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Ciekawa analiza buszyzmu jako purytanzimu dla boga

IP: 193.188.161.* 09.11.04, 13:56
tych.

A propos, czy slowo bogaty, czy bogactwo pochodzi od boga, ze niby bogaty
jest bogaty dzieki bogu, ktoremu bog poblogoslawil, nie tylko dzieki swojej
pracy, a na przyklad dzieki kradziezy, rabunkowi itd?

www.guardian.co.uk/comment/story/0,3604,1346632,00.html
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    • Gość: staszek To level the playing field IP: 209.101.135.* 09.11.04, 14:03
      Jak to sie mowi po angolu

      We weren't dumb enough to vote Kerry
      By Mark Steyn
      (Filed: 09/11/2004)

      Last week, you may recall, I quoted Bob Kerrey - not the Kerry who was running
      for president, but a fellow senator and Vietnam veteran and a big backer of his
      near-namesake. This Kerrey was on television a couple of days before the
      election and claimed to have the pulse of the man in the street.



      "I was in Gallia, Ohio, down in the southeastern part of Ohio," he said. "They
      don't give a damn about the war in Iraq. They're terrified about the loss of
      their job, health care, their pensions. That's what's bothering them."

      I begged to differ: "In fact," I wrote, "the people - in Gallia, Ohio and many
      other places - understand the relevance of Iraq and Afghanistan to their well-
      being rather more clearly than the Democratic leadership do."

      Just for the record, on Tuesday, in Gallia County, Ohio, George W Bush won 62
      per cent of the vote.

      It wasn't the economy, stupid. It was the stupidity, stupid. No man is an
      island, but the Democrats expect voters to act as if they are. Don't think
      about national security and war and Iraq and Iran and North Korea - that's all
      way beyond a loser like you. You're too "terrified" about your job to be
      bothered with the foreign pages. It's practically the Depression out there.

      OK, it's not. But it's a recession. OK, it's not. But there aren't any jobs out
      there. OK, there are. But they're not like the jobs you used to have, when you
      could go to the mill and do the same job day in day out for 45 years, and it
      made it so much easier for us come election time because there were large
      numbers of you all in the same place when we flew in for the campaign stop. But
      the point is: you are an island, stick to "pocketbook issues", think about
      yourself.

      The Left always used to accuse the Right of appealing to the voters'
      selfishness, but this year the Dems did and it got them nowhere.

      I think there are a couple of lessons here. First, when you're cursed to live
      in "interesting times", a party has to have something interesting to say. It
      has to stand for something; it has to have a core identity, not just wonkish
      programmes. The Dems do have core beliefs - abortion, racial grievances, gay
      marriage, etc - but unfortunately they're not the kind of thing you can talk
      about at election time.

      In Britain, alas, it's the Tories, under their current Kerrykaze pilot, who are
      distressingly Democrat-like: full of itsybitsy policies for this and that,
      irrelevant on the big picture, deeply evasive on Europe. They're also far too
      timid on the British equivalent of America's "cultural values" - crime and the
      other "quality of life" issues.

      Secondly, assume for a moment that Bob Kerrey was right - that voters in Gallia
      County really were "terrified about the loss of their job, health care, their
      pensions". Even if that's true, do you want the government to do anything about
      it? In many Continental countries, it's all but impossible to lose your job -
      which is why so many companies are reluctant to hire anyone and Germany's
      unemployment rate is twice that of America. And once healthcare and pensions
      are the province of the government, the basic relationship between the citizen
      and the state is altered. By 2040, Greece's government pension liabilities will
      be 25 per cent of GDP, as opposed to 6.8 per cent for America, which is quite
      colossal enough, thank you.

      So even if I was "terrified" of losing my job, healthcare, pension, etc, I'd be
      reluctant to let the government relieve me of my terror. On the Continent, the
      mainstream parties of Tweedleleft and Tweedleright, having spent half a century
      ruling more and more issues beyond the subject of debate, can't quite bring
      themselves to tell the truth to the voters about the looming crisis.

      They reckon that the masses have become too used to 35-hour work-weeks, two
      months of holiday, you leave college at 36, take early retirement at 47, etc,
      and that they won't take kindly to being told the jig's up. The Daily Mirror
      may think American voters are "DUMB", but I'll bet in the chancelleries of
      Europe there are plenty of officials who wish their own electors would
      occasionally disdain "pocketbook issues". Once you've turned citizens into
      junkies for government crack, it's very hard to wean them off it.

      Thirdly, after listening to John Edwards's Dickensian tales of "two Americas"
      for months on end, I'm convinced that any red-state county knows more about
      business than your average Massachusetts senator, tenured Harvard professor or
      Boston Globe editor. When John Kerry gets his hair done at Cristophe's in
      Washington for somewhere north of $75, that high-priced stylist is an employee.
      If he'd ever stopped to have it done for $10 by DeeDee in a hair salon in a
      small town, he'd discover that she's a one-woman business.

      When he goes to his favourite restaurant in Washington, the waiter's an
      employee. When he drops by a diner on Main Street in some nowhere burg to
      pretend to eat a hot dog for a photo op, the waitress might well be like the
      lady who served me lunch on Sunday: she has her own house-cleaning business,
      but does some part-time work at the local school and a couple of shifts at the
      diner for a bit of extra cash.

      She's a small business, and she knows more about her tax return than Teresa
      Heinz Kerry knows about hers. Mrs Kerry farms it out to the best advisers money
      can buy, and they do a grand job: she's one of the richest women in the world
      and she paid 12 per cent tax last year. It makes no difference whether the tax
      rate is 20 per cent, 50 per cent or 88 per cent: the Kerrys of the world will
      still pay 12 per cent.

      The American people don't want to be condescended to by ketchup heiresses,
      billionaire currency speculators, $20-million-a-picture Hollywood pretty boys,
      and multi-millionaire documentary-makers posing as bluecollar lardbutts.

      The Democrats keep talking to people as if they're like John Edwards's 40-year
      mill-workers, but that's not what work is any more, and a 23-year-old
      hairdresser can know enough about starting and running a business to be
      unimpressed at a few footling tax credits dangled in front of her by a 60-year-
      old lifelong "public servant" lucky enough to be living a grand old life thanks
      to his billionaire wife's first husband.
      • Gość: Tysprowda Re: To level the playing field - i wszystko jasne IP: 193.188.161.* 09.11.04, 14:25
        We weren't dumb enough to vote Kerry, znaczy: we were dumb enough to vote Bush.

        Ketchup jest zly.

        Ropa i krew sa dobre.

        Bogaci Kerry i Heinz sa zli, bo sa bogaci dzieki sosowi pomidorowemu.

        Bogaci buszysci i buszewicy sa dobrzy, bo sa bogaci dzieki zbrojeniom,
        zabijaniu, ropie i krwi.

        Zabijaniu nie tylko amerykansynow, ale i innych synow i ich rodzin.

        Ales ty staszek nie tylko buszolom, ale do tego bandyta.

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