Yeah, yeah, the source aside you can just watch the video here: http://www.c-spanarchives.org/program/ID/218836&start=0&end=5202http://www.dailykos.com/story/2010/1/29/831890/-Video:-Obama-at-GOP-House-conference-meeting
1/29/2010 6:57:30 PM
Soapbox, aim & a miss... anyone want move this over?
1/29/2010 7:01:47 PM
Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
1/30/2010 12:00:47 AM
and the Democrats have made it equally hard to work on bipartisan efforts by demonizing Republicans and not allowing them into the process at all, going so far as to lock the doors to the rooms in which they meet. What is your point?
1/30/2010 12:24:39 AM
The GOP is already regretting they did this:http://twitter.com/RussertXM_NBC/status/8380253627Obama made them look like a bunch of fools for all the things they've been saying about him. P.S. is anyone willing to call him the Teleprompter President after watching this?
1/30/2010 7:40:57 AM
1/30/2010 8:53:10 AM
Obama knows he has to have the GOP to support some of his legislation to get it through. But he is not going to convince the GOP to magically say you know what he is right lets line up and pass this Healthcare plan that really does nothing outside of getting rid of the preexisting conditions clause to reform healthcare, increases the tax burden on the middle class and decreases Medicare benefits for Seniors (the people who typically vote for the GOP). Does it look bad for the GOP it depends the media is trying to demonize them as not doing their jobs, but I personally think they are. I assume the piece of legislation you are talking about that was co-sponsored by Republicans was the one that was voted down this week to budget committee. Even though Obama signed an EO it still will not have the power that bill would have had. I wish both sides would play ball but Obama has pushed his agenda so far left that Republicans have no choice but to oppose almost everything. I think if he works on small chunks instead of the whole pie he might get GOP support on certain things. He won't get any GOP support for Cap and Trade and this version of Healthcare which has 0 GOP input, if its not Hilary Care its not to please the GOP its to get Blue Dog and Moderate Dem support. Make no mistake Obama is campaigning again instead of being a President (and I know Party Chief is part of his duties). He is trying to protect his majority so he can ram through his agenda regardless of GOP support. I would like to see more bipartisan support but that intro he did was very condescending to the GOP and you want their support good luck. The old saying you catch more flies with honey than vinegar.
1/30/2010 9:40:51 AM
wow. you fell for it. all of it.did you watch the Q&A? You know, that's what this thread is about.
1/30/2010 9:53:27 AM
I really liked this. Both sides were respectful, but still good at putting their side across. I'll give props to Obama, he spoke very well off-the-cuff. Much more natural.I think they should have more of these types of events. It's too easy to give speeches which launch nasty attacks against people when you don't have to do face-to-face. This seemed like a press conference where reporters actually asked pointed critical questions. I'd like to see...a president sit down with opposition leadership and discuss their political philosophy..the foundation for their policies. Good job GOP and Obama!
1/30/2010 10:03:46 AM
1/30/2010 10:28:27 AM
Very impressive. He came off kind of patronizing, but he played ball and won.It was in stark contrast to the poignant, yet hollow lip-service sessions that are his speeches.
1/30/2010 10:56:24 AM
This kind of was unfair. Some of the congressmen present and trying to ask questions were horribly unfamiliar with the format. They are trained in the interaction of congressional panels, since that is all they know, while Obama was in question-time mode. I liked it a lot, but realized from the event that unless they are made to do this, Congress is not going to let this become a common occurrence, since the current leadership on both sides of the isle cannot look good doing it. Maybe they can find lower party members buried in the house somewhere to take the place of party leadership at these exchanges. Then maybe this format could stay.
1/30/2010 10:58:11 AM
reiterating for Wolfey:
1/30/2010 11:04:08 AM
1/30/2010 3:09:52 PM
Well, as was discerned from some of the exchange, on some issues Obama needed to be debating the House Democrats, not the GOP.
1/30/2010 4:29:43 PM
Good luck getting the GOP to do this again. It was great, but no way.
1/31/2010 12:45:30 AM
1/31/2010 12:46:26 AM
Good luck getting Obama to do this again. It was great, but no way.
1/31/2010 11:00:03 AM
1/31/2010 11:34:28 AM
I have no idea why Obama wouldn't want to do this again because he completely came out of it smelling like roses???
1/31/2010 1:25:06 PM
1/31/2010 1:29:47 PM
2/1/2010 9:29:14 AM
republicans have already said it was a mistake to allow cameras in. they're not going to initiate it like they did this time certainly. only if obama/dems make a big stink about it in the press for weeks on end will it happen again. and i just don't see the dems playing their cards that smartly.
2/1/2010 9:32:17 AM
2/1/2010 9:41:12 AM
I haven't watched it, and I can't watch it right now, but everyone makes it seem like Obama made the GOP looks like fools. That wouldn't be surprising. I suspect that it was a bunch of dumb mainstream Republicans asking the wrong questions. The #1 issue is the economy, and I guarantee Obama doesn't have the right solution for that. His solution is, and has always been, more legislation and regulation. The possibility that some of the current laws and regulations on the books have contributed to the problem is never considered, but until we address those root problems, we can't come up with a real solution.
