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Topic: Opinion on the US (Read 18959 times)

newbie
Activity: 18
Merit: 0
February 11, 2015, 06:11:03 AM
There are always two sides of a coin. You like it or not but ultimately this is the reality and we have to live with it.  Undecided
sr. member
Activity: 504
Merit: 250
August 02, 2014, 02:09:31 PM
it becomes anarchy  Grin .

Every country of this world is far away from anarchy, we have a long road of freedom improvement before anarchy. If the government would stop the most stupid thing he do i think life would be much better.

I'm not anarchist for few reason but i appreciate this guy.
legendary
Activity: 1778
Merit: 1043
#Free market
August 02, 2014, 02:05:18 PM
Democracy without strong limitation is the problem, anything against individual choice or serious budget management should be forbidden.

it becomes anarchy  Grin .
sr. member
Activity: 504
Merit: 250
August 02, 2014, 01:30:55 PM
Democracy without strong limitation is the problem, anything against individual choice or serious budget management should be forbidden.
legendary
Activity: 1204
Merit: 1002
Gresham's Lawyer
August 02, 2014, 01:27:46 PM
USA has a war on drugs and a war on obesity.

What an horrible way to spend the taxpayer money against him  Embarrassed I hope every country who have this stupidity will stop, it's fascism.

Given enough democracy, that's where it goes...



President's wives aren't really elected.  Though Hillary tried.
sr. member
Activity: 504
Merit: 250
August 02, 2014, 01:17:56 PM
USA has a war on drugs and a war on obesity.

What an horrible way to spend the taxpayer money against him  Embarrassed I hope every country who have this stupidity will stop, it's fascism.
legendary
Activity: 1204
Merit: 1002
Gresham's Lawyer
August 02, 2014, 01:14:12 PM
Drug and fat people is my impression.

USA has a war on drugs and a war on obesity.
Both were started by the wives of presidents. (Reagan and Obama)
A people are judged by the wars started by its first ladies, it seems.
full member
Activity: 169
Merit: 100
July 31, 2014, 03:03:32 AM
Drug and fat people is my impression.
member
Activity: 83
Merit: 10
July 31, 2014, 02:58:08 AM
they are just jealous
DrG
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 1035
July 31, 2014, 02:24:27 AM
Make in US used to be something to be proud of and people used to avoid "make in Japan".
Guess time have changed.

The quality of the American products have slipped quite considerably (due to a large number of reasons such as taxes, unqualified staff.etc), while that of the Japanese products have remained constant.

I would agree with that assessment.  15 years ago you would buy something made in china and you would curse at the horrible instructions and shody quality.  While today's stuff made in American may not be called shody, it certainly is not fine craftsmanship.  Even the manuals are horrible - they're in English but they don't make sense, and skip obvious steps, and the diagrams are pathetic.

Look at the ASICs coming out of BFL and compare that to the stuff Bitmain is putting out in China... so sad.
full member
Activity: 167
Merit: 100
July 30, 2014, 03:11:30 AM
Make in US used to be something to be proud of and people used to avoid "make in Japan".
Guess time have changed.

The quality of the American products have slipped quite considerably (due to a large number of reasons such as taxes, unqualified staff.etc), while that of the Japanese products have remained constant.

Government hiring process is largely influence by politic rather than qualification. Reason why it is getting more bloated every year,
legendary
Activity: 3752
Merit: 1217
July 30, 2014, 03:03:25 AM
Make in US used to be something to be proud of and people used to avoid "make in Japan".
Guess time have changed.

The quality of the American products have slipped quite considerably (due to a large number of reasons such as taxes, unqualified staff.etc), while that of the Japanese products have remained constant.
DrG
legendary
Activity: 2086
Merit: 1035
July 30, 2014, 02:55:40 AM
As a citizen I can say that the government no longer represents the people.  The U.S has taken on the role of "big brother" in the world and now is expected to resolve problems everywhere when we do nothing for our own issues.  There is constant conflict both in and of itself and worldwide!  Non-stop fraud and criminal investigations from the top to the bottom and never any punishment!  

