surreal and more surreal
#201
Posted 2013-October-16, 08:36
Hm. If you just delete "redskins" does that make the team "the Washington"?
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#202
Posted 2013-October-16, 11:10
Quote
Senator Harry Reid of Nevada, the majority leader, and Senator Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, the Republican leader, announced completion of the agreement shortly after noon, and the Senate Republicans who had led the push to shut down the government unless President Obama’s health care law was gutted conceded defeat and promised not to delay a final vote.
“This is not a time to point fingers of blame,” Mr. Reid said. “This is a time of reconciliation.”
The deal, with the government shutdown in its third week, yielded virtually no concessions to the Republicans, other than some minor tightening of income verifications for people obtaining subsidized insurance under the health care law.
Under the agreement, the government would be funded through Jan. 15, and the debt ceiling would be raised until Feb. 7. The Senate will take up a separate motion to instruct House and Senate negotiators to reach accord by Dec. 13 on a long-term blueprint for tax-and-spending policies over the next decade.
Mr. McConnell stressed that under the deal, budget cuts extracted in the 2011 fiscal showdown were not reversed as some Democrats had wanted, a slim reed that not even he claimed as a significant victory.
The deal “is far less than many of us hoped for, quite frankly, but far better than what some had thought,” he said. “It’s time for Republicans to unite behind other crucial goals.”
#203
Posted 2013-October-16, 12:57
Quote
“We took some bread crumbs and left an entire meal on the table,” said Senator Lindsey Graham, Republican of South Carolina. “This has been a really bad two weeks for the Republican Party.”
Senator Richard Burr, Republican of North Carolina, took a swipe at Senators Ted Cruz, Republican of Texas, and Mike Lee, Republican of Utah, as well as House members who linked further funding of the government to gutting the health care law, which is financed by its own designated revenues and spending cuts.
“Let’s just say sometimes learning what can’t be accomplished is an important long-term thing,” Mr. Burr said, “and hopefully for some of the members they’ve learned it’s impossible to defund mandatory programs by shutting down the federal government.”
#204
Posted 2013-October-16, 13:34
#205
Posted 2013-October-16, 13:44
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#206
Posted 2013-October-16, 13:50
blackshoe, on 2013-October-16, 13:44, said:
In this context, it means a service that the government is required to provide regardless of funding levels.
As a practical example, the National Park Service is required to take action to protect physical property even if the Park Service isn't being funded.
Some fraction of the staff are required to show up and work without pay.
Other functions of the park service are not deemed mandatory and do shut down.
(Cleaning restrooms, emptying trash, etc.)
#209
Posted 2013-October-16, 15:48
I said in my earlier post you could not fault the republicans that ran on a platform of closing the government for doing what they said they would do. But the gamesmanship of quickly changing house rules to strip a power away for all but two representatives of the house is wrong. I suspect if this rule change is not eliminated it will someday bite the republicans in the butt, and even it if is removed, it has shown a way for future speakers (from whatever party) to reinstate such a change in rules. This horrible new rule that needs to be not only killed, but precautions need to be taken to prevent such nonsense in the future. Now don't get me started on the Hastert rule.
#210
Posted 2013-October-16, 16:31
kenberg, on 2013-October-16, 13:34, said:
I think the next item on the agenda is to attack gerrymandering on both sides of the aisle. I understand there are programs that could be used to divide districts based solely on population - whether this requires a Constitutional Amendment or not, Congressional seats should not be a perk of any one party based on the ability to draw and redraw voting districts.
Without competition from the opposing party, the free market concept of self-governing breaks down.
#211
Posted 2013-October-16, 16:48
#212
Posted 2013-October-17, 08:34
y66, on 2013-October-16, 16:48, said:
It is getting more and more difficult for me to grasp which came first - the neo-conservative or the fundamentalist Christian, and by this I do not mean to criticize all theistic believers. But the idea that "I know what is right and therefore any action I take is based on rightness and is for the greater good" is exactly the same kind of thinking that drove the Inquisition, and, to be fair, drove the atrocities of Stalin.
This type thinking is a direct attack on democracy - the action of changing the rules in the fashion described by this video is not in the realm of "politics as ususal", just as this particular debt-hostage crisis was not "business as ususual".
Hopefully, enough citizens have been awakened to the genuine danger people like Ted Cruz pose - people so arrogant they think only their way can possibly be the right way.
On the bright side, this crisis has stirred me personally from my cynicism to the point where I went out yesterday and registered to vote and later volunteered my services to the Democratic Party.
#213
Posted 2013-October-17, 10:12
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#214
Posted 2013-October-17, 10:13
Next month, in the general election, NJ residents are voting to either re-elect Chris Christie as Governor or to elect Barbara Buono to replace him. I am somewhat torn. I know that Christie will be reelected regardless of my vote. But even though Christie has the balls to stand up for what is right regardless of whether the national Republican party agrees with him or not, his views on social and economic policies do not match mine. I am more aligned politically with Buono. And Buono has come across well in her debates with Christie.
There are even news stories circulating that Christie insured Booker's victory yesterday by appearing with him publically at events having to do with development in Newark (Booker is currently the mayor of Newark). And Republicans are having a fit over that.
#216
Posted 2013-October-17, 11:15
ArtK78, on 2013-October-17, 10:22, said:
In alphabetical order (not quote order): John Boehner (R-Ohio), Susan Collins (R-Maine), Michael Corleone (GF-New York), Lindsey Graham (R-South Carolina) and Barak Obama (U.S. President).
#217
Posted 2013-October-17, 11:34
y66, on 2013-October-17, 11:15, said:
Which quote belongs to the President? I kind of wish it was the last one, but I am sure that belongs to the Honorable Mr. Corleone.
It would not surprise me if the President said "There are no winners here." That would be accurate. But there sure are a number of losers.
#218
Posted 2013-October-17, 11:42
"I don't think it's a coincidence that women were so heavily involved in trying to end this stalemate. Although we span the ideological spectrum, we are used to working together in a collaborative way."
I'm pretty sure I heard Susan Collins say that.
"More entries, perhaps, after i The House has fought with everything it has to convince the president of the United States to engage in bipartisan negotiations aimed at addressing our country's debt and providing fairness for the American people under Obamacare. That fight will continue. But blocking the bipartisan agreement reached today by the members of the Senate will not be a tactic for us. In addition to the risk of default, doing so would open the door for the Democratic majority in Washington to raise taxes again on the American people and undo the spending caps in the 2011 Budget Control Act without replacing them with better spending cuts. We fought the good fight, we just didn't win.have some lunch." -- Boehner, I believe.
"Republicans’ poll numbers have gone down, Obamacare’s somehow mysteriously have gone up. And other than that, this has been great." Dunno, but maybe Lindsey Graham
Leaving the last quote for Michael Corleone, about whom I know nothing
#219
Posted 2013-October-17, 13:23