North Korea already has nukes -- what they need now are missiles that can reach the continental U.S., which they may have already. I agree that the people of North Korea need food more than nukes, 1000% -- it's the tyrant of North Korea that needs nuclear weapons to maintain power and prevent an invasion.
I honestly don't think they do. Yes, they have detonated one or two, but they lack the ability to not only send them a long way, but they also lack the ability to make more than one or two. It ate up A LOT of thri resources and money to even do those two.
The sanctions against Iran are there because they're pursuing nuclear weapons! So... so wait, according to your logic, the Iranians are developing nukes so that the U.N. sanctions leveled against them (for developing nukes) will be dropped? That doesn't make much sense, does it? I think it's pretty clear that they want nukes so that they can consolidate their power, forever.
I think it's more a matter of energy independence from oil, and the only way they see to do that is nuclear. However, the first time they built a reactor it was bombed. So while they may see nukes as a defense, they also see it as a way to force the world to let them build a reactor.
It's like haggling over a car.
You start out with threatening nukes, and by the time you come to an agreement, you end up with your reactor.
Do you honestly trust Russia or China? I think if we completely de-nuclearized, the Chinese and Russians never would, or they would have a few hidden away, and they would nuke one small place and say, "Just give up -- it's better than living in Fallout 3, right?" Or they would detonate a nuke in the upper atmosphere, over the U.S. and use the EMP to disable the country. We'd all be living on a communist work farm, Leslieann, sans electricity, with iron hand tools.
We won't get rid of all of them, but we are drawing them down to a reasonable level.
Russia is back as a super power, invading Georgia was them letting everyone know. However, threatening and invading small countries is a LONG way from invading the U.S. As for China, they have too much to lose financially if they invaded us. It would cripple their economy.
Regardless, neither country could get here. Nukes, yes, boats and planes, heck no.
Russia has 3 carriers at most, China barely has one. We also have far better long distance aircraft. No invading armada or sortie would get to mainland U.S., especially in the kind of numbers needed.
So, violence never solves anything? (Looks back at all of human history.) *sigh* Um, yeah, it kinda does, sadly.
Violence, yes, but if your intent is to invade and gain territory or resources, nuking said land and resources isn't a good way to do it. Know anyone who wants land near Chernobyl? Didn't think so. The U.S. is rich with resources, if you invade it, you would want to capture those resources.
Not the way Americans do education, no. More unionized public schools that don't work won't solve our problems, no. We would have to break apart the government monopoly on education, and let people decide what is in their own best interests as far as education is concerned.
I worry more about letting the people decide, have you seen what Louisiana has been trying to do with education? They removed it from government control and first thing they tried to do was eliminate math and science.
Where I currently live, they spend more on education than almost anywhere else, and I swear, they are as dumb as a box of rocks. I can tell in 5 minutes if a customer has ever left the state. Many of my customers have never been more than 50 miles from their home. EVER.
Not only do I not want them controlling their education, I don't want them voting! Some shouldn't even be allowed to reproduce.
We are up against math, Leslieann. Why hire an American engineer for $90,000/year, when I can get one just as good (or better, and with a potentially better attitude) for $30,000/year? Should I do it for patriotism's sake? There's huge correction that needs to happen, Leslieann, in terms of American affluence and attitudes, but our politicians are giving us what we want -- forestall it forever, deny it, hold it back. Businesses in the U.S. are larded up with all sorts of expenses that competing nations don't do. America doesn't want to get in the ring and compete -- we'd rather buy off the referee, and we're paying for it.
Again, I agree to some extent, however, we need to transition slow, and that isn't in the cards.
It would be worth paying the $90k, IF you were getting better quality. However we aren't investing in ourselves, and instead we just walk around saying how America is #1 and ignoring how far we have fallen.
It's also why I tell people to get a job that cannot be outsourced.
I agree completely -- the world is becoming a more competitive place, and technology is making it happen. But we needed to see this coming, and we did not. Plus, China and other nations don't respect our copyrights, which I think should hurt them. I would support a tariff that calculated the profit lost from China copyright infringement and distribute it across Chinese goods, and send that money back to copyright holders. I don't mind competing with foreign countries, but that doesn't mean they can openly break the law.
This is partly why they can do it cheaper.
Force them to play fair and suddenly U.S. jobs being sent there will slow. Not completely, but would slow the tide some.
