(Part 2) Best products from r/Republican

We found 22 comments on r/Republican discussing the most recommended products. We ran sentiment analysis on each of these comments to determine how redditors feel about different products. We found 49 products and ranked them based on the amount of positive reactions they received. Here are the products ranked 21-40. You can also go back to the previous section.

Top comments mentioning products on r/Republican:

u/tagus · 5 pointsr/Republican

>IMO, conservative = social + fiscal + constitutional. And really in a cascading order.

It's a lot more general than that, actually. To paraphrase Roger Scruton, a conservative is someone who thinks that there are some things (could be in life, in family, in government, in finance, or whatever) that not only should be protected in general but that they need to be protected because there are always people who want to change those things for the worse.

edit-- so a "social conservative" is just someone who feels that way about most social issues.

u/teerrioo · 2 pointsr/Republican
    • -
      Exxon earns tremendous returns on the money it invests,

      far better than any of its major competitors.

      So why not build shareholder wealth by investing more than $20 billion a year?

      The constraint isn't money, it's people:

      "You don't just walk out on the street and hire an Exxon Mobil engineer or geoscientist or researcher. "

      He could fund more projects, but he doesn't have enough qualified people to manage them.

      For virtually every company, the scarce resource today is human ability.
u/Starrfx642 · 1 pointr/Republican

Actually, the stock market crashed because the housing market crashed. The housing market crashed because the government propped up ridiculously low interest rates on loans because they wanted 'everyone to have affordable housing.' The problem is, people with no money to buy houses, bought houses, because the government forced banks to have super low interest rates. But when the people couldn't pay, the market went bust. When that happened, the stocks plummeted.

Creating artificial 'opportunity' is a bad idea, and only messes things up.


If any of what I said didn't make sense, I suggest this book: Meltdown: A free market look at why the stock market crashed

u/[deleted] · -2 pointsr/Republican

You're a whiny fucktard. Don't go around whining about information sources when you won't even try to Google any real information. Romney's entire economic plan has been available for free on the Internet for over a year now.

http://www.amazon.com/Believe-America-Romneys-Economic-ebook/dp/B005LEY5Q0/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1346800330&sr=8-1&keywords=mitt+romney

u/novvva · 1 pointr/Republican

I dislike images with text, but the story check out.

Amazon #1 in Political Philosophy

u/groovyfinch · 5 pointsr/Republican

Addressing your "better alternative" statement: I'm starting to think that America needs to create a system that can incarcerate the mentally ill and drug addicted for short-term evaluation and treatment, leading to mandatory long-term treatment when necessary.

My city is overrun by drug-abusing and mentally ill homeless people. Part of this is due to some very stupid propositions voters have approved over the past few years, but much of it is due to the fact that there is no way to compel people to get treatment for these disorders. As a result, they commit petty crimes, squat illegally on public land, create unsafe and unsettling public areas, and continue to suffer under their own illness (be it drug addiction, schizophrenia, or any number of other conditions).

America used to have an institutional culture that was set up to care for patients long-term. These institutions had farms and were somewhat self-sustaining. They gave patients jobs and a sense of purpose. Obviously, there were abuses that we could work to prevent. But there are many Americans who need that level of support.

There's a book about the old system that I found very interesting.

u/J-Mech · 23 pointsr/Republican

Bill Cosby has been saying the same for years now. Unfortunately Cosby has always had difficulty laying his argument out in such a straight forward and easy to digest manner. His book Come on, People:On the Path from Victims to Victors takes some patience to read but gives statistics for this argument.

u/IIRC · 1 pointr/Republican

> no one knows or cares who he is.

Arrogant Millennials only know about the "The Apprentice".

However, many adults have known about Trump for 30 years or so.

For example, the bestselling "Art of the Deal" was published way back in 1987.

u/LWRellim · 1 pointr/Republican

All parents of kids in public schools (Kindergarten and above these days... yes I said Kindergarten!) absolutely MUST read a book called:

You're Teaching My Child What?: A Physician Exposes the Lies of Sex Ed and How They Harm Your Child

Just make certain you take some anti-nausea pills first (oh, and maybe a valium or two as well).

u/FixPUNK · 3 pointsr/Republican

Don Watkins and Yaron Brook are coming out with a book this month attacking the Left's "Income inequality" issue. I pre-ordered it because I'm 100% sure this is going to be a major topic from the Democrats in the General Election.

Equal Is Unfair: America's Misguided Fight Against Income Inequality
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B015CKO1DY/ref=dp-kindle-redirect?ie=UTF8&btkr=1