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Hence, why USPS should be privatized..... The reality is that FedEx and UPS basically deliver where ever USPS does. If you live where only a pack mule can reach you, USPS is gonna tell you to bring your mail to them. Your right that the private companies don't visit every mailbox everyday, but if you want a package picked up, you call them and they will pick it up for you. That sounds a lot more efficient and less of a waste of time then checking every single mailbox.Choboman wrote:Two items:
Postal Service: I've heard a lot of complaints about USPS as fiscally bankrupt that I think miss the point. USPS has it's hands tied in many ways because of the way it's set up. They have to maintain local branches in all counties, even ones that don't carry much traffic. They have to visit every mailbox, no matter how remote,multiple times a week, even if they have no mail to deliver to that location, in case the address has mail they want to send. Some remote locations can only be reached via helecopter or pack mule! If it was being run as a for-profit business they could just choose to deny service to those locations, but USPS doesn't have that option.
Choboman wrote:Minorities in Prison: Correlation <> Causation. A high percentage of minorities are poor. A high percentage of minorities are incarcerated. A high percentage of poor people are also incarcerated. What evidence do you have that people's incarceration is [indirectly] related to their race instead of their poverty?
Yakk wrote:The question the thought experiment I posted is aimed at answering: When falling in a black hole, do you see the entire universe's future history train-car into your ass, or not?
Dark567 wrote:Hence, why USPS should be privatized..... The reality is that FedEx and UPS basically deliver where ever USPS does. If you live where only a pack mule can reach you, USPS is gonna tell you to bring your mail to them. Your right that the private companies don't visit every mailbox everyday, but if you want a package picked up, you call them and they will pick it up for you. That sounds a lot more efficient and less of a waste of time then checking every single mailbox.
Izawwlgood wrote:The USPS also doesn't pay dues on having post boxes in incredibly high traffic areas, like other companies do, and thus, I would say, the burden of delivering to remote locations is a wash. I would wager the cost of delivering an occasional letter to some remote county is less expensive than the cost of paying dues on setting up a drop box on Wallstreet.
Choboman wrote:Minorities in Prison: Correlation <> Causation. A high percentage of minorities are poor. A high percentage of minorities are incarcerated. A high percentage of poor people are also incarcerated. What evidence do you have that people's incarceration is [indirectly] related to their race instead of their poverty? If some white supremicist joined the discussion and used the prison statistics to suggest that minorities were inherently more violent we'd be jumping all over him for his flawed logic. Using this data to 'prove' that the system is racist is similarly bad logic.
Does removing the barriers to a level playing field, also remove the barriers on FedEx and UPS preventing them from competing against USPS? How about removing the government subsidies and debt guarantees on USPS? Right now the playing field isn't even, its generally tilted in favor of USPS.Deep_Thought wrote:Why does that lead you to think that USPS should be privatized? How about the reverse - changing the legislation covering them so that they can compete on an even playing field? Please note I'm from the UK so don't know the details of USPS obligations but we are in the process of similar arguments about our own Royal Mail.
Yakk wrote:The question the thought experiment I posted is aimed at answering: When falling in a black hole, do you see the entire universe's future history train-car into your ass, or not?
Deep_Thought wrote:How about the reverse - changing the legislation covering them so that they can compete on an even playing field?
clockworkmonk wrote:Except for Warren G. Harding. Fuck that guy.
The problem for me that anecdotally, in my life, the only people I know that get government support are either unmotivated, or using it to supplement their under the table income. I understand that this is partially because of the situations and social circles I am in, and that there are people that really do need the support, but it becomes very hard not to look at the programs with some cynicism.broken_escalator wrote:I'm wary of people clamoring about unmotivated types that live off of government support.
Yakk wrote:The question the thought experiment I posted is aimed at answering: When falling in a black hole, do you see the entire universe's future history train-car into your ass, or not?
Izawwlgood wrote:That they are still successful businesses, while the USPS has been in the red for years and years, means that the USPS is a horribly run business, and no amount of slowly hiking up the cost of postage stamps a couple pennies at a time is going to fix them.
Dark567 wrote:The problem for me that anecdotally, in my life, the only people I know that get government support are either unmotivated, or using it to supplement their under the table income. I understand that this is partially because of the situations and social circles I am in, and that there are people that really do need the support, but it becomes very hard not to look at the programs with some cynicism.
broken_escalator wrote:Spoiler:
(I spoilered a quote because it was easier for me to read after breaking up the text a bit, and thought maybe someone else might like that, too)
I'm wary of people clamoring about unmotivated types that live off of government support. There is a common thought in America that if you try hard enough you can get whatever you want, and that the poor people are just lazy. Usually that segues into talking about how society has advantages or disadvantages for certain members of society, etc.
