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  4. OK So you just won the Presidency

OK So you just won the Presidency

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  • D DRHuff

    ColinDavies wrote: Obviously after re-elected in 2008-9 invading Canada would be a priority. Do you really think you can spare the 200 marines required to do this? :laugh::laugh: Dave

    R Offline
    R Offline
    retZ
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    :laugh: Cruel There are no failures.. only extended learning opportunities.

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    • D DRHuff

      ColinDavies wrote: Obviously after re-elected in 2008-9 invading Canada would be a priority. Do you really think you can spare the 200 marines required to do this? :laugh::laugh: Dave

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      J Offline
      Jorgen Sigvardsson
      wrote on last edited by
      #8

      Hey, don't pick on the Canadians. Without them you might not have had the NHL, and that my friend, would've been a catastrophy! -- Arigato gozaimashida!

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      • J Jorgen Sigvardsson

        Hey, don't pick on the Canadians. Without them you might not have had the NHL, and that my friend, would've been a catastrophy! -- Arigato gozaimashida!

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        73Zeppelin
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        The NHL is Canada's secret weapon against the U.S. We're ever so slowly taking them over. They don't even notice...:suss: The US will be Canada's 11th province - except California - we don't want that. Unfortunately, since you have given the plan of conquest away, we have to dispose of you. :| John Theal Physicist at Large Got CAD? http://www.presenter3d.com[^]

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        • D DRHuff

          ColinDavies wrote: Obviously after re-elected in 2008-9 invading Canada would be a priority. Do you really think you can spare the 200 marines required to do this? :laugh::laugh: Dave

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          S Offline
          Stephane Routelous
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          well, when you think that in a few decades (perhaps years) , water provision will really become problematic for the world and that Canada has a HUGE amount of water reserve ( I think it is the biggest in the world) , I will not make jokes about this subject .... :~ just my 2 cents.


          Stephane

          www.exotk.org

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          • R Richard Stringer

            So you just won and now its time to back up some promises. What would be your Presidential action to resolve the following: (A) Rising cost of gasoline (B) Solving the education crisis (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. These seem to be the main areas of concern in the domestic sector and I am of the school of though the the President can really do nothing about any of them but make empty promisies. But I wait to be enlightened. Remember you have to pay for this stuff somehow. No Utopian ideas please Richard "Under certain circumstances, profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer --Mark Twain (1835 - 1910)

            M Offline
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            Marc Clifton
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            Oh, let's see, I'll take a shot at this and enjoy the resulting flames. Richard Stringer wrote: (A) Rising cost of gasoline Promote alternative fuel research. This obviously would require pissing off the automobile lobby AND the oil lobby, but a long term solution is seriously needed. The Japanese are way ahead of us in this, which is pathetic. What the hell happened to Americans being the leaders in technology and innovation anyways? It seems that all the articles I read on innovation are the result of research done by other countries. How to pay for government sponsored research? Well, fighting fewer wars would help. Richard Stringer wrote: (B) Solving the education crisis No child left behind is a farce. I would remove all federal regulation, allow states and local governments to create educational programs that best suit their local economic/social issues, and I'd attempt to get rid of as much beaurocracy as possible so that money spent on education goes to teachers and children, not beaurocrats. Richard Stringer wrote: (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) OK, creating a new infrastructure for hydrogen and/or electric powered cars and significantly reducing our dependence on foreign oil seems like it would boost manufacturing jobs. Richard Stringer wrote: (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. 1. Dramatically limit/eliminate medical malpractice lawsuits. 2. Make all tobacco products illegal. Shut down the cancer stick manufacturers. Period. (flame away, but the reality is that tobacco use costs billions of dollars in medical care every year). 3. Get CPians to write medical administration software that unifies the industry and eliminates 90% of the beaurocratic overhead. You forgot to mention the deficit and the looming social security disaster. And how DO you spell beaurocrat? Marc MyXaml Advanced Unit Testing

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            • M Marc Clifton

