EmptySlime

joined 1 year ago
[–] EmptySlime 31 points 1 year ago (7 children)

Even some otherwise good regular leftists have absolute dogshit takes on Ukraine. It's like they're allergic to even being coincidentally on the same side as the US State Department that they start falling all over themselves to be like "Remember guys, US Bad," and start like saying that we should be pushing Ukraine to give up territory to appease Russia so they don't use nukes. When we already know because of Crimea that Putin will almost certainly just regroup and try again if they give him anything.

[–] EmptySlime 6 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I'm sure they're hoping it cleans the air of people telling them to "do something" about "climate change" and let them get back to giving huge giveaways to oil companies.

Seriously, I might be wrong but last I knew carbon capture tech wasn't anywhere near good enough. How long would this thing have to run to do much as break even on the emissions building it caused?

[–] EmptySlime 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

So Australian Libertarians don't believe in the free market above all else and that governments basically should only exist to enforce individual property rights? Awesome.

[–] EmptySlime 13 points 1 year ago (7 children)

I don't mean more taxes I mean taxes at all. Pretty much every libertarian I've ever heard talking about it says "Taxation is theft," then the ones I'm talking about will for example get asked to describe their ideal society and when asked how to say maintain some key infrastructure they essentially describe collecting taxes from the citizens for it. Things like that.

[–] EmptySlime 8 points 1 year ago (4 children)

Yeah that can get very boring. I suppose though if they had any interest in how things actually worked they wouldn't be libertarians. That's exactly what kept me from aligning with them back in high school when I first started getting into politics.

Like I got as far as roads and it was like "Wait a second, how would you handle roads going into areas where where it wouldn't be profitable to run them?" They either just wouldn't have roads, or someone would build it and would make it profitable by charging exorbitant tolls. Neither of those were acceptable to me and my agreement with libertarianism died. There are always going to be things in society that are not profitable but are worth having because they have downstream benefits to society.

[–] EmptySlime 36 points 1 year ago (15 children)

Some of the funniest shit in the world to me is watching a libertarian talk to pretty much anyone remotely competent in discussing policy and watching in real time as the libertarian reinvents things like taxes and liberal democracy trying to make their policy prescriptions make sense.

[–] EmptySlime 13 points 1 year ago

Wanting to raise the threshold isn't inherently bad. But from what I've read on this their legislature previously banned August elections like this because of poor turnout and they're also trying to make it effectively impossible to even put a measure like this on the ballot to get that increased majority by requiring a large amount of signatures from every county in the state. Meaning it would only take one county to not get enough people and it theoretically wouldn't matter if literally every single other person in the state signed onto the petition; It wouldn't get in the ballot.

It seems like the 60% rather than 50% is just to try and hide the ball so they can effectively outlaw popular grassroots action going directly to the ballot.

[–] EmptySlime 10 points 1 year ago

Of course my dude. Opposing America automatically makes you an anti-imperialist, duh. /s

[–] EmptySlime 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

I hate when I glance at it, resolve to take care of it later, and then the mere act of doing so marks the matter as resolved in my brain and it's just gone forever.

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