mazeltov wrote:
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When one state fucks up. Only those people are affected.
One of the dumbest things you've ever said which is saying something.
Give me a fucking break.
I'm sorry, you're going to have to explain to me how Wisconsin's Education Reform, New York's Taxes, California's Marriage Laws, Oklahoma's Drug Laws, Nevada's Prostitution Laws or Massachucett's Romney Care have a direct effect on someone from Minnesota.
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CA passed its own tougher version of the Clean Air Act. Doesn't mean shit unless every other state does it as well, and having done so they are now at a disadvantage against every other state that makes the choice to sacrifice what is the common good for the here and now.
If it drove energy out of state, it would seem to me that they got the clean air they wanted.
As far as pollution across state lines, that's actually something for the federal government. And there's far more effective ways keeping states surrounding California from polluting it than blanket standards.
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There is NO CASE IN THE HISTORY OF THE ENTIRE WORLD where a loose federal government has worked better than a strong one. Every single case where a federal authority has been strengthened, the result has been better government. The Holy Roman Empire. The late Roman Empire. The Persian Empire. Medieval France. Pre-Raj India.
The first three are empires, and limited federal power probably had little to do with their downfall.
Better government would also seem to be subjective.
I don't have well versed history of these places, so was it a limited federal government that were the major factor in their downfall, or were they limited federal governments that just happened to fall for other reasons?
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It's true of corps, it's true of utilities, it's true of the armed forces, it's true of apartment buildings, it's true of bridges. Big things mean big trouble but bigness is necessary to get shit done.
My utilities go out, how has that affected you?
A bridge here in MN fell, if no federal taxes went towards it, what direct effect did it have on you?
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No it isn't.
Job? Housing? Discrimination against carpetbaggers? Go read about the Okies.
Discrimination against carpetbaggers... lolwut. That term is so old and outdated that I bet a lot of people had to look it up.
Aside from changing jobs - which becomes very easy if you work for a big bad corporation who can just transfer you over, is the only thing aside from some paper work, that makes moving across state lines harder.
Having to move to Canada, would be a lot harder, even with the convenience of Canada speaking English and bordering the US.
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Because that's life. Civilized society is based on the social contract. Accepting authority within defined boundaries.
We have a document that defines boundaries, but we've decided to shit on it.
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BP disaster says hi
Not quite sure what this is about. Pretty sure it was a federal government decision to open the waters (because coastal waters fall under federal jurisdiction) and private companies that made the mistake.
Aestu wrote:
Ironically enough that term was coined in the context of defending arbitrary government power over business.
There's a term for a lot of things. It's still wrong, it's never worked, and it won't ever work. That term is one offhand quote from one judge 80 years ago that disingenuous libertarian fatcats have used to try to legitimize a philosophy of willful ignorance.
The idea of 'one size fits all' is crazy and I'm not a cat.