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US Politics Mega-thread - Page 436

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Read the rules in the OP before posting, please.

In order to ensure that this thread continues to meet TL standards and follows the proper guidelines, we will be enforcing the rules in the OP more strictly. Be sure to give them a re-read to refresh your memory! The vast majority of you are contributing in a healthy way, keep it up!

NOTE: When providing a source, explain why you feel it is relevant and what purpose it adds to the discussion if it's not obvious.
Also take note that unsubstantiated tweets/posts meant only to rekindle old arguments can result in a mod action.
ziggurat
Profile Joined October 2010
Canada847 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 15:00:43
September 15 2013 14:50 GMT
#8701
On September 15 2013 23:22 DoubleReed wrote:
Show nested quote +
On September 15 2013 23:09 ziggurat wrote:
On September 15 2013 21:53 DoubleReed wrote:
On September 15 2013 15:19 ziggurat wrote:
On September 15 2013 12:26 DoubleReed wrote:
On September 15 2013 10:06 ziggurat wrote:
On September 15 2013 07:16 DoubleReed wrote:
On September 15 2013 04:26 ziggurat wrote:
On September 15 2013 01:16 farvacola wrote:
On September 14 2013 11:37 Danglars wrote:
+ Show Spoiler +
On September 14 2013 09:05 Jormundr wrote:
Show nested quote +
On September 14 2013 08:32 Danglars wrote:
On September 14 2013 08:13 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
Obamacare is becoming a huge headache for the Republican Party.

Conservative advocacy groups are rallying behind House legislation backed by 43 Republicans to threaten a government shutdown unless Obamacare is defunded, undercutting GOP leaders’ efforts to lock in low spending levels by goading the party into a self-defeating confrontation.

Within 24 hours of its Thursday release, Sen. Mike Lee (R-UT) threw his support behind the bill, as did the well-funded groups Club For Growth, FreedomWorks and Heritage Action.

“The Club for Growth strongly supports the legislation offered by Congressman Tom Graves to save America from Obamacare,” said Chris Chocola, the group’s president, boasting that “momentum is building” to stop the health care reform law.

House GOP leaders, who have few votes to spare, are determined to pass their proposal to continue spending at sequestration levels and force a Senate vote to defund Obamacare without risking a shutdown. House leadership is open to tweaking the specifics but they want to achieve three goals: continue the sequester, give Senate Republicans a chance to fight Obamacare and maintain leverage against the health care going into the debt limit fight. The 43 Republicans behind the Graves bill haven’t implicitly committed to opposing leaders’ version.

“House Republicans have been fighting Obamacare for three years and we’ve achieved several victories. We’re happy that Senators Cruz and Lee are joining us in this fight, and we want to give them the opportunity to fight it,” said a senior House GOP aide. “And we’re happy that these groups have finally recognized that a delay strategy is smarter than a defund strategy. Now we hope they can help us strategically get that victory as opposed to squandering it.”

Conservatives, meanwhile, are undercutting — and infuriating — Republican leaders who want to be pragmatic about what they can achieve in the continuing resolution. Democrats, they recognize, are vulnerable on spending levels but won’t cave on Obamacare. As a result, if the hard right’s desires get in the way of reaffirming sequestration cuts (even temporarily), the GOP may lose on all fronts. Veteran Republicans realize the party out of power will be blamed if the government shuts down, and their negotiating hand weakened over how much it should spend upon re-opening.

The conservative opposition to Obamacare has become unappeasable and it’s tearing the GOP apart. The base is anxious to make a stand now because implementation of the law is set to accelerate on Oct. 1 and its major components poised to take effect on Jan. 1. Advocates privately gloat about their chances of sticking it to GOP leaders as they mobilize in favor of a standoff. Stare down President Barack Obama until he blinks on his own signature achievement, they demand of the GOP, even if it means shutting down the government. But Republican leaders aren’t optimistic that he’ll blink, and worry that initiating this battle could damage their already weak brand and threaten their otherwise secure House majority.


Source

I don't know if you can get more biased reporting than that. It's a headache, its undercutting the party, its goading into self defeating confrontation. It's supported by well-funded groups. Undercutting again, infuriating again. Conservatives have become unapeasable, they're tearing the GOP apart. They're staring down Obama. Advocates are privately gloating. Humorous coverage.
One of the disillusioning facts about Washington is that Congress can vote on something and that vote won’t mean a thing.

