Government avoids shutdown until Wednesday Am I supposed to congratulate them:
#1
Posted 2014-December-13, 16:56
Senate averts shutdown
The story begins:
In a rare Saturday session, the Senate voted to approve a backstop measure to extend current government funding until Wednesday...
Dear Senator Hogwash,
If this is intended as a joke it has long since ceased to be funny.
With all due respect (i.e. with no respect at all),
Your constituent, and I am positive that I speak for many.
#2
Posted 2014-December-13, 17:34
#3
Posted 2014-December-13, 18:55
Bbradley62, on 2014-December-13, 17:34, said:
PLease give some examples of such bills...
#4
Posted 2014-December-13, 19:32
Edit: Ha! There is another one: http://www.senate.go...on=2&vote=00021
#5
Posted 2014-December-13, 19:42
And don't forget that last year they DID allow a government shutdown.
#6
Posted 2014-December-13, 19:48
Quote
Quote
As for tv, screw it. You aren't missing anything. -- Ken Berg
I have come to realise it is futile to expect or hope a regular club game will be run in accordance with the laws. -- Jillybean
#7
Posted 2014-December-13, 20:30
Bbradley62, on 2014-December-13, 19:32, said:
Edit: Ha! There is another one: http://www.senate.go...on=2&vote=00021
I see. You are really a fan of farm subsidies, and of cuts to food stamps.
#8
Posted 2014-December-13, 21:17
#9
Posted 2014-December-14, 06:22
Bbradley62, on 2014-December-13, 21:17, said:
Well, I strongly oppose most efforts to make distinctions for convicted felons who have served their sentence. It makes for some probably successful (but in my view disgusting) political posturing, but it runs counter to the goal of reintegrating them to the society. (Yes, I also think they should be allowed to vote.) As an aside, on a practical level it probably means that everyone receiving food stamps now has to fill out a slightly longer form with questions about past convictions, thus making what's probably a humiliating experience for many slightly more tedious and humiliating.
On a larger point, Republicans have gotten away with obstructing completely common sense bills or nominees, just for the sake of obstructing them. Why did they get away with it? Because too many voters apply the logic "if it/he/she is backed by all Democrats and opposed by all Republicans, it must be a crazy left-wing bill".
#10
Posted 2014-December-14, 07:15
And if I hear one more time about how they are so dedicated they even came in and worked on a Saturday, how energetic, imagine that, I think I will puke.
Suggestion (well not really): Perhaps we could have Senators be paid on a weekly basis, and very Saturday the country could electronically vote to decide whether they should or should not receive their p[ay for that week.
#11
Posted 2014-December-14, 07:42
kenberg, on 2014-December-14, 07:15, said:
But the blame lies with the voters. Yes they are upset about nothing getting done in Washington, but they don't look closely enough to see whether their representatives might be to blame. And they blame Obama because he didn't manage to work successfully with Congress.
I think the genius of Mitch Mcconell is underrated. He realized early on that a dysfunctional government would mean that Obama is considered less successful. And as long as Republicans were unanimous in blocking bills there would be no risk for them, as in the eyes of most voters a bill supported by all Democrats and opposed by all Republicans must be an extreme left-wing bill.
And in this thread we have an example of a voter who even says openly that he judges bills based on this heuristic (even if it was half in-jest).
You blame the senators. I blame the ones who put them in charge.
#12
Posted 2014-December-14, 07:49
cherdano, on 2014-December-14, 07:42, said:
Sadly, I fear that Cherdano is correct on this one.
American's no longer deserve to have good government. By and large, the population is ignorant and lazy.
Their government is a mirror of the voters.
On the bright side I'm rich enough that none of this is going to impact me, other than a profound feeling of distaste.
#13
Posted 2014-December-14, 08:01
cherdano, on 2014-December-14, 06:22, said:
cherdano, on 2014-December-14, 06:22, said:
cherdano, on 2014-December-14, 06:22, said:
cherdano, on 2014-December-14, 06:22, said:
#14
Posted 2014-December-14, 08:27
hrothgar, on 2014-December-14, 07:49, said:
Americans no longer deserve to have good government. By and large, the population is ignorant and lazy.
Their government is a mirror of the voters.
On the bright side I'm rich enough that none of this is going to impact me, other than a profound feeling of distaste.
I guess John Gruber agrees with you. Do you think people are lazier and/or stupider now than they were fifty years ago? I'm actually serious about this question. I am neither rich nor stupid. My father was neither rich nor stupid. There are times when I think that the nation has collectively taken a dumbness pill but then I get a hold on myself and think maybe not.
If people now are about the same as people were fifty years ago, and mostly I think that this is true, then we have to look elsewhere for cause.
#15
Posted 2014-December-14, 09:38
I think that the biggest difference between now and say, 1960, is that it is much more difficult to find a non-biased assessment of what is occurring, i.e., information that is based on a search for the truth of the situation rather than promoting a position for political gain.
#16
Posted 2014-December-14, 09:41
kenberg, on 2014-December-14, 08:27, said:
If people now are about the same as people were fifty years ago, and mostly I think that this is true, then we have to look elsewhere for cause.
I think that there are obvious changes in American society today compared to where we were 50 years ago.
50 years ago, if you were born black, the deck was severely stacked against you.
That hasn't changed today, however, these days it also sucks if you're a poor or even a working class white.
The world has changed, America lost a very privileged position, and we as a society definitely aren't dealing well with this.
Sadly, I see too many people responding by making claims about "American Exceptionalism", acting as if they have a god given right to have the best of everything simply because of where they we born, and rejoicing in their collective stupidity.
Jumping back to your core question, the core of what changed is probably grounded in a combination of
1. The recovery of the European economies following the great wars
2. The reintegration of China into the global economy
3. The closing of the American frontier
4. Increased concentration of wealth in the US
All of this has conspired to make a life a lot more difficult for many Americas. However, I don't see much chance of any of these genies being put back into their respective bottles.
#17
Posted 2014-December-14, 10:26
Even if this isn't what you are saying, it is what I am saying.
The world has changed. But that is too pat an answer. We need to see how it has changed, what is possible, what is not. My life simply was easier, I think. We weren't smarter, it's that life was easier.
#18
Posted 2014-December-14, 10:59
Bbradley62, on 2014-December-13, 17:34, said:
So, what you are saying is that a bill that does not get the vote of someone with the intelligence of a piece of wood (Mr. Cruz) or from someone who is actually too good for the Senate (Ms. Warren) is a worthwhile bill. An interesting viewpoint.
By the way, in reference to the OP, the budget resolution that passed yesterday should keep the government running until at least next September, not just next Wednesday.
#19
Posted 2014-December-14, 11:19
kenberg, on 2014-December-14, 10:26, said:
I would agree
#20
Posted 2014-December-14, 11:32
ArtK78, on 2014-December-14, 10:59, said: