You would be mistaken if you think that anyone who actually cares about sustainability and preservation truly considers Obama to be a "Green President", he is, however, a lot better than the alternative. If nothing else, he's a stopgap measure to prevent the rampant pillaging that would likely ensue if the tea baggers were unleashed.
3/2/2012 9:53:55 AM
seems like our refining capacity could use a boost more than anything?
3/2/2012 10:31:36 AM
wrong thread.[Edited on March 2, 2012 at 10:43 AM. Reason : .]
3/2/2012 10:43:31 AM
http://cnsnews.com/news/article/obama-budget-subsidize-10-k-each-electric-car-solddefending him is really an exercise in futility at this point.
3/4/2012 3:48:46 PM
What the subsidy/tax break for each SUV and gallon of gas?
3/4/2012 5:34:05 PM
why not 20k subsidies. why do they keep electric cars out of the range of 98% of consumersseriously if you give 10k. why can't you afford 20kif you're going to inject govt into controlling the market. why not grab it by the balls and get some shit done since we've made car buying a full matter of the state.so fucking mysterious. electric cars will always be outside of the reach of the mainstream it seems.[Edited on March 4, 2012 at 5:39 PM. Reason : ,]
3/4/2012 5:38:18 PM
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/03/04/attorney-questions-promotion-terrorist-defender-to-head-gitmo-policy-at-justice/
3/4/2012 7:30:55 PM
^welcome to utopia
3/4/2012 9:08:41 PM
http://money.cnn.com/2012/03/05/news/economy/national-debt-interest/index.htm?hpt=hp_t3
3/5/2012 11:55:37 AM
http://livewire.talkingpointsmemo.com/entries/report-mccain-to-call-for-air-strikes-onObama could spend the rest of his term playing Wii golf between bong hits, and I'd still be glad I didn't vote for McCain.
3/5/2012 3:49:49 PM
wrong thread....derp[Edited on March 5, 2012 at 7:13 PM. Reason : ]
3/5/2012 7:12:58 PM
^^ If Obama did that then I'd vote to elect him President for life. But we all know he is instead going to use his time in office causing as much damage to the country as he can. Not on purpose, obviously, but results are more important than intentions.
3/6/2012 8:07:48 AM
he loses credibility for just visiting mt holly nc tomorrow, lol
3/6/2012 4:55:56 PM
pwnt
3/6/2012 5:00:56 PM
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-503544_162-57391681-503544/obama-to-gop-rivals-war-in-iran-not-a-game/
3/6/2012 5:39:10 PM
and those of us that actually live in reality are reminded of something too:we really think it would be cool if al qaeda / syria / hamas had access to nuclear arms.that would be a really fun problem to solve. [Edited on March 6, 2012 at 5:46 PM. Reason : -]
3/6/2012 5:45:59 PM
US Attorney General Eric Holder discussing how the President can have you killed without due process:
3/7/2012 2:50:33 AM
3/7/2012 6:00:28 AM
Obama bucket list#3056Start an abortion war to distract the coming economic apocalypse!
3/7/2012 10:16:09 AM
^^ I agree with that. Words are empty, actions are meaningful. If Obama wins and ends up not attacking Iran all we can do is speculate on what a Republican would have done. Still, talking casually about war with Iran is not very prudent even if both Dems and Repubs are working off the same platform. Anything we say over here gets amplified and negatively distorted x10 by the time Iranian citizens hear about it.^^^ Technically, he's correct. There is no "judicial process" outlined in the Bill of Rights. Precedent has been that judicial process is typically the route taken although in times of war, that right has been suspended. Surprise, surprise... we've been in a state of perpetual war for the last 40 years which can technically allow the government to do whatever it wants as it constantly has war time privileges. I agree with his interpretation of the law, but I disagree with the law itself. Someone in Congress or the Supreme Court needs to step up and overturn/legislate a law more in spirit with the Bill of Rights. One vague word in one amendment has set off a shit storm in modern times.[Edited on March 7, 2012 at 11:56 AM. Reason : ]
3/7/2012 11:51:38 AM
out of curiosity, how do you suppose that due process has occurred when no one even knows what the process is or if it has taken place at all? if only there were some body that would "hear" these situation, these "cases", if you will, and decide on them, maybe even, be a "judge" on them. what you are saying is that all the President needs to do to kill someone is to claim there has been due process, and that's all that's necessary. Or, you are at least saying that that is a legitimate legal justification, even if you don't agree with it or like it.