It would seem that a congressional vote should be a meaningful occasion, with Members weighing the costs and benefits of voting for the particular measure at hand. Unfortunately, political gamesmanship often leads them to create voting opportunities that have no real impact, but will allow them to tell constituents, “I voted for this” or “I voted against that.”

The House of Representatives was heading in that direction—considering a proposal that purported to defund Obamacare but wouldn’t actually achieve that goal. This is what voters have come to expect from Capitol Hill and why Congress has such low standing with the American people.
source:heritage
+ Show Spoiler [Obamacare's amendments,delays] +
[image loading]

At first I thought you were trying to make a reasonable point and then you go and post a tardbarn image which contradicts your apparent frustration with biased reporting. Not only is that image biased, the fact that you think that it is somehow relevant to your viewpoint makes me wonder how you are able to operate a computer.
I hereby decree, in your honor, that starting now, this nation will be governed by the first draft of of every bill that has ever passed. Because apparently making revisions is a bad thing. Also, any bills which were not implemented exactly according to their original timetable shall be nullified. Thank you, you great thinker you!

The preponderance of changes and delayed implementations are proof to the contrary. You are being dishonest when you imply that I'm merely quibbling about the changes. It is how many changes Obamacare has been through so soon after passage that stands out. Two thousand pages and billed to solve all kinds of problems and essentially cost the consumer nothing. Secondly, it is unheard of for the President to take such an active part in changing bills. His agency structure is tantamount to a fourth branch of government, with law amending powers.

Frankly, there's about two HuffPo and other liberal news outlets a page, so it would do some good to give consideration to other news articles. Particularly, in this case, the biased reporting on a conservative goal to force Congress to start acting on their stated beliefs. My previous post stands. Who other than Democrats are so gleefully predicting the breakup of the Republican party in the terms I referred to?

I hardly think you were even prepared to accept a different viewpoint or let another reason their case, given how eager you are to engage in ad hominem attacks.

Can we please stop whining about biases and actually address the merits of various issues? Everyone who has an interest in politics has some opinions, and those held opinions result in biases. Fox, MSNBC, National Review, TPM, all of these organizations have editorial biases. Furthermore, pretty much every political reporter or politician has some bias of some sort, with varying levels and directions of biases. What matters is the merits and truthfulness of their assertions. When their biases result in outright dishonesty or inability to perceive demonstrable facts, yeah, complain about bias. But can we please stop making that the first point of argument? No matter how biased TPM may be, that doesn't change whether or not the American Care Act is a good idea. And their bias doesn't even affect whether or not what they said about Republicans is true.

To the point, the TPM articles pointed to the split between Senate Republicans and Congressional Republicans, with the Senators wanting to grandstand and strut about (because Democratic senators are the majority) while the Congressmen are left having to actually pass a bill (because Republicans Congressmen are the majority). This is a real point. Bias be damned.

Almost a quarter of the news stories in this thread the last handful of pages have been pointing to differences the Tea Party conservatives, and allies, are having with the moderates. If you prefer the reporting of the liberals on the differences happening within the opposition party, maybe you should reconsider your evaluation of sources. Posted was an egregious example of such reporting, and I pointed out what made it so. It's a hit piece and the language makes it so.

The argument of the conservative right is that moderate republicans are holding nonsense votes and fleeing from action that might have an effect. It's not reported in the last few page's articles. If you were on the right and viewed the parade of liberal media outlet articles, you'd get tired of the faintly concealed glee. The Republican party is infighting, hooray! Those who already view it as an old dinosaur going extinct (partially correct in leadership, not base) don't have quite the appreciative eye for this.

When Tea Party types refuse to acknowledge party membership on behalf of the so called RINOS with a wave of the hand and a whisper of "He/she is a secret liberal", its no surprise that y'all are trying to dismiss anything overtly negative as exterior and dismissible. That's ok though, with how folks like Ted Cruz operate in the public-political sphere, your hands are tied when it comes to legitimately addressing the problems facing your political collective. Just keep hunkering down, I'm sure it'll work out. (for liberals)

The Republican party need to figure out what it stands for. The last few years have been shitty for republicans, partly because the party hasn't been able to present a clear message to anyone. I suppose a lot of infighting is the only way that figuring out process is going to happen.


