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Is the world really going down hill or just a stage?

Everyone says that the U.s is going down hill fastly and wour kids are going to live in a worse enviroment is this true or will we finnaly wake up?Will the united states change or will we go down hill more?

Asked By: ♥RACHEL♥ - 12/22/2009
Best Answer - Chosen by Asker
Ultimately, the greatest problem with government is the institution of government itself. I'm not an anarchist, but rather a student of history.

As governments gain in power, influence, and resilience, the more profound their abuses of their constituencies. Is healthcare reform an important issue? Yes, nobody is arguing that. Is the solution a massive and unsustainable government beaurocracy? No. History shows us an easy answer there. Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid, put together, have more than $700 trillion in unfunded liabilities. If Social Security were cancelled today, and all benefits owed were paid, it would take more than 4 times the current national GDP (current bill is about $56 trillion) to pay it. And that would leave nothing else for any other government spending. The truth is, the reason healthcare is expensive in this country is because of government involvement ... and that's not a party or ideology stance, both parties share the guilt. There are two simple changes that would dramatically lower the cost of health insurance in the US: 1. allow individuals and companies to purchase policies across state lines. There are more than 11,000 insurance companies in the US, but as many of you are well aware, you may only have one or two options where you live because policies available in one state (even with the same insurance company) are not available where you live, or are only available at a dramatically higher cost due to government intervention. 2. Allow individuals and companies to deduct the cost of health insurance premiums from their federal income taxes. Yes, this is expensive, but the burden is far smaller than the $900 billion the Senate plan is supposed to cost (which, if history is any indicator, will probably cost more like $1.5 to $2 trillion).

The problem with the healthcare debate is not whether reform is needed or not. The problem is the stalwart assertion that the current suite of legislation is the only answer and it's this or nothing. Even Howard Dean, who I have never to my recollection agreed with on ANYTHING, says this legislation is junk and we need to start over.

The notion that the current rounds of proposals will save us money is rediculous. When has government intervention ever saved the nation money? This is the group that conditions it's procurement contracts with built-in cost advancement measures to make sure they don't spend too little. Remeber the $800 screwdriver? That wasn't because we don't know they only cost $3 at Sears, it's because government procurement contracts are as much about paying off political debts as they are about actually procuring the projects and services they are for. You don't have to look far for examples. When a toll-road is constructed by private industry, it costs roughly 1/3 the cost of what a state department of transportation will pay. Is it because the private company is that much smarter? No. It's because there are wage guarantees (union-generated) built into government construction bids that boost union construction wages over the national average ... and in most states and all federal contracts, union labor is a mandatory component of such contracts.

We're not going downhill, we're spiraling out of control ... and both parties are to blame. Neither has the Constitution or our interests in mind. Democrats don't care that there will be no incentive under their plan for individuals to assume $150k+ in student loans to go to medical school only to work in an $80k/year job (there's a reason why doctors don't like Medicare, it doesn't even cover their costs much less leave them with any profit). The lessons from the nations that have tried single payer and government run healthcare are not good ... even the most "successful" programs are completely unsustainable, totally in the hole, and by the best estimates totally bankrupt. The sad part is, we never even looked at a market-based solution ... didn't even consider it an option. The only answer has been more government, from the beginning.

The Repubics started it with TARP and Medicare Part D (prescription coverage, which is already $6 trillion in unfunded liabilities), and the Dems have taken that baton gladly and are sprinting with it. There's a reason why there is a rush to pass this legislation, and despite his campaign promise not to sign any bill loaded down with pork, Obama will sign this 2,100 page monstrosity without reading it, and will hail it as a victory. If it's such a great plan, why does it take 4 years before the public "benefits" roll out? If it's so great, why did Harry Reid have to add 350+ pages of amendments in the 6 hours prior to Monday's 1am vote to get the Democratic and Independent holdouts to vote for it? Why does it take 2,100 pages to detail this bill? How can you possibly read a 2,000+ page bill in time to vote on it? If it has so much merit, why is it that even progressives and liberals are ha
Answered By: Been There - 12/22/2009
Additional Answers ()
We are over the h**p and there is no stopping the downhill slide. There is no change that can happen fast enough to make much of a difference.
Answered By: Got Wild, Staring Eyes - 12/22/2009
I look at it this way everything up must come down! There is way to many people in office right now who is stealing everybody blind. It's not just the American people it's other countries as well. I think were going through the big fall if you know anything about the bible then you know what I'm talking about.
Answered By: you ask I shall answer - 12/22/2009
We are too busy cutting each others throats to do anything about it
Answered By: IndianaJohn - 12/22/2009
If the great consumer goes down then the rest of the world will be in economic collapse until they find a new top consumer.
Answered By: Land of the Free? - 12/22/2009
The wagon is headed down hill faster everyday..but we can print some more money up lol
Answered By: Katerina - 12/22/2009
An underground group built up in America.. that is underminding the quality of life here.. there is a large following and a false belief it would pull together a new govt.. Ive seen it close up first hand. made up more of illegal aliens ,criminals, ignorant people willing to do anything.. and they dont care about the wonderful life of the USA.. Its gotten way worse since 9-11.. they were here and came out of the wood work as a result of that...
Answered By: Peach - 12/22/2009
I am just too sad that I will not be alive to withness this world plunge into the abyss.
Answered By: !truth! - 12/22/2009
The desire of republicans to remain living in the 19th century just never ceases to astound.
Eventually we will have modern government and healthcare in the US - instead of the Ma and Pa Kettle nightmare we now have thanks to Southern and rural Conservatives - I hope.
Answered By: future - 12/22/2009
It depends on the perspective.

