" From: Frank Swygert <farna@xxxxxxx> " " The government doesn't manage war well -- Vietnam and the current " mess in Iraq come to mind. Military trained and experienced men " *usually* do -- the first Gulf War, for example. Bush Sr. told " the military what he wanted, then stayed out of the way. His son " was an idiot in several ways, but all presidents have their good " and bad sides... politicians... excellently qualified for the beauty contest which is the democratic election process and damn-all else, but not shy of meddling whenever and whereever they see advantage, primarily for themselves. " In " theory I agree with a government sponsored basic health care, but " really think it should be something taxed at a low level, and " only for those who don't have their own insurance. In other " words, government sponsored (and probably subsidized), but also " with the benefactor making at least a token payment. I mean heck, " you're paying for those without insurance now, in one way or " another, so why not? Mandatory payroll premiums, based on a " percentage of pay to make it somewhat fair, with the government " making up the rest. Like I said, taxes pay for those without " insurance anyway, that would at least pay for a portion of it. that's the ma plan. like taxes it's free at the bottom, but the more you make the more you pay. and you can opt out if you show qualifying insurance - i do. if you don't have insurance, you get a big penalty on your taxes regardless of income. this is to encourage all those who don't have insurance to stop using emergency rooms as their basic care and get some. we've had a serious problem with er closures b/c hospitals can't afford to run them and they can't selectively turn folks - like those who don't pay - away. the theory is that if you have insurance you'll get preemptive instead of emergency care, and that should be much cheaper in the long run. iirc there's already some evidence of that, though many more signed up for the state plan than forecast. " The "cash for clunkers" idea has some merits, but the main " problem is that money is coming from the government. secondarily, it's also anti-ecological. the federal epa did a study in the '90s that determined that the greenest thing you can do with an old car is keep it on the road. there's a tremendous hidden cost, in both energy and pollution, in manufacture and disposal of a car. before that, the ca epa did a state study and concluded that all old cars and trucks - in a state where cars last a looong time - emitted less pollution than only the newer cars that failed state inspection. this is a very nasty, dirty, expensive way to subsidize jobs. and as someone else posted, it's the camel's nose in the tent. we could cut the program's real costs down if we passed a law like germany's green party's - which i understand is now eu-wide: manufacturers are responsible for proper disposal - eg. recycling - of their products [and all packaging] at the end of their useful lives. it's resulted in cars being re-engineered so that every scrap of plastic is marked with the recycling triangle. the economics of 'planned obsolescence' are radically altered. what do you think the chances of that are? how hard do you think industry would lobby for loopholes? " Obama has " spent way too much money on way to many things, some totally " stupid, some couldn't be helped. GM and Chrysler should have been " under bankruptcy protection before the government stepped in to " keep them from folding. Negate those "golden parachute" contracts " and axe half the execs! But no, they fired the head guy before " bankruptcy so he got his 20 mill (or whatever) parachute filled " -- you and I (everyone on the list!) paid it. it's possible they forced him out sans parachute, and it sure would be nice to hear - though imho he was as much designated fall guy as perp of gm's woes - but i wouldn't lay odds. " Manufacturing jobs " are still moving out of the country, part of that is our own " fault for continually demanding more while doing less. It's a " vicious cycle -- factories give in to employee union demands, " then try to do more with less, which puts more pressure on " employees, who demand more, etc. It goes on. We've got into that " cycle and can't get off easily! part of it is the vicious adversarial union-mgmt relationship, and there's so much bad history there's no easy solution. i suspect this is why gm hasn't been able to duplicate toyota's success even when toyota stepped in and showed them how in their own factories. gm has been 'burning the furniture to heat the house' for so long, the 'leaner, more competitive' gm of the future will be only the palest, thinnest shadow of what it once was just a few decades ago. it may well be more competitive. it will be less important. much that was competitive - emc, delphi, muncie, detroit diesel - has already been cut loose. probably all the divisions gm is now shedding will lose their jobs and go offshore. the new owners of saturn promised to keep the factories open for the next 2 years. the chinese bidders for hummer [which deal is now off, i understand] promised the same thing. then what? ________________________________________________________________________ Andrew Hay the genius nature internet rambler is to see what all have seen adh@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx and think what none thought _______________________________________________ AMC-list mailing list AMC-list@xxxxxxxxxxxx http://list.amc-list.com/listinfo.cgi/amc-list-amc-list.com