              Oh, let's see, I'll take a shot at this and enjoy the resulting flames. Richard Stringer wrote: (A) Rising cost of gasoline Promote alternative fuel research. This obviously would require pissing off the automobile lobby AND the oil lobby, but a long term solution is seriously needed. The Japanese are way ahead of us in this, which is pathetic. What the hell happened to Americans being the leaders in technology and innovation anyways? It seems that all the articles I read on innovation are the result of research done by other countries. How to pay for government sponsored research? Well, fighting fewer wars would help. Richard Stringer wrote: (B) Solving the education crisis No child left behind is a farce. I would remove all federal regulation, allow states and local governments to create educational programs that best suit their local economic/social issues, and I'd attempt to get rid of as much beaurocracy as possible so that money spent on education goes to teachers and children, not beaurocrats. Richard Stringer wrote: (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) OK, creating a new infrastructure for hydrogen and/or electric powered cars and significantly reducing our dependence on foreign oil seems like it would boost manufacturing jobs. Richard Stringer wrote: (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. 1. Dramatically limit/eliminate medical malpractice lawsuits. 2. Make all tobacco products illegal. Shut down the cancer stick manufacturers. Period. (flame away, but the reality is that tobacco use costs billions of dollars in medical care every year). 3. Get CPians to write medical administration software that unifies the industry and eliminates 90% of the beaurocratic overhead. You forgot to mention the deficit and the looming social security disaster. And how DO you spell beaurocrat? Marc MyXaml Advanced Unit Testing

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              Gary Kirkham
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              Apparently, you are the only one who took this question seriously. :) Marc Clifton wrote: 3. Get CPians to write medical administration software that unifies the industry and eliminates 90% of the beaurocratic overhead. 90% percent of bureaucratic overhead is bureaucrats, how would software help that? It would just add another layer of bureaucracy tasked with software oversight. Bureaucracies exist to perpetuate themselves and grow bigger and stronger. It's kinda like trying to unplug HAL. Gary Kirkham A working Program is one that has only unobserved bugs He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose. - Jim Elliot Me blog, You read

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              • S Stephane Routelous

                well, when you think that in a few decades (perhaps years) , water provision will really become problematic for the world and that Canada has a HUGE amount of water reserve ( I think it is the biggest in the world) , I will not make jokes about this subject .... :~ just my 2 cents.


                Stephane

                www.exotk.org

                C Offline
                C Offline
                ColinDavies
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                Stephane Routelous wrote: water provision will really become problematic for the world Good point. Regardz Colin J Davies Attention: Watch this signature for an upcoming announcement that will affect you.

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                • 7 73Zeppelin

                  The NHL is Canada's secret weapon against the U.S. We're ever so slowly taking them over. They don't even notice...:suss: The US will be Canada's 11th province - except California - we don't want that. Unfortunately, since you have given the plan of conquest away, we have to dispose of you. :| John Theal Physicist at Large Got CAD? http://www.presenter3d.com[^]

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                  peterchen
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  Oh John, didn't you know? You have to dispose of the plan, not of you.


                  we are here to help each other get through this thing, whatever it is Vonnegut jr.
                  sighist || Agile Programming | doxygen

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                  • 7 73Zeppelin

                    The NHL is Canada's secret weapon against the U.S. We're ever so slowly taking them over. They don't even notice...:suss: The US will be Canada's 11th province - except California - we don't want that. Unfortunately, since you have given the plan of conquest away, we have to dispose of you. :| John Theal Physicist at Large Got CAD? http://www.presenter3d.com[^]

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                    Jorgen Sigvardsson
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    I thought that was pretty obvious, and even common knowledge. :confused: -- Arigato gozaimashida!

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                    • 7 73Zeppelin

                      The NHL is Canada's secret weapon against the U.S. We're ever so slowly taking them over. They don't even notice...:suss: The US will be Canada's 11th province - except California - we don't want that. Unfortunately, since you have given the plan of conquest away, we have to dispose of you. :| John Theal Physicist at Large Got CAD? http://www.presenter3d.com[^]

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                      L Offline
                      Lost User
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      In TNG half the actors were canadian :rolleyes: Except for the british captain of course ! The tigress is here :-D

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                      • L Lost User

                        In TNG half the actors were canadian :rolleyes: Except for the british captain of course ! The tigress is here :-D

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                        Jorgen Sigvardsson
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #17

                        Ah, TNG. Maybe I should indulge myself in that after a hard afternoon of Unreal Tournament. Your comment has ripped a hole in the space time continuum, and I feel compelled to mend it. :-D -- Arigato gozaimashida!

