Is Obama a good CEO of America, Inc.?

Discussion in 'Politics' started by Robert A. Green, Oct 24, 2012.

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    Only a military dictator who is paid $5M a year taxfree and who has an economic team where each member gets $1M a year taxfree. Only this configuration of leadership can be a good CEO for the economic current set up of the US.

    Hard pills in areas like defense, health care, government spendings, taxes etc. are needed. The good news is, in 5-7 years of hard pill, US can resurge and establish itself as a leader in defense, economic, social, education fields for next few decades atleast.

    :D
     
    #11     Oct 25, 2012
  2. CT10Gov

    CT10Gov

    You do realize that you are not the first person to think of this right? The problem is that the dictator, after his 7 year stint, may very well figure that he might as well stick around for a little bit longer.

    It's tools like you and the kind of idiocy that you espouse that end up enslaving entire countries to grim fates.

     
    #12     Oct 25, 2012
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    Listen Moron! a US Army sponsored dictator or leader cannot just decide to stay for another 17 or 27 years. Either face a hard pill for 5-7 years or look into the "ECONOMIC ABYSS" for next 50 years.......all the while "abandoning on the streets" the older generation that really made what US has been and all the while "borrowing from the unborn" future generations.

    THAT IS CALLED PURE DASTARDLY EVILNESS!!

    PS: ALL MORONS LIKE YOU SHOULD BE HANGED AND FED TO WOLVES.
     
    #13     Oct 25, 2012
  4. Tsing Tao

    Tsing Tao

    Ah, I see. And it's not like that can happen or anything.
     
    #14     Oct 25, 2012
  5. CT10Gov

    CT10Gov

    You are calling me a moron??

    How about you go read some basic history of what usually happens in the last 1,000 time when the military decides to sponsor a dictator.

    I'll wait for your apology to sane people everywhere.

     
    #15     Oct 25, 2012
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    US is far different and once need of the hour is over, everything goes back to normal.

    In WWII, Japanese were put into prisons due to the hostility and war. When the war was over, these Japanese were released.

    Again, US is far different from the rest of the world, even Western Europe.

    Wonder how many dictators in other countries will prop up if the US becomes so economically weak, that it cannot project power overseas, even for its ally nations.

    ps: do not want any argument over Japanese example. Period!
     
    #16     Oct 25, 2012
  7. Chewy

    Chewy

    A Dictator is stupid.

    it requires the end of the Constitution.

    What is needed is a return to FREEDOM not CONTROL by Dictator.

    What makes a country great is FREEDOM.

    go watch the movies on

    Civilization: The West and the Rest with Niall Ferguson

    he shows that countries grow from a distribution AWAY FROM CENTRAL POWER TO INCREASED POWER OF THE INDIVIDUAL PERSON.

    the idea of a dictator helping out is insanity.

    It was on PBS TV recently. It might be available on internet. he did write a book.

    here is a blurb on the book and movies.

    For the past five centuries, Western civilizations have prevailed around the world. More people have been influenced by Western food, clothing, medicine, government and religion worldwide than by any other civilization. How did that happen? What led the West to be so influential and powerful? And how long will the West sustain its supremacy? As America approaches the 2012 presidential election in the midst of a geopolitical paradigm shift, acclaimed historian Niall Ferguson returns to public television with a timely look at the reasons behind the West’s economic ascendancy and why Eastern civilizations may now be taking the lead.

    Accompanied by a major new book, Civilization: The West and the Rest (Penguin Press), the series explores the West’s epic and surprising rise to global dominance. Applying essential economic and political insights, Niall Ferguson identifies what he calls “the six killer applications” that “the Rest” lacked, but which enabled the West to become an economic and political superpower. Yet no civilization lasts forever, and Ferguson speculates that perhaps “The Rest” can overtake the West by “downloading” and upgrading these “apps” too.

    Each two-hour episode focuses on three of these factors: competition; science; modern medicine; democracy; consumerism; and the (Protestant) work ethic. Spanning theories on the rise and fall of empires past and present, Ferguson explains how the West taught others its ideas and institutions.

    Ferguson argues that competition, science and property-oriented government put the West ahead of Asia, the Muslim world, and South America and proposes that modern medicine, consumerism and work ethic supported the West’s expansion into Africa, its mastery of mass marketing and consumption, and promotion of its work culture.