If you compare our world today to .....say... the dark ages...we are in much better shape.

Even comparing it to ...say...the 30's and 40's when 60 million people were killed in a world war we are in much better shape.

How about the 60's when people in the US were rioting in the streets for civil rights and or against the viet nam war. Many people were gunned down in the streets. High Schools had snipers on the roof, the KKK was still a force and so were the black panthers, 3 million men had gone through viet nam, the cold war was still on, the soviet union was a real threat, we were on the brink of nuclear holocaust with missiles in Cuba, the Berlin Wall was still up. I guess you can say we are better off now.

However, you are quite right, our children will not inherit a better world than we enjoyed. We are just now realizing we had something to lose now that it is leaving.

We are indeed witnessing the end of America as we knew it. "Fundamental Change" is not CHANGE for the better.
Answered By: JimSock - 12/22/2009
The main problem seems to be- we are too rich! My earlier studies in college showed that creativity goes up in direct relation to a limited budget; any artist or musician can relate to that. They often recall that their earlier years were much more productive than the later phases when they got too comfortable and had more time to indulge in vacations, transcendental medications and bedtime adventures.
Washington is too fat, complex, accustomed to raising phantom funds to finance pork, wars, egregious raises in pay, and is overrun with lobbyists (who outnumber legislators 3:1) all advancing special interests with corrupting political contributions. The best single improvement would be to ban the lobbyist cartels, limiting petitions to those that come directly from affected (non-political) parties and individuals. The next admittedly radical move would be to decentralize Washington's functions to about six satellite centers across the country, on the model of the Supreme Court system, better suited to dealing with regional concerns. This would cut House and Senate travel expenses by limiting Washington residency besides keeping representatives more directly connected and accountable to their constituents. Video conferencing fits into this picture very well- keeping up with corporations.
To relate back to your question; yes, the USA does appear to be on the decline, but we have been thru this sort of thing before. It all takes time, but we do recover, at least we have before. Just get accustomed to "lowered expectations" - a phrase from an earlier economic crunch.
Doing more with less is a wise course, and actually takes advantage of smarter gadgets like the iPhone. Drop the notion that happiness comes with a 30-year mortgage with furniture- that's becoming wasteful and inefficient. Lease or rent furniture and autos, be prepared to move on short notice, build up a cash reserve, protect your credit rating and maybe investment is a good idea- just be sure you know what you're doing. Work smarter, not harder- you've heard it before, just do it.
Will the USA change? Yes, but it had better do it more with initiative than inertia. Big O tries hard and has great ideas, but lately he has had some hard lessons on how entrenched the DC culture is, and how determined it is to resist "change". It is eerie how much he sounds just like some departed and unlamented past presidents- some of the speech phrases he uses don't sound like him, but appear plucked whole from other's past policy pronouncements. What was the old definition of insanity? "Doing the same thing over and over, and expecting something to change."
Who's really in charge here? Banks and lobbyists seem to set all the rules, and things improve only when they are in a position to profit. We are very vigilant about corruption in foreign countries, but apparently blind to the undue influence of lobbyists with deep pockets selling their agendas with impunity thru the halls of gummint. You want change? clean house, starting with the lobbyists. BTW, good luck getting that to happen.
Source(s):
Bloomberg, CNBC, Washington Post, NY Times, Daily Show/John Stewart, Jim Marrs
Answered By: hurtin' - 12/22/2009
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