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No, but if he was the fiscal hawk he claims to be, don't you think he would have voted with Cantor et al? Otherwise, it is another tax and spend, while belittling spending, republican.
For the record, on this issue, both sides suck the big one. |
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Got it. Check. Ryan is a fraud, and a big fat liar, and a liberal in disguise. How could I have been so stupid? Bryan, how exactly do conservatives suck the big one on this? They are in the minority. They didn't have the ability to force anything into the bill that the Senate Democrats weren't going to approve. They called for meaningful entitlement reform, and the Democrats said no. |
Because both sides played this as a political card, rather than work towards a solution that would have involved more compromise. this 'mentally disordered' liberal wanted to see a more balanced approach to spending. Instead they waited until the last minute and just kicked the can 2 months down the road.
Ryan is a hypocrite on spending, he talks against spending, but then is first in line writing letters asking money for his state. Does it make him a bad person, no, it makes him a good Politician... |
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Who is this 'they' that you refer to? Again, the GOP doesn't control the Senate or the Executive branch. Bryan, please tell me what you think would have happened, if the GOP-controlled house passed a bill that had more cuts? The Democrat-controlled Senate would have rejected it, and if somehow that failed to happen, Obama would have vetoed it. The conservatives offered a balanced approach leading up to the elections last November, and the country resoundingly rejected their ideas. We reap what we sow. "rather than work towards a solution that would have involved more compromise" Anyone who understands 5th grade math, knows that a political compromise won't fix the problem. When you factor in the unfunded costs of SS and Medicare, our debt is north of $50 trillion. There's no ambiguity in how we need to address that. We need massive, painful cuts. When Paul Ryan suggested a step in that direction, your fellow liberals made a commercial showing him pushing an old lady off a cliff. That's what causes gridlock, that's what prevents any meaningful legislation. "Ryan is a hypocrite on spending, he talks against spending, but then is first in line writing letters asking money for his state." Currently, Paul Ryan is a congressman representing a district in Wisconsin. His job is to represent their interests. Has Ryan funded a lot of wasteless pork projects to send money back to his district? I have no idea. Since you're so sure, maybe you could back up your statement. His current job is to take care of his constituents. That doesn't mean he screws everyone else to make his constituents rich, but his responsibility to his constituents is greater than his responsibility to you and me. Ryan stuck his neck out when he proposed cuts to Medicare that amounted to a few trillion in savings. I haven't seen anyone else stick their neck out like he did. Your side attacked him for it. And now you hold him accountable because he didn't do what you wanted him to do? |
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What has Pelosi ever done, that showed that kind of intellectual courage? She's a pro-union nut, who owns hotels that are not allowed to unionize. She claims to be Catholic, yet she has never met an abortion she didn't like. She condemned waterboarding, then it was proven that she signed off on it before it happened. Paul Ryan and Nancy Pelosi aren't distinguishable? Then neither are Rachael Maddow and Kate Upton. |
So, with the deal the Bush tax cuts have been made "permanent" for 99.4% of those that received them. And there is a big sigh of relief that the tax side of fixing the fiscal cliff nonsense has supposedly been accomplished. I guess that means that the Bush tax cuts were NOT only for the rich and that they were NOT the cause of the recession as many shouted. The amount of taxes to be collected from the .6 of a percent of taxpayers left won't amount to enough to matter much in significantly lowering the deficit and certainly not the debt. And, actually, with the new spending that is to come, the tax raise will not only be insignificant toward deficit/debt reduction, the deficit/debt will rise. So, apparently the fiscal problem IS spending not "revenue." If nothing else, at least that has been established.
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Again the both voted for this current measure. I guess your mind missed that yet again. Neither are different from one another just like a dog is a dog. |
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-spence |
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with a checkbook buying everything in sight. They still aren't mature or smart enough to know that money in the checking account is needed to pay for it. Overdrawn, no problem, the Children of the future will pay for their candy. Obama loves it, everybody gets a lollypop now as he makes all fair and equal on our Children's and Grandchildren's dime. |
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-spence |
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The GOP set out a negotiation position based on an absolute belief that any tax increases were off the table. At the end of the day, they folded and got nearly nothing in return. Ultimately I think this will be good for the GOP. To rebound they have to hit bottom and while I'm not sure this was it it's getting close. -spence |
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University of Chicago...no way? no literary hook, no tongue-in-cheek, this is his MO...just the same vermin that seem to be around every corner these days :uhuh: humiliation Spence?.....I'd imagine more frustration from having to deal with dishonest, destructive psychopaths :uhuh: |
I have to agree with Spence, the GOP was humiliated. They have no back bone . We will see in a couple months if they are as corrupt as the Dems. For now believe they are .
