(Zenny, no prob about the black voter stuff; I had already said understanding the psychology of voters wasn't my cup of tea, but am totally annoyed by the US's near tropic use of black/white voters, black/white people, in nearly all conversations about what's wrong with the US -- cos', you know, more people here than just north american plantation blacks and stuff; also, I have this venom towards the overexplanation of things in generalities, so I ran into my own wall (
Warning #1: I'm chiming in without fresh knowledge about markets or economics, so, in essence,
how I feel. Warning #2: I am super critical of globalism and global enterprise because of aggressive cultural imperialism, labor standards and the exploitation of women and children (TPP's totally notorious for this, money over human rights) under a system that does not benefit less powerful countries with the returns for places like the US.
So, a question: how free is the F in NAFTA? I hear Canada's lost control over its water resources through NAFTA, specifically with regard to its aquifers, and is required to, annually, send no less water to the US than it did the year prior. NAFTA wasn't designed, it seems, for other countries to control their domestic need. NAFTA has a bad rep in the US, esp. after Mexico's continued economic decline for farmers as crop subsidies crippled them. The USA is not unused to government subsidies stirring up a lot of imbalances with farming in the US. To the production of food crops, I still do not understand why the US needs to rely on external country assistance. It exacerbates the fact that our current system is self-serving to a finite few.
I'm totally in the camp of "Made in the USA" and community-supported agriculture, because
we need to live on a smaller scale, where it seems completely unnatural to have cantaloupe or pineapples year-round! The US government should intercede when land and space, at home, can be used more efficiently. Sidebar: I just read an article about trinity homes in Pennsylvania and it sounds like such a brilliant idea that could be encouraged in many other forms of government-subsidized home building, rather than getting rid of it altogether as is the fashion statewide.
Countries having less bargaining power in NAFTA/TPP makes it to where the "mutual benefit" is entirely questionable, positive only through intangible ideals, and negative in lots of different moral issues (for example, I had read an article that said the US should not engage in trade with countries that are the godfathers of human trafficking, so that the economic penalizing encourages more humanism -- when you know, the US is great at that too) that I feel uncomfortable stepping in.
This is not necessary at all, but I'm going to stand behind Dhyerwolf's feelings about Hillary's pandering. Hillary's remarks go beyond gaffes, they're not inconsequential and their repetitive nature only certifies the ridiculously superficial nature of campaigning for elections. Silence on real issues, or displacing others in sake of focusing on easier targets (say, the Moynihan Report and US Dept of Labor's collusion w/ "black folk is messed up" image) is disgusting -- women's rights, LGBTQI, low class exploitation and venture capitalism in crumbling neighborhoods, and all. Although I will agree with mc that Hillary's ideas for progress encapsulate more than she enunciates, but I don't like the principle of picking between two lesser evils.
This connects to what seems to be a serious moralizing issue that follows a remark that Elf made in the context of allowing Trump or Cruz to win. The US voting system is what isn't impressive to me. Why must one's vote, like Dhyer's, be undermined by two lesser evils? This is totally out of keeping with the freedom to exercise one's vote. That I'm even deciding to vote for Hillary, whom I do not find suitable in
any regard, is oppressive, and oppressive is the right word here. That my vote wouldn't, and historically has not, impacted GA or TX elections to sway their momentum in the electoral college as Republican states, yet it could yield such a strong response about accountability is……..
& those evil people, both Republic and Democrat, have done a great job at making it more difficult to vote in general.