Stas Bush wrote:I think "protectionism" means raising barriers to
international trade, Straha. So both Stalin and the British Raj are not protectionist
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because both easily gathered foods for international trade; the USSR traded heavily on the grain market.
Yes it did! But it also prevented its people inside the USSR from buying grain from outside the USSR. Also the major trigger of the 1930s famine was the large scale collectivization of farms which took control of the flow of grain out of the hands of the peasants. So holding up 1930s Russia as an example of how protectionism doesn't cause famines doesn't really work.
What about Tsarist Russia? It traded heavily too while the calorie availability per head remained lower than even during the 1930s famines, sometimes lower than 1K calories per head, durng massive and routine famines. All that time, Russia remained a "bread basket of Europe".
To be quite frank, I haven't studied my Tsarist history in the past two years. But to cite the Tsars as any sort of open minded trade barrier dropping rulers is inane. And you have to know that too.
Simple protectionist measures - a refusal to sell the food - alleviated famines, stopped malnutrition. Very simple measures. No barriers and full-on trade with foreigners, who of course often maintained protectionist barriers, resulted in disaster.
I challenge you to find me
one example of a famine where there were, to quote you, "no barriers" to trade imposed by the government.
Corn laws were the manufacture of Britain, Ireland's doomsayer in the situation, and are frankly irrelevant here aren't they? Ireland did not restrict "imports" of food from Britain mainland itself; it's people were just unable to buy food. Did Britain, the protectionist architect, itself suffer a famine as a result of Corn Laws? Tell me about it.
So, the people who imposed the protectionist trade laws on Ireland preventing them from buying food from external markets (indeed, even trying to prevent gifts of food coming from external markets) are irrelevant? And, no, they didn't restrict imports from the British mainland but those weren't affordable due, in no small part, to the Corn Laws.
Patrick Degan wrote:
And Sen. Obama proclaimed himself a new messiah... when, exactly?
He didn't. But the people around him treat him like one (the only person worse than him was Ron Paul). When it comes to government office I'm just as afraid as the people around the man as I am of the man.
Coyote wrote:
And Straha, your initial rejection of Obama had nothing to do with protectionism, it was because you felt that his followers were Kool-aid sipping moonbats.
Re-read my post. If they were kool-aid sipping moonbats who could argue in support of coherent policies I wouldn't mind. It's that I disagree with his policies and his followers tend to act as if they'd vote for him regardless of what his policies were because he's such an invigorating speaker.
Illuminatus Primus wrote:How is it wrong to place trade restrictions that force foriegn countries to make up the difference? Right now they profit from the fact that quite frankly, they are authoritarian states with no accountability to their populace and therefore can abuse human, labor, and property rights at will in order to drive down the cost of labor?
You mean like those evil Canucks up north! Their flagrant human rights abuses and sheer sweat shop industry! Why how could us poor Americans ever compete with them without pulling out of NAFTA!?! And how can we support the
evil evil Steven Harper and his reign of tyranny over the Canadian people. Oh... Wait...
See, if Obama's trade policy was "Free Trade with Free Nations" and set out goals for other nations to achieve Free Trade with America I could, possibly, get behind that. Yes it might cause some minor harm to the American economy but it's a moral stance and I'd respect that. But it's not like that in the least, instead it's pandering to the Starbucks vote by slapping "Fair" in the title and then claiming it'll recreate jobs. Another example is his opposition to the Colombia free trade agreement. Colombia is now freer than it has been in decades, has pushed FARC almost completely out of the country, has busted down on corruption (police can arrest and try even government officials now, something unthinkable eight years ago) and has been an American ally in a region that's rather Anti-U.S. Yet Obama opposes the agreement on flimsy grounds of anti-Union murders (when, in fact, statistically the rate of violent incidents involving union members per capita is lower than the national rate of such incidents.)
The United States cannot compete directly without betraying fundamental principles of equality of opportunity and popular soveriegnty. I, unlike many, do not think endless and slavish obsequience to "the market" is more important than social welfare.
So instead we drive people in other countries (like Mexico and Colombia just to name two) which need the labour into unemployment and starvation? How does that work out for caring about "social welfare"?
His health care policies may not be as good as foriegn states, but McCain's open admission that health care should be like "college" - i.e., where only the well-off and the very special exceptions can afford the decent brand of it? I suppose you're comfortable with an endless escalation of costs and the pricing out of a huge percentage of Americans.
Actually, I find no real solid plan for Health Care from any of the candidates. I do see some hope in McCain's anti-pharmaceutical speeches and his plan to make it so that hospitals get paid not for the procedures they operate but for the problems they cure. But, that being said, I have doubts he'll follow through. Odds are, I'll end up voting Third Party because the thought of voting for McCain just does not sit right with me.
Moderately competent otherwise? Compared to McCain? You're obviously a Republitard. Anyway, his method of campaigning at least sincerely calls for a sea change in the political climate of the United States. McCain will bring another four years of record deficits, increasing unaffordability in every aspect of American life for the middle and working class, more class inequity, more war, and no preparation for energy or environmental needs.
I'm not a Republican and I don't think McCain is the best man for the job but I don't think Obama could do any better judging from his policies. That's the long and short of it.
'After 9/11, it was "You're with us or your with the terrorists." Now its "You're with Straha or you support racism."' ' - The Romulan Republic
'You're a bully putting on an air of civility while saying that everything western and/or capitalistic must be bad, and a lot of other posters (loomer, Stas Bush, Gandalf) are also going along with it for their own personal reasons (Stas in particular is looking through rose colored glasses)' - Darth Yan