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what would you have had them do?...I think we knew that this was a no win from the start....
so if they aren't successful getting spending cuts in a couple of months...they are as corrupt as the dems? what leverage do they have ? |
now we have the debt ceiling and sequestration in the next 60 days to argue about with a new Congress.
Oh and FEMA relief for Sandy, way to go our elected officials. Both sides lost, the American people lost |
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And they can stand up for this countries future in a couple months . Some of them will Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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...it's dispicable, it's destructive and it does nothing in the long run but add more layers to the bureaucracy, increase out indebtedness and hasten our collapse....Spence for some reason applauds this, mocks the only people in the room who object and acts as though this is some kind of game( I don't know if you caught the CSPAN Democrat press conference on Monday but it was nauseating, smug and frankly frightening that we have people like this determining the future of our country) where we're simply keeping score to see who can come out on top in a negotiating tournament......you can't win negotiating with liars or crazies, and we're dealing with both aided by a complicit mainstream media propoganda machine.....I guess I'm saying...don't get your hopes up...expect more "humiliation"....mockery and humiliation are an important component of the Progressive playbook, expect the people that you are "counting on" to be further villified and marginalized and "humiliated" for the next two months....you can blame republicans for not jumping in front of the bullet...I'll reserve my ire for the lunatics that are driving the train and giving you the finger ......great to met Buckman Jr. by the way....:) as of the 1st...we are out of money... NEW YORK (CNNMoney) It's official: U.S. debt reached its legal borrowing limit Monday, giving Congress about two months before it must raise the debt ceiling or risk causing the government to default on its bills and financial obligations. "I can confirm we will reach the statutory debt limit today, Dec. 31," a Treasury Department official said Monday. A bipartisan fiscal cliff deal passed by the Senate early Tuesday and awaiting a vote in the House did not address the debt ceiling issue. As expected, Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner had submitted a letter to Congress on Monday saying he had begun a "debt issuance suspension period" that would last through Feb. 28. That means Treasury will employ a series of "extraordinary measures" so it does not exceed the debt limit, currently set at $16.394 trillion. Such measures include suspending the reinvestment of federal workers' retirement account contributions in short-term government bonds. By taking those steps, Treasury can buy about $200 billion of headroom. That normally can cover about two months' worth of borrowing, although continuing uncertainty about tax rates and spending make it hard to determine precisely how long the extraordinary measures will last. |
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never mind..I Googled it...Obama Catch Phrase..... (which means it means nothing) primarily and maybe exclusively used regarding "spending cuts" from what I can see...which we know never materialize.....I like Obama's "Balanced Approach" to Christmas Vacation Spending ....... "shared sacrafice" and all of that...... |
The Republican Party has problems Scott. Being fiscally conservative,wanting a budget, protecting our borders, defending the Constitution, Defending the unborn and the sanctity of marriage and expecting those that can work to support their families to work used to be the norm for republicans . Now you're crazy right-winger if you defend those institutions. Stick to your values don't compromise. Brown has become a Republican in name only. No different than Olympia Snow
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Christie Craving Pork-Filled Sandy Bill Jan 2, 2013 • By DANIEL HALPER New Jersey governor Chris Christie, a Republican, blasted Speaker of the House John Boehner for ending the congressional session before voting on the Hurricane Sandy relief bill. "I called the Speaker four times last night after 11:20 and he did not take my calls," said Christie, who said Congress had not delivered on the aid needed to clean-up after the hurricane and Boehner had avoided giving him answers as to why. "There’s no reason for me to believe anything they tell me, because they’ve been telling me stuff for weeks. And they didn’t deliver." But one of the big objections to the bill was that Senate Democrats had filled it with pork. In fact, "Democrats expanded the legislation during a mark-up to include not just areas affected by Sandy, but also to provide money for 'storm events that occurred in 2012 along the Gulf Coast and Atlantic Coast within the boundaries of the North Atlantic and Mississippi Valley divisions of the Corps that were affected by Hurricanes Sandy and Isaac,'" we reported previously. The expansion of the bill was a way to provide a financial incentive for senators from red states--"two Republicans senators from Alabama, Mississippi, and Texas, and the one Republican senator from Louisiana"--to vote for the bill. "The Sandy kickbacks provide an incentive for those Republicans to vote on the bill," we wrote. ..................... this is great Purcell: Isn’t this another example