I agree that contracted prisons are a terrible idea in principle that has gone horribly in practice.
Ya think?
I agree that contracted prisons are a terrible idea in principle that has gone horribly in practice.
A global super-rich elite had at least $21 trillion (£13tn) hidden in secret tax havens by the end of 2010, according to a major study.
The figure is equivalent to the size of the US and Japanese economies combined.
Cicero wrote:I don't think that Obama has been a very good president and I definitely think that a CEO is generally better qualified to be President than a constitutional law professor.
Bain Consulting and SLOC are somewhat similar stories: both involved troubled entities where Romney swooped in and turned things around in a relatively short period of time. In both cases, I think his efforts were impressive.
I don't think that Obama has been a very good president and I definitely think that a CEO is generally better qualified to be President than a constitutional law professor.
Equality wrote:I don't think that Obama has been a very good president and I definitely think that a CEO is generally better qualified to be President than a constitutional law professor.
Historically, how does the record of CEOs who became President stand up against the record of academics? Are there enough data points to draw any conclusions? Is running a business like running a country? Is anything like running a country for that matter? If considering past experience as predictive of future success in the Oval Office, would any experience be superior to four years as President? I mean, it's not really a race between a former law professor and a CEO. It's a race between someone who has been President for four years and a CEO. All other things being equal, someone who has actually been President is always going to be more experienced at running the country than someone who has not, right?
krose wrote:
As for me, for several cycles now, I have been choosing presidents based almost exclusively on whom they would appoint to the courts, especially the Supremes. (I based this on the idea that presidents don't really affect much else. They have little, if any, effect on the economy.) Anyway, Romney says he wants more like Thomas and Scalia. No thanks.
DrW wrote:How many appointments can we expect in the next 4 years, though?
EAllusion wrote:Ginsburg is barely hanging on. She's gone in the next administration probably. Definitely if Obama is reelected. Scalia is dying on the bench, but he's getting up there for someone who has been obese for a while.
It's now a matter of course for Republican candidates to claim they want more Thomas's and Scalia's. Bush said the same thing and he appointed one Scalia out of two chances. It's hard to match up Romney's rhetoric to what his actions will actually be because he's such a blank slate. McCain I was fairly certain was going to appoint Scalia's because that obviously was a compromise he made with the religious right in the election season. Romney, I'm not so sure. Outside of the justices being conservative, it's anybody's guess as far as I'm concerned.
DrW wrote:krose wrote:As for me, for several cycles now, I have been choosing presidents based almost exclusively on whom they would appoint to the courts, especially the Supremes..
Interesting. An unconventional, but certainly defensible, point of view.
sock puppet wrote:I suspect Romney would be less interested in ideology of appointees, but more interested in giving those positions as favors in return for campaign support. That's how 'business' works, and Romney's a businessman.