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#241
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On Sun, 28 Nov 2004 17:08:03 +0000, Lazarus Cooke
wrote: In article , Larry L wrote: wrote Um, I, for one, would love to hear the theory under which you and your brother seem to: a) feel the taxpayers of the US of A should subsidize you or anyone else with free or essentially-free public fishing, Every time I go to Yellowstone I take the time to walk around National Park Meadow and think about the tremendous leap that mankind made when, for the first time, it was decided to set aside a great place forever and for everyone. I must say I agree with Rdean on this one. I don't understand this selective communism, which seems to be based on the fact that some things used to be cheap in the us but aren't any more. You have to pay for your food, for your healthcare, for your housing, for your air travel: why should your fly-fishing, or Yellowstone Park be free? ( I think there are quite a few people who would pay a lot of money for Yellowstone, and probably manage the franchising much more efficiently Why subsidize American farmers, who as far as I can see are totally uneconomic when food and cotton could be imported much more cheaply? I don't understand why they still have free high-school education in the States. If parents want an education for their children, why don't they pay for it? Am I right in thinking you even have free school buses? IF you want socialism in National Parks, fly fishing and school buses, then why not extend it to other areas? If I was going to fight for socialist something, I think it would be healthcare before fly-fishing. Um, well, you may agree with me, but if I understand your position above, I don't agree with you - not saying that your position is wrong or "bad," just that it isn't mine. I feel that there is _too much_ "public" land in the USA, not that there shouldn't be ANY "public" land or that having "public" land is the equivalent of communism, socialism, etc. What I am against in such cases as are currently being discussed is the (mis)use of the US Constitution to allow some of the "public" to get something that the Constitution or its authors never contemplated - the definition of "navigable" water being disputed not because of a barrier to commerce on that water, but because a relative few wish to use it for their own reasons, subsidized by the majority. Further, I simply don't feel that "the public" is _entitled_ to the amount of land currently deemed "public," (in the US) not because it is "the public," but basically because there is no truly legitimate vehicle for as broad a program (in both amount of land and number of clients) as is currently in effect. IOW, any given member of the public is no more "entitled" to such amounts of land than they are to, say, "entitled" to the subsidized use of another member of the public's property and certainly, members of "the public" in general are somehow "entitled" to lay claim to these amounts of land. It is not the responsibility of all to subsidize this broad level recreational activities/availability of a few. And further, the argument of setting aside land for future generations is perfectly valid, but such a setting aside doesn't mean that the current generation is entitled to subsidized usage. HTH, R Lazarus |
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In article ,
wrote: What I am against in such cases as are currently being discussed is the (mis)use of the US Constitution to allow some of the "public" to get something that the Constitution or its authors never contemplated Does this also apply to gun control? ;-) L -- Remover the rock from the email address |
#243
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In article ,
wrote: What I am against in such cases as are currently being discussed is the (mis)use of the US Constitution to allow some of the "public" to get something that the Constitution or its authors never contemplated Does this also apply to gun control? ;-) L -- Remover the rock from the email address |
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In article ,
wrote: What I am against in such cases as are currently being discussed is the (mis)use of the US Constitution to allow some of the "public" to get something that the Constitution or its authors never contemplated Does this also apply to gun control? ;-) L -- Remover the rock from the email address |
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In article qDNqd.3632$%R1.41@trndny03, Thomas Littleton
wrote: "Lazarus Cooke" wrote I'm puzzled by the inconsistency. Socialist systems of education, school buses, fly-fishing; state subsidized agriculture, but free market capitalism in healthcare. Lazarus ....maybe I am all wet(a virtual Reid, if you will), but this would seem to reveal Lazarus' true argument. It's the inconsistency, not the socialism. Tom Exactly L -- Remover the rock from the email address |
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In article qDNqd.3632$%R1.41@trndny03, Thomas Littleton
