Romney promises energy independence by 2020
He's not in a position to promise that. If he breaks his promise, do we get to break his neck?
Should politicians be held accountable for what they say? If they lie, should they be fired?
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Romney promises energy independence by 2020
bedub1 wrote:Is there even any reason to believe anything a politician ever says? Is it just assumed that they are lying sacks of shit that will say anything to get elected? I just saw this headline:Romney promises energy independence by 2020
He's not in a position to promise that. If he breaks his promise, do we get to break his neck?
Should politicians be held accountable for what they say? If they lie, should they be fired?
bedub1 wrote:Is there even any reason to believe anything a politician ever says?
thegreekdog wrote:bedub1 wrote:Is there even any reason to believe anything a politician ever says? Is it just assumed that they are lying sacks of shit that will say anything to get elected? I just saw this headline:Romney promises energy independence by 2020
He's not in a position to promise that. If he breaks his promise, do we get to break his neck?
Should politicians be held accountable for what they say? If they lie, should they be fired?
I saw a video a few years ago (maybe from the Daily Show) that involves clips from every president since Eisenhower promising energy independence by a certain date. It's rather funny and sad.
tzor wrote:bedub1 wrote:Is there even any reason to believe anything a politician ever says?
Although Reagan's words were directed to the Soviets, they too should be applied to all politicians.
"Trust but verify."
And if anyone doesn't deliver on promises you expect them to follow ... throw the bum out! PERIOD END.
/ wrote:http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/wed-june-16-2010/an-energy-independent-future
BigBallinStalin wrote:tzor wrote:bedub1 wrote:Is there even any reason to believe anything a politician ever says?
Although Reagan's words were directed to the Soviets, they too should be applied to all politicians.
"Trust but verify."
And if anyone doesn't deliver on promises you expect them to follow ... throw the bum out! PERIOD END.
That's not effective.
(1) It doesn't correct the poor policies which were already implemented
(2) The logrolling will still continue with the newly elected politician.
(3) Failure to deliver on promises can always be blamed on others, so the politician can dishonestly argue his way outta this.
(4) Promises come in a package whose appeal garners the support of different voter markets, some of which criss-cross on various promises from the whole package. This means that if you break one promise, the constituents may still support you because you're still promising other packages.
(4b) Or you can break a promise, but it doesn't matter if you lose constituent support because you no longer need them.
Conclusion: "THROW THE BUM OUT" doesn't work.
tzor wrote:There is a fundamental flaw in the general line of argument. If a people, who are promised B, do not verify that B was delivered or who do verify that B was not delivered and in either case still vote for that person, then they deserve what they get. This is the fundamental principle of, not just a democracy, but democratic goverment; the "consent" of the people.
This is a fundamental truth and no broken utopian claptrap would ever replace it (indeed any utopian claptrap only makes the matter worse); eternal viligance is the price of liberty. If you do not pay that, you don't get it. PERIOD END (FULL STOP EVEN).
thegreekdog wrote:I've studied the voter tendencies of my parents (locally, statewide, and nationwide). My dad is a Republican-leaning Liberatarian type (more socially conservative than me and yet more crazy libertarian than me in some things). My mom is straight up conservative Republican. I do not recall my parents ever voting for someone because of a promise he or she made... except on a local level. My mom doesn't support Mitt Romney because he's promising energy independence. She supports Romney because he's a Republican and Republicans stand for the things she believes the government should do and not do.
I wonder how many others are like that. I'm not so much I think. I like to look at political record, ideas the politician may have, etc. But I also look at political party. I'm not sure political party affiliation influences my decision that much, although I have to be honest and say I've never voted for a Democrat.
I agree with tzor and BBS on the other stuff.
BigBallinStalin wrote:thegreekdog wrote:I've studied the voter tendencies of my parents (locally, statewide, and nationwide). My dad is a Republican-leaning Liberatarian type (more socially conservative than me and yet more crazy libertarian than me in some things). My mom is straight up conservative Republican. I do not recall my parents ever voting for someone because of a promise he or she made... except on a local level. My mom doesn't support Mitt Romney because he's promising energy independence. She supports Romney because he's a Republican and Republicans stand for the things she believes the government should do and not do.
I wonder how many others are like that. I'm not so much I think. I like to look at political record, ideas the politician may have, etc. But I also look at political party. I'm not sure political party affiliation influences my decision that much, although I have to be honest and say I've never voted for a Democrat.
I agree with tzor and BBS on the other stuff.
Your parents' voting behavior is a great example of rational ignorance. Instead of (1) spending additional time educating themselves on the relevant issues and evaluating politician A, B, and C, they choose to (2) vote by Party, which allows them more spent time elsewhere, thus depriving themselves of that knowledge.
The balance between (1) and (2) is on the margin, so I'm not saying that your parents are totally ignorant on these matters. I'm only saying that they appear to shift more to #2 instead of #1.
BigBallinStalin wrote:Your parents' voting behavior is a great example of rational ignorance. Instead of (1) spending additional time educating themselves on the relevant issues and evaluating politician A, B, and C, they choose to (2) vote by Party, which allows them more spent time elsewhere, thus depriving themselves of that knowledge.
bedub1 wrote:Is there even any reason to believe anything a politician ever says? Is it just assumed that they are lying sacks of shit that will say anything to get elected? I just saw this headline:Romney promises energy independence by 2020
He's not in a position to promise that. If he breaks his promise, do we get to break his neck?
Should politicians be held accountable for what they say? If they lie, should they be fired?
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