How the World might look like in 2017?

I wouldn't myself consider the ACA a highlight of the Obama Presidency, nor can I blame its defects on Obama alone. He had help from those in both parties who were bought by the vested interests. By the time it passed, the most effective cost containment measure had been thoroughly wrung out of it. And leaving McCarran Ferguson intact meant that the originally-intended competition among insurers had no hope of working well. It is unrealistic to have expected Obama to veto the Bill as finally passed, but that's what he should of done. Had he, he would have called attention to the deceit of those intent on ruining the legislation.
you may be right,but ACA is the one thing you can say he definately got done, for good or ill. And IMHO that is the thing to watch in 2017. Don't let it just become another government bottomless pit.

And just for fun, those us us that are right wing nutcases are also enjoying watching the DOJ treatment of Hillary and also the IRS.

Cuba and Iran although today are quite unpopular should have been done a long time ago. I go by the 80% rule. 80% of all Cubans and Iranians are just like me and have the exact same problem of 20% running their government.
 
Thank you for reading it. My own view is that Obama's single most important achievement, and the one that made his foreign policy initiatives possible, was his decision to break from standard responses and practice. We don't yet know how these initiatives will work out. It will take a number of years for that, but I remain hopeful. With time, I believe Obama has become more of a realist. He now seems to have accepted the limitations and downside of conventional military action. He plainly wanted to avoid another Iraq-like fiasco.

You've identified three world events that occurred during Obama's Presidency where the NATO Nations might have conceivably intervened earlier and with much more presence. Even though the results in these instances are not as we would have liked, it isn't clear at this point that the decisions made were not the best that might have been made, given the information, and assessments of risk and probability of success. We live in a complicated world. Ideally we will always choose well educated, experienced, psychologically stable and well balanced leaders, and then trust them to make the best decisions. We don't always to that, and that is the downside of our particular way of choosing our leaders.
I really appreciate your comments. I'm starting to appreciate Obama. Especially before the elections this year, which will probably be a choice between two evils.
 
whatever, 80% of Iranians are just like me. They like their old time religion. It gives them strength when everything man does fails. But the world works on money.

I've about given up watching on the 3 channels how politics works.

But if you switch the the Science Channel, you will see and hear Milton Friedman explaning how things have so far always worked.

Not much difference between light and algae. You need both of them to keep the thing going.

Too much light, too much algae. Too little light, not enough algae.

You need both in balance to keep it all going.
 
We are having the centenary of the Irish rebellion. Now here is an object lesson for all leaders of how not to suppress dissent. British troops squashed the rebellion by force. The leaders were caught and executed. End of story the Brit leaders thought but it wasn't. The cause has continued up to this day.
Exactly the same is happening in Turkey. Ankara tries to put the Kurdish rebellion down by force. It won't work. It would be much better all round if:-
1. It had never been allowed to come to force being applied. The UK has learnt this valuable lesson in the case of Scotland. Gave them local govt and now tax control. For Turkey it would be better imho of having a friendly neighbour than a civil war. Obvious really !
2. If force is decided on then it has to be applied brutally and totally as the Russians did in Chechnya to have any chance of success.
 
We are having the centenary of the Irish rebellion. Now here is an object lesson for all leaders of how not to suppress dissent. British troops squashed the rebellion by force. The leaders were caught and executed. End of story the Brit leaders thought but it wasn't. The cause has continued up to this day.
Exactly the same is happening in Turkey. Ankara tries to put the Kurdish rebellion down by force. It won't work. It would be much better all round if:-
1. It had never been allowed to come to force being applied. The UK has learnt this valuable lesson in the case of Scotland. Gave them local govt and now tax control. For Turkey it would be better imho of having a friendly neighbour than a civil war. Obvious really !
2. If force is decided on then it has to be applied brutally and totally as the Russians did in Chechnya to have any chance of success.
War is normal Peace is rare
 
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