9/17/2010 10:44:38 AM
9/17/2010 11:18:34 AM
9/17/2010 2:43:49 PM
9/17/2010 4:54:01 PM
10th Amendment.
9/17/2010 9:30:42 PM
9/17/2010 10:25:02 PM
it absolutely prohibits the federal gov't from doing it.Basically, the 10th amendment says that whatever powers aren't given to the fed, that aren't denied to the states, belong to the states.
9/18/2010 2:05:43 AM
Did they not teach you the term "Implied Powers" in ELPS or ELPSA? The US government has powers that aren't specifically delegated to the federal government but are implied, as it it is impossible for the Constitution to anticipate all future problems.Here, I'll let you brush up on common fucking knowledge:http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Implied_powersSpecifically:
9/18/2010 4:29:12 AM
Words of wisdom from Delaware's Republican Tea Party candidate for Senate, Christine O'Donnell:
9/18/2010 11:40:27 AM
^ It’s like what Clinton said a few days ago:"In his 30-minute speech, Clinton told the audience that Americans are angry with reason."But when you make an important decision in your life when you're angry, there's an 80 percent chance you'll make a mistake," he said.”Tea party primary wave breaks in the Northwesthttp://www.oregonlive.com/news/oregonian/david_sarasohn/index.ssf/2010/09/tea_party_primary_wave_breaks.html
9/18/2010 12:52:54 PM
9/18/2010 2:41:28 PM
9/18/2010 4:55:51 PM
9/18/2010 5:54:10 PM
no see the constitution was meant to promote right-wing values, it says no taxes and jesus in the schools WHY DO YOU LIBRULZ HATE FREEDOM
9/18/2010 6:18:13 PM
no, it really doesn't. That's the way it has been misinterpreted. Again, to take one clause and make it negate the rest of the document is absurd. You can be guaranteed that were the founding fathers to write that document today, they would have left that clause out.
9/18/2010 7:58:22 PM
9/18/2010 9:08:39 PM
9/18/2010 9:36:22 PM
9/19/2010 12:26:20 AM
i'm not blasting all of them. just the one that ignored the document he helped write for political expediency. if you'll note, he initially argued that it only allowed execution of power already granted by the Constitution.funny that you would quote Hamilton and then bring up John Kerry. The two would probably get along very well...]
9/19/2010 12:57:28 AM
http://www.newsweek.com/2010/09/18/the-tea-party-s-anarchist-streak.htmlTea Party gets called out for being retarded (basically).
9/19/2010 5:09:59 AM
^ You look to Jacob Weisberg for objectivity? Sweet Jesus.
9/19/2010 7:55:50 AM
BTW, wacky comments never seemed to hurt Joe Biden, spöokyjon.
9/19/2010 8:40:50 AM
I actually was about to say that I shouldn't be that surprised, considering she's running for Biden's seat.
9/19/2010 9:20:30 AM
Speaking of which...
9/19/2010 10:10:16 AM
The Tea Party and the Value of Craziness
9/19/2010 11:34:23 AM
I don't think you have it granular enough. In areas where the left thinks they'll lose to the Tea Party candidate, they are doing what politics does, in areas where they aren't worried they aren't commenting.I mean you have Karl Rove coming out bashing Tea Partiers, he's hardly a progressive.
9/19/2010 12:17:15 PM
The Republicans are fucking terrified because they gambled and unleashed this Tea Party movement in an attempt to rally support for the mid-terms. Now it's cannibalizing the party and forcing all of the reasonable center-right people to move to the left. They did it to themselves and now they're paying the price having to put up with all the Teabagging insanity.
9/19/2010 6:01:23 PM
^ That is like suggesting the Democratic party unleashed the Green Party. It did no such thing. That said, unlike the Green Party, the Tea Party won't survive the 2012 election. They sound to me like a single issue movement. And once that issue is dealt with, they will dissolve back into the two dominant parties.
9/19/2010 11:03:33 PM
These people aren't going away, because unlike the Green Party, they're glued together through ideology and not one very specific big issue (or lots of small very similar issues). These people believe they're relevant now and were formerly aligned with the Republicans, but they're so extreme and radical in their views that they're marginalizing any momentum they might have instead of working to change things little by little which is the only way anything really gets done in American politics. They're not going away because they identify with a small, but mainstream ideology. They can't possibly remain as fervent and aggressive as they are right now over a long period of time, but they won't go away altogether and until they learn to compromise and tone down their rhetoric some, they'll continue to alienate any allies they might have.I think everyone can admire their passion for their beliefs, but their tactics for being heard is completely fucking retarded, even to those who might find common ground.