In that scenario of yours (which I think is coming) would you support laws that would outlaw the use of robots, or 3D printing machines? Would you support a law requiring all U.S.-based manufacturing companies to have a minimum number of human workers, per robot worker? Or some other similar law? I'm not being facetious here, I'm dead serious. I would not support those kinds of laws because they seek to distort the market. Laws like the ones above would incentivize moving automated manufacturing overseas, where presumably they would not have such laws.
At least one U.S. senator already wanted to ban 3d printers (because of guns), he's a complete fool.
Making a law that requires x amount of employees won't work, as you would just again encourage them to go overseas.
What eventually MUST happen is one of three things (that I can think of):
The first one is the one I think Republicans like, and that is, we get off this rock and spread to other planets. This would create more industries and more opportunity and things could stay roughly as they are. Problem is, we will reach a tipping point before we ever leave our solar system.
The second option is something similar to Star Trek, everyone is taken care of, and people work if they want, on what they want. Certain jobs give you extra money or income, but no one is really forced to do anything. No one lacks for anything.
The last option is we could go the way of the Romans, those making money, pay to take care of those without.
The latter two, will actually allow for offshore manufacturing and such, but would likely require a revolution. I suspect the tipping point could be within 20 years. Will it be worldwide or just local who knows. Regardless, the rich and powerful, are going to have their hands full when we reach that point and the masses figure it out. Scarily, this will coincide with global warming reaching dangerous levels, making everything even more perilous.
The next 20-100 years will likely be the most important and perilous in human history.
the only way to truly be safe in the face of a wave of change is to become a surfer, to become nimble, flexible and agile enough to cope. My point is that building walls to keep out change in the form of laws that distort market forces don't work.
Again, this is why I tell people to go for a job that cannot be outsourced, to another country, or a robot. At least not cheaply, before you retire.
Delivery, warehouse work, manufacturing, coding, all can and will be outsourced. Self driving cars will eliminate most driving jobs and at some point pilots as well. We have had hobbyists building autonomous planes for years.
A plumber will have a job for a long time, a doctor, expect a lot fewer of them. The same goes for teachers, a robot could easily replace many of them.
Home care workers in Japan are already being replaced in some instances with robots.
Sadly, that is where we are headed and it's not unprecedented. Rome had a similar problem, all those slaves killed the job market, just as robots will kill ours. Most of the Roman population lived on government assistance, paid for by the rich.
I don't know if slavery killed Rome's job market or not, but they did discover things like steam power and other technological concepts that they could have used to launch an earlier Industrial Age, but likely never did because... they already had something that worked for them -- slaves. Why invent a steam-powered rock drill when you can force slaves to demolish a mountain? As for Roman welfare systems -- bread and circuses -- I agree that the same scenario is playing out in the modern world.
And the lesson is what? That a government promise is safer than the stock market? The 2008 real estate crash was instigated by the government trying to politicize mortgage lending, but that's a whole other thread. I would support letting people decide to either manage their own retirement (and not pay into Social Security, and have no right to government assistance) or pay into Social Security. Would you support giving people that choice?
I agree another thread, but I disagree with what you are saying.
I think the banks coerced the government to ease restrictions to spur growth and turned it into a money grab. I saw the roots of it take hold in California. My whole family left there at peak because we knew what was coming, it wasn't hard to see.
Which studies?
Just got done at work, and not in the mood to look up studies on it, but that is the number I saw given. Still better accuracy than weather men.
However, like with Buffet, he may be right only 54%, but he knows which 4% to put the money on. If you miss 50% of the time, but most of your money is on the winner, you still come out far ahead.
I disagree. I think there's fraud and bad investments throughout the stock market, but it is still a better longterm place for your money than Social Security. Social Security taxes don't even go into any market, they just go out to current beneficiaries, and they have no contingency plans for these unfunded liabilities, Leslieanne, none.
I'll take the government and here's why.
If your stock tanks, you tank. As you said, the new generation pays for the old one, so money is always coming in. It may not always be enough, but there is money there.No contingency plan? Yes there is, raise taxes. I'm not saying it's a good plan, but at least it's bot gambling with the money where it can all be lost.
One problem I have with people predicting the doomsday of Social Security is this... So long as there are young people working, there is money for Social Security. The ONLY way it completely fails 100% is if NO ONE is working. It may not be as much as you want, but so long as someone is working, there is money there.
But again, in 20 years or so, our whole system will need a rework anyhow.
So, if I haven't plumbed the very depths of poverty personally, I should shut my mouth? I'm curious -- the more poor you've been, does it give you more of a right to comment on economic matters? I figure if you know how to make money, you might actually have more to say on how to generate more wealth, no? Is that not rational?
