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Shut it down! (Page 6)
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by BLAZE_MkIV
Check out how much money the fed pays out in wheat, corn, oil, gun subsidies. (If you confused about guns they call it foreign aid.) Then compare that number to the budget deficite. Then compare the wheat and corn subsidies to the Feds standard of living and inflation. Then also compare them to obesity rates.
I know correlation isn't causation but something stinks.
I honestly don't understand your point. How does this relate to the principal that higher volume sales usually, if not always leads to being able to lower costs?
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Originally Posted by el chupacabra
When just closing parks wasn't upsetting the nation enough the administration decided to pay people to put up cones to block turnouts overlooking the scenery. Glad to see people are being furloughed for this "essential" task. They're reeally running out of ideas to demonstrate their own importance aren't they?
Petty bullshit.
I read about how they shut down a self-service pay station at a fishing place.
That place has never seen any action from a park ranger for months and months, but as soon as the shut down came, they summoned people to do petty shit.
Then again, this perfectly demonstrates what little people are in charge in DC right now.
-t
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Originally Posted by ebuddy
I'm not interested in playing "gotcha" games, Paco500.
You catch me out on one thing- I said I was done. Clearly I was incorrect. A few things.
1. Nothing says towing a party line like using the phrase "gotcha." Pointing out when someone has made an error of fact in their argument is not "gotcha". It's reality.
2. Read some Hemingway. Join twitter. You seem to be of the belief that any argument that can be made in 10 words will only improve with 400. This is incorrect.
3. Governors are responsible for redistricting in the same way the Senate is responsible for selecting the president's cabinet. Yes they both have the role of approving the outcome of decisions made by others. You asserted (either by mistake or ignorance) that the governors were responsible for redistricting. They are not. This is fact. Another 20 paragraphs will not make it so.
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Originally Posted by ebuddy
Where's the huge difference, Paco500? That's what I'm asking you.
I can be sure if you simply don't understand the significance of statistical information or the statistical information does not fit your agenda so you are denying it. Again, my point was that it is not advisable to use polling data as a form of representative government. My one point of evidence (and it seemed a relevant one as we are discussing O-Care) was that depending on how you ask a question you get a large difference in results. To sum up:
Obamacare:
Very positive/Somewhat positive: 29
ACA:
Very positive/Somewhat positive: 22
7% Difference - Statistically significant
Obamacare:
Very Negative/Somewhat negative: 46
ACA:
Very Negative/Somewhat negative: 37
9% Difference - Statistically significant
Obamacare:
Don't know: 12
ACA:
Don't know: 30
18% Difference - Statistically significant
Originally Posted by ebuddy
I can't imagine the importance of reiterating that Obamacare was among the biggest issues of the last election unless you're suggesting some implied mandate or support from the result of that election. If that is what you maintain (as many others have as well), well then you're going to get polling results to debate the notion.
Well you are kind of right here- well done! However, the causation is somewhat confused. The shutdown was caused because the Republican controlled congress has asserted that the majority of the American People are against Obamacare and it is their duty to stop it. Others on this board have said the same. The only thing they can point to is polling data, as the election results don't show that. I was answering an assertion. Not the other way around.
The question was asked. The people answered. The law was written. The Courts said it was ok. The wheels are coming off the country because some people can't accept that.
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Originally Posted by ebuddy
Could you point this out please? The American people, as they often do, have produced a check and balance with both parties represented through the Executive and Legislative branches of govt.
I had to call this out. It's non-sense. The check and balance was produced passively- possibly by the brilliance of design of the founding fathers, possibly because of a long history of gerrymandering by both sides. The American people actively voted to have one party in power for both branches of government. The way the system works means that didn't happen. This is not sour-grapes. I'm not even sure it's a bad thing (Although living under in a parliamentary has taught me the benefit of single party control, even when I don't agree with them). It is fact. The republicans lost the election by every measure except one- and that one matters, but it wasn't what the American people wanted on election day and to claim it was is disingenuous at best.
