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One "big change" that has had a lasting effect, though far from positive, is the "war on drugs". The Controlled Substances Act of 1970, in conjunction with the "sentencing reform" of 1986-88, which brought us the "Sentencing Guidelines" and "Mandatory Minimum Sentencing" have had a huge effect on this nation of which most people are unaware because the change has been like the frog in cold water that is slowing brought to boil. It has created a huge prison-industrial complex in which our nation, with 5% of the world's population, now has 25% of the world's prison population. We are firmly ensconced as number one in the world in percentage of population under control of the criminal justice system, and we left number two in our dust long ago. As a result of the "war on drugs" roughly 65-75% of people in jail and prison are there for drug or drug-related crimes. Individual liberties and privacy rights have been steadily chipped away by the gov't as a casualty of this "war". Our courts are clogged way beyond capacity with "drug" cases. In many urban areas, as a result of all the drug cases, (which, as criminal cases must take precedence over civil cases), a civil case must often wait at least two years to ever see the inside of a courtroom. And by leaving the drug industry in the hands of criminals, smugglers, and other black market denizens, rather than controlling, regulating and taxing, we are spending in excess of $40 billion a year on a system that is almost universally perceived as a failure. There are no less drugs available now than when we started this "war" over 40 years ago. The only difference of opinions seems to be whether to ramp it up even more, or try a completely different approach (like decriminalization, regulation, taxation).
O.K. now I'll get off my soapbox and go hop in my 968. Much more fun!
Bill
'93 Horizon Blue Metallic Cab
'58 Triumph TR3A (sold)
'06 Lexus RX400h Hybrid
Lots of guitars
(This post was last modified: 11-04-2011, 12:07 PM by
lbpesq.)
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[quote name='flash' timestamp='1320418597' post='117551']
lol - it they linked voting to the porn sites, we'd probably get a better response
[/quote]
LOL. or not. I'm not entering that booth behind a previous "voter".
I love my 968 for what it is & don't hate it for what it isn't!
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[quote name='smshirk' timestamp='1320521908' post='117606']
We are at the precipice of making sweeping changes in our society that will affect us for generations to come.
[/quote]
And just what are these changes? ... Can anyone answer just what these imminent or needed changes are? ... Nobody seems to know what changes are needed. Or more likely, the needed changes are taboo, we have our head in the sand, too fearful to acknowledge our true condition. That is why we just drift along in the same old ways.
The traditionalists long for the good old days and can't come to grips with how a country must evolve in a changing environment (e.g. the undeniable globalized environment of today).
The progressives spend more time complaining about what is wrong, and have little to offer when considering tangible changes with realizable results.
And that is why we just drift along in the same old ways. The constitution was designed to evolve, yet those responsible in Washington do nothing but posture and bicker. No wonder people don't feel that strong responsibility to vote. Note that there are in fact a number of countries that have the ability to change and evolve (e.g. Germany and China's investment in renewable energy). The core problem is that as a population we no longer know what the US stands for, what are our unifying goals (not Principles! ... Goals with a plan!)? We have none, and therefore we have no basis for making decisions. And we run the risk of becoming balkanized into groups, most likely around economic class, maybe around national origin, probably not around geography or ideology. The US has already become much more a place where every man is for himself, much less caring for the country as a whole or one's fellow man (the single exception being the 968forums); no wonder voting is seen with less importance than originally intended. We are quite fractured and discouraged, just watch, prime territory for some charismatic leader (dictator) to surface.
Roland
'93 Coupe Tip Silver on Grey, '02 911 C4S, '89 Vanagon Syncro -- (RIP: 944, 911SC, 931, MGB, VW Bug, GTO, Sprite.)
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Hi Rap, I agree, yes you are absolutely correct, huge pending problem. I interpreted the question "precipice of making sweeping changes ", as "what changes are we making", not what changes are going to happen to us. I don't see us making any significant changes, but if we don't, the changes that are affecting us are overwhelming. Here are some more current problems:
- we value entertainment more than education.
- we admire more what someone has, than what someone does.
- the concept of "jobs" is obsolete, a quaint leftover from the industrial revolution.
- we specifically decided to give away our businesses/economy to other countries (outsourcing), this is nuts, what did people expect.
- government workers have higher compensation than the average private sector worker.
- and as Bill wrote, government waste and harm, for example the war on drugs.
Roland
'93 Coupe Tip Silver on Grey, '02 911 C4S, '89 Vanagon Syncro -- (RIP: 944, 911SC, 931, MGB, VW Bug, GTO, Sprite.)
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[quote name='tamathumper' timestamp='1320543257' post='117625']
These are not generational lessons. These same issues have played to their terminus in all civilizations that came before, and they generally take hundreds of years. But they are inexorable, and they always come to the same conclusion.
In the past few centuries, we've given them new names, but they are the same fundamental flaws of humanity.
[/quote]
Good point. We will follow this idea --- Let's all agree that humanity cannot be improved, we should give up! Let us accept that the problems of the past should always be with us in the future. It is way to hard to change, hey -- my gas tank is full, let's go for a drive and get some ice cream. It has always been this way, we will just live with what is wrong.
I suggest reading Steven Pinker, "
The Better Angels of Our Nature: Why Violence Has Declined " (things do improve!)
I won't give up, I think I will continue to vote.
Roland
'93 Coupe Tip Silver on Grey, '02 911 C4S, '89 Vanagon Syncro -- (RIP: 944, 911SC, 931, MGB, VW Bug, GTO, Sprite.)