wrote: "Lazarus Cooke" wrote I'm puzzled by the inconsistency. Socialist systems of education, school buses, fly-fishing; state subsidized agriculture, but free market capitalism in healthcare. Lazarus ....maybe I am all wet(a virtual Reid, if you will), but this would seem to reveal Lazarus' true argument. It's the inconsistency, not the socialism. Tom Exactly L -- Remover the rock from the email address |
#247
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On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 09:26:20 +0000, Lazarus Cooke
wrote: In article , wrote: What I am against in such cases as are currently being discussed is the (mis)use of the US Constitution to allow some of the "public" to get something that the Constitution or its authors never contemplated Does this also apply to gun control? Yes. And it applies equally to both the pro- and anti-gun loons. As I've said before, IMO, the US Constitution is clear, just as the pro-gun loons claim, but those same loons are flat wrong when they claim some extra/super-Constitutional ("God-given," _every_ person) right for "the People" to "keep and bear arms." If the Constitution were to be amended as it itself allows, no more 2nd and no more "right to keep and bear arms." It is clear from the contemporary legislative intent that it was not ever intended for "the public" to have unrestricted access to whatever it wanted firearms-wise - "the people" then were not as "the people" are currently defined. Therefore, Congress has _some_ power to control "the people," but none to control the "arms," ala no one under X age of majority can purchase _any_ long or hand gun, no rights-restricted felon can purchase or possess a firearm (another issue pro-gun loons often trip over), etc. Congress WAS free to prevent non-white male property owners from "bearing arms," but now, by Constitutional amendment, it isn't - who are "the people" has been legally (and, again, IMO, properly) redefined. HTH, R ;-) L |
#248
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![]() wrote in message ... On Sun, 28 Nov 2004 17:08:03 +0000, Lazarus Cooke wrote: In article , Larry L wrote: wrote Um, I, for one, would love to hear the theory under which you and your brother seem to: a) feel the taxpayers of the US of A should subsidize you or anyone else with free or essentially-free public fishing, Every time I go to Yellowstone I take the time to walk around National Park Meadow and think about the tremendous leap that mankind made when, for the first time, it was decided to set aside a great place forever and for everyone. I must say I agree with Rdean on this one. I don't understand this selective communism, which seems to be based on the fact that some things used to be cheap in the us but aren't any more. You have to pay for your food, for your healthcare, for your housing, for your air travel: why should your fly-fishing, or Yellowstone Park be free? ( I think there are quite a few people who would pay a lot of money for Yellowstone, and probably manage the franchising much more efficiently Why subsidize American farmers, who as far as I can see are totally uneconomic when food and cotton could be imported much more cheaply? I don't understand why they still have free high-school education in the States. If parents want an education for their children, why don't they pay for it? Am I right in thinking you even have free school buses? IF you want socialism in National Parks, fly fishing and school buses, then why not extend it to other areas? If I was going to fight for socialist something, I think it would be healthcare before fly-fishing. Um, well, you may agree with me, but if I understand your position above, I don't agree with you - not saying that your position is wrong or "bad," just that it isn't mine. I feel that there is _too much_ "public" land in the USA, not that there shouldn't be ANY "public" land or that having "public" land is the equivalent of communism, socialism, etc. What I am against in such cases as are currently being discussed is the (mis)use of the US Constitution to allow some of the "public" to get something that the Constitution or its authors never contemplated - the definition of "navigable" water being disputed not because of a barrier to commerce on that water, but because a relative few wish to use it for their own reasons, subsidized by the majority. Excellent (and virutally always overlooked) point. Clearly, the framers of the U.S. constitution never intended that the use of public lands should be restricted to the use of EVERYBODY when it is easy, profitable, and much more equitable to open it up to just the wealthy. Even a cursory glance at the constitution should suffice to make it obvious that the intention behind the reservation of public lands was anything but making them available to the minuscule minority that constitues the unwashed masses when the vast bulk of the wealthiest elite is in such great need. Further, I simply don't feel that "the public" is _entitled_ to the amount of land currently deemed "public," (in the US) not because it is "the public," but basically because there is no truly legitimate vehicle for as broad a program (in both amount of land and number of clients) as is currently in effect. Well, good God, no! I mean, the very thought that "the public" needs any more room that what is required for them to stand shoulder to shoulder......in the absence of legitimate vehicles, for God's sake!....is to be laughed at. It is merely yet another example of the "public" citizenry's shocking abuses at the expense of the much maligned and overburdened poor little rich kids. It is simply disgusting to contemplate the depth and breadth to which to insane fiction that the "public" has a right to or need for the lands that were set aside for the use of the "public" have penetrated into the "public" consciousness. IOW, any given member of the public is no more "entitled" to such amounts of land than they are to, say, "entitled" to the subsidized use of another member of the public's property No duh! Obviously! I mean, that would require some sort of distinction between "public" and "private", ainna? And God only knows where a trip down THAT path would lead! and certainly, members of "the public" in general are somehow "entitled" to lay claim to these amounts of land. Well, I for one, am certain that you might think that particular piece of gibberish could mean something. It is not the responsibility of all to subsidize this broad level recreational activities/availability of a few. No, that much is certainly true. Once again, why limit the use of public lands to the 290,000,000 or so members of "the public" when opening it up to ALL of the Dean family would require nothing more than abandoning the silly principles on which this corporation was founded? And further, the argument of setting aside land for future generations is perfectly valid, but such a setting aside doesn't mean that the current generation is entitled to subsidized usage. Ah, and here we come to the real beauty of it all. If, indeed, we set it aside for future generations while excluding the current generation of minority users (that is to say, the "public") then it becomes clear that by simply continuing this process indefinitely we can guarantee that the rapacious minority (otherwise known as "the public") can be forever prevented from despoiling "public" land while at the same time keeping it available for the widespread use of the vast private majority of wealthy stewards. HTH, Immensely. By the way, we've been wondering.......did you participate in any organized team athletics while in college.......um.....besides being anchor man on your frat's Comatose High School Chick Gangbang Team, that is? Seriously though.......tell us a little bit about yourself. What do you do for a living? What's your home phone number? Where do your children go to school? Wolfgang |
#249
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![]() wrote in message ... On Sun, 28 Nov 2004 17:08:03 +0000, Lazarus Cooke wrote: In article , Larry L wrote: wrote Um, I, for one, would love to hear the theory under which you and your brother seem to: a) feel the taxpayers of the US of A should subsidize you or anyone else with free or essentially-free public fishing, Every time I go to Yellowstone I take the time to walk around National Park Meadow and think about the tremendous leap that mankind made when, for the first time, it was decided to set aside a great place forever and for everyone. I must say I agree with Rdean on this one. I don't understand this selective communism, which seems to be based on the fact that some things used to be cheap in the us but aren't any more. You have to pay for your food, for your healthcare, for your housing, for your air travel: why should your fly-fishing, or Yellowstone Park be free? ( I think there are quite a few people who would pay a lot of money for Yellowstone, and probably manage the franchising much more efficiently Why subsidize American farmers, who as far as I can see are totally uneconomic when food and cotton could be imported much more cheaply? I don't understand why they still have free high-school education in the States. If parents want an education for their children, why don't they pay for it? Am I right in thinking you even have free school buses? IF you want socialism in National Parks, fly fishing and school buses, then why not extend it to other areas? If I was going to fight for socialist something, I think it would be healthcare before fly-fishing. Um, well, you may agree with me, but if I understand your position above, I don't agree with you - not saying that your position is wrong or "bad," just that it isn't mine. I feel that there is _too much_ "public" land in the USA, not that there shouldn't be ANY "public" land or that having "public" land is the equivalent of communism, socialism, etc. What I am against in such cases as are currently being discussed is the (mis)use of the US Constitution to allow some