I like the idea of a safety net for when people fall below the poverty line, especially when they start out disadvantaged. I forget the statistic but I remember in one of my sociology books they said that a large percent of people on welfare are not on it long-term. Something along the lines of half of all welfare receivers leave in the first two years. So I imagine a young mother would hit hard times, receive welfare for a year or two and then stabilize above the poverty line. I'm sure someone out there does scam the system though.
clockworkmonk wrote:Except for Warren G. Harding. Fuck that guy.
broken_escalator wrote:I like the idea of a safety net for when people fall below the poverty line, especially when they start out disadvantaged. I forget the statistic but I remember in one of my sociology books they said that a large percent of people on welfare are not on it long-term. Something along the lines of half of all welfare receivers leave in the first two years. So I imagine a young mother would hit hard times, receive welfare for a year or two and then stabilize above the poverty line. I'm sure someone out there does scam the system though.
Deep_Thought wrote:Yup, I have the same problem. I know only a few people who have claimed benefits, but there's been a roughly 50/50 split between people who I thought deserved it and those who didn't. One claimed simply because he could not be bothered to get any kind of job despite just having graduated from a top university. It wasn't like the guy didn't have options! Hell, work in a pub if you have to. One broke an arm and was then signed off work for over a year. How you separate these cases from those that have a more genuine need I don't know.
Thesh wrote:Deep_Thought wrote:Yup, I have the same problem. I know only a few people who have claimed benefits, but there's been a roughly 50/50 split between people who I thought deserved it and those who didn't. One claimed simply because he could not be bothered to get any kind of job despite just having graduated from a top university. It wasn't like the guy didn't have options! Hell, work in a pub if you have to. One broke an arm and was then signed off work for over a year. How you separate these cases from those that have a more genuine need I don't know.
I worked with someone at a grocery store back in 2004, who wouldn't work more than 32 hours a week because she would lose her welfare. I don't know whether she made more money with less hours and welfare or she was just being lazy, but I thought it was ridiculous at the time. To me, it's an indication of a broken system. What we should be focusing on is getting rid of the need for welfare programs. For example, through charitable organizations to help provide assistance, possibly including education and training, to get people in poverty better jobs.
Also, for the US at least, we should be looking at developing Latin America. Building the economy, providing better jobs to all, improving education, getting rid of the corruption that some countries there have. If you can bring poverty and quality of life up to first world levels, then you no longer have to worry about immigration (and could possibly have open borders), and people have a lot more choice of where to go to find jobs. I don't think you can get rid of poverty in the United States without significantly reducing poverty in Latin America.
clockworkmonk wrote:Except for Warren G. Harding. Fuck that guy.
Yeah, but social security/disability doesn't. The US has lots of welfare programs, some of them have longer terms.Bubbles McCoy wrote:Did this happen to be with the same professor who that claimed the USPS as a success? Welfare payments automatically cease after two years, with a lifetime limit of five years. (sec 402 a ii)
Yakk wrote:The question the thought experiment I posted is aimed at answering: When falling in a black hole, do you see the entire universe's future history train-car into your ass, or not?
zmatt wrote:I love how you accused me of having a blanket statement of the poor with a blanket statement yourself. I did not claim that everyone who is poor is lazy, and if you actually read my post you would see i dedicated more time of it to the people who didn't choose to be poor.
zmatt wrote:I agree with paragraph 1 of your post. I have some problems with paragraph 2. the first is that historically US meddling in Latin America has never gone well and a lot of people resent us for it. Even when our intentions are good you would meet resistance. The second is in most of these situations a solution from the outside is extremely difficult or impossible. A lot of those nations could only first be improved by a popular revolution against the corruption and rebuilding their government into one that serves the people. You also have to think about the drug violence, many of those groups have a higher gdp than some countries. They wont take it lying down. but I digress. I completely agree that the best course of action is to work at the root of the problem and try to get rid of poverty. We just have to keep in mind that even though we can greatly improve the situation utopia is impossible and there will always be someone who has a crappy life.
