Poll

Do You Consider Yourself A US citizen Or A Citizen Of Your State?

I identify more with National Citizenship86%86% - 33
I identify more with State/local Citizenship13%13% - 5
Total: 38
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

I don't see what your point is about Connecticut.
My point is that Connecticut shows you can have high taxes, be productive, and not have massive debt issues or have businesses fleeing your state.
Connecticut sucks. The cities are utter shitholes and the rest of the state is confused about whether it wants to be suburban or rural. The overall feel is one of... neglect. It's also full of thousands of hippies turned yuppies who crave 'rural life' while driving their BMW and sipping their Grande Mocha Crappiato.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
13rin
Member
+977|6765

Turquoise wrote:

North Florida is part of the South, and South Florida is Cuba a retirement home for Northerners.
You're right.  I've been all over Florida.  I was being a cynic..  The only things that tweak me about FL are the bad drivers and humidity.  Honestly, some areas of Little Havana are quite bad ass.  There is some of the best coffee there.  I saw more bikes.  Shops were very colorful.  Women were made-up and all the old guys are smoking cigars wandering the streets wearing fedoras.  Been to some awesome restaurants in Miami and Tampa and also the backwater ones like a BBQ pit in Chiefland.  I tour the state every other year.  Put in around 1900 miles on a trip.  My state is very diverse and I am quite fond of it.

Ever hear of The Villages and their little problem?  Retirement people getting it on like there is no tomorrow.
I stood in line for four hours. They better give me a Wal-Mart gift card, or something.  - Rodney Booker, Job Fair attendee.
rdx-fx
...
+955|6877
My main dislike of the urban sprawl locations is;

rdx-fx wrote:

The above problem areas, the local government treats the people as subjects  rather than citizens - as simpletons to be protected from themselves, rather than as responsible adults to be left alone and respected. 
Secondly;
Cram that many people into that small of an area, and they just seem to lose their humanity.
Crammed into such a densely populated environment, people stop relating to each other and start pretending everyone else is just some anonymous drone rather than an actual person.
I lived in Cook County, Illinois for close to 5 years - and I hated every day of it.
(Cook County - 2nd most populous county in the US, after LA county)

Contrast this to my current location where I personally know everyone that walks in the door of my favorite breakfast/lunch restauraunt, aside from the odd tourist stopping through. 
People say "Hi, how are you?" around here, and actually give a damn what the answer is.


JohnG@lt wrote:

Who cares? It doesn't matter what you personally can do, that's why we have a fucking economy in the first place. Some people do certain kinds of work, some do other kinds of work, when they need stuff from each other they trade money for the services. It's the entire foundation of a functioning economy. The goal in life shouldn't be to aspire to some hick scratch farming existence.
Yes, it does matter what you personally can do.

A degree of specialization is key to a modern western economy, true.
overspecialization (to the exclusion of other basic skills) is a weakness, however.
Overspecialization makes a system (economy, community, organism, whatever) that much more fragile.
Overspecialize, and the loss of one function can cripple the whole system.
(What happened to Detroit, when the manufacturing jobs went away?)


There are a few basic tasks that anyone should be able to take care of themselves. Urban life makes things so easy, and so overspecialized, that there is someone waiting to take your credit card to do the most trivial of things for you.
To be a smartass, what's next? have to hire someone to pump gas for you at the gas station?!  (oh, wait.. New Jersey)

A little flexibility goes a long way.
I call the local plumber if something is well and truly fucked up beyond my expertise, yes.
BUT I don't need to call him every time the sink is clogged, or if I'm installing a new sink, refrigerator, or washing machine.

If you've been military, you've probably been to some country where the economy and infrastructure have been wrecked.
Bosnia, Baghdad, Kabul, Haiti - or, closer yet, Hurricane Katrina.
If mother nature, or the whims of international politics decide to shitcan the modern infrastructure near you, how screwed would you be?
Completely helpless?  manage to get by for a few days?  or able to actually help others survive and thrive until things get straightened out?

You don't have to go all wingnut apocalyptical survivalist, either.
Just don't be so overspecialized that you're completely useless to the world around you, except for being able to write a mean TPS report.