of the "public" to get something that the Constitution or its authors never contemplated - the definition of "navigable" water being disputed not because of a barrier to commerce on that water, but because a relative few wish to use it for their own reasons, subsidized by the majority. Excellent (and virutally always overlooked) point. Clearly, the framers of the U.S. constitution never intended that the use of public lands should be restricted to the use of EVERYBODY when it is easy, profitable, and much more equitable to open it up to just the wealthy. Even a cursory glance at the constitution should suffice to make it obvious that the intention behind the reservation of public lands was anything but making them available to the minuscule minority that constitues the unwashed masses when the vast bulk of the wealthiest elite is in such great need. Further, I simply don't feel that "the public" is _entitled_ to the amount of land currently deemed "public," (in the US) not because it is "the public," but basically because there is no truly legitimate vehicle for as broad a program (in both amount of land and number of clients) as is currently in effect. Well, good God, no! I mean, the very thought that "the public" needs any more room that what is required for them to stand shoulder to shoulder......in the absence of legitimate vehicles, for God's sake!....is to be laughed at. It is merely yet another example of the "public" citizenry's shocking abuses at the expense of the much maligned and overburdened poor little rich kids. It is simply disgusting to contemplate the depth and breadth to which to insane fiction that the "public" has a right to or need for the lands that were set aside for the use of the "public" have penetrated into the "public" consciousness. IOW, any given member of the public is no more "entitled" to such amounts of land than they are to, say, "entitled" to the subsidized use of another member of the public's property No duh! Obviously! I mean, that would require some sort of distinction between "public" and "private", ainna? And God only knows where a trip down THAT path would lead! and certainly, members of "the public" in general are somehow "entitled" to lay claim to these amounts of land. Well, I for one, am certain that you might think that particular piece of gibberish could mean something. It is not the responsibility of all to subsidize this broad level recreational activities/availability of a few. No, that much is certainly true. Once again, why limit the use of public lands to the 290,000,000 or so members of "the public" when opening it up to ALL of the Dean family would require nothing more than abandoning the silly principles on which this corporation was founded? And further, the argument of setting aside land for future generations is perfectly valid, but such a setting aside doesn't mean that the current generation is entitled to subsidized usage. Ah, and here we come to the real beauty of it all. If, indeed, we set it aside for future generations while excluding the current generation of minority users (that is to say, the "public") then it becomes clear that by simply continuing this process indefinitely we can guarantee that the rapacious minority (otherwise known as "the public") can be forever prevented from despoiling "public" land while at the same time keeping it available for the widespread use of the vast private majority of wealthy stewards. HTH, Immensely. By the way, we've been wondering.......did you participate in any organized team athletics while in college.......um.....besides being anchor man on your frat's Comatose High School Chick Gangbang Team, that is? Seriously though.......tell us a little bit about yourself. What do you do for a living? What's your home phone number? Where do your children go to school? Wolfgang |
#250
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On Tue, 30 Nov 2004 10:31:04 -0600, "Wolfgang" wrote:
Yet even MORE drivel that I'm not inclined to thoughtfully wade through, but... By the way, we've been wondering.......did you participate in any organized team athletics while in college.......um.....besides being anchor man on your frat's Comatose High School Chick Gangbang Team, that is? Now, that's just plain inaccurate - they didn't need to be either comatose or in high school...heck, if they were good-looking enough, we'd even hook up with the common townie girls... Seriously though.......tell us a little bit about yourself. What do you do for a living? Mainly pickles and sausage, but I occasionally do some contract work for...er, nevermind... What's your home phone number? 1-800-IMBETTR Where do your children go to school? Geez, the things you riff-raff just don't understand...to the same schools that we've been going for generations, of course...heck, buy 'em a new building or something, and it's a 4.0 without even going to class...ah, yes, it's wonderful to be one of us - so sorry about your situation, old boy... Dickie |
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