Anecdotes can provide an indication, but that's all. They certainly can't provide evidence. I can't personally find much evidence on welfare abuse either way, and I suspect concern over it is probably somewhat overblown. Good welfare programs, though, do assist in job training and education. That being said, teaching a man to fish gets him food once he learns how (and gets a fishing rod and bait). He (and his family) need food in the meantime.Thesh wrote:I worked with someone at a grocery store back in 2004, who wouldn't work more than 32 hours a week because she would lose her welfare. I don't know whether she made more money with less hours and welfare or she was just being lazy, but I thought it was ridiculous at the time. To me, it's an indication of a broken system. What we should be focusing on is getting rid of the need for welfare programs. For example, through charitable organizations to help provide assistance, possibly including education and training, to get people in poverty better jobs.
It's probably gone badly because we've done dumb things like trying to influence leaders and burning coca crops. No one really objects to money coming in. Money coming in is also pretty much the best assistance possible. It gets spent on things people want, which is usually provided by private enterprise (often through an informal economy), which leads to reform. Of course, you have problems in distributing money. Any program to build schools or something usually gets interfered with by the government, or politics in general. It's also rarely as good a distribution of funds as that provided by the market.zmatt wrote:the first is that historically US meddling in Latin America has never gone well and a lot of people resent us for it. Even when our intentions are good you would meet resistance. The second is in most of these situations a solution from the outside is extremely difficult or impossible. A lot of those nations could only first be improved by a popular revolution against the corruption and rebuilding their government into one that serves the people. You also have to think about the drug violence, many of those groups have a higher gdp than some countries. They wont take it lying down. but I digress. I completely agree that the best course of action is to work at the root of the problem and try to get rid of poverty. We just have to keep in mind that even though we can greatly improve the situation utopia is impossible and there will always be someone who has a crappy life.
Spambot5546 wrote:My work filter blocks "JournalOfAfricanAmericanMales.com", so i'm only going of the text you posted, but it sounded a lot more like an anecdote than data. Given that, i countered it with my own anecdotal experience that children are never given "options" over "commands" by any parent or teacher of any ethnicity.
But even if we accept it as true that six year old black kids have to be told twice to sit down in school, if that's the best example of our "white schools" being unfit to educate black children then it's a pretty shitty argument. I'd stick to your first one. The math behind that one is a lot stronger.
A BLack mother, in whose house I was recently a guest, said to her eight-year old son, "Boy, get your rusty behind in that bathtub." Now I happen to know that this woman loves her son as much as any mother, but she would have never have posed the directive to her son to take a bath in the form of a question. WEre she to ask, "Would you liek to take your bath now?" she would not have been issuing a directive but offering a true alternative.... Upon entering school the child from such a family may not understand the indirect statement of the teacher as a direct command.
But those vieled commands are commands nonetheless, representing true power, and with true consequences for disobedience. If veiled commands are ignored, the child will be labeled a behavior problem and possibly officially classified as behavior disordered. In other words, the attempt by the teacher to reduce an exhibition of power by expressing herself in indirect terms may remove the very explicitness that the child needs to understand the rules of the new classroom culture.
A black elementary school [principal in Fairbanks, Alaska, reported to me that she has a lot of difficulty with Black children who are placed in some White teachers' classrooms. The teachers often send the children to the office for disobeting directives. Their parents are frequently called in for conferences. The parents' response to the teacher is usually the same: "They do what I say; if you just tell them what to do, they'll do it. I tell them at home that they have to listen to what you say."
Wow...that is pretty ethnocentric of you. You're suggesting that cultural minorities should simply adopt to the majority culture, portraying anything else as "twisting society out of shape" for the few. That is wrong in so many ways, but let me break it down for you.nitePhyyre wrote:sje46 wrote:My single argument is that there are cultural differences between ethnic groups, and that when these ethnic groups are underrepresented, they are at a disadvantage in the system which gives undue preference for the majority group. Society is obligated to fix these discrepencies.
I disagree with this notion entirely. If the culture of a minority is incompatible with the culture of the majority, then the minority should abandon their culture for the culture of the majority, or they should go somewhere where they are in the majority. To say that millions of people should twist their society out of shape for a handful of people instead of the handful joining the society that they live in, is absurd.
broken_escalator wrote:zmatt wrote:I love how you accused me of having a blanket statement of the poor with a blanket statement yourself. I did not claim that everyone who is poor is lazy, and if you actually read my post you would see i dedicated more time of it to the people who didn't choose to be poor.