Last edited by rdx-fx (2010-05-28 21:50:58)

Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

rdx-fx wrote:

My main dislike of the urban sprawl locations is;

rdx-fx wrote:

The above problem areas, the local government treats the people as subjects  rather than citizens - as simpletons to be protected from themselves, rather than as responsible adults to be left alone and respected. 
Secondly;
Cram that many people into that small of an area, and they just seem to lose their humanity.
Crammed into such a densely populated environment, people stop relating to each other and start pretending everyone else is just some anonymous drone rather than an actual person.
I lived in Cook County, Illinois for close to 5 years - and I hated every day of it.
(Cook County - 2nd most populous county in the US, after LA county)

Contrast this to my current location where I personally know everyone that walks in the door of my favorite breakfast/lunch restauraunt, aside from the odd tourist stopping through. 
People say "Hi, how are you?" around here, and actually give a damn what the answer is.


JohnG@lt wrote:

Who cares? It doesn't matter what you personally can do, that's why we have a fucking economy in the first place. Some people do certain kinds of work, some do other kinds of work, when they need stuff from each other they trade money for the services. It's the entire foundation of a functioning economy. The goal in life shouldn't be to aspire to some hick scratch farming existence.
Yes, it does matter what you personally can do.

A degree of specialization is key to a modern western economy, true.
overspecialization (to the exclusion of other basic skills) is a weakness, however.
Overspecialization makes a system (economy, community, organism, whatever) that much more fragile.
Overspecialize, and the loss of one function can cripple the whole system.
(What happened to Detroit, when the manufacturing jobs went away?)

There are a few basic tasks that anyone should be able to take care of themselves. Urban life makes things so easy, and so overspecialized, that there is someone waiting to take your credit card to do the most trivial of things for you.
To be a smartass, what's next? have to hire someone to pump gas for you at the gas station?!  (oh, wait.. New Jersey)

A little flexibility goes a long way.

If you've been military, you've probably been to some country where the economy and infrastructure have been wrecked.
Bosnia, Baghdad, Kabul, Haiti - or, closer yet, Hurricane Katrina.
If mother nature, or the whims of international politics decide to shitcan the modern infrastructure near you, how screwed would you be?
Completely helpless?  manage to get by for a few days?  or able to actually help others survive and thrive until things get straightened out?

You don't have to go all wingnut apocalyptical survivalist, either.
Just don't be so overspecialized that you're completely useless to the world around you, except for being able to write a mean TPS report.
You've got a completely warped view of the skills that city dwellers possess. You do understand that we don't import people to build homes and buildings yes? Our construction workers aren't going to disappear so knowing how to lay concrete doesn't matter to the individual person. Being able to hunt and fish is completely irrelevant because if push came to shove, the city I live in would starve. The immediate surrounding area doesn't have nearly enough fish and game to feed everyone. Fixing a car? Sure, some people can't even change a tire but as with the construction workers, the mechanics aren't imported and they aren't going anywhere either.

Society is not going to collapse during our lifetimes so while it might make you feel more manly to possess the skills you do, they don't make you any more valuable to the society you live in or you'd be paid for them, which I assume you are not.

As far as your points about overspecialization, that only happens to stupid people or people unwilling to change. They are the people who stay in their town after the factory is gone and then whine and cry to politicians on national television that they have to bring the jobs to them instead of them going to look for the jobs themselves. I bet 99% of those people can hunt, fish, fix a car etc because they're all blue collar so there goes your theory eh? Modern life is all about adaptability and you are clearly an anachronism who'd rather live up in the woods of Montana building bombs and mailing them to people in the cities he despises.
"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

You failed to see the original point then. If California has such obscene problems with debt to the point it is unstable, all else is irrelevant. It is not a viable political/economic plan.
You're discrediting an entire economic structure over a referendum system?  Look, Flaming, the original issue at hand was that rdx was suggesting America would be better off without several of its most productive members.  Now, while it is true that getting rid of California right now might help us fiscally, his argument was not one primarily regarding debt.  He was suggesting that California was leeching off of the system.  My stats clearly showed that to be untrue.  California's debt problems are state-related, not federal.  They aren't sucking up more federal funds than they contribute, but they are running a major deficit in their state budget because of their referendum system.
Their economic structure is there referendum system. Take out the referendum system, change the ridiculous economic structure, remove the "cheap" higher education, the low taxes, and you take out all the businesses that go to California to do business specifically because of these facts. California is a bubble. Wait for the bubble to burst, see how long it takes for all the companies that aren't rooted to the land to get up and leave.

p.s. maybe he did, but I dunno where rdx implied California itself was "leeching" off the feds.

edit: So I read back, and I finally realized what is so stupid about your graph. That is not a measure of how "productive" a state is as you implied in the post with the picture, GDP has nothing to do with it. That graph is a measure of how federal dollars get spent per state - and probably not just federal dollars spent, but federal dollars moved to include transfer payments. If you live in a relatively poor state, you are going to have a lot more money coming in through federal welfare than other states. If you live in a more liberal state, your population is going to have fewer lows and fewer highs as far as wealth, but since welfare is done on a national standard people from those states are going to be further up towards the median. The graph is an extremely rough measure of median income in ascending order. Now look at the picture with that in mind.

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

I don't see what your point is about Connecticut.
My point is that Connecticut shows you can have high taxes, be productive, and not have massive debt issues or have businesses fleeing your state.
You point to another state that is doing just fine in order to debunk the theory that low taxes aren't good for business/the economy of a state?

Texas is economically exemplary.

KEN-JENNINGS wrote:

attacking the state = attacking the "cultural ideals" of that state.  Why would anyone talk shit on the 'state'?  I hate Colorado because it is a square state....not because of the ideals commonly associated with the state, just because of the shape.  derp derp.
Because back in the day when State pride meant something that's what it was. It's why we might rip on other countries now, or why people support their local sport franchises. You might come up with some rationalizations as to why yours is objectively better than theirs, but when it comes down to it it's all a regional throw of the dice.

People are pricks in states you like and people are legit in states you hate. It's got little to do with the state itself, it's about cultural ideals. As I said, calling out this state or that state is just a useful heuristic.

13/f/taiwan wrote:

Especially Texas.
Quickly now, go back to the sections from whence you came before you get the urge to post solid ideas with robust logical foundations.
rdx-fx
...
+955|6877

JohnG@lt wrote:

You've got a completely warped view of the skills that city dwellers possess. You do understand that we don't import people to build homes and buildings yes? Our construction workers aren't going to disappear so knowing how to lay concrete doesn't matter to the individual person. Being able to hunt and fish is completely irrelevant because if push came to shove, the city I live in would starve. The immediate surrounding area doesn't have nearly enough fish and game to feed everyone. Fixing a car? Sure, some people can't even change a tire but as with the construction workers, the mechanics aren't imported and they aren't going anywhere either.

Society is not going to collapse during our lifetimes so while it might make you feel more manly to possess the skills you do, they don't make you any more valuable to the society you live in or you'd be paid for them, which I assume you are not.

As far as your points about overspecialization, that only happens to stupid people or people unwilling to change. They are the people who stay in their town after the factory is gone and then whine and cry to politicians on national television that they have to bring the jobs to them instead of them going to look for the jobs themselves. I bet 99% of those people can hunt, fish, fix a car etc because they're all blue collar so there goes your theory eh? Modern life is all about adaptability and you are clearly an anachronism who'd rather live up in the woods of Montana building bombs and mailing them to people in the cities he despises.
Oh, get off your high-horse, you condescending fuck-wit.

You were doing just fine up until the "you are clearly an anachronism who'd rather live up in the woods of Montana building bombs and mailing them to people in the cities he despises." bit.

I've lived in densely populated areas nearly as much as I've lived in rural areas.
Seattle WA, Studio City CA, Calabasas CA, Schaumburg IL, Milwaukee WI, etc..

My point, as shortly put as I can manage is this:
hyper-urban populations are frighteningly overspecialized and overcrowded, and thus are too vulnerable to any weakness in their infrastructure.
If something like Hurricane Katrina hit LA County, a staggering number of people would die simply because they're generally incapable of surviving without their accustomed infrastructure and they're so densely packed in that a mob-mentality free-for-all rioting and looting shit storm would be inevitable.

If Hurrican Katrina is too unrealistic of an example, how about a 9.5 Haiti-style quake?

If the military opened my eyes to anything, it's that the conveniences of modern urban life can be wiped out with a quickness, by the most trivial of circumstances, in a frighteningly short period of time.

