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Feb 28 2008, 04:10 PM
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Mark S. Young Group: Admin Posts: 13957 Joined: 20-August 03 From: CVG Member No.: 3 |
I heard nothing on this during the brief time I had on any non investment media, so I thought I'd offer a link to a decent memoriam
http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/washington...02/buckley.html And to also say that that man was something else. Leave his politics out. What a mind. What a wit. What a vocabulary. Not a bad fiction writer either. I gotta say, he had what appears to be a life well-lived. I only wish he could have had a little more of it and little better health toward the end. Thanks for everything, Bill. -------------------- |
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Feb 28 2008, 04:45 PM
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#2
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![]() Member Group: Traders-Talk User Posts: 525 Joined: 6-June 04 Member No.: 1945 |
No Doubt. RIP.
-------------------- NONE of what I type should be taken as financial advice.
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Feb 28 2008, 05:08 PM
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#3
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![]() Member Group: TT Member Posts: 987 Joined: 29-September 03 From: the Wastelands Member No.: 152 |
Not all of us share positive memories of his beliefs, here is a quote from just one of many who disagreed.
"The modern conservative is engaged in one of man's oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness." John Kenneth Galbraith -------------------- Please, help stamp out vibration.
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Feb 28 2008, 05:38 PM
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#4
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Member Group: TT Patron+ Posts: 7066 Joined: 10-September 03 Member No.: 44 |
Not all of us share positive memories of his beliefs, here is a quote from just one of many who disagreed. "The modern conservative is engaged in one of man's oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for a superior moral justification for selfishness." John Kenneth Galbraith Galbraith never did know much about anything. But below is a link to a story about the Buckley-Galbraith debate in 1982, where Galbraith claimed that Reagan's policies would lead to severe inflation. Need I say that inflation at the time was double digit, and at it's peak? http://www.thecrimson.harvard.edu/article.aspx?ref=346304 RIP Bill. This post has been edited by IndexTrader: Feb 28 2008, 05:40 PM |
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Feb 28 2008, 05:46 PM
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![]() Member Group: TT Member Posts: 987 Joined: 29-September 03 From: the Wastelands Member No.: 152 |
Galbraith did not know much about anything?
Typical conservative response, when you cannot change the facts that don't agree with your outlook, quickly attack the presenter. Here is a very brief biography, that clearly contradicts your preconceived idea of his "nothingness". Attack this: John Kenneth Galbraith (born 1908) was a leading scholar of the American Institutionalist school and arguably the most famous economist in the post World War II world. His views were a stinging indictment of the modern materialistic society that championed personal achievement and material well-being over public interest and needs. In spite of these views, he served as an advisor in both the American and Canadian governments from the 1930s onward. John Kenneth Galbraith was born on October 15, 1908 in southern Ontario, Canada, on the shores of Lake Erie to a farming family of Scotch ancestry. He studied agricultural economics at the Ontario Agricultural College (then part of the University of Toronto; now, the University of Guelph) and graduated with distinction in 1931. He went on to study agricultural economics at the University of California, receiving his Ph.D. in 1934 after submitting a dissertation on public expenditures in California counties. In this year he also began his long, though frequently interrupted, tenure at Harvard University, where he became an emeritus professor. Galbraith's academic career frequently gave way to public service. He worked in the Department of Agriculture during the New Deal and in the Office of Price Administration and Civilian Supply during World War II, where, according to John S. Gambs, he was "virtually the economic czar of the United States until he left in 1943" From his wartime work emerged a monograph, The Theory of Price Control (1952), which, though not widely influential, contained some of the seminal ideas of his major works. -------------------- Please, help stamp out vibration.
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Feb 28 2008, 05:57 PM
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#6
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Member Group: Traders-Talk User Posts: 1086 Joined: 22-November 03 Member No.: 582 |
board controllers posting topics that are politically related?
do as i say don't do as i do |
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Feb 28 2008, 06:34 PM
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#7
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Mark S. Young Group: Admin Posts: 13957 Joined: 20-August 03 From: CVG Member No.: 3 |
Hey, one can laud one who has passed for his accomplishments without waxing political.
And, Norton, from what I've read of Galbraith (and bear in mind that I studied economics under Jon Hughes and Joel Mokyr at NU), he's been proven wrong as well as philosophically bankrupt (IMO). I've no great respect for his work at all. Then again, if Galbraith was as entertaining and broadly talented as Bill (whom I had many core disagreements with), I'd laud him as well. But he wasn't. We're talking about Bill Buckley. De mortuis nil nisi bonum. So, anyway, a few words of appreciation about an interesting and entertaining intellectual. Leave the politics at the door. Mark -------------------- |
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Feb 28 2008, 07:06 PM
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![]() Member Group: Traders-Talk User Posts: 2390 Joined: 2-November 03 From: san jose Member No.: 481 |
Hey, one can laud one who has passed for his accomplishments without waxing political. And, Norton, from what I've read of Galbraith (and bear in mind that I studied economics under Jon Hughes and Joel Mokyr at NU), he's been proven wrong as well as philosophically bankrupt (IMO). I've no great respect for his work at all. Then again, if Galbraith was as entertaining and broadly talented as Bill (whom I had many core disagreements with), I'd laud him as well. But he wasn't. We're talking about Bill Buckley. De mortuis nil nisi bonum. So, anyway, a few words of appreciation about an interesting and entertaining intellectual. Leave the politics at the door. Mark okay Mark but if someone that i will miss much more like mick jagger or teddy kennedy kicks the bucket i expect the same courtesy ed rader -------------------- |
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Feb 28 2008, 07:12 PM
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#9
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Mark S. Young Group: Admin Posts: 13957 Joined: 20-August 03 From: CVG Member No.: 3 |
Ed,
They aren't allowed to die, I suspect. OK on Mick, no so much on Ted. Unless he suddenly develops some wicked new skills (what? It could happen!). Mark -------------------- |
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Feb 28 2008, 07:27 PM
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![]() Member Group: TT Member Posts: 987 Joined: 29-September 03 From: the Wastelands Member No.: 152 |
Sure Mark, I am quite willing to drop it, but remember it was you who started this using this forum to mourn the passing of a noted conservative. I felt your action was inappropriate forum wise, in regards to your stated policy of no political (in this case
"conservative" threads. Buckley's philosphy, as is all of conservatism, was and is so repugnant to me personally that, well, I just had to respond. In the future if you keep your support of conservatism thoughts to yourself, so will I not note the passing of any progessives, as I have honored and respected the rules regarding this. I think you owe the entire board here an apolgy for breaking your own rules, and thereby encouraging response from someone like me, who has spent a lifetime disagreeing with people like you, politically speaking. This post has been edited by norton: Feb 28 2008, 07:28 PM -------------------- Please, help stamp out vibration.
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