T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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206.1 | responses from topic 203 | LYRIC::BOBBITT | the universe wraps in upon itself | Fri Jun 15 1990 09:30 | 67 |
| The following were copied from 203, where this topic began...
-Jody
<<< RANGER::$2$DUA8:[NOTES$LIBRARY]WOMANNOTES-V3.NOTE;1 >>>
-< Topics of Interest to Women >-
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Note 203.17 trading women for CLOTH?? 17 of 20
EARRTH::MALLETT "Barking Spider Industries" 10 lines 14-JUN-1990 18:01
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re: .13 (Alison)
� . . .the purpose of government is to protect the minority
� from the tyranny of the majority.
Now that's an interesting idea. One question, though: what
is government's role in representing the majority and protecting
it from a tyranny of the minority?
Steve
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Note 203.18 trading women for CLOTH?? 18 of 20
AERIE::THOMPSON "trying real hard to adjust ..." 9 lines 14-JUN-1990 18:48
-< Government => to protect Government Payroll ! >-
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the government's role ...
The government exists simply for itself and the increase of
wealth and power for the governors and their appointees.
The government as a bloated beaurocracy is the real "tyrant"
and will always be more of a problem than majority or minority.
~- sdt -~ like Thoreau we distrust government more as it grows !
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Note 203.19 trading women for CLOTH?? 19 of 20
SNOC02::WRIGHT "PINK FROGS" 8 lines 15-JUN-1990 00:13
-< ? >-
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a question........
I understand what you are discussing but am puzzled as to how it
relates to the title of this topic.
Holly
a puzzled Aussie
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Note 203.20 trading women for CLOTH?? 20 of 20
RUBY::BOYAJIAN "A Legendary Adventurer" 15 lines 15-JUN-1990 02:37
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re:.4
� Laws are increasingly being forged and enforced by
people you don't vote for, (the Supreme Court [...] �
I disagree with the sentiment. The Supreme Court seems to me to
have been (at least with most of its decisions in the last couple
of decades, at least) quite fair and objective (much to the chagrin
of the Executive Branch, too). With respect to the subject that
prompted this topic, recall that the whole reason behind the
legislators wanting to amend the Bill of Rights to outlaw flag-
burning was *because* the Supreme Court ruled that flag-burning
was a freedom protected by the First Amendment.
--- jerry
|
206.2 | Perenniel Search for Balance | FSHQA2::AWASKOM | | Fri Jun 15 1990 12:07 | 27 |
| Wow. I certainly never expected this reaction (I had it in as more
or less a throwaway comment), but let me see if I can pull a little
more from the dim dark recesses of my brain.
Sometime during the debate over ratification of the constitution
and the Bill of Rights, one of the 'Founding Fathers' made a comment
substantially equivalent to what I posted. I want to say Ben Franklin,
but I'm not certain about it. Anyone have a Bartlett's handy to
pull the exact quote?
In theory, I view government as a balancing act. It's why there
are two bodies in Congress, and three branches of government. Each
is *supposed* to act as a 'governor' on the racing engines of the
others. Sometimes the balance gets skewed for a period of time,
but usually one of the other branches will eventually reassert itself.
One of the 'balances' which must be maintained is that between the
majority and the minority. The Electoral College is designed to
maintain that balance. The Bill of Rights is designed to maintain
that balance. The process for amending the Constitution is designed
to maintain that balance. The veto override provisions are designed
to maintain that balance.
Most of the time, it works pretty well.
Alison
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206.4 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Unless they do it again. | Fri Jun 15 1990 13:03 | 5 |
| The Constitution should protect the ultimate minority - the
individual - from any tyranny, whether it be the tyranny of
the majority, or the tyranny of some other minority. If each
individual is protected from tyranny, neither the majority
nor any minority can be tyrannized.
|
206.5 | | SPARKL::CICCOLINI | | Fri Jun 15 1990 13:06 | 26 |
| Politicians campaigning should be forced to adhere to the "promises"
they make. Right now, it amounts to nothing more than hype.
A great political cartoon in the Globe showed Bush, lipless, and his
lips were facing him saying something to the effect of, "We're tired
of this charade, George, get yourself another pair".
Do people still actually believe what candidates say? The government
moans that people are voting on looks and charm only but it's the
government that allows these politicians to BE no more to us than their
looks or their charm. Not that voting actually matters anyway. I've
always felt voting is simply a placebo given to the public - a little
wheel-spinning the government allows us to engage in to give us
something semi-positive about government to talk about and to satisfy
our needs to believe that we live in a democracy. The elected
officials are the window dressing. The real power is wielded behind
the scenes by people you have no voice with and no control over, i.e.
the American Medical Association, the NRA, Noriega and his cohorts,
Sam Walton, (richest man in the US), judges, Hollywood heavies,
the board of directors at R.J.Reynolds, that financier in Texas, (what's
his name? It begins with a P but the rest escapes me), some heavies
from Japan, (and other foreign countries who "know where the bodies are
buried"), and of course, the increasingly powerful insurance companies
which are beginning to become a branch of the government themselves.