Last edited by rdx-fx (2010-05-28 22:37:51)

Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

JohnG@lt wrote:

I bet 99% of those people can hunt, fish, fix a car etc because they're all blue collar so there goes your theory eh?
I liked the "I bet 99% of those people can hunt, fish, fix a car etc because they're all blue collar so there goes your theory eh?" part myself.
rdx-fx
...
+955|6877

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

p.s. maybe he did, but I dunno where rdx implied California itself was "leeching" off the feds.
If implied, that was not the intent.

Simply put, my dislike for California's government is "... the local government treats the people as subjects  rather than citizens - as simpletons to be protected from themselves, rather than as responsible adults to be left alone and respected.  "
and, secondly, that their government seems wholly incapable of living within it's means.

regardless of what percentage of the GDP California may be, it's Leviathan government has turned into a Orwellian nanny-state, that can't seem to live within its means.  It is so far outside the intent of the US Constitution (in regards to personal freedoms and liberty, and in regards to responsible government), that it seems beyond fixing.

If it were simply a matter of dollars, then that could be fixed.

But it is not.

California's problems are more to do with their state government's ideology.

Unfortunately, that same ideology seems to be firmly rooted in Washington DC (Democrat or Republican, same shitbags, different color tie).


Realistically, the USA is never going to jettison one of our states.
We fought a civil war to keep the United States united.
But, being a smartass, I can sarcastically suggest we may be better off excising that cancerous mass before it kills us all off.
rdx-fx
...
+955|6877

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

rdx-fx wrote:

I bet 99% of those people can hunt, fish, fix a car etc because they're all blue collar so there goes your theory eh?
I liked the "I bet 99% of those people can hunt, fish, fix a car etc because they're all blue collar so there goes your theory eh?" part myself.
That was John G@lt you're quoting above, not me
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85
You could also mail bombs to people in California's government.

edit: my deepest, most profound apologies about the misquote
13urnzz
Banned
+5,830|6783

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

You could also mail bombs to people in California's government.
from a shack, in Montana


https://img88.imageshack.us/img88/1834/unabomberfbi.gif
rdx-fx
...
+955|6877

burnzz wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

You could also mail bombs to people in California's government.
from a shack, in Montana


http://img88.imageshack.us/img88/1834/unabomberfbi.gif
You want me to get that picture autographed for you, or what?

RAIMIUS
You with the face!
+244|7000|US
...Well, which side is following the US Constitution?
That's the one I swore to support.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

JohnG@lt wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

I don't see what your point is about Connecticut.
My point is that Connecticut shows you can have high taxes, be productive, and not have massive debt issues or have businesses fleeing your state.
Connecticut sucks. The cities are utter shitholes and the rest of the state is confused about whether it wants to be suburban or rural. The overall feel is one of... neglect. It's also full of thousands of hippies turned yuppies who crave 'rural life' while driving their BMW and sipping their Grande Mocha Crappiato.
Hey, I'm not saying it's where I'd want to live, but economically, it still shows that Texas isn't the only route for success.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

DBBrinson1 wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

North Florida is part of the South, and South Florida is Cuba a retirement home for Northerners.
You're right.  I've been all over Florida.  I was being a cynic..  The only things that tweak me about FL are the bad drivers and humidity.  Honestly, some areas of Little Havana are quite bad ass.  There is some of the best coffee there.  I saw more bikes.  Shops were very colorful.  Women were made-up and all the old guys are smoking cigars wandering the streets wearing fedoras.  Been to some awesome restaurants in Miami and Tampa and also the backwater ones like a BBQ pit in Chiefland.  I tour the state every other year.  Put in around 1900 miles on a trip.  My state is very diverse and I am quite fond of it.