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                        • D DRHuff

                          ColinDavies wrote: Obviously after re-elected in 2008-9 invading Canada would be a priority. Do you really think you can spare the 200 marines required to do this? :laugh::laugh: Dave

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                          G Offline
                          Gary R Wheeler
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #18

                          I think you may have just insulted the USMC.


                          Software Zen: delete this;

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                          • M Marc Clifton

                            Oh, let's see, I'll take a shot at this and enjoy the resulting flames. Richard Stringer wrote: (A) Rising cost of gasoline Promote alternative fuel research. This obviously would require pissing off the automobile lobby AND the oil lobby, but a long term solution is seriously needed. The Japanese are way ahead of us in this, which is pathetic. What the hell happened to Americans being the leaders in technology and innovation anyways? It seems that all the articles I read on innovation are the result of research done by other countries. How to pay for government sponsored research? Well, fighting fewer wars would help. Richard Stringer wrote: (B) Solving the education crisis No child left behind is a farce. I would remove all federal regulation, allow states and local governments to create educational programs that best suit their local economic/social issues, and I'd attempt to get rid of as much beaurocracy as possible so that money spent on education goes to teachers and children, not beaurocrats. Richard Stringer wrote: (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) OK, creating a new infrastructure for hydrogen and/or electric powered cars and significantly reducing our dependence on foreign oil seems like it would boost manufacturing jobs. Richard Stringer wrote: (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. 1. Dramatically limit/eliminate medical malpractice lawsuits. 2. Make all tobacco products illegal. Shut down the cancer stick manufacturers. Period. (flame away, but the reality is that tobacco use costs billions of dollars in medical care every year). 3. Get CPians to write medical administration software that unifies the industry and eliminates 90% of the beaurocratic overhead. You forgot to mention the deficit and the looming social security disaster. And how DO you spell beaurocrat? Marc MyXaml Advanced Unit Testing

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                            S Offline
                            Stan Shannon
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #19

                            Marc Clifton wrote: (A) Rising cost of gasoline Promote alternative fuel research. This obviously would require pissing off the automobile lobby AND the oil lobby, but a long term solution is seriously needed. The Japanese are way ahead of us in this, which is pathetic. What the hell happened to Americans being the leaders in technology and innovation anyways? It seems that all the articles I read on innovation are the result of research done by other countries. How to pay for government sponsored research? Well, fighting fewer wars would help. Agreed, except I think the best way to handle that is to give tax breaks to private companies doing the research themselves rather than funding such research directly by the government as other countries do. Promoting the country's entreprenurial spirit is always the best policy. I don't think the lobbyists are quite the spectre they are made out to be. The automobile and oil industries are not complete idiots. They will obviously attempt to eek out every last penny from fossil fuels, but as other energy tecnologies begin to compete more effectively, they will adapt or die. That should always be the way the U.S. competes with other nations. Marc Clifton wrote: (B) Solving the education crisis No child left behind is a farce. I would remove all federal regulation, allow states and local governments to create educational programs that best suit their local economic/social issues, and I'd attempt to get rid of as much beaurocracy as possible so that money spent on education goes to teachers and children, not beaurocrats. Agree completely,. Marc Clifton wrote: (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) OK, creating a new infrastructure for hydrogen and/or electric powered cars and significantly reducing our dependence on foreign oil seems like it would boost manufacturing jobs. Maybe. But the government should get out of the "job creation" mind set. Keep taxes low, let the economy function as it is supposed to and the jobs will be there. Marc Clifton wrote: (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. 1. Dramatically limit/eliminate medical malpractice lawsuits. 2. Make all tobacco products illegal. Shut down the cancer stick manufacturers. Period. (flame away, but the reality is that tobacco use costs billions of dollars in medical care every year). 3. Get CPians to write medical administra

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                            • M Marc Clifton