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Originally Posted by Paco500
I can be sure if you simply don't understand the significance of statistical information or the statistical information does not fit your agenda so you are denying it. Again, my point was that it is not advisable to use polling data as a form of representative government. My one point of evidence (and it seemed a relevant one as we are discussing O-Care) was that depending on how you ask a question you get a large difference in results. To sum up:
Obamacare:
Very positive/Somewhat positive: 29
ACA:
Very positive/Somewhat positive: 22
7% Difference - Statistically significant
Obamacare:
Very Negative/Somewhat negative: 46
ACA:
Very Negative/Somewhat negative: 37
9% Difference - Statistically significant
Obamacare:
Don't know: 12
ACA:
Don't know: 30
18% Difference - Statistically significant
So... you're citing the differences of 7%, 9%, and 18% as statistically significant in making your argument about the problem of polling, but I can't cite the statistical significance in the differences between support and opposition as indicative of public sentiment on a piece of legislation? Let me demonstrate your error in logic;
Obamacare:
Very positive/Somewhat positive: 29
Very Negative/Somewhat negative: 46
17% Difference between support and opposition
ACA:
Very positive/Somewhat positive: 22
Very Negative/Somewhat negative: 37
15% Difference between support and opposition
You see, there is a much less significant, 2% difference in the ratio of opposition to support regardless of how you ask the question and both show a statistically significant, greater distaste for the legislation; 17% and 15% greater opposition respectively. All you're saying is that people are more familiar with the term "Obamacare" than they are "ACA" or "Affordable Care Act", not there are any meaningful differences in support or opposition to the legislation. Overall -- again, the support:opposition ratio aligns very well with polling that explains the legislation using neither term.
Now if you're trying to make the point that one should not necessarily govern from polling data, I'm inclined to agree. This kind of leadership leads to abject confusion around policy such as the US Administration's bungling of the Syrian conflict. However, as representatives, it does behoove them to at least maintain awareness of the will and pulse of the people. Polls are among the more elegant ways of scientifically gauging something as otherwise ambiguous as the collective emotion, will, or advocacy.
Well you are kind of right here- well done!
Okay, please quit with the patronizing here. You're not qualified.
However, the causation is somewhat confused. The shutdown was caused because the Republican controlled congress has asserted that the majority of the American People are against Obamacare and it is their duty to stop it. Others on this board have said the same. The only thing they can point to is polling data, as the election results don't show that. I was answering an assertion. Not the other way around.
You're speculating. If Republicans were truly this driven by polling data, having watched their own approval ratings plummet to historic lows; they'd have bailed this endeavor two weeks ago. They are against Obamacare. Period. They believe they understand the legislation and they believe it's destructive. They're leveraging any opportunity at their disposal to hamper the legislation and overall spending and they do not see the election results of 2012 as a mandate for mob-rules legislative whimsy. For example --
The questions were: - Should poor people and their children have access to health insurance? The answer was yes.
- Should those with pre-existing conditions be uninsurable? The answer was no.
- Should health care cost less overall? The answer is yes.
- Does everyone have a role in facilitating the above? The answer is yes.
Had they asked the following: - Should businesses be granted amnesty on the mandate while individuals remain under the mandate? The answer is no. The people have spoken, but...
- Should Congress and federal staff be exempted from the legislation? The answer is no. Obama unilaterally exempted them from the legislation.
- Should there be waivers for mini-med plans only the largest corporate entities in Washington were effectively able to lobby? The answer is no.
- Should important consumer protections mandated of insurers be waived for a small handful of insurers with the largest corporate lobby in Washington? The answer is no.
- Should the 1099 tax filing requirement be waived? The answer is no.
- Should eligibility for coverage be determined on self-reporting? The answer is no.
What you're missing is that this implementation of the ACA is not what was written, or what Congress passed, or the Supreme Court heard, or anywhere close to a reasonable interpretation of what the collective wanted from health care reform.
Yes. They produced a House at odds with a Senate and the President. The people do not generally support a mob-rules environment of legislative whimsy and often implement checks and balances from their polling places and elections. Just as they did in 2010 and 2012.