I don't really understand this. The Republican party has been very clear what it stands for. Whether it's Romney's 47% comments, Paul Ryan's rejection of secularism, Eric Cantor not understanding what Labor Day is about, the push against voting rights in minority districts, or the war on women, the party's message is pretty goddamn clear. When they aren't showing blatant contempt, they are showing complete disregard for workers, women, and minorities.

That's what the Republican Party stands for.

Do you know what the Democrats stand for? I have no clue. Have you gotten a clear message from Democrats? Because I haven't. They're all over the map, unlike Republicans. You've got stupid authoritarians like Bloomberg who thinks racial profiling is totally awesome and that it's classy to call fellow Democrat Elizabeth Warren a socialist because she wants to break up the banks.

At the moment Democrats just stand for anyone who isn't as crazy as the Republicans.

You are describing your own cartoon version of the party. Although to be fair to you it's a version that's propagated by a lot of left-wing media outlets. But it's not the reality. "He who knows only his own side of the case knows but little of that ..."


Cartoon version? I cited specific examples from prominent leaders of the party. My examples didn't come from the crazy ones. You're acting downright delusional. There's absolutely nothing cartoonish about what I said, sadly. The real world does in fact work this way. Would you like more examples? Because I will be happy to provide more if you want me to.

Perhaps you have a counterexample? Where republicans show sensitivity toward minorities, women, or workers? Like maybe you could show how Republican Leaders showed up to a Martin Luther King Jr. Anniversary Event. Oh wait...

And my whole point was that I DON'T know my own side because Democrats at the moment are all over the place. It's like you're not paying attention.

Calm down dude, no reason to get so heated. You cited a few random bonehead moves from leaders and act like that's what the party is all about? Do you think that Obama believes there are 57 states as well? I guess by your logic Democrats can't count. When you use phrases like the the "war on women" and "push against voting rights" you're just repeating liberal talking points. Don't you see this? There are actually two sides to all these issues, but you don't seem able to open your mind to that. That's why I called your views cartoonish, because you seem to think that republican leaders are not much different from Magneto in the X men movies. The real world is a bit more complex; or "nuanced" as John Kerry would say.

Anyway, this guy made the point pretty persuasively -- you should reply to him if you really want to argue about it:

On September 15 2013 06:45 mozoku wrote:
On September 15 2013 05:50 oneofthem wrote:
i think it's pretty clear what the republicans stand for. problem is they stand for it too much, and not enough people like them enough for them to win.


I wouldn't be so sure it's clear what they stand for. Besides opposition to Obamacare, the GOP is hardly unified on anything these days. And even that is leading to division within the party it seems. They can't agree on foreign policy, social issues like same-sex marriage, and they're divided on immigration reform. They agree on spending cuts, but again, they're divided on where the cuts should come from.

They're even divided on where the party should go and how much they should compromise. Based on a poll two months ago, 54% of Republicans believe the party should move further right, and 40% believe the party should move in a more moderate direction. Meanwhile, 35% of Republicans say congressional Republicans compromise too much, 27% say they don't compromise enough, and 32% they compromise about the right amount.

Source

What issues are they unified on these days? Gun control maybe?




I was talking about the elected officials, not the masses.

Forgive me for getting heated but you are completely disregarding the real world that we're living in, where real policies are affecting real people, and there are real problems that need solving. There's nothing cartoonish about it, other than the fact that Republicans are bad guys right now. And those are not isolated incidents of bad silly moves, they are part of a symptomatic problem. It's not like Eric Cantor later admitted that Labor Day isn't about business owners. He did no such thing.

Apparently, it's "liberal" to describe the wide-range of policies being implemented in states all around the country as a War on Women when it includes: cuts off funding to Planned Parenthood; require medically unnecessary ultrasounds for the purposes of shaming; forcing women to explain to their employers why they need birth control; and arbitrary restricting of contraception. We haven't seen this strong a push to restrict reproductive rights since Roe vs. Wade. You can see many of the policies being documented at the ACLU's articles on the War on Women.

And restricting Voting Rights is the same damn thing. Do you think it's a coincidence that suddenly we're not hearing anything anymore about State IDs or whatever? No, we don't. It's because pushing for Voting Reform right now would give minorities the time they need to get the necessary IDs. All Republicans did was spread fear about an overhyped "problem" so that they could disenfranchise minorities. And Republicans have admitted that, so I don't understand why you think I'm being unfair.

There are not two legitimate sides to all these issues. To me, this is like someone saying that there are two sides to Creationism vs Evolution. That's not cartoonish. That's real life.