Ever hear of The Villages and their little problem?  Retirement people getting it on like there is no tomorrow.
Well, I now know where most of the sales of Viagra come from.  lol
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Their economic structure is there referendum system. Take out the referendum system, change the ridiculous economic structure, remove the "cheap" higher education, the low taxes, and you take out all the businesses that go to California to do business specifically because of these facts. California is a bubble. Wait for the bubble to burst, see how long it takes for all the companies that aren't rooted to the land to get up and leave.
We agree that it's a bubble, but the referendum system is not the same thing as the economic system.  It does affect their economics quite a bit, but if you got rid of the referendum system, then the economic structure of California would function far better.  It's not a matter of taxes as much as it is a matter of making sure you don't run huge debts from a lot of entitlements without the proper taxes.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

p.s. maybe he did, but I dunno where rdx implied California itself was "leeching" off the feds.

rdx-fx wrote:

We have to keep those boat-anchor states, even if they're going to sink the country.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

edit: So I read back, and I finally realized what is so stupid about your graph. That is not a measure of how "productive" a state is as you implied in the post with the picture, GDP has nothing to do with it. That graph is a measure of how federal dollars get spent per state - and probably not just federal dollars spent, but federal dollars moved to include transfer payments. If you live in a relatively poor state, you are going to have a lot more money coming in through federal welfare than other states. If you live in a more liberal state, your population is going to have fewer lows and fewer highs as far as wealth, but since welfare is done on a national standard people from those states are going to be further up towards the median. The graph is an extremely rough measure of median income in ascending order. Now look at the picture with that in mind.
Cost of living/median income is irrelevant in this, except with regard to poverty.  As you said, poorer states do receive more welfare than other states, but since a lot of red states have more poverty, they are literally going to have more money going back to them than they put in.  Also, the most populated states usually have the most industry -- therefore, they do contribute more to the system than the less populated ones, on average.

Granted, some smaller states like Connecticut still contribute a lot to the system for their size because of the inherent wealth there.

Still, this doesn't invalidate the graph at all.  The only real counter to this measure is that some states, like mine, do have a lot of military installations, so they do receive a lot of federal money to keep them running.  Military expenditures are much more useful than welfare payments, so I would suggest that this graph could be made more accurate if those expenditures were left out of the ratios.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

You point to another state that is doing just fine in order to debunk the theory that low taxes aren't good for business/the economy of a state?

Texas is economically exemplary.
Again, you're putting words in my mouth.  All I'm saying is that high taxes don't automatically = bad for business/economy.  There are a combination of factors that can lead to economic growth, and while low taxes often help, they aren't mandatory.

Last edited by Turquoise (2010-05-28 23:42:37)

LostFate
Same shit, Different Arsehole
+95|6771|England

Turquoise wrote:

Nah, I'd say LostFate makes an extra effort to troll as much as possible.  It's funny, because ruis typically gets labeled as hating America, but I don't think he does.  I can't always agree with his reasoning, but he at least provides an explanation for his statements.

As for Lost...  well, it would seem he takes every opportunity possible to complain about the U.S.  There's really not much of a context for it half of the time.  Normally, I don't like calling people out like this, but I'll make an exception for him.

Anyway, I feel more in tune with my state than my country.  I really don't like how we're so large.  There seems to be a lot of psychological distance between D.C. and much of the country.  I think this is inevitable no matter who enters power, because it's not really possible to reflect the interests of all 50 states under one government.  At the very best, we just fluctuate between different states getting more represented than others at any given time.
I don't know why you think i was trolling because i wasn't.

This thread is about loyalty to your state and to your country something which I'm very proud of, now if you guys even gave a fuck about you're country as much as you make out on here, then the North American Union wouldn't fucking exist.
Jay
Bork! Bork! Bork!
+2,006|5643|London, England

LostFate wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Nah, I'd say LostFate makes an extra effort to troll as much as possible.  It's funny, because ruis typically gets labeled as hating America, but I don't think he does.  I can't always agree with his reasoning, but he at least provides an explanation for his statements.

As for Lost...  well, it would seem he takes every opportunity possible to complain about the U.S.  There's really not much of a context for it half of the time.  Normally, I don't like calling people out like this, but I'll make an exception for him.

Anyway, I feel more in tune with my state than my country.  I really don't like how we're so large.  There seems to be a lot of psychological distance between D.C. and much of the country.  I think this is inevitable no matter who enters power, because it's not really possible to reflect the interests of all 50 states under one government.  At the very best, we just fluctuate between different states getting more represented than others at any given time.
I don't know why you think i was trolling because i wasn't.

This thread is about loyalty to your state and to your country something which I'm very proud of, now if you guys even gave a fuck about you're country as much as you make out on here, then the North American Union wouldn't fucking exist.
It doesn't exist...