Yes, it was. And because it was written so poorly, it could not get the 60 Democratic votes necessary to break opposition with a clear split in House and Senate Democrats. After a successful bribe of Nebraska's representative with a "Cornhusker kickback" they later tookback and a change in a legislative, filibuster-proof process that was to be specifically for budget reconciliation allowing passage of health care reform; the highly-contentious and questionable ACA was born.
The Courts said it was ok.
The Courts said the individual mandate was okay as a tax, not that you could arbitrarily manipulate tax law to enforce it on some and not on others at whim with zero congressional oversight.
The wheels are coming off the country because some people can't accept that.
The wheels are coming off the country because the wheels have been coming off the country. There are some who believe you should attempt to stop a vehicle when its wheels are coming off, particularly with one's own family in it. Others are okay with allowing the vehicle to careen wherever it may because A. when it flies off an overpass and crashes into a ball of fire -- some Republicans will be able to say "see I told you so" and pick up a few votes; B. some Democrats are merely protecting their single accomplishment in 5 years, good or bad; and C. some Democrats fear if you give in to Republicans at these critical moments, you'll set an unacceptable precedent of compromise.
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ebuddy
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by Paco500
2. Read some Hemingway. Join twitter. You seem to be of the belief that any argument that can be made in 10 words will only improve with 400. This is incorrect.
Translation: "I have run out of arguments.".
-t
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Originally Posted by Paco500
1. Nothing says towing a party line like using the phrase "gotcha." Pointing out when someone has made an error of fact in their argument is not "gotcha". It's reality.
Reality is a little more complex than the above, simpleton reasoning would imply. You see, perceptions are derived from a diverse array of inputs and/or facts. These inputs are not necessarily subject to Paco500's expediency filtration and therefore, exist in reality. A "gotcha" is such by virtue of its relative meaninglessness in bolstering or countering an argument. In this case, I could've merely reiterated the importance of the governor in the redistricting process and this toned-down approach would not have made my argument less compelling. i.e. I am guilty of flowery rhetoric to be sure, but this does not detract from my argument; that the Republican "success" you're attempting to marginalize as not representing the will of the American people is mistaken. Your analysis fails to account for the studies suggesting "gerrymandering" is a wash and it breezed past the role of the governor in the redistricting process. Inputs. Even in your myopic analysis; the successes gained began with the will of the people in their selections for governor. That is, if gerrymandering is ultimately responsible for their success in Congressional seats, gubernatorial races matter and also reflect the will of the people.
With all due respect, this degree of neglect disqualifies you from being an effective arbiter of reality. We likely disagree.
2. Read some Hemingway. Join twitter. You seem to be of the belief that any argument that can be made in 10 words will only improve with 400. This is incorrect.
No. I believe repetition is the key to retention. I believe there are times when reality cannot be summed up in a small and tidy, partisan box. Twitter is perhaps the best example of this folly. Your citation of it as somehow authoritative here is revealing.
3. Governors are responsible for redistricting in the same way the Senate is responsible for selecting the president's cabinet. Yes they both have the role of approving the outcome of decisions made by others. You asserted (either by mistake or ignorance) that the governors were responsible for redistricting. They are not. This is fact. Another 20 paragraphs will not make it so.
The aforementioned, 20 paragraphs allows me to now say -- see above.
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ebuddy
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Clinically Insane
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ebuddy, prior to the 2012 election, if I were to scan through the MacNN archives would I find you taking the presidential polling results seriously, or were you one of those people blowing them off? What did you think about Nate Silver?
Also, if the polling numbers shift to show a stronger support for the ACA, will your stance shift? Are people on the left supposed to be surprised that the polling numbers don't show overwhelming support for the ACA?
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Originally Posted by besson3c
ebuddy, prior to the 2012 election, if I were to scan through the MacNN archives would I find you taking the presidential polling results seriously, or were you one of those people blowing them off? What did you think about Nate Silver?