of reckless politicians exploiting an emergency to fund pet projects and pork? Deep Mole: Pet projects? Pork? There is no pork in the president’s proposal. Purcell: You’re nuts. As this bill worked its way through the Senate before Christmas, Democrats slipped in all kinds of non-emergency goodies. Then they offered more goodies to Republicans to win their support. Deep Mole: Goodies? Purcell: Why does the bill include $2 million to repair roof damage at Smithsonian buildings in Washington, D.C.? Deep Mole: The Smithsonian is a national treasure that Sandy victims may one day visit. We must make sure they are not traumatized by leaky museum roofs! Purcell: Nice try, my friend. Why does the emergency bill include $336 million for Amtrak-related expenses? Deep Mole: Amtrak is a common mode of transportation for New York residents to travel to Washington and go to the Smithsonian. We must make sure Sandy victims are not traumatized by broken-down trains. Purcell: You are clever. Then explain why the emergency bill includes $8 million to buy new cars for federal agencies. Deep Mole: Many federal agencies are assisting Sandy victims. They need new cars from government-owned General Motors to drive to the areas where government services are most needed. Purcell: You’re good. Then explain why the bill includes $150 million for fisheries in Mississippi and Alaska. Deep Mole: Hurricane victims are known to work very hard cleaning up their messy homes and burning excess calories. It is essential they have access to high-protein American fish! Purcell: Then explain how $4 million for repairs at the Kennedy Space Center has anything to do with a hurricane in the Northeast. Deep Mole: The John F. Kennedy Space Center has launched many historic flights into space, bringing inspiration and hope to millions of Americans. Aren’t inspiration and hope what Sandy victims need most? Purcell: Not bad, my friend, but this waste is yet another example of our politicians “not letting a good crisis go to waste.” Our country has almost $16.3 trillion in debt. We are accumulating additional debt at the rate of $150 million an hour — yet the gravy train keeps rolling. Our political leaders are out of control. Deep Mole: They are? Purcell: Yes, the Taxpayers for Common Sense explain that the federal government has established a clear definition of what an “emergency” is to determine which incidents or events are worthy of federal relief. Emergency spending should only support something that is necessary, sudden, urgent, unforeseen and not permanent. Those are the rules. Deep Mole: Rules? The Senate has not passed a budget in more than three years. There are no longer any rules. In our republic the only thing that can stop out-of-control politicians from spending recklessly are the voters — and a majority of them no longer care about what we waste money on, so long as they get their cut. Purcell: Well, if the pork-laden version of the Sandy bill passes the Senate, the only hope is that the Republican House will do its job and strip out the waste. It is called checks and balances. Deep Mole: So naive. If Republicans in the House do anything to hold up the bill, the president will tar them for withholding assistance to the victims of Sandy and the media will saturate the airwaves with images of the obliteration Sandy caused. Dumb Republicans can’t win for losing. ——— |
Thank you Scott, that is GREAT.
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True that Scott
Btw the print was beautiful. Thanks again Posted from my iPhone/Mobile device |
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Jefferson would have agreed with you to the extent that, as he wrote in an 1816 letter "Some men look at constitutions with sanctimonious reverence, and deem them like the arc of the covenant, too sacred to be touched. They ascribe to the men of the preceding age a wisdom more than human, and suppose what they did to be beyond ammendment." It is not that those who have followed have been inept. They have been too ept. They have "interpreted" and sometimes ammended with a different purpose than that for which the Constitution was written. The original intent was optimal individual freedom, especially from central tyranny. The progressive intent has been to transfer that freedom from the individual to the government. So the interpretations and ammendments have made the government stronger and the individual weaker, more dependent on the strength of government. Though Jefferson did not see the Constitution as "perfect" which would be impossible for fallible men to create, he believed in ammendment not abandonment. He even recommended that it be periodically ammended to fit future generations. But he saw the structure of governement in the Constitution as one to be continued "so that it may be handed on, with periodic repairs, from generation to generation, to the end of time, if anything human can so long endure." So, when Seidman ends with "If even this change is impossible, perhaps the dream of a country ruled by 'we the people' is impossibly utopian. If so, we have to give up on the claim that we are a self governing people who can settle our disagreements through mature and tolerant debate. But before abandoning our heritage of self-government, we ought to try extricating ourselves from constitutional bondage so that we can give real freedom a chance" he is speaking of government's freedom to rule with expedient and efficient discussion and opinion of "experts" not the citizen's freedom from government to rule as it wishes. What he advocates, implicitly, is rule by men, not rule