Obviously anyone who can accept the wretched state of healthcare in this country is an idiot or a monster".


Romantics are generally the ones you see with the communist-inspired art advocating one word solutions like Hope or Change. It doesn't get much more transparent, (or vacuous), than that.


The tragic perspective takes exactly the opposite approach. Instead of saying, "What a mess, how can I make this better?", the response is something like, "Thank God this works so well, lets be careful not to screw it up!"


And when you think about it, there's a hell of a lot we can all be thankful for.


Thank God I was born here and not in North Korea. Thank God I've never seen a tank come rolling into my town. Thank God there's so much to eat, and so many jobs, such access to information, and on and on.


There are many things, even in our "crisis" areas that work very well in the United States of America. This is not pre-ordained.


It's perfectly possible for self-righteous, na?ve idealists to destroy an excellent system in the process of "improving" it. Anyone who doubts me should take some time and read up on the imposition of socialism to British healthcare. How about Stalin and collective farming, Mao's Great Leap Forward, and Pol Pot? Don't evenget me started on the Schwarzenegger Administration...


Even though liberals like to see themselves as the thinking man's alternative, anyone with moderate intelligence and the willingness to do even minimal research will inevitable conclude that there is much, much, more right than wrong about present-day America. The glass is, most assuredly, well more than halfway full.

Next time you feel hopeless and swept up in an emotional desire for change remember the ultimate conceit in the words - "It can't get any worse".


Trust me: it can.

Well my take on this is that our not so distant relatives didnt have a DOLLAR MENU from McDonalds,Wendys, OR Burger King!!!!! Who can go hungry with options such as those:shrug: :142smilie
 
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saint

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Jan 10, 2002
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Well that's the whole problem. The writer assumes that because they are driving a mercedes then they must be well-off. The problem is the opposite...they are probably paying 700 bucks a month to lease that bad boy just so people think exactly that, the "we are successful because we drive a mercedes". Meanwhile they can barely afford the gas to fill it or a roof over their heads but they sure are happy with that car they can't afford.
 

Jabberwocky

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Mar 3, 2006
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David Douche could use an editor.

It's perfectly possible for self-righteous, na?ve idealists to destroy an excellent system in the process of "improving" it. Anyone who doubts me should take some time and read up on the imposition of socialism to British healthcare. How about Stalin and collective farming, Mao's Great Leap Forward, and Pol Pot? Don't evenget me started on the Schwarzenegger Administration...


Even though liberals like to see themselves as the thinking man's alternative, anyone with moderate intelligence and the willingness to do even minimal research will inevitable conclude that there is much, much, more right than wrong about present-day America. The glass is, most assuredly, well more than halfway full.
 

djv

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Kecko don't you worry about Kosar Jr Im ok and have my dues all payed up. I worry about all the young people that can't crawl out of a hole or get ahead. Because they got to haul the oats for next 30 years. And before we get to that depression we got a chance in Nov to bring our money back home and put folks to work. Just need to change course Nov.
 
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djv

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jer z jock you are right a dollar minu was not needed 35/40 years ago. At Micky D's you could get a burger/fries/shake all for 80 cents.
Keeko your right it can get worse, and did. Another 51000 jobs lost in July. That makes over half millon in 6 months. And unemployment now 5.7% up from 4% last two years. Luck for some the Federial gov has hird over 50000 last 6 months or it would be worse.
True we made great strides in the 90's. Just under Clinton they added over 22 million jobs. And balanced the budget. Don't ask about your wonder boy Bush. You don't want answer.
 

djv

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Keeko don't worry Bush can only stay 5 more months.
 
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