Celebrate with Obama and the DNC 50 years of failure

JD Barleycorn's Avatar
They are "celebrating" LBJ's war on poverty this week. It is 50 years since the dems started helping blacks and other minorities rise up and live the American dream. It is estimated that 20 trillion, TRILLION, dollars has changed hands from the creators of wealth to the consumers of wealth. The poverty rate is almost the same as it was in 1964. So if you spend $20 trillion and change nothing then I guess by common terms it is a failure, by democratic terms it is a rousing success. The democrats have achieved their goal.



Besides, this celebration distracts from the failure of Obamacare and the upcoming fight on amnesty.
CJ7's Avatar
  • CJ7
  • 01-08-2014, 12:26 PM



your family tree ?
As ole LBJ himself said, "I will have those Ni--eras voting Democrat for the next 200 years".

http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/7700...r-the-next-200

Just look what the "Great Society" as got the Black Community.
The highest unemployment rate of any ethic group
3 out of every 4 black babies are born out of we'd lock
A vast disproportion of young Black Men in Prison
Family's herded into "Projects", which are just centralized ghettos.

Good job. And Blacks continue to vote overwhelming for Democrat Candidates.
Yssup Rider's Avatar
Thank baby Jesus for that!
As ole LBJ himself said, "I will have those Ni--eras voting Democrat for the next 200 years".

http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/7700...r-the-next-200

Just look what the "Great Society" as got the Black Community.
The highest unemployment rate of any ethic group
3 out of every 4 black babies are born out of we'd lock
A vast disproportion of young Black Men in Prison
Family's herded into "Projects", which are just centralized ghettos.

Good job. And Blacks continue to vote overwhelming for Democrat Candidates. Originally Posted by Jackie S



Lighten up dude, just cause you hate blacks.
Lighten up dude, just cause you hate blacks. Originally Posted by i'va biggen

NO DOUBT, "i've biggen" just made the stupidest comment in the history of the internet...

You are watching history, folks...
They are "celebrating" LBJ's war on poverty this week. It is 50 years since the dems started helping blacks and other minorities rise up and live the American dream. It is estimated that 20 trillion, TRILLION, dollars has changed hands from the creators of wealth to the consumers of wealth. The poverty rate is almost the same as it was in 1964. So if you spend $20 trillion and change nothing then I guess by common terms it is a failure, by democratic terms it is a rousing success. The democrats have achieved their goal.



Besides, this celebration distracts from the failure of Obamacare and the upcoming fight on amnesty. Originally Posted by JD Barleycorn
OK. What's your plan? Oh...wait....you don't have one? Because people that are poor deserve to be poor? And, because we shouldn't try to do anything to alleviate the suffering that is endemic to being poor? Because it's better to be a fuckstick jackwagon asshole who ridicules and makes fun of the opposition political parties' efforts to do something about poverty? When you and yours haven't done fucking shit and never will because you don't care about anybody except yourselves?

Does that about cover it, Admiral? Eat shit.
CuteOldGuy's Avatar
As ole LBJ himself said, "I will have those Ni--eras voting Democrat for the next 200 years".

http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/7700...r-the-next-200

Just look what the "Great Society" as got the Black Community.
The highest unemployment rate of any ethic group
3 out of every 4 black babies are born out of we'd lock
A vast disproportion of young Black Men in Prison
Family's herded into "Projects", which are just centralized ghettos.

Good job. And Blacks continue to vote overwhelming for Democrat Candidates. Originally Posted by Jackie S
Hey Timmy! If this is what your caring and concern results in, after $20 trillion, please hate me! I can't afford your kind oh "help".

The War on Poverty is over, Poverty won.

I have an idea! The government should start a war on jobs and sound economic policy! If it meets with the same success as the Wars on Drugs and Poverty, we will have a balanced budget and full employment across the board by the end of April!

Write your Representatives! Stamp out jobs and sound economics! This will be easier than I thought!
JD Barleycorn's Avatar
OK. What's your plan? Oh...wait....you don't have one? Because people that are poor deserve to be poor? And, because we shouldn't try to do anything to alleviate the suffering that is endemic to being poor? Because it's better to be a fuckstick jackwagon asshole who ridicules and makes fun of the opposition political parties' efforts to do something about poverty? When you and yours haven't done fucking shit and never will because you don't care about anybody except yourselves?

Does that about cover it, Admiral? Eat shit. Originally Posted by timpage
That's your standard for success? What people's intentions are when they do something? Nothing has changed for the poor except a higher rate of them are black than in the 60s. How about if I do a little dance and slice up a virgin to make it stop being cold? My intentions are good but the results are bad, predictably bad. After World War II unemployment was high as was poverty. Millions of men returning looking for jobs. Within 15 years poverty was much lower as well as unemployment and the federal government had done nothing. Ditto the 1920s when Calvin Coolidge handled a dramatic fall of the economy by doing nothing. The recovery was so quick that most people don't even remember that major meltdown of the stock market.

