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Mavric

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Posts posted by Mavric

  1. Until Moore's LOI is signed, sealed, and delivered, nothing is final. Would LSU really try to steal him from us? Would Les Miles really do something like that to his former coordinator, Bo Pelini?

     

     

    You're damn right he would.

    Both here and on Rivals it shows Moore as "Signed"

  2. That pretty much perfectly summarizes the problem with this board at this time. Real, glaring, obvious problems with major components of this team are presented, then summarily dismissed with a few words, one-liners or quips, yet we have an 11-page (and counting) thread agonizing over every detail of the play of one player.

    Case in point: Talk about Martinez has now hijacked the Husker Extra recruiting chat ...

  3. Good post.

     

    I agree about the credit/blame issue. However, sometimes you can see heavy presidential lobbying for issues that incontrovertibly increased the deficit.

     

    Decreasing revenues while lobbying for massive new entitlement programs will lead to the sort of spike that you see in the 2009 fiscal year . . . which began on October 1, 2008.

    This is very true - Presidents definitely have input that carries weight. I was going to say this might especially be true when the president's party at least has one house but I was apparently didn't realize how infrequently the two houses are split in terms of which party has the majority - only six times in the last 112 years. And only once for more than a two year stretch.

  4. Players in the NFL:

    (-2) California 211

    (NC) Texas 181

    (+2) Florida 177

    (-1) Ohio 85

    Maybe I misunderstood your stats. I took the above quote to mean that California produces 2 fewer (-2) NFL players than the number of 4*/5* players coming from California. Texas is even (NC). And Florida produces 2 more (+2) NFL players than the number of of 4*/5* players from Florida. Does it mean something else?

    I think the number in parenthesis is the difference in rank - e.g., California is ranked two spots lower in the Rivals list than in the NFL list, Florida is two spots higher in rivals, etc.

     

     

    Edit: Apparently I don't type fast enough.

  5. I think presidents get too much blame (or credit) for how things are going than they actually deserve, especially on taxes/spending/deficits. It's really more congress that sets tax policy and enacts a budget (in theory). Yes, the president has to sign off on it but - in my admittedly limited research - I couldn't find an example of a president vetoing a budget. Perhaps someone can enlighten me.

     

    This isn't exactly the graph I was looking for but it's the only one I could find:

     

    Federal Debt as a Percentage of GDP overlaid on President/Control of House/Control of Senate

     

    I wasn't really looking for it as a Percent of GDP because that adds more variables but it also serves to somewhat inflation-adjust the numbers so maybe it's not so bad. Also it's not a perfect example because decisions made in one year can have long-term effects or may not go into effect for several years but it's an interesting overview.

     

    There are three blocks where Republicans controlled both houses for more than two years (1901-09, 1919-29 & 1995-2005). In all three, the percentage was lower at the end of the block than when it started. It's not as clear-cut on the other side of the coin because Democrats happened to control both houses at the outbreak of both World Wars and the Stock Market crash of 1929 happened during a transition. Democrats held both houses the vast majority of the time from 1933-93 so you don't get nice breaks to compare. However, some of the problems we are having today are due to the long-term effects of social programs that tend to be more Democratically-supported.

     

    Reagan had a Democratic house throughout his presidency so Democrats also had quite a bit of influence on spending policy. Even though GW Bush wasn't great on spending, the percentage was fairly flat until Democrats took control of both houses and the economy went into the crapper (no, I'm not implying a cause-and-effect relationship there).

     

    Many like to point out what happened in such-and-such a president's term but it's way to complicated on many issues to make such a black-and-white generalization.

  6. I guarantee that if LSU did end up snatching Moore from our clutches, and I wasn't here and nobody had given any fair warning about it being a possibility, that you'd be one of the ones here on NSD complaining. Either that or you'd be one of the ones with the whole "quality over quantity, this is still a great class, blah blah blah" spiel. All I'm doing is giving a realistic perspective of something that could happen, so that there won't be any surprises come Wednesday. Of course, you don't want to hear that. All you want to hear is "Moore is N."

    Realistically, if they felt like it, every single recruit could have a change of heart and decommit on Signing Day and then we'd be really screwed...

    If Cotton de-commits and goes somewhere else I'll officially be worried. :leghump:

  7. The only thing I can't figure out as far as transfers go is why they wouldn't have wanted to transfer for this semester so they could be in spring ball. I guess if they're going to have to sit a year anyway maybe it's not such a big deal or maybe they're going to give it one more spring here to see how things look ...

  8. How many pages will this thread get to before Sunday? O/U on 20

    I'll take the under, but barely. Still extremely hopeful about Devin though. Would love him to be the next guy in line after TM.

    The under was looking good but a late push might put it over the top.

     

    Hope the same is true for Devin...

  9. I just read this whole thread. If a great read ... all the ups and downs ... all the teams that came along and tried to lock of DF. You should take some time to enjoy the read. It's a great "story book". I hope what Michael Rose senses is true. But in the end ... it's a joy to hang with people like Michael Rose ... who bleed red and desire to have the :bigredn: on the side of their helmet.

     

    Keep hope alive people ... and drink your red kool-aid! :-)

    I hope you had plenty of :koolaid2: to get you through!

  10. Unfortunately most Americans have been brainwashed by our media to believe that only social issues are the litmus test between left and right, liberal and conservative. Finance and foreign policy are ignored as key issues, since both major parties are pretty similar on them.
    Maybe I'm not sure what you're including in "Finance" because there seems to be a lot of difference in where the sides think the money should come from. What are you referencing under "Finance"?

     

    Trends in tax policy and sSpending policy.

    So you don't think there is a noticeable difference on tax and spending policies?

  11. I agree and do listen to differing viewpoints. However, your point about following "mainstream views" is rendered impotent if the recent poll showing roughly 40% of Americans identifying as conservative, 30% moderate, and 22% liberal is accurate................then why is "mainstream media" out of step with "mainstream views" ?

    I would venture to wager that a good chunk of those that identify themselves as "moderate" would be more likely to lean to the "liberal" side of things.

  12. So ...

     

    Democrats trust sources that have a liberal bias.

    Republicans trust sources that have a conservative bias.

     

    This news brought to you by the democratically-affiliated polling service.

     

    We now return you to your regularly-scheduled programming ...

    My point was about epistemic closure.

    If that was your point, then I agree with you. Both sides favor hearing bias closer to their own beliefs.

     

    I wasn't trying to argue with you anyway, just not surprised by this "finding".

  13. Perhaps that is because the liberally biased sourced have been shown to be more factual.

     

    Reference?

     

     

    Unfortunately most Americans have been brainwashed by our media to believe that only social issues are the litmus test between left and right, liberal and conservative. Finance and foreign policy are ignored as key issues, since both major parties are pretty similar on them.

    Maybe I'm not sure what you're including in "Finance" because there seems to be a lot of difference in where the sides think the money should come from. What are you referencing under "Finance"?

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