You would likely find me both citing polls to defend my position and challenging aspects of tracking polls offered by others. I can tell you that I was pretty involved locally and made the mistake of thinking local trending would roll up on the national level. I was correct on their conclusions locally, but most definitely missed how they'd roll up into the national picture. For a time, the Presidential tracking polls were all over the place and it was really anyone's guess. Polling on the "ACA"/"Obamacare"/"major health care reform legislation" however, is much clearer. They are all essentially showing the same level of support or opposition and they differ very little from one another in their overall picture. i.e. had they consistently shown Obama up by 15% to 17%, they would've been much harder to ignore.
Why, did Nate Silver consistently have Obama up by 15% to 17% and were all polls essentially in agreement on this fact?
Also, if the polling numbers shift to show a stronger support for the ACA, will your stance shift? Are people on the left supposed to be surprised that the polling numbers don't show overwhelming support for the ACA?
My stance on what, Obamacare or polling? Neither, if most people support something and it's pretty clear -- I'm going to accept that most people clearly support something. This would neither change my own mind on Obamacare or on polling.
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ebuddy
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Maybe I don't understand something then. Do you think the tea party republicans are justified to shut down the government because of polls on ACA popularity?
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Bess, it was the Senate that shut the government down. The tea party doesn't have that kind of power.
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Clinically Insane
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-t
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by Snow-i
Bess, it was the Senate that shut the government down. The tea party doesn't have that kind of power.
It was the House Republicans that linked the funding of government to defunding Obamacare.
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Originally Posted by besson3c
Maybe I don't understand something then. Do you think the tea party republicans are justified to shut down the government because of polls on ACA popularity?
I can tell you that I don't think Democrats are justified in shutting down the government because of polls on Tea Party popularity. This isn't a mob-rules system of government. Otherwise, I'm not sure I understand what you're asking. Republicans know you can't defund Obamacare, that's why they're asking for a delay in the individual mandate which seems pretty fair in light of the Corporate delay, particularly when the federal exchange web sites they've spent 4 years and $500 million on aren't working. They'd also like a repeal of the medical device tax which would pass among Senate Democrats in a heartbeat.
Compromise is when both parties come to agreement. Aside from the above, popular measures; Republicans have offered numerous bills to fund programs and bureaucracies out of the approximate 14% of the Federal government that is actually closed during a shutdown. The Senate won't hear it. Regardless of what this does to the American people, Senate Democrats have determined that the shutdown hurts them least and remain rigid to avoid setting a precedent of compromise. Political gain is not just-cause for shutting down the government, no.
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ebuddy
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When the local Democrats start screaming to re-open the gov't and Reid and Obama are refusing to have SERIOUS discussions on both obamacare and the debt ceiling this tells you something. The Dems are not connecting the dots between the spending, waste in Gov't(GSA etc) and the cost over-runs with setting up the hackers dream and the other crap they have pulled, to see they have caused most of the crisis. We would not have to raise the debt ceiling if the house had been able to do their job without Reids stonewalling and President Stupids unwillingness to even discuss the problems. I am also pissed that the House hasn't been more vocal and proactive to call the Obama admin on the illegal, unconstitutional methods being used to screw us.
Right now they have to raise the Debt limit just to pay bills! Whats wrong with begging your credit card company to raise your limits so you can continue to pay your credit card debt with another credit card?
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by ebuddy
I can tell you that I don't think Democrats are justified in shutting down the government because of polls on Tea Party popularity. This isn't a mob-rules system of government. Otherwise, I'm not sure I understand what you're asking. Republicans know you can't defund Obamacare, that's why they're asking for a delay in the individual mandate which seems pretty fair in light of the Corporate delay, particularly when the federal exchange web sites they've spent 4 years and $500 million on aren't working. They'd also like a repeal of the medical device tax which would pass among Senate Democrats in a heartbeat.