Just remember, the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Intentions count for shit. Results are what count. The blacks of this country have been economically enslaved by the democratic party.
BJerk's Avatar
  • BJerk
  • 01-09-2014, 06:54 AM
They are "celebrating" LBJ's war on poverty this week. It is 50 years since the dems started helping blacks and other minorities rise up and live the American dream. It is estimated that 20 trillion, TRILLION, dollars has changed hands from the creators of wealth to the consumers of wealth. The poverty rate is almost the same as it was in 1964. So if you spend $20 trillion and change nothing then I guess by common terms it is a failure, by democratic terms it is a rousing success. The democrats have achieved their goal.



Besides, this celebration distracts from the failure of Obamacare and the upcoming fight on amnesty. Originally Posted by JD Barleycorn
I don't believe that you have presented all the relevant facts here. The wealth of the richest Americans has gone up considerably since the war on poverty has begun. Don't Republicans consider that a successful program?
NO DOUBT, "i've biggen" just made the stupidest comment in the history of the internet...

You are watching history, folks... Originally Posted by IIFFOFRDB


No you simple fuck you just trumped mine.
JD Barleycorn's Avatar
I don't believe that you have presented all the relevant facts here. The wealth of the richest Americans has gone up considerably since the war on poverty has begun. Don't Republicans consider that a successful program? Originally Posted by Bert Jones
I don't think you understand what you just posted. The war on poverty was a complete failure from it's inception to it's non-completion. The GOP has never endorsed this program but the democrats hail it as a great victory. You can see the results; higher unemployment, higher out of wedlock births, more crime, less income, etc. This is what the democrats are celebrating and as Timmie illustrated, all because of intentions. The outcome doesn't matter, it is all about the intentions...or what they call the intentions. I, and a good many other, harken back to what LBJ said about blacks and the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Their intentions were to enslave the black population as a ready made voter base for the democratic party. Field slaves you might call them. Their job is to turn the soil, plant the seeds, and pick the votes for the DNC. Successful people don't need government to look after them or to promise them things that won't really be provided. They don't need the democratic party.
BJerk's Avatar
  • BJerk
  • 01-09-2014, 01:31 PM
I don't think you understand what you just posted. The war on poverty was a complete failure from it's inception to it's non-completion. The GOP has never endorsed this program but the democrats hail it as a great victory. You can see the results; higher unemployment, higher out of wedlock births, more crime, less income, etc. This is what the democrats are celebrating and as Timmie illustrated, all because of intentions. The outcome doesn't matter, it is all about the intentions...or what they call the intentions. I, and a good many other, harken back to what LBJ said about blacks and the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Their intentions were to enslave the black population as a ready made voter base for the democratic party. Field slaves you might call them. Their job is to turn the soil, plant the seeds, and pick the votes for the DNC. Successful people don't need government to look after them or to promise them things that won't really be provided. They don't need the democratic party. Originally Posted by JD Barleycorn
Maybe people who are successful at stripping the wealth out of the economy and paying very little money don't need help, but the rest of us do.
I don't think you understand what you just posted. The war on poverty was a complete failure from it's inception to it's non-completion. The GOP has never endorsed this program but the democrats hail it as a great victory. You can see the results; higher unemployment, higher out of wedlock births, more crime, less income, etc. This is what the democrats are celebrating and as Timmie illustrated, all because of intentions. The outcome doesn't matter, it is all about the intentions...or what they call the intentions. I, and a good many other, harken back to what LBJ said about blacks and the 1964 Civil Rights Act. Their intentions were to enslave the black population as a ready made voter base for the democratic party. Field slaves you might call them. Their job is to turn the soil, plant the seeds, and pick the votes for the DNC. Successful people don't need government to look after them or to promise them things that won't really be provided. They don't need the democratic party. Originally Posted by JD Barleycorn
As usual, you're a fucking idiot. Sorry, Admiral but lots of folks don't happen to think that the war on poverty was a failure.

The War on Poverty

Michael Sean Winters | Jan. 9, 2014 Distinctly Catholic
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Yesterday was the anniversary of President Lyndon Johnson’s State of the Union address announcing a “war on poverty.” It was Johnson’s first State of the Union Address. In President Ronald Reagan’s last State of the Union, he delivered a sentence that has become a meme in conservative, Republican circles: “We fought a war on poverty, and poverty won.” Yesterday, countless talking heads from both parties debated the value of LBJ’s war on poverty and, in both cases, exposed their own intellectual impoverishment.

To be clear, I am grateful that both parties are speaking about poverty. It is a scandal that some 46 million fellow Americans live below the poverty line and that millions more, who live just above that line, lack much in the way of opportunity to join the middle class. In recent years, Republicans and Democrats alike declined to address the issue. President Obama could say the words “middle class” dozens of times in a single speech but never mention the poor. Republicans simply dismissed the poor as “takers.” So, the fact that leaders in both parties are finally willing to address the issue is a step in the right direction.

How sad, however, that the discussion immediately descends to the most tired of tired boilerplate.