Government is merely the interface between them and us. The little
taxpayers are at the end of the line. And it's a VERY long line.
|
206.7 | charade nothing! it was a clever piece of deception! | COBWEB::SWALKER | lean, green, and at the screen | Fri Jun 15 1990 14:14 | 22 |
| Re: .5 (Sandy)
This may be an eminently correctible piece of information, but my
memory of the context of the "read my lips, no new taxes" line was
the following:
Bush says he will not support new taxes.
Reporter asks if that means he will support raising existing taxes.
Bush looks disgusted, makes some remark that expresses his disgust,
and says:
"Read my lips. No new taxes."
Maybe if more Americans had "read between his lips" (i.e., listened to
what he said instead of concentrating on the showmanship), they would
have realized the truth:
Bush never said he would not raise taxes.
Sharon
|
206.9 | | MPGS::HAMBURGER | Take Back America | Fri Jun 15 1990 15:03 | 23 |
| What is the big deal about the First amendment?
Since flags are not specifically mentioned in the First amendment I don't see
how they can be considered in any constitutional argument.
The government should establish an appointed director of speech who
as an unelected official shall be empowered to decide which speeches have a
legitimate or sporting purpose and which ones should be banned.
I see nothing wrong with the government controling radio, TV, and Movies.
The framer's of the constitution never envisioned these things so clearly
they are not protected.
I think anyone who wishes to make a speech or any public appearance should
be required to get a permit and wait 14 days after applying for the permit
so that the government can check to see if he/she has a history of making
inflammatory speeches or not. This should be done every time he/she wishes
to make a speech or appear on radio or TV regardless of whether he/she has
been given a permit in the past.
Amos
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206.10 | I think I know some of the answers. | CAM::ARENDT | Harry Arendt CAM:: | Fri Jun 15 1990 15:10 | 49 |
|
Well this discussion really has kicked up some dust.
Is this a conversation about what government should do? Or is
it a debate about what the USA government was designed to do?
Is it about local or state or national?
Now for my opinions;
Let's start with the USA national government.
The basic purposes of the national government are;
1. To preserve the Union.
2. Provide for the common defense.
3. Protect the rights of individuals (Not groups) from the government
,from other groups and individuals.
4. To establish laws which do not conflict with the Supreme Court's
interpretation of the Constitution for anything else that we
want laws to cover.
The basic purpose of my elected representatives are;
1. To get as much of what is handed out to go to my and my state.
2. To work to enact laws and programs which they have promised which
could be percieved as transending state boundaries.
The state and local governments are similar, more accountable and
less concerned about my rights.
As you can see the federal system was designed to be weak, bloated
and ineffective due to so many conflicting interests, however the
bright side is that you will never have a King or a dictator.
As for you gun owners, Part 1 section 4 above is what allows us
to outlaw certain guns because the current Supreme court interpetation
of the right to "Bear arms" has been interpreted (since about 1870)
as the right to "Bear resonable arms". Thats why you can't own
a tank and why the NRA backed the 1929 ban on fully automatic machine
guns. If an elected local, state or federal lawmaking body determains
that a weapon is "unreasonable" and the current supreme court agrees
then it can be banned.
|
206.11 | Why don't you find out the facts before writing? | MPGS::HAMBURGER | Take Back America | Fri Jun 15 1990 16:08 | 52 |
| > <<< Note 206.10 by CAM::ARENDT "Harry Arendt CAM::" >>>
> -< I think I know some of the answers. >-
> The basic purposes of the national government are;
> 1. To preserve the Union.
> 2. Provide for the common defense.
> 3. Protect the rights of individuals (Not groups) from the government
> ,from other groups and individuals.
Correct!
> 4. To establish laws which do not conflict with the Supreme Court's
> interpretation of the Constitution for anything else that we
> want laws to cover.
Not quite!
> As for you gun owners, Part 1 section 4 above is what allows us
> to outlaw certain guns because the current Supreme court interpetation
> of the right to "Bear arms" has been interpreted (since about 1870)
> as the right to "Bear resonable arms". Thats why you can't own
> a tank and why the NRA backed the 1929 ban on fully automatic machine
> guns. If an elected local, state or federal lawmaking body determains
> that a weapon is "unreasonable" and the current supreme court agrees
> then it can be banned.
How many times do we have to re-explain this? how many people have been fooled
by the media as to supreme court rulings? did you ever look up the rulings
yourself?
There is nothing in the Second amendment about reasonable-ness.
the only ruling (Miller VS U.S. 1939) that addressed the second amendment
stated that the particular weapon (a sawed off shotgun) was *NOT* suitable
for military use and therefore not protected. in other words *ANY* firearm
suitable for military use *IS* protected and in fact is *EXACTLY* what the
framers of the constitution had in mind.
