Welfare queens are the legacy of the Lyndon Baines Johnson Administration and his IDIOTIC "war on poverty." Johnson wasn't racist for creating them, but Reagan was racist for pointing out that they exist?
Actually, I have a pretty hard time of faulting him for that. I take the idea of private property seriously. You ought to be able to use YOUR PROPERTY in any manner that you see fit. If you don't want to rent it to Homosexuals, or drug users, or Islamic terrorists, or Jehovah's Witnesses evangelicals, it's YOUR PROPERTY. The government getting to decide your morality for you is something that I think a lot of people are opposed to. The notion that the government should be "thought police" is a dangerous road to follow.ScottL wrote: Reagan opposed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, opposed the Voting Rights Act of 1965 (calling it "humiliating to the South"), and...Ronald Reagan - California Governor 1966 on Fair Housing ActIf an individual wants to discriminate against Negroes or others in selling or renting his house, he has a right to do so.
That sounds pretty subjective to me. I have noticed that a lot of people try to sometimes paint "unintended consequences" as the main goal. The Civil rights commission was one of those champions of quotas, and affirmative action. This is just another form of discrimination with the shoe on a different foot. If you take the view that discrimination is wrong for one class of people, then it is wrong for another class as well.ScottL wrote: As president, Reagan aligned his justice department on the side of segregation, supporting the fundamentalist Bob Jones University in its case seeking federal funds for institutions that discriminate on the basis of race. In 1983, when the supreme court decided against Bob Jones, Reagan, under fire from his right in the aftermath, gutted the Civil Rights Commission.
The government has every right (indeed every DUTY) to insure that people are not discriminated against under the law, or in any other contact with the government, such as employment, regulations, etc. But the government has no business in meddling with what private individuals chose to do.
Rather poor and far fetched examples.ScottL wrote: To name a few...
My recommendations for more affordable health care? Make all insurance policies below a $10,000.00 deductible illegal. The reason health care costs are completely ridiculous is because too many people aren't paying their own bills. Were they paying their own bills, they would negotiate and bargain shop. Both of which would reduce costs for everybody. Medical people CHARGE outrageous fees because their patients don't care and insist on the best. Patients don't care because someone else is picking up their tabs. Insurance companies pass the costs back through the system resulting in increased premiums. All the feedback pressures drive it in the positive direction. It needs negative feedback to stabilize at a quiescent point.ScottL wrote: As for health care, what's your recommendation for more affordable health care? How do low-income families afford it?
A Hospital room should not cost $1,000.00 per day. It's a freakin' BED in a ROOM for crying out loud! Motels manage those for something like $50.00 per day? ( and make a profit) What's the other $950.00 for?
Also, legal reform and a windfall profits tax on lawyers ought to help a lot, but the biggest improvement would be realized from reintroducing market forces into what is currently a bureaucratic cluster f***.