3/7/2012 12:34:45 PM
Did you read the rest of my post? I put my reasoning in there pretty clearly I thought. Let me explain again.1. "Due process" is the literal word straight from the Bill of Rights. Pretty vague term, right?2. "Due process" has traditionally (with Supreme Court precedent) meant judicial process.3. This is not true in times of war. Certain cases were found to allow the executive branch to suppress these rights for the cause of "national security."4. We have been in a perpetual state of war since the late 1960's.5. This, by our current legislation and legal precedent, essentially allows the executive branch to steamroll the Constitution. Both parties are equally culpable of this.6. Someone in Congress or the Supreme Court needs to step up to the plate and strike this out of our legal system.What the executive branch is doing is completely legal based on the way our government has been crafted over the past 200 years. The executive branch has abused their right to determine due process by involving us in wars continuously for the past 40 years. We either need to redefine the legal interpretation of war or scrap 200 years of precedent and law to fix this problem.[Edited on March 7, 2012 at 12:48 PM. Reason : ]
3/7/2012 12:47:31 PM
Stephen Colbert explains it with eloquence and humor.http://www.colbertnation.com/the-colbert-report-videos/410085/march-06-2012/the-word---due-or-die?xrs=share_copy[Edited on March 7, 2012 at 1:20 PM. Reason : ]
3/7/2012 1:19:36 PM
^^ I'd argue that the sheer absurdity of only needing to claim that due process was followed without even showing that it was followed in any way, much less there being any legal framework followed, goes to show that there is not a legally sound justification for what they are doing. It's not just one word. It's two, and the second word is "process." That implies some methodology upon which there has been agreement of some sort, whether it be a law or a judicial proceeding. As it stands, it's the equivalent of saying "Let there be some magic guy in the sky" and said magic guy in the sky is automatically willed into existence.I see what you are trying to say, that it is legally justified and you disagree with it and it should be taken care of, but I just simply don't think it's even legally justified.
3/7/2012 1:29:15 PM
3/7/2012 1:53:04 PM
I'm firing from the hip here, but weren't the Alien and Sedition acts highly controversial when they were proposed? or am I thinking of a different set of them?
3/7/2012 1:55:04 PM
Whether they were controversial 100 years ago doesn't mean much. They passed. All that matters is that they've been on the books for a long time without being legitimately challenged and that they have an entire subset of laws dedicated to allowing the executive branch unchecked power to detain war criminals.
3/7/2012 1:58:59 PM
a quick wiki on it revealed my suspicions that they were passed early on in the country's history, in 1798, not around WWI, which led to some of my confusion. It's also suggested on wiki that they were never challenged in the SC because they were passed before Marbury-Madison.
3/7/2012 2:00:39 PM
^ Beat me to it.Before anyone calls me out, I'm going to go ahead and admit I was confused on exact laws.Alien and Sedition Acts were 1798. Sedition and Espionage Acts were WWI.This doesn't really change the gist of my argument, I just wanted to clear it up.The Sedition and Espionage Acts during WWI was mostly what I had in mind because they're more recent, although the Alien and Sedition Acts are also meant to bypass the Fifth Amendment. Even if the 1798 laws were unchallenged, the WWI laws have been on the books for about 100 years.[Edited on March 7, 2012 at 2:08 PM. Reason : ]
3/7/2012 2:03:57 PM
3/7/2012 2:50:05 PM
makes sense. Obama is a Constitutional Law Professor, after all...
3/7/2012 2:54:37 PM
We didn't hold a trial for every Nazi killed during WWII. This is the same policy applied much more broadly. Again, I emphasize the point that we've been constantly at war for so long that the meaning of war has changed in a legal sense.
3/7/2012 3:10:06 PM
not on the battlefield. but we did hold a trial for the ones we captured after the fact. sort of.
3/7/2012 3:20:01 PM
Well the world is now a battlefield in the eyes of the US Government. The executive bureaucracy is running full bore on this one and will not stop. Congress or the SCOTUS need to step in and limit executive power.
3/7/2012 3:28:18 PM
whoa whoa whoa. limit government power? are you crazy??[Edited on March 7, 2012 at 3:45 PM. Reason : j]
3/7/2012 3:45:33 PM
I know, right? And I'm a liberal? WTF?
3/7/2012 3:52:27 PM
3/7/2012 7:12:09 PM
A surprising amount of consensus and surprisingly little vitriol on this page. ]
3/7/2012 7:33:56 PM
^^ I cannot support someone who has never gotten a bill passed or compromised on anything in his entire career.
3/7/2012 7:45:42 PM
So, you are saying that a guy who stringently opposes the growth and power of the federal government and who strongly defends the constitutional restrictions placed on the Executive and Legislative Branches of the Federal Government went to Washington, D. C., and doesn't have any legislation passed by Congress?SAY IT AIN'T SO?!?!
3/7/2012 8:25:47 PM
if c.p. ellis can find something to compromise on, then surely ron paul could have found one thing to compromise on in his 30+ years as an elected officialjus' sayin'
3/7/2012 8:49:08 PM
3/7/2012 9:02:01 PM
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Derrick_Bell[Edited on March 7, 2012 at 9:08 PM. Reason : ,]
3/7/2012 9:06:03 PM
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/2012/03/obama-admin-wants-warrantless-access-to-cell-phone-location-data.ars
3/7/2012 9:17:56 PM
and liberals will keep voting for this SOB because he's got a "D" beside his namethen again, for a black guy, a D's as good as an A with affirmative action]
3/7/2012 9:39:51 PM
I agree with you, I'm just playing devil's advocate.^
3/8/2012 12:20:50 AM
3/8/2012 12:00:30 PM
Has Paul actually accomplished anything in his career besides grandstanding and raking in pork for his district?
3/8/2012 12:01:33 PM
your problem in that statement is that you equate any legislation as an "accomplishment" and the only possible "accomplishment" is any legislation.
3/8/2012 1:58:33 PM
No, I also treat both grandstanding and raking in pork as accomplishments. Can we expect a guy who can't get a single piece of legislation through his entire career to somehow do so as president? Does the "no compromise, ever" approach work for anybody except dictators?
3/8/2012 2:04:34 PM