I'm not really sure where you thought I was accusing you. I certainly didn't mean to sound like I was attacking you, so sorry if you read it that way.
clockworkmonk wrote:Except for Warren G. Harding. Fuck that guy.
sje46 wrote:Wow...that is pretty ethnocentric of you. You're suggesting that cultural minorities should simply adopt to the majority culture, portraying anything else as "twisting society out of shape" for the few. That is wrong in so many ways, but let me break it down for you.nitePhyyre wrote:I disagree with this notion entirely. If the culture of a minority is incompatible with the culture of the majority, then the minority should abandon their culture for the culture of the majority, or they should go somewhere where they are in the majority. To say that millions of people should twist their society out of shape for a handful of people instead of the handful joining the society that they live in, is absurd.
[*]First, I'm not suggesting that we try to make life as easy as possible for minorities as possible. I am simply advocating cultural relativism...the idea that we should try to understand others' activities and beliefs through their culture. This is not moral relativism. Moral relativism is the idea that X is ethical in the context of the culture. Since I do not support, for example, female circumcision, I am not a moral relativist. I do think that we should, however, aim to understand other points of view instead of automatically assume they're inferior and that our way is best.
sje46 wrote:My single argument is that there are cultural differences between ethnic groups, and that when these ethnic groups are underrepresented, they are at a disadvantage in the system which gives undue preference for the majority group. Society is obligated to fix these discrepencies.
I guess you missed the part where i said "incompatible". If an Italian moves to Poland, it doesn't mean he has to stop drinking wine and has to only drink vodka. These aspects of their culture aren't incompatible. On the other hand, where I live, you aren't allowed to carry weapons in public. If you are a sheik you have to carry a weapon on your person at all times. These aspects of culture are incompatible. When this incompatibly arises, you only have so many options. You can:sje46 wrote:[*]Secondly, your view is discriminatory. There will always be cultural differences, no matter what. Unless you decide to outright eject all cultural minorities from the school system. The differences may be vast, like a person from Africa moving to the US, or it could be a student with Italian heritage in a location that is predominantly Polish. No matter what, there will be cultural differences, no matter how slight. And because of these differences in mindset, each kid will come to school with a different understanding of the world...with different understandings of social interactions, with what makes a good story, different dialects, different moral systems, etc. The school's responsibility is to make sure that all kids are enriched and educated as much as possible in order to function in this (in my case, American) society. And I'm not talking about just race here either. Religion, dialect, class, even mental/physical handicaps. The school's responsibility is to take what they get and try the best they can to enrich that kid as much as they can. To ignore the minority and attend to the majority means that the kid starts out already behind, and is simply unfair. I'm just saying that the teacher should take note of the backgrounds of all the students, and try to be as inclusive as possible...not attend to the majority and neglect the minority.
Why did you stop counting?sje46 wrote:[*]Your view results in the increased separation between the majority culture and the minority cultures. If the schools prefer an education that favors the majority culture over the minority culture, that means that the average majority kid will have more success than the average minority kid. This will result in all "upper level" echelons in pretty much most professional fields to have a disproportionate amount of the cultural majority. This will continue the cultural dominance of the majority at the loss of the minority.
sje46 wrote:[*]Supporting one idea of education without considering other cultures' ideas results in not only systematic discrimination, but also leads to the loss of the majority culture as well. Up until somewhat recently, US schools didn't have collaborative group projects, at least not to the extent it has now. American education was more about fending for your own self in competition with your peers, with a very didactic "switchboard" style of teaching. I may be mistaken in this (I was born in 1989) but judging from my readings, group discussions is a relatively new style of teaching adopted from other cultures. Which is good. But having the idea that other cultures should conform to the mainstream style is ludicrous because it assumes that our style is so much better, and couldn't be improved.
sje46 wrote:Again, I don't think all of education should change. The basic American style of teaching isn't all that bad, IMO. I'm just saying that a particular school or teacher should take into consideration all learning styles, predispositions, cultural backgrounds, when teaching. Otherwise, it'd be kinda like showing a video in a class where there's a deaf kid, telling the kid to simply think harder, infer harder about what may be said judging from the pictures. It simply isn't going to work like that. If all teachers have that attitude towards deaf kids then deaf kids, will, on average, do worse at school, and therefore won't get into as good colleges, and therefore won't get good jobs. And, if the deafness is genetic, that means their children will have the same problems, only worse! Whereas it's only a very slight inconvenience to turn on the closed captions.
Turn on the closed captions. Be culturally sensitive...it works for the benefit of everyone.
sourmìlk wrote:Monopolies are not when a single company controls the market for a single product.
You don't become great by trying to be great. You become great by wanting to do something, and then doing it so hard you become great in the process.
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