    Before the space race, Ferguson asserts, there was the spice race. In the 15th century, competition, both economic and political, fostered capitalism and spread the wealth from royal courts to a fragmented European state system. European kingdoms enlisted explorers such as Portugal’s Vasco da Gama to map and conquer the world with trading posts. Soon, Europe’s combined economy overtook the wealthy but monolithic empire of China to the East.

    After the defeat of the Ottoman Empire in 1683, Prussian King Frederick separated church and state and fostered an education system based on scientific inquiry. By contrast, the Ottoman Sultan Osman III ushered in an era of religious laws that forbade the study of science. As a result, scientific progress was hindered by religious rules in the East, while it flourished in the West. With modern science, the West pushed the frontiers of artillery warfare and established its position as the world’s military master.

    Ferguson suggests that the practice of property-owning democracy, established in America, fundamentally altered the distribution of power by giving landowners a voice in the government. Spain and England competed for New World riches. In the beginning, it seemed that South America with its abundance of gold and other natural resources, controlled by a small ruling class of conquistadors, would become the greater, more prosperous empire. However, North America, with its hardworking indentured servants and devolved land-ownership paved the way for a profitable democratic society.

    The West’s “civilization” of Africa relied heavily on modern medicine. At best, medicine cured diseases and prolonged the lives of both colonists and Africans.

    After the destruction of two World Wars threatened to destroy Western civilization, consumerism unified and accelerated Western influences during the Cold War. Ferguson explains how, as socialism faced off with capitalism, a sartorial revolution fueled the first wave of globalization in the 20th century. Jeans and T-shirts became the “must-have” fashion around the world. Popularized by the entertainment industry, mainly Hollywood and rock ‘n’ roll, denim was cultural currency with mass appeal and a mass message about American industrialism and capitalism.

    The final “app,” the Protestant work ethic, was also critical to the West’s success. Outlined in 1904 by Max Weber, the work ethic encapsulates the spirit of capitalism. Hard work, savings, and deferred consumption were seen as the means to glorify God. As the episode closes, Ferguson returns to China, where Christianity has flourished in spite of communism. And as the popularity of Christianity rises ever more rapidly in China, so too does the country’s economic success.

    With the inexorable rise of China and Islam re-energized, is the West history? Ferguson believes it dosn’t have to be. The West still has an edge in political pluralism, commercial competition, scientific development, and medical advances. Most of all, the West maintains the freedom and creativity to write the next chapter in Western civilization.

    Civilization: The West and the Rest is a co-production of Chimerica Media Limited, BBC and THIRTEEN in association with WNET.

    Niall Ferguson, MA, D.Phil., is Laurence A. Tisch Professor of History at Harvard University. He is also a Senior Fellow at the Hoover Institution, Stanford University, and a Senior Research Fellow at Jesus College, Oxford.
     
    #17     Oct 25, 2012
  8. CT10Gov

    CT10Gov

    If this were Germany 1938, you'd be a card carrying member of the NAZIS.

    If this were Russian 1915, you'd be cheering for the Bolsheviks.

    Look in the mirror - you are the willingness to give up your freedom for a strong man - you are the banality of evil.

    You make me sick.

     
    #18     Oct 25, 2012
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    US saved the world from European Impearlism and Colonialism

    US saved the world from German, Italian and Japanese Fascisim

    US got the world rid of the Soviet Communism

    US is working on saving the world from third world Dictatorism

    US work on defeating terrorist Mullahism is nearly completed


    In order to protect US from becoming so weak as to not being able to challenge and cut through the evilness, I am willing to take hard pills (mostly economic and somewhat social) for next 5-7 years. In these hard pills, no one is hampering freedoms of peoples in everyday walks of life.

    Call it dictator or emergency austerity, without the economic hard pills US slide into the mud will only accelerate.

    Both Obama and Romney agendas are 'helpless' and even hurtful to face off and turn back the economic monster problems.

    Cheers! :D
     
    #19     Oct 25, 2012
  10. Bob111

    Bob111

    tell this any russian(old folks, any woman and kids included) anywhere in russia and see what happens next. i would be really surprised,if you walk away in one piece.. :)

    what's wrong with communism anyway? first of all-there was no communism :p
    it's just another BS bogey man created by your leaders..
    here is quote for you,in case you didn't know it

    [​IMG]
     
    #20     Oct 25, 2012