Let us start with the most important fact: The war on poverty was a great success but not a total success. Poverty rates declined precipitously. In 1967, 25.8 percent of the population lived in poverty. Today, that number stands at 16 percent. By any reasonable evaluation, that is a success. Or, take another number. Today, the poverty rate among seniors is about 9 percent. If you took away Social Security, part of the New Deal but expanded under Johnson, 44 percent of elderly Americans would live in poverty. And, another important consequence of the Great Society programs is that millions of Americans are above the poverty line who, without key government programs, would fall below it. Finally, there is the very important fact that poverty is no longer attended by the other horsemen of social distress that formerly accompanied it, malnutrition and lack of basic health care: Food stamps and Medicaid have seen to that.
Sen. Marco Rubio delivered a speech yesterday, much hyped and well delivered, but short on ideas. He wants to turn over most federal anti-poverty programs to the states, recognizing the diversity of the country and the often inefficient and ineffective methods of the federal bureaucracy. I would, in general, support such an idea if – and this is not only a big if but a threshold one – there was any sign that Republican leaders at the state or municipal level were chomping at the bit to embrace new strategies to deal with poverty. But they aren’t and, lacking that evidence, Rubio’s proposal is exceedingly unserious. I do think Rubio’s idea to replace the Earned Income Tax Credit with something less complicated warrants attention. I once tried to help some refugee friends fill out the EITC form and I could not make heads-or-tails of it.
On the other hand, Democrats are not exactly brimming with ideas either beyond defending the status quo. Ideas conceived in the 1960s certainly need re-working. If you do not believe me, look back at some of the urban planning efforts that were part of the Great Society. I remember an old National Geographic that illustrated the plan for Pennsylvania Avenue, here in Washington. A series of low, square, identical buildings were proposed to replace the admittedly ugly hodgepodge which was America’s Main Street. But, the new structures were as ugly as the old and totally impersonal, the kind of thing we associate with Stalinist realism. Mercifully, that plan was never undertaken and Pennsylvania Avenue, through a mix of private and public development, became an organic, thriving and, if not beautiful, at least not oppressive ugly, street. Many downtown neighborhoods were uprooted and replaced with similar designs. Hartford and New Haven in my home state still bear the marks of urban planners who lacked all sense of feeling for the human and the personal. Why should it not be the same for anti-poverty programs? Shouldn’t they be adjusted from their ‘60s formulae and made less impersonal?
The other key thing, little discussed in recent days, is that government action does not happen in a vacuum. Other important socio-cultural forces are at work simultaneously and can be deeply resistant to government efforts. The Great Society came towards the end of the second Great Migration of black Americans from the rural South to the urban North and West. There had been a great deal of dislocation already within black communities when the Great Society came along. LBJ’s programs had a very profound effect on poverty rates among black Americans, cutting that rate in half in one decade. Again, that is a great success story. But, the problem was, through no fault of their own, black Americans who were successful in escaping poverty wanted out of the urban ghettoes to which they had moved during the Great Migrations. Those left behind soon lacked entrepreneurial and professional role models. Other ladders into the middle class, such as education, suffered too as urban schools became a hellish nightmare. I cannot begrudge those who succeeded in escaping poverty from removing themselves from the ghetto. But, liberals must recognize that the cultural, familial breakdowns that followed among those left behind, and the ensuing socio-cultural pathologies that followed, were not the kind of ailments to be resolved with a simple federal program. Ameliorated, yes. Solved, no.
The issue of poverty should elicit an “all hands on deck” response from our political culture, but that is unlikely in polarized D.C. But, I have an idea. Addressing the issue of poverty at its root, finding new, innovative ways to help liberate people from its chains, will certainly require an active civil society. The Catholic Church is well placed not only to assist those who have been left behind, but to help those who can climb out of their dismal circumstances to do so, all the while mindful that the Church of Jesus Christ must always, and unapologetically, stand for those who will never improve their circumstances. Every diocese in the country has a Catholic Charities director. Every state has a Catholic Conference. The Church should, at the local level, convene other religious and non-profit groups, to meet with local government leaders and discuss ways to address poverty in our day, not LBJ’s. They should seek to come to some agreement about what they do need from Washington. They should ask what the business community can and will contribute. They should analyze what can be done to support families and help them stay together: Rubio was right that single parenthood is one of the chief indicators, and perhaps incubators, of poverty. Catholic school leaders and public school leaders need to abandon their sense of competition and see which type of school handles which types of students best, and divide up the work, perhaps even learning from each other in the process. Building trades should be enlisted to teach young people skills. A federally funded program to put teenagers to work in the summers, perhaps away from the stresses of urban neighborhoods, should be explored. There is plenty to be done.
Sadly, both political parties tend to prefer talking points to solutions. Maybe a Church less inclined to culture wars could actually launch the kind of cultural effort, not a war, we could all support and which Pope Francis seems to be calling for, an effort to go to the margins of our own society, encounter the poor, and, just so, to humanize ourselves and make ours a more humane society. It must be done one person at a time, but that does not mean the effort is simply a private affair. There is a role for government. There is a role for the business community. There is a role for the Church. All hands on deck. Our plans, like LBJ’s, will never succeed totally. “Total” is not a word with a happy history in politics. But, we Catholics know we must keep trying to alleviate the sufferings of the poor because we are ordered by the Lord to do so. And, if, like LBJ, we can cut the number of people in poverty in half, that will be no small achievement.