misterman
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I never called you a liar.
Okay, then declare right now that you have no reason to believe my Amtrak story isn't true.
I never called you a liar.
The complaint was about the ability of METRO to take care of its customers. I call that incompetence.
Okay, then declare right now that you have no reason to believe my Amtrak story isn't true.
Huh? If you oppose tax money going to some private companies, you should oppose it for all.
Okay, then declare right now that you have no reason to believe my Amtrak story isn't true.
There's no reason to believe or disbelieve.
I don't believe its true. :shrug:
Then drop the subject.
Then you were a liar when you said you weren't calling me a liar.
Go away, troll. That's the last I'll speak of this on this thread. You and the rest have infected enough threads already. Substance only.
Droning on and repeating ad nauseum the same thing in a new thread is not debate.
Uhm I thanked a post of yours and applauded your change of attitude. It seems it may have been premature.....
Like the other thread, your entire premise is bunk. TEA Party members have never been for no spending. And furthermore, If thier tax dollars are paying for something why would they NOT use it?
It's like saying they shouldn't use roads since you know the state paves them. It's a silly argument, twice now.
Uhm I thanked a post of yours and applauded your change of attitude. It seems it may have been premature.....
Like the other thread, your entire premise is bunk. TEA Party members have never been for no spending. And furthermore, If thier tax dollars are paying for something why would they NOT use it?
It's like saying they shouldn't use roads since you know the state paves them. It's a silly argument, twice now.
“These individuals came all the way from Southeast Texas to protest the excessive spending and growing government intrusion by the 111th Congress and the new Obama administration,” Brady wrote. “These participants, whose tax dollars were used to create and maintain this public transit system, were frustrated and disappointed that our nation’s capital did not make a great effort to simply provide a basic level of transit for them.”
A spokesman for Brady says that “there weren’t enough cars and there weren’t enough trains.”
I tend to agree with your point about the premise. The premise is idiotic. This notion that one's views are either all or nothing with no room for exception or compromise else, they are dubbed a "hypocrite" is not reality. I seem to recall the outcry when Bush stated pre Iraq war "Either you're with us or against us" and the outcry of such a simple view being applied to a very complex and long standing issue as 10 years of no-fly over Iraq after the first invasion.
In the last thread it basically came down to everyone who didn't agree being called a coward by the OP poster.
For any non-trolls on this thread, here's what Rep. Brady wrote and a spokesman said:
Having too few cars and trains is a spending issue, not a management issue. Metro simply can't afford to run more trains on weekends. It would lose money, unless it hiked up fares significantly.
So either the Tea Partiers need to pay MORE in taxes for the system, which is safe to say most would oppose, or they need to pay more (alot more) in fares, which everyone would also have to pay.
You disqualify your first suggestion since you already identified it's NOT a spending issue, so why then would an option be to pay MORE taxes to the system for management? That doesn't make sense.
The question is, if a special event was held --- say a million man march for example, and public transit was going to be burdened, what management request/requirement would need to be made to add more cars? It's safe to say that more cars would not need to be purchased, just added for that special occasion. If there are special costs needed for labor, time, expenses or fuel --- what are those costs and who would need to pay them and in what method? Fares? A one time fee?
Where's Amtrak on this as I'm sure this is not the first time that an event caused the trains to be full.
And second, people will complain about anything, so complaining that there were not enough cars is not hypocritical, as the tax payers do not have a say in how their tax money is spent other than who they vote for in their districts or states as representatives.
Why is it over the top? People whine and complain about everything that they feel isn't up to their standard. Whining is a global human/sociological issue not just relegated to Tea Party members.I'm not saying there is no room for exception or compromise.
I don't have any problem with them riding Metro, just the idea that they whine about the service. But Amtrak? That's just over the top.
Lack of credibility and a lack of proof for someone pushing so hard to try to be believable has a negative effect. Name calling is a sign of weakness in all cases.Absolutely false. I called anyone who simply denied that I saw a tea partier at Amtrak a coward. Anyone is welcome to disagree with me about the meaning of it.
Absolutely false. I called anyone who simply denied that I saw a tea partier at Amtrak a coward. Anyone is welcome to disagree with me about the meaning of it.
Why is it over the top? People whine and complain about everything that they feel isn't up to their standard. Whining is a global human/sociological issue not just relegated to Tea Party members.
Name calling is a sign of weakness in all cases.
You're correct, I reversed it.I don't understand what you mean. I said the service issue for Metro is a spending issue.
Metro does often add more cars for special events. I don't know if it did for this one. I think, but I'm not sure about this, that sometimes the organizers pay Metro for the additional service. But just adding trains can still lose money, since the whole system has to run that day even though people coming to the event aren't using the whole system to full capacity. That's a money-losing proposition for Metro if they only rely on fares to cover it.
If it's justifiable and presented to the organizers as choice - the organizers can either pay or find alternatives. Either way, complaints will occur.Maybe they should just hike up fares for special events, but I can imagine the reaction to that.
Probably or did? You're one for fact... speculating they lost money may be accurate but perhaps on all events they lose money, or not.And they probably lost money on it too.
I'm saying people have no say in how their tax money is spent other than by voting for a representative or in a voting referendum. Politicians collect tax money and spend it as they see fit which is not always in agreement with the majority of their constituents.You're saying people have no representation except for their representation?
Free speech and speaking out about how tax money is spent is not the same as affecting how it's actually spent. As we saw with the Health Care bill, it was and still is unpopular - yet town hall meetings, rally's and free speech did not change it's passing. Taxpayers also cannot just wake up one day and start lobbying, but they can attend rallies.And of course taxpayers have a say about how their money is spent. They can lobby for it - or go to Tea Party rallies.
Not over the top at all and not even close to hypocrisy.But this is a particularly egregious hypocrisy. To start a whole movement with rallies and things, complaining about the government spending tax money on private company bailouts and such, and then using a similar company to get to the rally? Over the top.
No good reason is subjective - no good reason to you because you're at the end of the criticism and lack of credibility. You lose each time you call someone a name. Even the most basic internet poster views this as pwnage.Denying what someone says for no good reason other than it is inconvenient to you, thereby implying that they are lying, is a sign of weakness.
Not over the top at all and not even close to hypocrisy.
Why not? What is the difference?
Non-substance ignored.
The complaint was mistaken. The inability of Metro to take care of its customers is directly linked to it's lack of a dedicated tax revenue stream.