The North American Union (NAU) is a theoretical economic union, in some instances also a political union, of Canada, Mexico, and the United States. It is loosely based on the European Union, occasionally including a common currency called the Amero or the North American Dollar.

While the idea for some form of union has been discussed or proposed[1] in academic, business and political circles for many decades,[2] government officials from all three nations say there are no plans to create such a union and no agreement to do so has been signed.[3][4][5] The formation of a North American Union has been the subject of various conspiracy theories.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_american_union

Last edited by JohnG@lt (2010-05-29 08:02:06)

"Ah, you miserable creatures! You who think that you are so great! You who judge humanity to be so small! You who wish to reform everything! Why don't you reform yourselves? That task would be sufficient enough."
-Frederick Bastiat
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

LostFate wrote:

Turquoise wrote:

Nah, I'd say LostFate makes an extra effort to troll as much as possible.  It's funny, because ruis typically gets labeled as hating America, but I don't think he does.  I can't always agree with his reasoning, but he at least provides an explanation for his statements.

As for Lost...  well, it would seem he takes every opportunity possible to complain about the U.S.  There's really not much of a context for it half of the time.  Normally, I don't like calling people out like this, but I'll make an exception for him.

Anyway, I feel more in tune with my state than my country.  I really don't like how we're so large.  There seems to be a lot of psychological distance between D.C. and much of the country.  I think this is inevitable no matter who enters power, because it's not really possible to reflect the interests of all 50 states under one government.  At the very best, we just fluctuate between different states getting more represented than others at any given time.
I don't know why you think i was trolling because i wasn't.

This thread is about loyalty to your state and to your country something which I'm very proud of, now if you guys even gave a fuck about you're country as much as you make out on here, then the North American Union wouldn't fucking exist.
Lost, sometimes, I don't know what to say to you.  As John posted, it doesn't exist.  Now, look, I'm not saying that there aren't certain groups that would love to have a North American Union, but unlike Europe, there has never been a push supported by the general public for such a continent wide union.

All an American, Mexican, or Canadian citizen has to do to realize the folly of such a move is to look at the EU.  That's not going to last much longer because of various problems, so there's no need for us to move toward the same failed idea.

Granted, our danger isn't an official union but rather a cultural one.  Gradually, America is becoming more like Mexico, mostly in the border areas.  There may come a time when there isn't much of a difference between us, other than living under a different government.
eleven bravo
Member
+1,399|5544|foggy bottom
lostfate thinks the half an hour he spent in a warzone gives him credibility when he trashes the US
Tu Stultus Es
11 Bravo
Banned
+965|5522|Cleveland, Ohio

eleven bravo wrote:

lostfate thinks the half an hour he spent in a warzone gives him credibility when he trashes the US
lol

Last edited by 11 Bravo (2010-05-29 09:37:47)

Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

Turquoise wrote:

We agree that it's a bubble, but the referendum system is not the same thing as the economic system.  It does affect their economics quite a bit, but if you got rid of the referendum system, then the economic structure of California would function far better.  It's not a matter of taxes as much as it is a matter of making sure you don't run huge debts from a lot of entitlements without the proper taxes.
Get rid of the referendum system and the economic structure runs better because it changes dramatically. The costs:benefits ratio is what it is because of the referendum system, and that is what defines the economic structure.

What rdx said did not refer to federal tax dollars, and he confirmed as much a few posts up. There are other ways to sink a ship besides money issues.

Turquoise wrote:

Cost of living/median income is irrelevant in this, except with regard to poverty.  As you said, poorer states do receive more welfare than other states, but since a lot of red states have more poverty, they are literally going to have more money going back to them than they put in.  Also, the most populated states usually have the most industry -- therefore, they do contribute more to the system than the less populated ones, on average.

Granted, some smaller states like Connecticut still contribute a lot to the system for their size because of the inherent wealth there.

Still, this doesn't invalidate the graph at all.  The only real counter to this measure is that some states, like mine, do have a lot of military installations, so they do receive a lot of federal money to keep them running.  Military expenditures are much more useful than welfare payments, so I would suggest that this graph could be made more accurate if those expenditures were left out of the ratios.
This is not a measure of productivity though, in any way. You need a graph of GDP percentage by state, and past that take everything with a grain of salt concerning federal tax dollars, state debt, and other factors.