Compromise is when both parties come to agreement. Aside from the above, popular measures; Republicans have offered numerous bills to fund programs and bureaucracies out of the approximate 14% of the Federal government that is actually closed during a shutdown. The Senate won't hear it. Regardless of what this does to the American people, Senate Democrats have determined that the shutdown hurts them least and remain rigid to avoid setting a precedent of compromise. Political gain is not just-cause for shutting down the government, no.
Why do you insist on getting in your little digs? It's like you're an intensely guarded ideological warrior or something.
It sounds like you are empathetic to the Republicans for the situation they are in, but I was just confused as to what all of this has to do with polling data. The polls make these arguments wildly incoherent on multiple fronts.
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Originally Posted by BadKosh
When the local Democrats start screaming to re-open the gov't and Reid and Obama are refusing to have SERIOUS discussions on both obamacare and the debt ceiling this tells you something. The Dems are not connecting the dots between the spending, waste in Gov't(GSA etc) and the cost over-runs with setting up the hackers dream and the other crap they have pulled, to see they have caused most of the crisis. We would not have to raise the debt ceiling if the house had been able to do their job without Reids stonewalling and President Stupids unwillingness to even discuss the problems. I am also pissed that the House hasn't been more vocal and proactive to call the Obama admin on the illegal, unconstitutional methods being used to screw us.
Right now they have to raise the Debt limit just to pay bills! Whats wrong with begging your credit card company to raise your limits so you can continue to pay your credit card debt with another credit card?
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ebuddy
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Originally Posted by besson3c
Why do you insist on getting in your little digs? It's like you're an intensely guarded ideological warrior or something.
I love this. You ask a question loaded to the hilt with the assumption that it is Tea Party Republicans who have shut the government down when anyone other than intensely-guarded partisan warriors would accept that this phenomena requires the rigidity of both parties, and it's a "little dig" when I don't bite on your flame-bait.
It sounds like you are empathetic to the Republicans for the situation they are in, but I was just confused as to what all of this has to do with polling data. The polls make these arguments wildly incoherent on multiple fronts.
You tell me, I didn't bring them up to begin with. I merely corrected those who were trying to imply that distaste for the ACA was merely a figment of wordsmithing polls.
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ebuddy
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by ebuddy
I love this. You ask a question loaded to the hilt with the assumption that it is Tea Party Republicans who have shut the government down when anyone other than intensely-guarded partisan warriors would accept that this phenomena requires the rigidity of both parties, and it's a "little dig" when I don't bite on your flame-bait.
How dare you call out besson on this ?
If he stopped doing it, he wouldn't be able to post at all in the PWL.
-t
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Originally Posted by ebuddy
I love this. You ask a question loaded to the hilt with the assumption that it is Tea Party Republicans who have shut the government down when anyone other than intensely-guarded partisan warriors would accept that this phenomena requires the rigidity of both parties, and it's a "little dig" when I don't bite on your flame-bait.
You're right, it was a false assumption. I didn't think people would earnestly embrace viewpoints this demented. It looks like some moderate Republicans like McCain recognize that this false equivalency thing is bunk too.
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by besson3c
You're right, it was a false assumption. I didn't think people would earnestly embrace viewpoints this demented. It looks like some moderate Republicans like McCain recognize that this false equivalency thing is bunk too.
You are aware that you can be a real hypocritical asshole, right ?
-t
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Originally Posted by besson3c
I didn't think people would earnestly embrace viewpoints this demented.
Control your emotions.
(Sorry I couldn't help myself)
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Originally Posted by el chupacabra
Control your emotions.
(Sorry I couldn't help myself)
I'm not getting emotional about this, I meant that in a matter-of-fact manner.
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Originally Posted by BadKosh
When the local Democrats start screaming to re-open the gov't and Reid and Obama are refusing to have SERIOUS discussions on both obamacare and the debt ceiling this tells you something. The Dems are not connecting the dots between the spending, waste in Gov't(GSA etc) and the cost over-runs with setting up the hackers dream and the other crap they have pulled, to see they have caused most of the crisis. We would not have to raise the debt ceiling if the house had been able to do their job without Reids stonewalling and President Stupids unwillingness to even discuss the problems. I am also pissed that the House hasn't been more vocal and proactive to call the Obama admin on the illegal, unconstitutional methods being used to screw us.