9/19/2010 11:18:02 PM
9/19/2010 11:23:01 PM
I mean, it's already happened to a certain extent. Colin Powell, Arlen Specter, definitely some others have all moved more to the center in the past few years. Hell, even the last Republican presidential candidate, McCain, had to put up a huge fight in his senate primary against an arch-conservative. You'd think that if there was anyone who could easily handle all opponents in a simple primary, it would be the party's presidential candidate from less than two years ago. Murkowski is running in Alaska as an independent which is going to seriously hurt Joe Miller's electability.As more and more incumbent politicians have to fight for their lives in positions they've easily won in the past, they're either going to have to move more to the right to survive which will hurt their general electability or go in the other direction and become more moderate. We're seeing time and time again that the Tea Party is forcing out politicians who aren't radical enough for their views and by doing so they're only hurting their chances of getting people into office.
9/19/2010 11:38:12 PM
9/20/2010 8:58:30 AM
That would almost make sense if you were talking about the Libertarian Party.
9/20/2010 9:37:47 AM
^ The two parties a very similar in that way. The difference is that the tea party doesn't care about the drug war or any of the cultural aspects of libertarianism.
9/20/2010 9:42:42 AM
9/20/2010 10:01:56 AM
I don't believe the Libertarian Party has the aversion to reality that the Tea Party does. While I don't remotely agree with libertarianism, it's a rational, well thought out ideology. I have fundamental disagreements with the libertarian philosophy, but I totally see where they're coming from. There is a thought process behind it.What does the Tea Party stand for? Less taxes. And what else? Who knows? Smaller government? Where were they when Bush was in office? What solutions do they offer? What is their plan for moving forward given the endemic bigotry in their ranks and even among their leaders? Are they concerned about what seems to be a largely uniform distrust of and disbelief in science, again, prevalent in both their supporters and their leaders? Why do they largely support the Bush doctrine? What does any of this have to do with smaller government?
9/20/2010 10:09:41 AM
^ Where are you getting that? The best I can find is some "Contract from America": 1. Protect the Constitution 2. Reject Cap & Trade 3. Demand a Balanced Budget 4. Enact Fundamental Tax Reform 5. Restore Fiscal Responsibility & Constitutionally Limited Government 6. End Runaway Government Spending 7. Defund, Repeal, & Replace Government-run Health Care 8. Pass an ‘All-of-the-Above” Energy Policy 9. Stop the Pork 10. Stop the Tax HikesSeems to say nothing bigoted or anti-science or pro-Bush doctrine, whatever that means. It doesn't call for cutting spending, just ending "runaway government spending", which is logically defensible, as just ending the growth of spending would restore solvency within a number of years as population growth, inflation, and bracket-creep raise revenue. That said, they do actually name a program they want to cut spending on, Government-run Health Care. Ask either a Republican or Democrat and they probably couldn't name a single program to cut, much less one as large as the latest Health Care spending bill.
9/20/2010 11:19:36 AM
9/20/2010 11:50:28 AM
Generalize much? Do all democrats really believe we should nationalize the entire economy and tax every cent earned by the rich? Although I have heard a democrat say exactly this one more than one occasion, I suspect not, so don't let the 10% determine your outlook on an entire political movement.[Edited on September 20, 2010 at 12:03 PM. Reason : .,.]
9/20/2010 12:02:26 PM
See... you're dismissing this without fully understanding it. The percentage of people who don't believe in evolution in this country is something like 45%. The number of people who think Obama is a Muslim or wasn't born in this country is around 25% (thanks Fox News). Don't come in here with your bullshit 10% and try to act like you know what you're talking about. These people are uninformed and dead wrong about a lot things, including their philosophy on politics.
9/20/2010 12:05:05 PM
9/20/2010 12:10:08 PM
Ok. So let me get this straight. You think that these people are well-informed and that their political philosophy of "Cut It All" is a good one? Wait, you're a libertarian... that IS what you think. Nevermind, I didn't know you were a Teabagger.
9/20/2010 12:16:44 PM
9/21/2010 12:06:19 PM
And I'm sure I can find worse stuff spewed by republicans and democrats. Such quotes are great reasons to vote against such candidates. I don't see them as proof that all republicans and democrats should be marginalized by association.
9/21/2010 3:48:24 PM
10/10/2010 9:19:23 PM
I think I would have to hear the entire speech to hear the context. You just cant throw something like that out and not back it up. Of course these type "clips" are SO common around election time and even though most are harmless or taken out of context.
10/10/2010 9:22:13 PM
Here's the context:
10/10/2010 9:33:06 PM
Thanks for that. Has she explained her position? I just googled Dearborn, Michigan and it turns out to be the second most muslims in the world outside the middle east. Apparently they have changed some rules/policies in school and some christians got arrested at a muslim event... so Im not sure where she was coming from on this.. probably just some good ole fashion fear mongering.
10/11/2010 11:12:42 AM
11/17/2010 4:52:01 PM
I'm wondering if the Murkowski and Crist incidents are going to make state parties change how people sign up for primaries and force them to sign a document saying they can't run if they don't win the primary.
11/18/2010 7:58:41 PM