I'll second this.  US citizen born and raised but I don't feel like the government has my best interests at the top of their agenda - I think their more interested in keeping personal power to live like little kings of their fiefdoms with the POTUS as emperor.

I mostly agree with you both, but I have to disagree on your representation of the president as being the "emperor" - as far as I can tell, he's mostly a puppet, with the real "emperors" being those that financed his campaign (by the way, I don't mean this just about the current president).

I would agree with you about Obama being a puppet before the 2nd election.  The way he works and acts now is too fluid and smooth to be the work of any puppet master.  That would be like saying Cheney was a puppet.  Was Cheney Bush's puppet master or was he himself a puppet?

I think Obama is Machiavellian - he knows what he wants and is personally trying to get it.  He will use anything he has to go get that.  Look at his talk from 2004 to 2008 - for a puppet that's a lot of 180s.
hero member
Activity: 756
Merit: 506
July 29, 2014, 06:40:27 PM
I'm old enough to remember what US manufacturing was like until the jobs were sent overseas.   The made in America was never as good as people claimed it to be.  I'm referring to those Zenith televisions that would always break!  Zenith doesn't even exist anymore.   Shocked  Now a more contemporary reminder are all those recalls in the US automobile manufacturers.

As much as people say made in China is junk - my clothes made in China haven't exploded on me yet, neither has my Ipod or the computer parts I bought over the years that came from China.  I haven't had a TV made overseas die on me yet, even though I witnessed multiple Zenith and other American brands die.   Let's face it the stuff made in East Asia is better than the stuff that was ever made in America.

Interestingly enough I was going through the history books and found out this has always been the case with American manufacturing.  Americans back in the 1860s, 1890s and the 1900s were calling for tariffs and the main argument was that American products (due to being inferior) couldn't compete with oversea products hence we needed a tariff to save our industry.

For all the argument of the WASP work ethic - it doesn't seem to have materialized much in US history outside of the armaments industry.  



Make in US used to be something to be proud of and people used to avoid "make in Japan".

Guess time have changed.

Well before the US / Germany it used to be the British.  The British used to laugh at the quality of German automobiles and other industrial products.

Italy also saw substantial improvements after the war too.   Like in Germany's case, I guess it helped when all your factories were blown up that you remade them with contemporary technology.

member
Activity: 112
Merit: 10
July 29, 2014, 04:09:38 PM
I'm old enough to remember what US manufacturing was like until the jobs were sent overseas.   The made in America was never as good as people claimed it to be.  I'm referring to those Zenith televisions that would always break!  Zenith doesn't even exist anymore.   Shocked  Now a more contemporary reminder are all those recalls in the US automobile manufacturers.

As much as people say made in China is junk - my clothes made in China haven't exploded on me yet, neither has my Ipod or the computer parts I bought over the years that came from China.  I haven't had a TV made overseas die on me yet, even though I witnessed multiple Zenith and other American brands die.   Let's face it the stuff made in East Asia is better than the stuff that was ever made in America.

Interestingly enough I was going through the history books and found out this has always been the case with American manufacturing.  Americans back in the 1860s, 1890s and the 1900s were calling for tariffs and the main argument was that American products (due to being inferior) couldn't compete with oversea products hence we needed a tariff to save our industry.

For all the argument of the WASP work ethic - it doesn't seem to have materialized much in US history outside of the armaments industry.  



Make in US used to be something to be proud of and people used to avoid "make in Japan".

Guess time have changed.

that was in back to the future, right?

when the Doc said the DeLorean was crap because it was made in Japan and Marty told him that everything good is made in Japan
or it was the other way around Cheesy

Compared to MOST other places, the US is still better in terms of quality of life and "freedom."  However I do agree it is much harder to make a good living in the US than it used to be.