2/1/2010 9:48:57 AM
"I haven't watched it... I guarantee Obama doesn't have the right solution"The answer to a well running market is leave it alone to do its thing, the answer to a market failure can be regulation. We had one heck of a market failure. Maybe there are rules that need to be addressed/removed, but overall a failure on that scale requires more oversight for a time, not less.
2/1/2010 3:17:46 PM
But the market wasn't such a failure back when there was less oversight. Your reasoning is logical. That is why it is "the natural progress of things is for liberty to yield and government to gain ground."[Edited on February 1, 2010 at 5:54 PM. Reason : ,.,][Edited on February 1, 2010 at 5:55 PM. Reason : .,.]
2/1/2010 5:54:00 PM
Saying the market wasn't a failure when there was less oversight is like saying that Enron and WorldCom were doing fine. Yeah, they were not KNOWN to be hollow and empty and headed for a huge crash, because the lack of oversight meant no one was paying attenton. It's like a train where the conductor is dead. For a while everything seems fine, but when it's time to stop and there's nothing you can do, the shit hits the fan.The financial markets need heavy regulation. The idea that they won't make money if they are regulated is bullshit, because they'll make money, just not quite as much, and it's still the best paying game in town. The disparity between the rich and poor is one of the major reasons that the Roman Republic became an Empire, and our gap is widening as well. I don't have a problem with people making money, but once you reach a certain point, the harm to overall society is too great to outweigh the incentives.I know this is off topic, and I don't mean to hijack the thread.I watched the Q & A, and thought it was a step in the right direction for both parties.
2/1/2010 9:31:39 PM
But Enron and Worldcom were doing fine. Capitalism is a profit and loss system. If no company ever went bankrupt and caused someone to lose their shirt, then no one would do their due diligence. It is a design feature based on the fact that human beings lie, cheat, and steal. As such, in a system populated by flawed human beings, it is best to have them in an unregulated environment, where those that are corrupt cause their corporation to blow up and go away, leaving behind only a strong lesson in how to trust but verify. In a regulated environment, the corrupt will gravitate to where they cannot be touched by the loss system, which would be the regulators. Wielding the power and deference of a government official, the corrupt can rig the economic system to the benefit of themselves and their cronies with no check on their corruption but fellow government bureaucrats which may not be paying attention, because it is the voters/consumers money at stake, not theirs. You cannot rely solely upon whistle-blowers, as with regulation. Sometimes the only check on bad behavior is bankruptcy. And government regulation curtails bankruptcy. To put it another way, if Hank Paulson was the CEO of Bank of America he could not have bailed out his cronies at Goldman Sachs. But because he was the regulator in charge of the Treasury, bailing them out of their bad behavior was simply a matter of doing so at tax-payer expense. And as a study of history demonstrates, no industry has ever been regulated in the United States that did not also lobby in favor of the same. As always, it is through regulation that corporations free themselves from competition, and the losses competition often brings. Given these facts, it seems reasonable to argue that the recent increases in inequality should be partially due to the increased regulatory burden of the modern age (the number of active laws increases something like 15% per year).
2/1/2010 11:00:57 PM
Don't you think you've gotten really really off topic?
2/1/2010 11:48:12 PM
2/1/2010 11:52:14 PM
2/2/2010 12:17:18 AM
2/2/2010 12:25:06 AM
2/2/2010 12:56:41 AM
last i heard, Kris is a pinko commie
2/2/2010 1:19:29 AM
I am astonished and pleased to see the return of Kris.
2/2/2010 1:30:52 AM
Kris:How do you know someone is going to fuck up until after they are caught fucking up? We already established that humans lie, so you can't just ask them. And what magical thing are you thinking of that is incapable of lying? Computers only know what humans have told them. Even if we had AI that could interpret the world itself, now you would need to worry about whether it was basing its knowledge on human lies, or the designer designed it to lie, or worse, it decided to lie all by itself. And there are more lies than concious. Some information cannot be known, and it is not obvious how to find it out. And reprogramming humans will not work. The fundamental nature of our neural networks are to be creative, which means we cannot help but exagerate, forget relevant facts, and ultimately lie if it is in our interest to do so.
2/2/2010 1:56:56 AM
Regardless of which side you're on, public debates like this are hard to imagine as being a bad thing. I'd back making them mandatory!
2/2/2010 3:45:31 AM
2/2/2010 9:14:12 AM
2/2/2010 11:47:28 AM
http://politicalticker.blogs.cnn.com/2010/02/02/obama-to-address-take-questions-from-senate-dems/?fbid=_uZnLbrB2TV[
2/2/2010 10:14:01 PM
2/2/2010 11:34:16 PM
Fuck yes Kris is back. Too bad idiots will run him out in under a week.
2/3/2010 12:28:17 AM
2/3/2010 3:27:42 AM