                              Oh, let's see, I'll take a shot at this and enjoy the resulting flames. Richard Stringer wrote: (A) Rising cost of gasoline Promote alternative fuel research. This obviously would require pissing off the automobile lobby AND the oil lobby, but a long term solution is seriously needed. The Japanese are way ahead of us in this, which is pathetic. What the hell happened to Americans being the leaders in technology and innovation anyways? It seems that all the articles I read on innovation are the result of research done by other countries. How to pay for government sponsored research? Well, fighting fewer wars would help. Richard Stringer wrote: (B) Solving the education crisis No child left behind is a farce. I would remove all federal regulation, allow states and local governments to create educational programs that best suit their local economic/social issues, and I'd attempt to get rid of as much beaurocracy as possible so that money spent on education goes to teachers and children, not beaurocrats. Richard Stringer wrote: (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) OK, creating a new infrastructure for hydrogen and/or electric powered cars and significantly reducing our dependence on foreign oil seems like it would boost manufacturing jobs. Richard Stringer wrote: (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. 1. Dramatically limit/eliminate medical malpractice lawsuits. 2. Make all tobacco products illegal. Shut down the cancer stick manufacturers. Period. (flame away, but the reality is that tobacco use costs billions of dollars in medical care every year). 3. Get CPians to write medical administration software that unifies the industry and eliminates 90% of the beaurocratic overhead. You forgot to mention the deficit and the looming social security disaster. And how DO you spell beaurocrat? Marc MyXaml Advanced Unit Testing

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                              M Offline
                              Michael A Barnhart
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #20

                              I will give you a 5. Although some details I disagree with. The general trend is very close to what I would have said. Marc Clifton wrote: Promote alternative fuel research. Some is already being done. One of my friends son did a intership with Sandia Labs and that was the focus. But yes not nearly enough. Item B: Education. I would also restrict the coaches salaries being many times the department chairpersons salary. Education is not a public sports club. Marc Clifton wrote: 1. Dramatically limit/eliminate medical malpractice lawsuits. Agree! Well... Do not get me started. Marc Clifton wrote: Make all tobacco products illegal. Just not practical, but I agree with the thought. I do not mind getting old. It beats all the other options that can think of.

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                              • S Stan Shannon

                                Marc Clifton wrote: (A) Rising cost of gasoline Promote alternative fuel research. This obviously would require pissing off the automobile lobby AND the oil lobby, but a long term solution is seriously needed. The Japanese are way ahead of us in this, which is pathetic. What the hell happened to Americans being the leaders in technology and innovation anyways? It seems that all the articles I read on innovation are the result of research done by other countries. How to pay for government sponsored research? Well, fighting fewer wars would help. Agreed, except I think the best way to handle that is to give tax breaks to private companies doing the research themselves rather than funding such research directly by the government as other countries do. Promoting the country's entreprenurial spirit is always the best policy. I don't think the lobbyists are quite the spectre they are made out to be. The automobile and oil industries are not complete idiots. They will obviously attempt to eek out every last penny from fossil fuels, but as other energy tecnologies begin to compete more effectively, they will adapt or die. That should always be the way the U.S. competes with other nations. Marc Clifton wrote: (B) Solving the education crisis No child left behind is a farce. I would remove all federal regulation, allow states and local governments to create educational programs that best suit their local economic/social issues, and I'd attempt to get rid of as much beaurocracy as possible so that money spent on education goes to teachers and children, not beaurocrats. Agree completely,. Marc Clifton wrote: (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) OK, creating a new infrastructure for hydrogen and/or electric powered cars and significantly reducing our dependence on foreign oil seems like it would boost manufacturing jobs. Maybe. But the government should get out of the "job creation" mind set. Keep taxes low, let the economy function as it is supposed to and the jobs will be there. Marc Clifton wrote: (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. 1. Dramatically limit/eliminate medical malpractice lawsuits. 2. Make all tobacco products illegal. Shut down the cancer stick manufacturers. Period. (flame away, but the reality is that tobacco use costs billions of dollars in medical care every year). 3. Get CPians to write medical administra

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                                Ian Darling
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #21

