9/10/2009 10:53:13 AM
It's kinda hilarious in retrospect. Before 9/11 the Bush Administration was not taking a hard line with Iraq really, but after the attacks, suddenly we knew they had WMDs, even though we did not have enough intelligence before the attacks to prompt a harder line from Bush pre-9/11. Hence, lies.
9/10/2009 10:55:15 AM
And if a Democrat had yelled "YOU LIE" when Bush addressed Congress, he would have most certainly been labeled a TREASONOUS TRAITOR by the Conservative party.[Edited on September 10, 2009 at 10:57 AM. Reason : ]
9/10/2009 10:57:18 AM
9/10/2009 10:58:47 AM
Pres. Obama didn't say much of anything new. He has hitched his wagon to the Pelosi Bill which is losing support daily.Did he ramp up partisan attacks for his democrat base in congress? yes. Did he actually change anyone's mind? doubtful.Obama's speech was what we've come to expect now. Lots of teleprompted elegance at the beginning and end with little substance in the middle.
9/10/2009 11:06:53 AM
9/10/2009 11:26:38 AM
When he speaks, I have to put him on and listen - I can't stand to watch his side to side motion as he switches from the teleprompters in the corners. He hardly ever looks the camera - the people, directly in the eyes, which is a little curious in itself.
9/10/2009 11:27:44 AM
i feel like this address was a little more to congress itself, rather than the people.but he kind of can't look directly at the camera...prompters on on either side... and the man can't do a speech sans prompter
9/10/2009 11:30:20 AM
Not the issue. We saw a film of Hoover picking his nose during a speech in high school. Didn't have a fucking thing to do with his performance as President.[Edited on September 10, 2009 at 11:35 AM. Reason : ...]
9/10/2009 11:35:28 AM
I don't believe I'd make a reference to Hoover in support of Obama.
9/10/2009 11:37:31 AM
People certainly equated Bush's speaking abilities to his intelligence. He was not a good public speaker, and was called moronic because of it.
9/10/2009 11:38:04 AM
I'm not supporting Obama. I'm saying the President's reliance on a teleprompter is irrelevant.
9/10/2009 11:39:19 AM
Bush actually was a decent public speaker before his presidency. I think nerves just took over after the failures of finding WMDs in Iraq, which cheney completely invented, and the economy sinking, along with the unpopular war, and Katrina. He just had a mental breakdown.[Edited on September 10, 2009 at 11:46 AM. Reason : -]
9/10/2009 11:44:39 AM
9/10/2009 11:46:15 AM
ZOMG Obama can't speak without a teleprompter!
9/10/2009 11:46:25 AM
Insta-polls show a bump in his approval rateshttp://i2.cdn.turner.com/cnn/2009/images/09/09/top13.pdf
9/10/2009 11:50:03 AM
^ Interesting, I wonder if it'll last?
From everything you have heard or read so far, do you favor or oppose Barack Obama's plan toreform health care? (Post-Speech) (Pre-Speech) Sept. 9 Sept. 5-8 2009 2009 Favor 67% 53%Oppose 29% 36%No opinion 4% 11%
9/10/2009 11:53:26 AM
9/10/2009 12:37:51 PM
9/10/2009 12:43:15 PM
No one answered my question I posed in the other thread.What if employers opt to take the cheaper penatly rather than provide insurance for their employees? Are there any provisions to keep this fromm happening? This is my main concern with the entire health care overhaul that is being proposed. I'm happy with the coverage I have today - but if the government provides a cheaper loophole for companies, they will certainly take it.
9/10/2009 12:47:06 PM
^ Employers don't have to offer health coverage now, they generally do it as a "perk," it's almost expected.If your employer is offering health coverage now when they don't have to, they'll likely continue to offer health coverage after the new policies are in place if business stays the same.Otherwise, you are free to find another job with a better employer (you know... how capitalism is supposed to work).
9/10/2009 12:52:40 PM
9/10/2009 12:56:02 PM
http://www.actblue.com/entity/fundraisers/19079The last time Wilson was challenged it was with a $500,000 campaign, if this keeps up the challenge this time from Rob Miller will have bypassed that within 24 hours. Rob Miller's campaign has raised over $300,000 so far since Wilson's outburst at the address to the joint session of congress.
9/10/2009 2:15:29 PM
from about 8k people... which means that as this goes on, he can go back to those $5, $10, $20 donors again....this guy's fundraising team is most likely going to be taking a vacation soon.
9/10/2009 2:18:25 PM
On ABC, I heard some correspondent mention something about "going nuclear", where they would only need 51 votes in the Senate instead of the usual 60. What are they talking about?
9/10/2009 2:23:03 PM
^ the reconciliation option. passing it without requiring the normal 60 votes for cloture, to bypass filibustering.
9/10/2009 2:24:20 PM
reconciliation - I dont really understand it either, sounds like a hack the dems are going to use to cram this bill through
9/10/2009 2:24:34 PM
^ don't be an idiot, that 'going nuclear' threat has been around for years. it's nothing new here.
9/10/2009 2:27:40 PM
Can you explain how it works? Or how it's justifiable to use it one instance and not another? I've heard of the term, but don't know if I've ever seen it applied.
9/10/2009 2:29:10 PM
i read a really good explanation of it the other day...i will see if i can find it
9/10/2009 2:30:50 PM
basically it's kinda a pandora's box. 51 votes to pass a motion, rather than 60. i.e. needing a majority to pass a bill, not a supermajority. so if one party decides to use this as a way to pass a bill, just wait until they're out of power, and the other party does the same thing. it defeats the civility that the senate tries to keep for itself.
9/10/2009 2:32:11 PM
I dont understand how it is justifiable to go forward without a majority vote. It just boggles the mind that this can even happen.
9/10/2009 2:32:59 PM
^^Not that needing 60 votes to prevent a filibuster falls in the realm of civility either, needing 60 votes to pass something isn't the standard requirement, its just the only way to pass something that you know already has the votes to pass but the opposing party will use delaying tactics or in some cases actually not releasing control of the floor by talking with no breaks so as to prevent a vote.The 60 vote thing only applies when you know the opposing team wont let a vote happen because they know if a vote did happen they'd lose. For my money I think the democrats letting the republicans filibuster to prevent a vote from happening would hurt the republicans (it'd probably hurt everyone b/c congress wouldn't be getting anything done, but it'd hurt the republicans more after being labeled as obstructionists when the dems say hey look, we have the votes to pass it, but the republicans wont let it come to a vote).[Edited on September 10, 2009 at 2:39 PM. Reason : .]
9/10/2009 2:36:55 PM
Bush used it to pass his tax cuts early in his administration. I don't want to hear any complaining from the right if it's used to pass health care reform. The 60 vote requirement to break a filibuster is inherently unfair to Democrats anyway, as it's considerably harder to gather support for progressive legislation than anything else.
9/10/2009 2:40:37 PM
To trigger the reconciliation process, Congress passes a concurrent resolution on the budget instructing one or more committees to report changes in law affecting the budget by a certain date. If the budget instructs more than one committee, then those committees send their recommendations to the Budget Committee of their House, and the Budget Committee packages the recommendations into a single omnibus bill. In the Senate, the reconciliation bill then gets only 20 hours of debate, and amendments are limited. Because reconciliation limits debate and amendment, the process empowers the majority party.Until 1996, reconciliation was limited to deficit reduction, but in 1996 the Senate adopted a precedent to apply reconciliation to any legislation affecting the budget, even legislation that would worsen the deficit. Under the administration of President George W. Bush Congress used reconciliation to enact three major tax cuts. Efforts to use reconciliation to open the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge to oil drilling failed.Reconciliation generally involves legislation that changes the budget deficit (or conceivably, the surplus). The "Byrd Rule" (2 U.S.C. § 644) outlines what reconciliation can and cannot be used for. The Byrd Rule defines a provision to be extraneous in six cases:(1) if it does not produce a change in outlays or revenues; (2) if it produces an outlay increase or revenue decrease when the instructed committee is not in compliance with its instructions; (3) if it is outside the jurisdiction of the committee that submitted the title or provision for inclusion in the reconciliation measure; (4) if it produces a change in outlays or revenues which is merely incidental to the non-budgetary components of the provision; (5) if it would increase the deficit for a fiscal year beyond those covered by the reconciliation measure, though the provisions in question may receive an exception if they in total in a Title of the measure net to a reduction in the deficit; and (6) if it recommends changes in Social Security. If a provision violates the Byrd Rule, then any Senator may raise a procedural objection and unless 60 Senators vote to waive the objection, then the offending provision will be stripped from the bill.So basically, reconciliation can be used in the case of health care because it will affect the budget in some way and delaying legislation that is contingent on budgets is very messy business. If the bill stalls out in the Senate, reconciliation can be used with 51 votes instead of 60, and the majority party will have more power over what goes into the bill before it is made into law. Kinda like when under the Bush Administration, the GOP used reconciliation to pass three tax cuts for the wealthy with 51 votes, because it had an impact on the budget, obviously. Rushing tax cuts through the process is completely acceptable, but if Obama tries to do the same thing with health care, expect a lot of idiots to say that it's unconstitutional or some other GOP BS.[Edited on September 10, 2009 at 2:52 PM. Reason : -]
9/10/2009 2:45:01 PM
[Edited on September 10, 2009 at 2:50 PM. Reason : nm....i missed a post up there]
9/10/2009 2:46:45 PM
Very interesting. Thanks for the info. I had no idea this process existed or that it was used to get the tax cuts through.
9/10/2009 2:47:33 PM
Thanks, good information. Here's a current whip count of people currently opposed to the legislation: http://drudgereport.com/flashwc.htm Granted, it's from Drudge, but it's some good information nonetheless.I'm not arguing whether or not it should be used... but doesn't everything potentially effect the budget? I mean, it sounds to me to be similar to how the federal government uses the Commerce clause to enact legislation in the States... in shorthand, if it effects interstate commerce, then the feds can regulate it. Maybe I'm not seeing the check on this kind of power?[Edited on September 10, 2009 at 2:56 PM. Reason : ]
9/10/2009 2:53:14 PM
9/10/2009 2:54:08 PM
I think it has more to do with losing Dem support....especially the fiscally more conservative Demsif they can lower the needed votes then they don't have to depend on those Dems as much
9/10/2009 2:58:24 PM
Honestly, the check on the power existed before Bush. Since he used it to pass tax cuts, and then even tried to use it to drill for oil in protected national parks, it's pretty clear that the GOP, specifically the Bush Administration, can be blamed for it's expanded implied powers.[Edited on September 10, 2009 at 3:00 PM. Reason : -]
9/10/2009 2:59:43 PM
9/10/2009 3:11:33 PM
Thanks for the explanation - I did not know that it had been used before by the Bush administration, as I do not recall a big deal being made of it at the time.
9/10/2009 3:28:57 PM
9/10/2009 3:56:25 PM
wow, LP, I've never seen you in here talkin bout stuff before,
9/10/2009 4:09:00 PM
that's because my visits to TSB were few and far betweeni'm sick of chit chati need something that makes me think
9/10/2009 4:12:01 PM
share the wealth. Chit Chat needs you, too
9/10/2009 4:13:26 PM
i think i'll leave chit chat for my night time endeavors
9/10/2009 4:17:40 PM
oh my...
9/10/2009 4:18:30 PM
9/10/2009 4:31:03 PM