Right now they have to raise the Debt limit just to pay bills! Whats wrong with begging your credit card company to raise your limits so you can continue to pay your credit card debt with another credit card?
The debt limit was raised 18 times under Pres. Reagan. You know, the fool who tripled the national debt by cutting taxes for the rich and increase government spending.
Republicans didn't seem to care much about the debt ceiling or government spending when a Republican is the President.
We all know Republicans in congress only pretend to care about the debt ceiling when there is a Democrat sitting as the President.
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Bush Tax Cuts == Job Killer
June 2001: 132,047,000 employed
June 2003: 129,839,000 employed
2.21 million jobs were LOST after 2 years of Bush Tax Cuts.
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Originally Posted by ebuddy
I can tell you that I don't think Democrats are justified in shutting down the government because of polls on Tea Party popularity. This isn't a mob-rules system of government. Otherwise, I'm not sure I understand what you're asking. Republicans know you can't defund Obamacare, that's why they're asking for a delay in the individual mandate which seems pretty fair in light of the Corporate delay, particularly when the federal exchange web sites they've spent 4 years and $500 million on aren't working. They'd also like a repeal of the medical device tax which would pass among Senate Democrats in a heartbeat.
I love how this is the Republican BS talking point now after trying to defund Obamacare over 40 times.
So I guess either Republicans are douche-bags or just retarded. Maybe both.
Originally Posted by ebuddy
Compromise is when both parties come to agreement. Aside from the above, popular measures; Republicans have offered numerous bills to fund programs and bureaucracies out of the approximate 14% of the Federal government that is actually closed during a shutdown. The Senate won't hear it. Regardless of what this does to the American people, Senate Democrats have determined that the shutdown hurts them least and remain rigid to avoid setting a precedent of compromise. Political gain is not just-cause for shutting down the government, no.
More BS Republican talking points.
Put forth a clean bill on the house floor to vote on.
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Bush Tax Cuts == Job Killer
June 2001: 132,047,000 employed
June 2003: 129,839,000 employed
2.21 million jobs were LOST after 2 years of Bush Tax Cuts.
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Originally Posted by Paco500
Well you are kind of right here- well done! However, the causation is somewhat confused. The shutdown was caused because the Republican controlled congress has asserted that the majority of the American People are against Obamacare and it is their duty to stop it. Others on this board have said the same. The only thing they can point to is polling data, as the election results don't show that. I was answering an assertion. Not the other way around.
Yes, we get that Republicans are douche-bags and most of America know that Republicans in congress are douche-bags according to polls.
Most people don't want to repeal or defund Obamacare.
Only 1/3 of Americans want Obamacare repeal, defunded, or delay.
New Poll: Only One-Third Of Americans Support Repealing, Defunding Or Delaying Obamacare - Forbes
Once again, proving Republicans are just douche-bags.
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Bush Tax Cuts == Job Killer
June 2001: 132,047,000 employed
June 2003: 129,839,000 employed
2.21 million jobs were LOST after 2 years of Bush Tax Cuts.
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Originally Posted by ebuddy
I love this. You ask a question loaded to the hilt with the assumption that it is Tea Party Republicans who have shut the government down when anyone other than intensely-guarded partisan warriors would accept that this phenomena requires the rigidity of both parties, and it's a "little dig" when I don't bite on your flame-bait.
I love how it can never be just the Republicans fault. It's either the Democrats fault or Democrats are also at fault.
Yes, Tea Party Republicans wanted to shut down the government. They have been wanting this in the last 2 years.
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Bush Tax Cuts == Job Killer
June 2001: 132,047,000 employed
June 2003: 129,839,000 employed
2.21 million jobs were LOST after 2 years of Bush Tax Cuts.