Regarding the government, I also agree it is mostly interested in preserving its own power. That's why I rarely vote for an incumbent and I think people need to wake up and vote for candidates who are not in the major parties.  I wouldn't vote for a radical but just someone who thinks more outside the box.  Our founding fathers also spoke of not letting 1 person stay in power too long.

Politicians and diapers must be changed often, and for the same reason.
hero member
Activity: 700
Merit: 500
July 29, 2014, 11:22:22 AM
Compared to MOST other places, the US is still better in terms of quality of life and "freedom."  However I do agree it is much harder to make a good living in the US than it used to be.

Regarding the government, I also agree it is mostly interested in preserving its own power. That's why I rarely vote for an incumbent and I think people need to wake up and vote for candidates who are not in the major parties.  I wouldn't vote for a radical but just someone who thinks more outside the box.  Our founding fathers also spoke of not letting 1 person stay in power too long.
full member
Activity: 218
Merit: 101
July 29, 2014, 10:10:02 AM
I'm old enough to remember what US manufacturing was like until the jobs were sent overseas.   The made in America was never as good as people claimed it to be.  I'm referring to those Zenith televisions that would always break!  Zenith doesn't even exist anymore.   Shocked  Now a more contemporary reminder are all those recalls in the US automobile manufacturers.

As much as people say made in China is junk - my clothes made in China haven't exploded on me yet, neither has my Ipod or the computer parts I bought over the years that came from China.  I haven't had a TV made overseas die on me yet, even though I witnessed multiple Zenith and other American brands die.   Let's face it the stuff made in East Asia is better than the stuff that was ever made in America.

Interestingly enough I was going through the history books and found out this has always been the case with American manufacturing.  Americans back in the 1860s, 1890s and the 1900s were calling for tariffs and the main argument was that American products (due to being inferior) couldn't compete with oversea products hence we needed a tariff to save our industry.

For all the argument of the WASP work ethic - it doesn't seem to have materialized much in US history outside of the armaments industry.  



Make in US used to be something to be proud of and people used to avoid "make in Japan".

Guess time have changed.
legendary
Activity: 1778
Merit: 1043
#Free market
July 29, 2014, 09:44:17 AM
Just a fat people  Grin .
sr. member
Activity: 518
Merit: 250
July 29, 2014, 09:38:10 AM
As a citizen I can say that the government no longer represents the people.  The U.S has taken on the role of "big brother" in the world and now is expected to resolve problems everywhere when we do nothing for our own issues.  There is constant conflict both in and of itself and worldwide!  Non-stop fraud and criminal investigations from the top to the bottom and never any punishment!  

I'll second this.  US citizen born and raised but I don't feel like the government has my best interests at the top of their agenda - I think their more interested in keeping personal power to live like little kings of their fiefdoms with the POTUS as emperor.

I mostly agree with you both, but I have to disagree on your representation of the president as being the "emperor" - as far as I can tell, he's mostly a puppet, with the real "emperors" being those that financed his campaign (by the way, I don't mean this just about the current president).

Our government is like a store, the ones with the money have the power. The US president is in a way living like a king, but the "emperors" are the ones with the most money.
legendary
Activity: 2562
Merit: 1071
July 29, 2014, 09:10:08 AM
As a citizen I can say that the government no longer represents the people.  The U.S has taken on the role of "big brother" in the world and now is expected to resolve problems everywhere when we do nothing for our own issues.  There is constant conflict both in and of itself and worldwide!  Non-stop fraud and criminal investigations from the top to the bottom and never any punishment!  

I'll second this.  US citizen born and raised but I don't feel like the government has my best interests at the top of their agenda - I think their more interested in keeping personal power to live like little kings of their fiefdoms with the POTUS as emperor.

I mostly agree with you both, but I have to disagree on your representation of the president as being the "emperor" - as far as I can tell, he's mostly a puppet, with the real "emperors" being those that financed his campaign (by the way, I don't mean this just about the current president).
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