werepossum
Elite Member
- Jul 10, 2006
- 29,873
- 463
- 126
What's your excuse for not understandig it's about Republican obstructionism, not responsible slowing?
My guess would be his possession of a functional cerebrum.
What's your excuse for not understandig it's about Republican obstructionism, not responsible slowing?
Considering that I reject your "progressive" utopia, I think the answer to your question is self-explanatory.
My guess would be his possession of a functional cerebrum.
Nice straw man.
Did he get yours? You didn't answer the point, either.
So my question about all this is, do you honestly think that the quoted section of the bill would actually be successful in preventing alteration of the act by a future Congress? I can't see how any rational person would think so. So if it doesn't, then who cares?
I see your point and recommend a nice hat.
Like I'm going to seriously engage someone who just said "Gobble gobble" as though it was a germane comment. Sorry, you must be this bright to ride the 'possum, please step away from the line.
I care because it's wrong to attempt to do so. Is that the standard now, that anyone can attempt anything as long as eventually it will probably be fixed?
Why do you think people are so upset. This is noting more than another pork filled bill that really does nothing except grant handouts to the insurance industry.
Obama like to talk about the evil insurance company...well...he is about to increase their customer base by 30 million people and that revenue stream will be subsidized by the federal government.
(And people say the GOP is in the pocket of the insurance industry)
I am a bit perplexed at why Harry Reid (or the staffer who actually wrote the provision) tried to put this in on this particular subsection. In spite of the ludicrous "death panel" gambit, the independent Medicare advisory board is about the most innocuous, and least important part of this bill. If you want to set something up as unrepealable, why not the whole bill or the material portions of it? There are now headlines on the all the tea partier/birther/Glenn Beck sites "Death Panels Are Unrepealable!" Oh brother. Sounds like someone screwed up.
They can't make anything unrepealable without a rule change which requires a 2/3's vote, and even then the rule change itself would be repealable with another 2/3's vote. I strongly suspect that this language will get chucked out in the conference committee.
- wolf
You can thank the GOP do nothing party that has allowed the bill to be watered down. It allowed a handful of independents and hick state democrats to strip down the bill and profit hugely.
Can't complain if you support the party that removes 40 senators from the legislative process completely on the basis of trying to hurt the opposition.
I care because it's wrong to attempt to do so. Is that the standard now, that anyone can attempt anything as long as eventually it will probably be fixed?
If the quality of the bill is such that a Senator does not feel that they can support it and/or it does not do what they feel it should do why blame them.Why do you think people are so upset. This is noting more than another pork filled bill that really does nothing except grant handouts to the insurance industry.
Obama like to talk about the evil insurance company...well...he is about to increase their customer base by 30 million people and that revenue stream will be subsidized by the federal government.
(And people say the GOP is in the pocket of the insurance industry)
You can thank the GOP do nothing party that has allowed the bill to be watered down. It allowed a handful of independents and hick state democrats to strip down the bill and profit hugely.
Can't complain if you support the party that removes 40 senators from the legislative process completely on the basis of trying to hurt the opposition.
Our world is changing dramatically and perhaps irreversibly right before our eyes. In spite of poll after poll after poll telling our Senators that the majority of Americans do not want this bill in its current form, they press on behind closed doors. Despite being inundated with letters, emails, faxes and phone calls they press on. The media is silent.
The issue now is not the bill. The issue is not what is in it and what it will do. The issue now is what is happening to our Republic. The health care bill is a distraction from what is taking place. It's the vehicle for the change - the fundamental change. "The Fundamental Transformation of the Unites States of America."
Government of the people, by the people, for the people is no more if this bill passes. Our form of representative government will be dead. It will cease to exist. What will take its place has had many names through history. Voting these traitors out of office will not turn this country around. The form of government we will have is unconcerned about elections. They may be held, but there will be no meaning to them.
The usual cast of characters is in this thread attempting to minimize and dismiss legitimate concerns. We've heard them before. If it suits your purpose to consider this post lunatic ravings feel free to do so. But you know, deep down inside that our very way of life is teetering on the edge. You feel it in your bones. You know something is not at all right even though those on the extreme left want you to believe it's business as usual. It's not.
The people running our government no longer want a government run by the people. They know what's best and they are going to force it down our throats willingly ... or not. Passage of this bill will embolden them.
In our form of government, our representatives do what we the people want them to. Are they? You know the answer.
"Fundamentally Transforming the United States of America"
Other sweeping landmark bills in history have had a large Senate passage that included both parties.