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Posting Junkie
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There are some who believe you should attempt to stop a vehicle when its wheels are coming off, particularly with one's own family in it. Others are okay with allowing the vehicle to careen wherever it may because A. when it flies off an overpass and crashes into a ball of fire -- some Republicans will be able to say "see I told you so" and pick up a few votes; B. some Democrats are merely protecting their single accomplishment in 5 years, good or bad; and C. some Democrats fear if you give in to Republicans at these critical moments, you'll set an unacceptable precedent of compromise.
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ebuddy
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Just because polls are quoted, doesn't mean you've inspected the internals of it to actually understand any POLITICAL polls, or how they work. It doesn't change the fact that the Democrats, appointed by the current admin pissed away billions on wasteful BS. Can you remember further back than your last nap? Remember the GSA waste scandals, all the parties the Gov't had and the half billion dollar OwebamaCAIR web site? How about the NSA data center? How good is that been working? How did they miss the Boston Bombers? This POS president and his disgusting minion have made it tough on US for the wasteful BS they caused. Why hasn't President Stupid ever sent a serious budget? You can also blame the media for not reporting relevant facts about the admins ignorance, and irresponsibility.
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Games Meister
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Originally Posted by Snow-i
Bess, it was the Senate that shut the government down. The tea party doesn't have that kind of power.
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Games Meister
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Originally Posted by ebuddy
For that matter, what are Republicans being offered and why the notion that there is an obligation to offer something to a political party?
The Republicans are asking the Democrats to negotiate, but so far the only item being bandied about is ACA funding with nothing in return. And one wonders why the Democrats find it unpalatable. It's not a compromise, it's a concession. With nothing given in return.
Originally Posted by ebuddy
Otherwise, what the Democrats have been offered are opportunities to fund the aspects of government upon which there is across-the-board agreement. This is supposedly very important to them and a solution to the problem exists.
Bwahaha, so what's being offered is government funding? So if the ACA didn't exist the Republicans would be doing the same thing? Reps don't think it's important to fund the govt.?
Here's my favorite detail most people seem to gloss over – the continuing resolution the House did pass was only for a matter of weeks. So the House wanted the Democrats to delays the ACA by a year to fund the government for weeks. lol. Who wouldn't turn that down?
Originally Posted by ebuddy
Unless of course you're operating under something other than the will of the people and compromise.
70% of the people didn't support shutting down the govt. over ACA. So who's will is being represented?
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by BadKosh
Just because polls are quoted, doesn't mean you've inspected the internals of it to actually understand any POLITICAL polls, or how they work.
I hope from this point on polls are not used to support ACA popularity or lack thereof, because not only are they generally suspect, but these ones in particular are full of all sorts of problems.
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by The Final Dakar
That was my reaction too, but I'm trying not to be passive aggressive. I guess we'll have to wait until Snow-i comes back to explain what he meant by that.
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Clinically Insane
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Games Meister
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Originally Posted by besson3c
That was my reaction too, but I'm trying not to be passive aggressive. I guess we'll have to wait until Snow-i comes back to explain what he meant by that.
It'd be one thing if he claimed it was both sides, but the only way you could claim the Senate shut the government down is if you think that legislation is a game of hot potato and the Senate was the last one holding the resolution therefore they are at fault.
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Originally Posted by besson3c
Did you even read that? The very first line of the section entitled "The Process" is
"The United States budget process begins when the President of the United States submits a budget request to Congress."
You're kidding, right?
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Games Meister
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Way to demonstrate he's canadien.
That's what you get for responding to BadKosh. He didn't say Obama didn't submit a budget, he said Obama didn't submit a "serious budget" which translated means "budget I like."
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Yeah, the Democrats liked Obama's budget so much they echoed the Republicans...ZERO VOTES.
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Isn't it pathetic that democrats don't seem to be able to live and work within their means? Tax n Spend is all they know. Cost cutting is a foreign concept to liberal stooges.
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Originally Posted by besson3c
Details are too difficult for you to grasp? Does that go for reality too?
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by Snow-i
Did you even read that? The very first line of the section entitled "The Process" is
"The United States budget process begins when the President of the United States submits a budget request to Congress."
