[quote name='speedracer']How would you measure that?[/QUOTE]
In ideological points. It's the same philosophy behind "if we sponsor and pass mandatory minimum/three strikes/truth in sentencing laws, then the crime rate will decline." Which proved disastrously untrue such that anybody who thinks this way is immediately discredited in my view as a threat to empiricism, and, thus, reality.
I think we should test welfare recipients for lottery tickets, budweiser, sports illustrated and pizza hut if we actually want to get to the root of the problem.
In all seriousness, this is coming at a suspicious time. Now that unemployment is rising, we're getting a whole new class of people applying for government subsidies. This is just a method of denying government aid to those who have lost their jobs in the past 18 months, while we pat their bosses on the back for $165 million in bonuses.
As a matter of fact...
[quote name='Ruined']Fantastic idea. There are a ton of people who take their check and blow it on illegal drugs. Hopefully this will weed (pardon the pun) those people out of the system.[/QUOTE]
[quote name='Ruined']While it may cost more in the short run, in the long run it would save a bundle as it encourages more responsible usage of the limited money you receive.[/QUOTE]
TAKE AWAY THEIR MONEY! THEY'RE LEECHES ON SOCIETY! TEST THEM! ASK QUESTIONS! MAKE THEM PROVE THEY NEED IT!
Meanwhile, in the alternate universe vs forum (and, by alternate universe, I mean "yesterday" and "here"):
[quote name='Ruined']I think the "outrage" from this event stems from the primary people receiving said bonuses were in the same dept as the ones partially responsible for some of the poor decisions by AIG. I say partially because the government also shares blame not only in their handling of Freddie Mac/Fannie Mae but also over the many years of their actions which partially led to the predictament we're in now.
Granted the bonuses look fishy. But then again, it is sorta scary that the govt can step in and take away your check (even if undeserved).
Finally, I see many post like these CEOs are the big elite moneymakers in our society. While a select few are, most of their salaries pale in comparison to that of the average Hollywood star/sports star. Should the government step in and pay back our season tickets if our team goes without winning a game using the salaries of players on said underperforming team? Should an actor be taxed at 50% if his movie tanks and it costs the studio bigtime? Obviously those situations are different than what is going on with AIG since you are dealing with entirely private companies and the gov't now owns a stake in AIG + the taxpayers are paying for it, but for the actual workers in said company it very much may feel like the same thing.
Also, from my experience when the government gets involved generally things get worse, not better. I see Geithner's massive oversight proposals as quite scary, as a result.[/QUOTE]
DON'T TAKE THEIR MONEY! WHAT A WASTE OF TIME! THEY'RE NOT RICH BECAUSE THEY'RE NOT A-ROD!
Dude, you're absolutely

ing shameless, or absolutely

ing pathetic. Your pick. Special bonus for you: you can pick both if you want.