I never questioned your ability to make money or your right to comment on economic matters. I am saying you don't see things from the same light as the lower classes.
It's far easier to make money, with money, but really, I don't want to go down this road because it will end up an "us vs. them".
Well, at least you have a positive mental attitude, there's always that! 
I think people who believe that everything is out to get them, that blame outside forces on everything -- they don't get far, no matter how smart they are, or how many pieces of paper they have indicating they have an education.
I'm pessimistic on peoples attitudes towards jobs and education, the media has fed people a bunch of lies about jobs and education. Some people see it as pessimistic, while I see it it as realistic.
I don't fear for my job, I'm my own boss and my work cannot be outsourced. I didn't go the whole education route, but I'm qualified for several different careers.
I'm not rich, but instead, I value my free time.
Whoa, I don't reward people for having an education. Again, maybe your language is just imprecise, but I'm not looking for someone to reward -- I'm looking for someone who can help me run by business -- bluntly, who will help me make a profit. If I can find someone who is willing to take less money and do just as good a job (and hopefully has a sense of humor) they're hired. Yeah, I want them at the lowest price I can get. Good people are hard to find -- even harder to keep, too. We've had so many good people that, even when I hired them I knew they wouldn't stay; they were too smart. They were going to make their own companies one day, and many of them did. Their education is usually just a way to separate the wheat from the chaff, to be honest.
And do you pay the well educated ones more than the others, even though they do the same job?
If one person has 5 years experience, another has 1 year experience and a 4 year a degree in an non-related field, who makes more? In traditional business, the one with a degree can often earn more and progress through the company faster. This is, or at least was, especially true in the aerospace industry. Those with degrees were sought out for management above those without. Why? Because they put in the "effort" to get a degree while the other guy was working.
That is what I meant by reward.
Who told them that?
Jeez, I heard it all my life. TV, school, parents... Even today you constantly hear on the radio how an education is your ticket out.
I think college should be a lot cheaper, but again, the government likes to fund these things, and so they inadvertantly drive the price up. But don't worry, next they'll force banks to forgive student loans (sort of like what they did for the mortgage market) and then college loans will get really, REALLY expensive because banks will always have to wonder if they'll be forced to forgive future loans. To me the common denominator to all these disasters is government deciding to "Do Something." My crazy idea -- have them "Do Nothing" for a while and just see what happens.
I would be very surprised if those loans are forgiven. Students aren't in power, so they don't command enough control in congress to achieve that.
To be honest, it was just a scenario, and not actually a plan, Leslieanne.
You're taking this very, very seriously.
Nah.
Text is just a terrible way to convey intent. It's all theoretical, but I have had this argument with a few Texans who thought they could go it alone.
Thought experiment time! By some miracle, the government is gone tomorrow. We just wake up and there's no government. Does the world really end? Will no new roads be built? Will the electricity stop flowing? Will people just starve in the streets? There would be unrest, there would be problems, but the world would get back on its feet. Governments are symptoms of human interaction, not vice versa. The government doesn't do nearly enough for me to justify what they take, by a very large amount. I wouldn't even mind paying as much as I do if they didn't piss it away like a pimp with two weeks left to live. Not only do Progressive policies not help poor people, they demonstrably make them worse! Fifty years ago the rate of out of wedlock black births was on par with white births -- same amount. Today something like 75% of all black babies are born out of wedlock, into a single parent home, with disastrous results for those kids and society at large. That's what all the "help" did -- made things a whole lot worse. It's bad enough to fund stupidity with my taxes; it's even worse to fund the outright destruction of the black family.
I agree some progressive policies are bad, but so are a lot of conservative ones as well. We have a committee for a government, and idiots on said committee, so you can only expect so much from them.
A recent study in St. Louis gave away free contraceptives and proper sex education to the poor there, rather than teaching abstinence only... guess what happened? Teen births dropped by MASSSIVE amounts. So what did the conservatives there do? They dropped the program and went back to abstinence only education and trying to ban abortions.
Want to stop poor black women from having kids (and from having abortions), get them the education and contraception they need.
As for being single parents, sorry, but I don't have an issue with that. Guys think women are crazy, it's only because men make them that way. Can't live with them, can't reproduce without them.... Yet.

Gah, this is getting long and we seem to be attracting a crowd (they even brought popcorn!)
Make your rebuttal, I will read it, but I'm calling it quits.