Let me try this a different way: what evidence would differentiate from the world you live in from the world I live in? Is there anything I can demonstrate that would convince you?

I hadn't heard about the Eric Cantor / Labour Day flap, so I googled it to find out what you were talking about. I shouldn't have bothered. How this is evidence of anything is beyond me.

The "other side" to the "war on women" arguments is just that some people don't think taxpayers should have to pay for contraception. Also some people think abortion ends a human life and is immoral.

As for voter ID laws, we actually are hearing about them. North Carolina recently passed a law that will apply to the 2016 election. Maybe Salon and TPM haven't covered it. Democrats are up in arms about it as usual, even though this would appear to give everyone ample time to get their documentation in order.

"Republicans are the bad guys". If you really see the world this way, there's probably not much point in continuing this discussion.


What? You're just going to close your ears and refuse to talk? Why? I genuinely don't understand why you think Republicans aren't the bad guys. Could you please clarify? All you have said is that they are "nuanced," which doesn't say anything.

The War on Women refers to much more general restrictions of access to birth control. It does not necessarily have to do with taxpayers (although birth control saves taxpayers money so this is a nonsensical argument anyway). It also refers to shaming tactics like the abortion ultrasounds or requiring employees to request "permission" for birth control from their employers.

I see the world this way right now, sure. That's the tide that politics has gone. The Republicans have very recently gone full cray-cray, and what's depressing is that people are still acting like we have two reasonable sides to the discussion. Honestly, this is giving me the impression that the Republicans could talk about the legitimacy of lynchings and there will always be centrists who will say "There are two sides to this issue! Why are you being so extreme to suggest that lynchings have no merit whatsoever? Both sides make good points!"

That's cartoonish.

In your last two posts you've compared people who disagree with you to (i) creationists and (ii) lynch mobs. And then you wonder why someone wouldn't want to keep talking to you?

edit: My original point was that the Republican party needs to figure out what it stands for. You've somehow lured me into an argument about whether the party is evil or not. But to get back to my original point, even the views you think of as so wrong-headed are not universally held by republicans. Abortion is the best example. This is an important issue to religious types, but libertarians and other fiscal conservatives couldn't care less about it.
DoubleReed
Profile Blog Joined September 2010
United States4130 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 15:54:31
September 15 2013 15:52 GMT
#8702
On September 15 2013 23:50 ziggurat wrote:
Show nested quote +
On September 15 2013 23:22 DoubleReed wrote:
On September 15 2013 23:09 ziggurat wrote:
On September 15 2013 21:53 DoubleReed wrote:
On September 15 2013 15:19 ziggurat wrote:
On September 15 2013 12:26 DoubleReed wrote:
On September 15 2013 10:06 ziggurat wrote:
On September 15 2013 07:16 DoubleReed wrote:
On September 15 2013 04:26 ziggurat wrote:
On September 15 2013 01:16 farvacola wrote:
[quote]
When Tea Party types refuse to acknowledge party membership on behalf of the so called RINOS with a wave of the hand and a whisper of "He/she is a secret liberal", its no surprise that y'all are trying to dismiss anything overtly negative as exterior and dismissible. That's ok though, with how folks like Ted Cruz operate in the public-political sphere, your hands are tied when it comes to legitimately addressing the problems facing your political collective. Just keep hunkering down, I'm sure it'll work out. (for liberals)

The Republican party need to figure out what it stands for. The last few years have been shitty for republicans, partly because the party hasn't been able to present a clear message to anyone. I suppose a lot of infighting is the only way that figuring out process is going to happen.


I don't really understand this. The Republican party has been very clear what it stands for. Whether it's Romney's 47% comments, Paul Ryan's rejection of secularism, Eric Cantor not understanding what Labor Day is about, the push against voting rights in minority districts, or the war on women, the party's message is pretty goddamn clear. When they aren't showing blatant contempt, they are showing complete disregard for workers, women, and minorities.

That's what the Republican Party stands for.

Do you know what the Democrats stand for? I have no clue. Have you gotten a clear message from Democrats? Because I haven't. They're all over the map, unlike Republicans. You've got stupid authoritarians like Bloomberg who thinks racial profiling is totally awesome and that it's classy to call fellow Democrat Elizabeth Warren a socialist because she wants to break up the banks.

At the moment Democrats just stand for anyone who isn't as crazy as the Republicans.