                                Stan Shannon wrote: Agreed, except I think the best way to handle that is to give tax breaks to private companies doing the research themselves rather than funding such research directly by the government as other countries do. Promoting the country's entreprenurial spirit is always the best policy. I don't think the lobbyists are quite the spectre they are made out to be. The automobile and oil industries are not complete idiots. They will obviously attempt to eek out every last penny from fossil fuels, but as other energy tecnologies begin to compete more effectively, they will adapt or die. That should always be the way the U.S. competes with other nations. There is something to be said for public research as well - given appropriate and sensible organisation (ok, this is tricky), you could avoid unnecessary duplication of research and allow you to work on many more angles at once. And you need to get scientists and researchers trained up and educated for the private sector anyway, so they might as well do some useful research (or validating privately done work) while they're at it. There's also a patents issue to be reconciled - can we really afford to be wrangling over patents and other intellectual property stuff on an issue as potentially important as green technologies? Of course, tax breaks that encourage use of and research on "cleaner" technologies is a good idea nonetheless and should be encouraged.


                                Ian Darling The world is a thing of utter inordinate complexity ... that such complexity can arise ... out of such simplicity ... is the most fabulous extraordinary idea ... once you get some kind of inkling of how that might have happened - it's just wonderful ... the opportunity to spend 70 or 80 years of your life in such a universe is time well spent as far as I am concerned - Douglas Adams

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                                • S Stan Shannon

                                  Marc Clifton wrote: (A) Rising cost of gasoline Promote alternative fuel research. This obviously would require pissing off the automobile lobby AND the oil lobby, but a long term solution is seriously needed. The Japanese are way ahead of us in this, which is pathetic. What the hell happened to Americans being the leaders in technology and innovation anyways? It seems that all the articles I read on innovation are the result of research done by other countries. How to pay for government sponsored research? Well, fighting fewer wars would help. Agreed, except I think the best way to handle that is to give tax breaks to private companies doing the research themselves rather than funding such research directly by the government as other countries do. Promoting the country's entreprenurial spirit is always the best policy. I don't think the lobbyists are quite the spectre they are made out to be. The automobile and oil industries are not complete idiots. They will obviously attempt to eek out every last penny from fossil fuels, but as other energy tecnologies begin to compete more effectively, they will adapt or die. That should always be the way the U.S. competes with other nations. Marc Clifton wrote: (B) Solving the education crisis No child left behind is a farce. I would remove all federal regulation, allow states and local governments to create educational programs that best suit their local economic/social issues, and I'd attempt to get rid of as much beaurocracy as possible so that money spent on education goes to teachers and children, not beaurocrats. Agree completely,. Marc Clifton wrote: (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) OK, creating a new infrastructure for hydrogen and/or electric powered cars and significantly reducing our dependence on foreign oil seems like it would boost manufacturing jobs. Maybe. But the government should get out of the "job creation" mind set. Keep taxes low, let the economy function as it is supposed to and the jobs will be there. Marc Clifton wrote: (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. 1. Dramatically limit/eliminate medical malpractice lawsuits. 2. Make all tobacco products illegal. Shut down the cancer stick manufacturers. Period. (flame away, but the reality is that tobacco use costs billions of dollars in medical care every year). 3. Get CPians to write medical administra

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                                  M Offline
                                  Marc Clifton
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #22

                                  Hi Stan, I concur with your rebuttals. Good points! Marc MyXaml Advanced Unit Testing

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                                  • M Marc Clifton

                                    Oh, let's see, I'll take a shot at this and enjoy the resulting flames. Richard Stringer wrote: (A) Rising cost of gasoline Promote alternative fuel research. This obviously would require pissing off the automobile lobby AND the oil lobby, but a long term solution is seriously needed. The Japanese are way ahead of us in this, which is pathetic. What the hell happened to Americans being the leaders in technology and innovation anyways? It seems that all the articles I read on innovation are the result of research done by other countries. How to pay for government sponsored research? Well, fighting fewer wars would help. Richard Stringer wrote: (B) Solving the education crisis No child left behind is a farce. I would remove all federal regulation, allow states and local governments to create educational programs that best suit their local economic/social issues, and I'd attempt to get rid of as much beaurocracy as possible so that money spent on education goes to teachers and children, not beaurocrats. Richard Stringer wrote: (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) OK, creating a new infrastructure for hydrogen and/or electric powered cars and significantly reducing our dependence on foreign oil seems like it would boost manufacturing jobs. Richard Stringer wrote: (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. 1. Dramatically limit/eliminate medical malpractice lawsuits. 2. Make all tobacco products illegal. Shut down the cancer stick manufacturers. Period. (flame away, but the reality is that tobacco use costs billions of dollars in medical care every year). 3. Get CPians to write medical administration software that unifies the industry and eliminates 90% of the beaurocratic overhead. You forgot to mention the deficit and the looming social security disaster. And how DO you spell beaurocrat? Marc MyXaml Advanced Unit Testing

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                                    I Offline
                                    Ian Darling
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #23

                                    Marc Clifton wrote: beaurocrat? Try bureaucrat Bloody frenchies :rolleyes:


                                    Ian Darling The world is a thing of utter inordinate complexity ... that such complexity can arise ... out of such simplicity ... is the most fabulous extraordinary idea ... once you get some kind of inkling of how that might have happened - it's just wonderful ... the opportunity to spend 70 or 80 years of your life in such a universe is time well spent as far as I am concerned - Douglas Adams

                                    1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • R Richard Stringer

                                      So you just won and now its time to back up some promises. What would be your Presidential action to resolve the following: (A) Rising cost of gasoline (B) Solving the education crisis (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. These seem to be the main areas of concern in the domestic sector and I am of the school of though the the President can really do nothing about any of them but make empty promisies. But I wait to be enlightened. Remember you have to pay for this stuff somehow. No Utopian ideas please Richard "Under certain circumstances, profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer --Mark Twain (1835 - 1910)

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                                      C Offline
                                      Christian Graus
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #24

                                      Richard Stringer wrote: Rising cost of gasoline Well, you own Iraq now, don't you ? Richard Stringer wrote: Solving the education crisis Smack parents upside the head, and tell them they need to take responsibility for their own kids. Richard Stringer wrote: Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) Require that American companies manufacture their goods in the USA, and impose tarrifs on imported goods to make the playing field level. Richard Stringer wrote: The rising cost of health care and insurance. Tax fast foods, provide cheap or free exercise programs, so less people need health care. You're a nation of blimps over there... Christian I have drunk the cool-aid and found it wan and bitter. - Chris Maunder

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                                      • R Richard Stringer

                                        So you just won and now its time to back up some promises. What would be your Presidential action to resolve the following: (A) Rising cost of gasoline (B) Solving the education crisis (C) Creating jobs ( primarily in the manufacturing area ) (D) The rising cost of health care and insurance. These seem to be the main areas of concern in the domestic sector and I am of the school of though the the President can really do nothing about any of them but make empty promisies. But I wait to be enlightened. Remember you have to pay for this stuff somehow. No Utopian ideas please Richard "Under certain circumstances, profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer --Mark Twain (1835 - 1910)

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                                        H Offline
                                        Henry miller
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #25

                                        (A)Not my problem for the most part. The invisiable hand will take care of the problem long term, as gas goes up ethanol, and biodiesel get better. (Both are energy positive in modern plants, so don't try that false argument that they are not) Miond I would watch this issue, because short term it can cause serious problems. Getting in the way of the invisiable hand isn't a good idea though. (B)Education is a LOCAL issue. If I wanted to solve education problems I'd run for local shcool board. My solution would be to repeal all federal laws relating to how a school is run. My only requirement would be that local schools provide the same opportunity for all students (ie no discrimination). (C) Why should we create manufacturing jobs? Ecconomic cycles happen. The bubble of the 1990s burst, it shouldn't be a surprize that we lost jobs. An issue to watch. Various ecconomic theories suggest things to do, but in generally I favor doing nothing. (D)Make the minimum deducatable for insurance $1000. When people have to pay for health care they will look at the cost. Suddenly they can decide if it is worth paying a A student doctor with a good reputation, or if the C student is good enough for their problem. Note that this action will take at least 30 years to have a large effect.

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                                        • C ColinDavies

                                          I didn't thiink such a large force was necessary. :-) :-) Regardz Colin J Davies Attention: Watch this signature for an upcoming announcement that will affect you.

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                                          Richard Stringer
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #26

                                          Not for the French portion of Canada ( 5 or 6 would be enough). But the English part would be more difficult thus the need for the additional troops. Richard "Under certain circumstances, profanity provides a relief denied even to prayer --Mark Twain (1835 - 1910)

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