of law. He is an example of how law schools have produced judges who rule progressively rather than constitutionally. And the irony is that he doesn't seem to know how successful this has been. He talks about abandoning the Constitution as if it were the problem. The Constitution has already been abandoned bit by bit so that it is barely hanging on with the thread of what is left. The fiscal chaos to which he attributes the cause as clingling to constitutional formalities is none of that--it is the disobedience to the structure and intent of the Constitution to reign in the very extravagance that the Federal Government now has the power to exert. And the regulatory "experts" that have been spawned will continue to cast an over-arching web of control over us--for our own good of course. But it is they who have the power now, not us. And, contrary to his "If we acknowledged what should be obvious--that much constitutional language is broad enough to encompass an almost infinitely wide range of positions--we might have a very different attitude about the obligation to obey," rather the almost infinitely wide range of positions are not expressed or commanded by constitutional language. What is circumscribed in the Constitution is that various types of positions are to be legislated, enforced, or adjudicated by various branches of gvt. so long as those types fit into the realm of enumerated powers. Types of positions which are not circumscribed by the enumerations or by the limitations of power granted to those branches are the province of the states or the people to debate or regulate. So-called problems of "interpretation" arise, usually, when legislators and/or judges wish to make laws/policies/positions fit the Constitution even when they don't. The logic and law must be twisted and contorted into positions that are barely recognizable by the concocted definitions that purport to describe them. The jurisprudence of constitutional disobedience has always been the wilful twisting, if not outright lying, of concepts--legal, moral, or social--to make legislation appear to fit constitutional construction. And they use various progressive judicial philosophies. Seidman says "the two main rival interpretive methods, 'originalism' (divining the framer's intent) and "living constitutionalism' (reinterpreting the text in light of modern demands), cannot be reconciled." But the two rivals are more complex. Originalism is accompanied by formalism, textualism, strict construction, intent, as means to apply the actual constitution as written. "Living constitutionalism" is a hodge-podge of several methods of "interpretation" concocted by progressive theorists to escape from the actual Constitution and make of it whatever the judges wish--such theories as Monumentalism, Instrumentalism, Realism, Cognitive Jurisprudence, Universal Principles of Fairness, Rule According to Higher Law, Utilitarian Jurisprudence, Positivist Jurisprudence, Sociological Jurisprudence--theories that the Founders would have considered arbitrary whims of personal judgment and destructive to constitutional law-- are used to accomplish a "living Constitution" that bears little resemblance to the written one. Such is the state of modern, progressive jursprudence which has effectively disobeyed the Constitution, such is the method taught in most universities and colleges. Apparently, Seidman doesn't recognize that what is utopian, is not a government of "We the People," nor one "of, by, and for the People," but one of "Us the Beneficent Government--of, by, and for the Government." He doesn't recognize that the disobedience he advocates is, for the most part, the current state of affairs, so he can't connect our broken system of government to that state of affairs and must then attribute it to a fictional over-concern for sticking to the Constitution. |
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Can anyone tell me what is bad about working within a budget, following the Constitution, limiting an influx of immigrants to what we can afford, defending the sanctity of life, the stability of marriage and working to support a family with all the self-esteem and independence that goes with it??? I doubt it. but I am always ready to listen. |
Good read on bailouts related to the fiscal cliff
Secret and Lies of the Bailout | Politics News | Rolling Stone |
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It's a lot easier to hurl insults than it is to tell you what's so wrong with the notion that we not bankrupt ourselves, or why Osama Bin Laden has more of a right to live than an unborn baby. |
Now it seems that those in-bred, trailer-trash hicks in Texas somehow have lowered unemployment to 6.2%, and they have a budget surplus of $8 billion. This, in a state that spends a fortune on services for penniless Mexican immigrants. I guess it turns out that you don't need a massive government infastructure to have lower unemployment.
Connecticut is going broke, Texas has more money (and lower unemployment) than they know what to do with. And here in CT, our high and mighty liberal legislature looks down their noses at those right-wing hicks in Texas. And we're going broke. Obviously oil has a whole lot to do with that. But it's not everything. The typical response would be to say "it's easy for Texas to have a surplus, they have lots of oil". If that's true, why are 'we' (meaning Obama) denying so many drilling permits? Why don't we all follow Texas' example, to the extent we can? http://search.yahoo.com/r/_ylt=A0oG7...184800547.html |
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