You're kidding, right?
No. The key word here is *REQUEST*.
Were you kidding about the Senate shutting down government?
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Games Meister
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Originally Posted by BadKosh
Isn't it pathetic that democrats don't seem to be able to live and work within their means? Tax n Spend is all they know. Cost cutting is a foreign concept to liberal stooges.
Do the years 2000-2008 not exist for you?
Edit: Dammit now he's got me responding; I blame you besson
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Clinically Insane
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by BadKosh
Details are too difficult for you to grasp? Does that go for reality too?
Let's recap. You wrote:
President Stupid ever sent a serious budget?
I pointed out that a president doesn't create budgets himself. What happened here?
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Games Meister
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Originally Posted by ebuddy
Math and Politics don't mix.
See! Anecodotal evidence reinforcing the scientific! I bring you guys ****ing wisdom
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Clinically Insane
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Originally Posted by The Final Dakar
Edit: Dammit now he's got me responding; I blame you besson
Yeah, we best pace ourselves. When the country defaults I'm sure we'll be hearing more false equivalency stuff. This party is just getting started!
You know, the Clinton years took place before I arrived here, but I was told that they were very much like what we have now as far as the Republicans trying every trick in the book to destroy his presidency, ranging from the silly to milking any sort of leverage they had at various times. Does this seem like deja vu to those who followed politics during those years?
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Games Meister
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I don't about the Clinton years, but watching some of the conservative members here just dig in, fill with emotion and spite, well, I see a lot of this forum and myself back in 2004-2008 in that.
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Just in case anyone still doubted that the Tea Party is a haven for neo-Confederates, we had this on full display when Tea Party activists hijacked the "Million Vet March on the Memorials" this weekend …
Ugly rebel yell in front of the White House | WashingtonPost.com
And as a former GOP staffer put it …
The government shutdown, and the prospect of an unprecedented debt default, have sparked a new wave of debate about whether the system of government set forth in the Constitution is equipped to handle the tactics taken up by the modern GOP. Salon spoke Friday with Mike Lofgren, who worked as a Republican congressional staffer from 1983 to 2011 (including 16 years as a senior analyst on the budget Ccommittees of the Senate and House) before leaving and writing the best-seller “The Party Is Over: How Republicans Went Crazy, Democrats Became Useless, and the Middle Class Got Shafted.”
We discussed the last government shutdown (“terrible”), the current GOP (“neo-Confederate insurrectionists”) and how this showdown could end. A condensed and edited version of our conversation follows.
So in the lead-up to the shutdown and the way it’s played out so far, what if anything has surprised you?
Nothing. Of course the media is kind of covering it like the Michigan-Ohio State game, and love anything with a countdown clock or supposed suspense and all this other crap, and the easy visuals of some park service guy putting up a sawhorse at the Jefferson Memorial. None of that surprised me. [But] this is not something happening according to exigent circumstances or happenstance. This is something that the GOP wanted.
And I’ll say this: I am not an Obama partisan. I have many bones to pick with him, including the healthcare bill. If your intent was to insure as many people as possible, you’d have single payer. You also wouldn’t pay off big Pharma and the insurance companies. That said, the difference between what Obama and the Republicans are doing is like the difference between stomach upset and galloping Ebola.
These people are basically neo-Confederate insurrectionists. They are in substantive rebellion against the orderly government of the country. And one of the things I noticed — and it’s something that’s very common in human beings — we all try to mollify or appease the crazy uncle at Thanksgiving dinner. You know, “Don’t make a scene.” Well, I noticed in the last few years of my service on the Hill that a number of Democrats seemed to be afraid of Republicans. And Obama pretty much wasted his first term trying to mollify them. I think he’s finally stumbled upon a strategy that’s better: simply not give them what they demand. Because this is a deliberate strategy to hold the government hostage.
Ex-GOP insider unloads: Blame “neo-Confederate insurrectionists” for shutdown! - Salon.com
OAW
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