So Craig, it wasn't corporate people who ran NY state into the ground. It was a Progressive agenda. Corporations and the public have been taxed to death for social programs, and there's no reform. The programs are apparently too important to modify or cut back.
When we have people paying 8k in property taxes on 200k worth of home how do you justify that? When people are leaving (and taking businesses with them) they are the ones who can afford to do so. High income taxes, fees, real estate taxes, sales taxes. It's not enough to feed the beast.
They milked the cow dry.
Now what guarantee do I have that the Progressives won't do the same thing on a national basis?
There's always one more program we need regardless of affordability.
For what it's worth, from my limited familiarity with New York politics, as I think I've said, I sympathize, and we might well be able to find problems there. It's a somewhat unique environment and culture.
Liberalism can go and has gone bad. Ask Bill Moyers, at the heart of the Great Society, he'll tell you they made some big mistakes along with the good they did.
It's a larger question to get into, to look at all the specifics of New York, goodf and bad, progressive or not.
But I don't see things that generalize to the progressive movement elsewhere, and the claims I've made do not deny the risk for abuses, problems, missteps - they are accurate for what I've said.
Such as that progressives are the one major faction we can reliably look to to do major finance industry reform.
Now, maybe they'd make a mistake in that reform. But they'd do it.
It reminds me of FDR's approach in the new deal. He put togehter progressives and said come up with things to do. Some will work we'll keep, and some won't we'll get rid of. A lot of good came out of it.
What political model is going to come out of New York looking pristine and infallible?
I'm happy to look at how to prevent their own problems - while they get the problems fixed. What we're facing is big corruption from the concentrated wealth and power, and only one major faction against it.
Look at the *positions* at the national level of the progressives the last few decades - they've been right on issue after issue. What do you see there that resembles New York's problems?