Turquoise wrote:

Again, you're putting words in my mouth.  All I'm saying is that high taxes don't automatically = bad for business/economy.  There are a combination of factors that can lead to economic growth, and while low taxes often help, they aren't mandatory.
I don't understand what you are responding to. California is fucked up. Texas isn't. Not every state that isn't like Texas is fucked up, but Texas is exemplary. Simple.
Turquoise
O Canada
+1,596|6690|North Carolina

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

Get rid of the referendum system and the economic structure runs better because it changes dramatically. The costs:benefits ratio is what it is because of the referendum system, and that is what defines the economic structure.

What rdx said did not refer to federal tax dollars, and he confirmed as much a few posts up. There are other ways to sink a ship besides money issues.
First, let me get this straight.  You're saying that a referendum system defines the economic structure?  See, I look at it more like the industries themselves define the economic structure, along with the tax scheme.  The referendum system would be more typically defined as the governmental structure -- at least in terms of actual policy passage.

Second, rdx's logic is pretty flawed if he's still suggesting that the states he listed out are "anchors" on our economy.  Yes, they have debt issues, but again, they each make up a large part of the GDP in productivity.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

This is not a measure of productivity though, in any way. You need a graph of GDP percentage by state, and past that take everything with a grain of salt concerning federal tax dollars, state debt, and other factors.
Generally speaking, most of this country's productive capacity is concentrated in the Northeast, California, Texas, and the Chicago area.  It's more than a coincidence that most of these areas contribute more than they receive back.

The only major exception to the rule is Northern Virginia, which also contributes a lot, but its contributions are heavily dependent on government spending.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

I don't understand what you are responding to. California is fucked up. Texas isn't. Not every state that isn't like Texas is fucked up, but Texas is exemplary. Simple.
Texas certainly isn't exemplary when it comes to crime.
Flaming_Maniac
prince of insufficient light
+2,490|6992|67.222.138.85

Turquoise wrote:

First, let me get this straight.  You're saying that a referendum system defines the economic structure?  See, I look at it more like the industries themselves define the economic structure, along with the tax scheme.  The referendum system would be more typically defined as the governmental structure -- at least in terms of actual policy passage.

Second, rdx's logic is pretty flawed if he's still suggesting that the states he listed out are "anchors" on our economy.  Yes, they have debt issues, but again, they each make up a large part of the GDP in productivity.
The referendum system means people vote low taxes and high services. That defines directly what the tax scheme is and indirectly what industries come into the state.

rdx didn't say anchors on our economy. He said anchors. Money isn't everything.

Turquoise wrote:

Generally speaking, most of this country's productive capacity is concentrated in the Northeast, California, Texas, and the Chicago area.  It's more than a coincidence that most of these areas contribute more than they receive back.

The only major exception to the rule is Northern Virginia, which also contributes a lot, but its contributions are heavily dependent on government spending.
I'm not saying there aren't going to be similarities, but that is the list you need to use if you are going to try to make a red state/blue state argument.

Turquoise wrote:

Texas certainly isn't exemplary when it comes to crime.
Since when?
rdx-fx
...
+955|6877

Turquoise wrote:

Second, rdx's logic is pretty flawed if he's still suggesting that the states he listed out are "anchors" on our economy.  Yes, they have debt issues, but again, they each make up a large part of the GDP in productivity.

Flaming_Maniac wrote:

rdx didn't say anchors on our economy. He said anchors. Money isn't everything.
1) The California government's ideology of 'spend beyond our means' is unworkable.  That is the overweight anchor that will sink the country.  Washington DC seems to have already caught that illness too.  If the country follows California's ideological lead, that ideology of government will sink the country.


"A democracy cannot exist as a permanent form of government. It can only exist until the voters discover that they can vote themselves money from the Public Treasury. From that moment on, the majority always votes for the candidate promising the most benefits from the Public Treasury with the result that a democracy always collapses over loose fiscal policy always followed by dictatorship."

Alexander Fraser Tyler, "The Decline and Fall of the Athenian Republic"

Last edited by rdx-fx (2010-05-29 12:03:40)

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