You are describing your own cartoon version of the party. Although to be fair to you it's a version that's propagated by a lot of left-wing media outlets. But it's not the reality. "He who knows only his own side of the case knows but little of that ..."


Cartoon version? I cited specific examples from prominent leaders of the party. My examples didn't come from the crazy ones. You're acting downright delusional. There's absolutely nothing cartoonish about what I said, sadly. The real world does in fact work this way. Would you like more examples? Because I will be happy to provide more if you want me to.

Perhaps you have a counterexample? Where republicans show sensitivity toward minorities, women, or workers? Like maybe you could show how Republican Leaders showed up to a Martin Luther King Jr. Anniversary Event. Oh wait...

And my whole point was that I DON'T know my own side because Democrats at the moment are all over the place. It's like you're not paying attention.

Calm down dude, no reason to get so heated. You cited a few random bonehead moves from leaders and act like that's what the party is all about? Do you think that Obama believes there are 57 states as well? I guess by your logic Democrats can't count. When you use phrases like the the "war on women" and "push against voting rights" you're just repeating liberal talking points. Don't you see this? There are actually two sides to all these issues, but you don't seem able to open your mind to that. That's why I called your views cartoonish, because you seem to think that republican leaders are not much different from Magneto in the X men movies. The real world is a bit more complex; or "nuanced" as John Kerry would say.

Anyway, this guy made the point pretty persuasively -- you should reply to him if you really want to argue about it:

On September 15 2013 06:45 mozoku wrote:
On September 15 2013 05:50 oneofthem wrote:
i think it's pretty clear what the republicans stand for. problem is they stand for it too much, and not enough people like them enough for them to win.


I wouldn't be so sure it's clear what they stand for. Besides opposition to Obamacare, the GOP is hardly unified on anything these days. And even that is leading to division within the party it seems. They can't agree on foreign policy, social issues like same-sex marriage, and they're divided on immigration reform. They agree on spending cuts, but again, they're divided on where the cuts should come from.

They're even divided on where the party should go and how much they should compromise. Based on a poll two months ago, 54% of Republicans believe the party should move further right, and 40% believe the party should move in a more moderate direction. Meanwhile, 35% of Republicans say congressional Republicans compromise too much, 27% say they don't compromise enough, and 32% they compromise about the right amount.

Source

What issues are they unified on these days? Gun control maybe?




I was talking about the elected officials, not the masses.

Forgive me for getting heated but you are completely disregarding the real world that we're living in, where real policies are affecting real people, and there are real problems that need solving. There's nothing cartoonish about it, other than the fact that Republicans are bad guys right now. And those are not isolated incidents of bad silly moves, they are part of a symptomatic problem. It's not like Eric Cantor later admitted that Labor Day isn't about business owners. He did no such thing.

Apparently, it's "liberal" to describe the wide-range of policies being implemented in states all around the country as a War on Women when it includes: cuts off funding to Planned Parenthood; require medically unnecessary ultrasounds for the purposes of shaming; forcing women to explain to their employers why they need birth control; and arbitrary restricting of contraception. We haven't seen this strong a push to restrict reproductive rights since Roe vs. Wade. You can see many of the policies being documented at the ACLU's articles on the War on Women.

And restricting Voting Rights is the same damn thing. Do you think it's a coincidence that suddenly we're not hearing anything anymore about State IDs or whatever? No, we don't. It's because pushing for Voting Reform right now would give minorities the time they need to get the necessary IDs. All Republicans did was spread fear about an overhyped "problem" so that they could disenfranchise minorities. And Republicans have admitted that, so I don't understand why you think I'm being unfair.

There are not two legitimate sides to all these issues. To me, this is like someone saying that there are two sides to Creationism vs Evolution. That's not cartoonish. That's real life.

Let me try this a different way: what evidence would differentiate from the world you live in from the world I live in? Is there anything I can demonstrate that would convince you?

I hadn't heard about the Eric Cantor / Labour Day flap, so I googled it to find out what you were talking about. I shouldn't have bothered. How this is evidence of anything is beyond me.

The "other side" to the "war on women" arguments is just that some people don't think taxpayers should have to pay for contraception. Also some people think abortion ends a human life and is immoral.

As for voter ID laws, we actually are hearing about them. North Carolina recently passed a law that will apply to the 2016 election. Maybe Salon and TPM haven't covered it. Democrats are up in arms about it as usual, even though this would appear to give everyone ample time to get their documentation in order.