It should make you wonder why this "sweeping" bill can not garner such support.
werepossum didn't post a straw man, he posted idiotic false history
werepossum didn't post a straw man, he posted idiotic false history becasue he doesn't understand things like the way the Suprme Court Justices used other nations' laws.
That's what Republican propagandists do - they lie, by saying things idiots can't understand are lies, hence why the liberal they're attacking is constantly trying to destroy the US and the world.
Hence Obama 'palling around with terrosists' because he is a secret terrorist who hates the US.
Yes, it sounds ridiculous, but the millions of people who fall for it are the real measure.
Our world is changing dramatically and perhaps irreversibly right before our eyes. In spite of poll after poll after poll telling our Senators that the majority of Americans do not want this bill in its current form, they press on behind closed doors. Despite being inundated with letters, emails, faxes and phone calls they press on. The media is silent.
The issue now is not the bill. The issue is not what is in it and what it will do. The issue now is what is happening to our Republic. The health care bill is a distraction from what is taking place. It's the vehicle for the change - the fundamental change. "The Fundamental Transformation of the Unites States of America."
Government of the people, by the people, for the people is no more if this bill passes. Our form of representative government will be dead. It will cease to exist. What will take its place has had many names through history. Voting these traitors out of office will not turn this country around. The form of government we will have is unconcerned about elections. They may be held, but there will be no meaning to them.
The usual cast of characters is in this thread attempting to minimize and dismiss legitimate concerns. We've heard them before. If it suits your purpose to consider this post lunatic ravings feel free to do so. But you know, deep down inside that our very way of life is teetering on the edge. You feel it in your bones. You know something is not at all right even though those on the extreme left want you to believe it's business as usual. It's not.
The people running our government no longer want a government run by the people. They know what's best and they are going to force it down our throats willingly ... or not. Passage of this bill will embolden them.
In our form of government, our representatives do what we the people want them to. Are they? You know the answer.
"Fundamentally Transforming the United States of America"
I was merely pointing out that assuming something is unconstitutional and will therefore be overturned is unwise because the SCOTUS no longer considers itself as just an arbiter of the Constitution. When a justice quotes something other than the Constitution - especially foreign laws or practices - as justification for a decision, he or she is obviously not interpreting the Constitution which says exactly nothing about foreign laws or practices (except for treaty obligations.) If you have an explanation as to how a justice is actually interpreting the Constitution when he or she quotes a foreign law, I'd be interested in reading it. I suspect though that I would get another lecture on how the justices are much smarter and better educated than I and therefore I should just accept whatever they proclaim. Which, come to think of it, isn't that much different from the core Democrat position of "government knows best."No it was a straw man, he was just strawmanning the USSC's position on the Constitution. This is what happens when someone knows they would lose an argument on the merits.
I was merely pointing out that assuming something is unconstitutional and will therefore be overturned is unwise because the SCOTUS no longer considers itself as just an arbiter of the Constitution. When a justice quotes something other than the Constitution - especially foreign laws or practices - as justification for a decision, he or she is obviously not interpreting the Constitution which says exactly nothing about foreign laws or practices (except for treaty obligations.) If you have an explanation as to how a justice is actually interpreting the Constitution when he or she quotes a foreign law, I'd be interested in reading it. I suspect though that I would get another lecture on how the justices are much smarter and better educated than I and therefore I should just accept whatever they proclaim. Which, come to think of it, isn't that much different from the core Democrat position of "government knows best."
By the way, you use 'strawman' a lot and I do not think it means what you think it means. A strawman is an associated but weaker argument set up by a debater in place of the opposing argument, the purpose being to defeat the new, weaker argument in order to defeat, or to seem to have defeated, the original, stronger argument. In this case I brought up an issue (the reliability of something unconstitutional actually being declared unconstitutional) which is at best ancillary to and more properly merely related to Rudder's original argument, that being that this will be declared unconstitutional. For instance, one could agree completely with me that SCOTUS no longer considers itself bound by the Constitution and still believe Reid's action will be overturned by SCOTUS or lower courts. One could also agree completely with me that SCOTUS no longer considers itself bound by the Constitution and still believe that Reid's action is completely constitutional and in fact an excellent idea. Or one could believe SCOTUS is still bound by the Constitution and will overturn Reid's action as unconstitutional. Or one could believe SCOTUS is still bound by the Constitution and will not overturn Reid's action because it is not unconstitutional. So calling this point a strawman is completely wrong.
When a justice quotes something other than the Constitution - especially foreign laws or practices - as justification for a decision, he or she is obviously not interpreting the Constitution which says exactly nothing about foreign laws or practices (except for treaty obligations.)
Change you can believe in!