In 1929 the NRA was (and still is today) a target shooting organization
it is the *ILA* which does the political stuff.
Also in 1929 the country was in the throes of a alcohol-mania. the "war on
alcohol" had to be won. there were drive-by shootings, gangs of rival
drug-oopps I meant alcohol- pushers in the cities. the media and government
had joined forces to panic the public into believing that if we outlaw these
guns the killings will stop.
Please read history before you continue to spout the lies handed to you by the
media, that you haven't researched the truth of.
|
206.12 | Shifting focus | DEVIL::BAZEMORE | Barbara b. | Tue Jun 19 1990 19:33 | 4 |
| When Europe unifies in 1992, what new government bodies will be put in
place? What are the checks and balances in the unified government? Is
there any mention of people's rights, or is it all monetary?
|
206.13 | | SX4GTO::HOLT | Robert Holt, ISVG West | Wed Jun 20 1990 01:03 | 3 |
|
They already have a passel of expensive bureaucrats in Brussels and
Strasbourg..
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206.14 | What Jefferson thought about the purpose of government | LEDS::LEWICKE | | Wed Jun 20 1990 20:35 | 5 |
| "All men (but thats what he said) are created equal and endowed by
their creator with certain inalienable rights, among these are life
liberty and the pursuit of happiness. To preserve these rights
governments are instituted among men."
|
206.15 | simple | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Mon Jun 25 1990 21:18 | 3 |
|
government exists to create and maintain order.
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206.16 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Unless they do it again. | Tue Jun 26 1990 08:02 | 8 |
| re .15 The Third Reich created and maintained order very well. Does
it, then, qualify as a legitimate government ? Even if it was
responsible for the deaths of millions ?
To define by non-essentials is dangerous. If all a government need
do to remain legitimate is maintain order, then the government
of Red China is superb. The dictatorships around the world do great
jobs of maintaining order. The key ? Ignore the rights of individuals.
|
206.17 | I can't be a Marxist - I won't belong to any clubs,, | DELNI::POETIC::PEGGY | Justice and License | Tue Jun 26 1990 12:17 | 41 |
|
RE: last few.
I am of the opinion that goverment as we know and "love" today,
is and was a process of keeping people in their place. That is,
it was designed and supported by the priviledged class to keep
them in the priviledged class. By the means of maintaining
"law and order" where they get to define what is lawful and what
is orderful.
One does not need to look very far to see the results of this
mindset. I recently saw the movie "Romero" - I recommend it to
everyone - where a person who believed in what he was doing, and
who wanted to maintain law and order was forced into acts that
were no longer considered lawful or orderful. How was he forced
to perform these acts, one might ask? Simple, he believed in
the sancity of life, all life and he believed in the sancity of
his church to nuture life, all life. This included the people
who lived in the slums (actually they lived in garbage dumps)
and the rural poor who owned no land, no house, but had a church
that listened to their plight.
Now where does goverment fit in to this - they (members of the
priviledge class made the rules and would enforce them only
when they would benefit. To me goverment is inherently a bad
thing, and the more control it has the worse it is. Is there
an altenative? At this point I can not see one, but that does
not mean that there isn't one - (I have not begun my Phd thesis
yet, just a little of the research).
It is just possible that the problem with goverment are the ones
who get to be part of it, and influnce the decisions.
_peggy
(-)
|
Goverment of man, by man and for man
is a delusion - we are all part of the
Earth and can not control her cycles.
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206.18 | call me a radical | DECWET::JWHITE | the company of intelligent women | Tue Jun 26 1990 13:27 | 5 |
|
the question was not what was 'good' government, merely what is the
role of government. i would suggest that in its essence our
'enlightened' government is not that different from the fascists.
|
206.19 | Then and Always | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Jun 26 1990 13:57 | 18 |
| Back in the disty mists of almost-prehistory...
Government was the entity that protected the grain crop, seeing that
it was gathered and stored, meting out to everyone as they needed
it, rationing it if necessary, and trying to insure that there was
seed grain for the next planting.
Government was the entity that protected the borders of the community
against outside forces (human and `natural') which would negatively
affect the members of the community.
...
All governments are agreed that there are two crimes: Nonpayment of
taxes, and Attempting to overthrow the government. All others are
optional.
Ann B.
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206.20 | | SA1794::CHARBONND | Unless they do it again. | Tue Jun 26 1990 15:38 | 1 |
| re .19 Unless you win.
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206.21 | Heh, heh. Notice the use of "Attempting". | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Tue Jun 26 1990 15:58 | 0 |
206.23 | distant, so distant it fades away | REGENT::BROOMHEAD | Don't panic -- yet. | Wed Jun 27 1990 13:58 | 0
|