U.S. Economic Recovery Is Weakest Since World War II

Quote from Mav88:

You make the failed assumption that government actually knows what to spend on and isn't doing it. If economic were as simple as you make it to be then all the past failed attempts would never have been

The end of the liberal rainbow, government can make it all work, just a little more money.....
They knew where to spend it when the WPA was created. Is history forgotten? Are any reps advocating even that kind of spending?
 
Quote from Ricter:

They knew where to spend it when the WPA was created. Is history forgotten? Are any reps advocating even that kind of spending?

Is WPA still around? I didn't know that was a long term success story.

Why do you think gov't is so smart right after we got Solyndra'd?

Here is the type of waste you are advocating

<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/b8opYArPtPI" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
 
Quote from Mav88:

Is WPA still around? I didn't know that was a long term success story.

Why do you think gov't is so smart right after we got Solyndra'd?

Here is the type of waste you are advocating
What the Solyndra-phobes continue to ignore is that that bet was just one among many. Some bets have paid off massively, like the internet. What is the long term win/loss on government sponsored R&D?
 
Quote from Ricter:

What the Solyndra-phobes continue to ignore is that that bet was just one among many. Some bets have paid off massively, like the internet. What is the long term win/loss on government sponsored R&D?

Oh boy...

First, the internet was mostly developed and paid for outside government as the original wasn't useful for the larger role. Second, the original internet was not an economic investment, it was a scientific-military one. Third, it took 30 years to come to fruition. Fourth, WPA didn't invent things, they simply dug ditches.

So how much of Gov't R&D pays off? Very small percentage. I can speak with authority on that one. I have been party to many government paid for efforts and knew many scientists within gov't. A success rate at DARPA (the successor to ARPA) of 10%, just tech success and not economic or militray success, is considered real good. Nobody really knows the economic impact, but probably like NASA it is small.

The consumer market and the military market are very different. Intel won't even make military spec items.

You might say DoE and Sandia are helping, but Solyndra shows you that politics will trump science anyway in energy.
 
Quote from Mav88:

Oh boy...

First, the internet was mostly developed and paid for outside government as the original wasn't useful for the larger role.


did'nt know that. who was the original owner of the internet? who were the folks that paid for it?
 
Quote from imabadboy:

did'nt know that. who was the original owner of the internet? who were the folks that paid for it?

ARPA, but that network was not useful for what was to come.

Here's the the thing about the internet, if you want to say that nobody else would have ever thought to network computers then you don't know much about computers. It's just not that big a deal. ARPA paid stanford to do it since they were about the only folks that had computers and a need.
 
Quote from Mav88:

ARPA, but that network was not useful for what was to come.

Here's the the thing about the internet, if you want to say that nobody else would have ever thought to network computers then you don't know much about computers. It's just not that big a deal. ARPA paid stanford to do it since they were about the only folks that had computers and a need.

I thought Al Gore invented the internet.

That's what he says anyway.
 
Quote from Mav88:

ARPA, but that network was not useful for what was to come.

Here's the the thing about the internet, if you want to say that nobody else would have ever thought to network computers then you don't know much about computers. It's just not that big a deal. ARPA paid stanford to do it since they were about the only folks that had computers and a need.
You didn't happen to stumble across the recent Scientific American article on the history of the internet, did you?
 
Quote from Ricter:

You didn't happen to stumble across the recent Scientific American article on the history of the internet, did you?

no, got a link?
 
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