"Republicans are the bad guys". If you really see the world this way, there's probably not much point in continuing this discussion.


What? You're just going to close your ears and refuse to talk? Why? I genuinely don't understand why you think Republicans aren't the bad guys. Could you please clarify? All you have said is that they are "nuanced," which doesn't say anything.

The War on Women refers to much more general restrictions of access to birth control. It does not necessarily have to do with taxpayers (although birth control saves taxpayers money so this is a nonsensical argument anyway). It also refers to shaming tactics like the abortion ultrasounds or requiring employees to request "permission" for birth control from their employers.

I see the world this way right now, sure. That's the tide that politics has gone. The Republicans have very recently gone full cray-cray, and what's depressing is that people are still acting like we have two reasonable sides to the discussion. Honestly, this is giving me the impression that the Republicans could talk about the legitimacy of lynchings and there will always be centrists who will say "There are two sides to this issue! Why are you being so extreme to suggest that lynchings have no merit whatsoever? Both sides make good points!"

That's cartoonish.

In your last two posts you've compared people who disagree with you to (i) creationists and (ii) lynch mobs. And then you wonder why someone wouldn't want to keep talking to you?

edit: My original point was that the Republican party needs to figure out what it stands for. You've somehow lured me into an argument about whether the party is evil or not. But to get back to my original point, even the views you think of as so wrong-headed are not universally held by republicans. Abortion is the best example. This is an important issue to religious types, but libertarians and other fiscal conservatives couldn't care less about it.


My comparison was just to illustrate that in real life there are bad guys and good guys. Because creationists and lynch mobs are part of American history. It's not cartoonish to say so. And considering that Republicans are heavily creationist, including Louisiana governor Bobby Jindal, it's not even that distant a comparison.

And my original point is that Republican party stands for the disregard for women, minorities, and workers. When they aren't showing outright contempt for them. You can see this quite clearly in their rhetoric and their policies. That holds true just as much with libertarians and fiscal conservatives.

My other point is that the Democratic party is the one that doesn't know what it stands for. Right now, it just stands in general opposition to the crazies.
{CC}StealthBlue
Profile Blog Joined January 2003
United States41117 Posts
September 15 2013 19:18 GMT
#8703
WASHINGTON -- President Barack Obama won't negotiate with congressional Republicans over the U.S. government's borrowing limit, he said in an interview that aired Sunday.

Obama told ABC News' George Stephanopoulos that he would not cooperate with House Speaker John Boehner's demand for budget cuts in exchange for House Republicans' allowing the government to continue paying its obligations.

"I'm happy to have a conversation with him about how we can deal with the so-called sequester, which is making across-the-board cuts on stuff that we shouldn't be cutting, while continuing tax breaks, for example, for companies that are not helping to grow the economy," Obama said on ABC's "This Week." "What I haven't been willing to negotiate, and I will not negotiate, is on the debt ceiling."

Much of the federal government will shut down unless Congress passes a budget, or a temporary spending bill, by next month. Not long after that, the U.S. will run out of borrowing authority, with potentially catastrophic consequences for the world economy if the government defaults on its debts. Some Republicans want Obama to gut his own health care law in exchange for a functioning government.

Obama called the GOP's debt ceiling demands unprecedented.

"Never in history have we used just making sure that the U.S. government is paying its bills as a lever to radically cut government at the kind of scale that they're talking about," he said. "It's never happened before. There've been negotiations around the corners, because nobody had ever presumed that you'd actually threaten the United States to default."

Moreover, he said, Congress' routinely using the debt ceiling as leverage "changes the constitutional structure of this government entirely."


Source
"Smokey, this is not 'Nam, this is bowling. There are rules."
JonnyBNoHo
Profile Joined July 2011
United States6277 Posts
September 15 2013 20:27 GMT
#8704
IRS tax deductions: Businesses catch a break

In a win for companies ranging from energy utilities to casinos, the U.S. Internal Revenue Service on Friday released new rules that broaden the kinds of business expenditures that can be treated as deductible asset repairs.

The difference between a deductible repair and a non-deductible improvement to "tangible property" has historically been a point of frequent dispute between the IRS and companies.

In more than 220 pages, the IRS has now finalized rules effective Jan. 1, 2014, making more costs deductible, including for instance, new laptop computers worth less than $5,000. ...

Link

If I'm not mistaken the difference is expensing vs capitalizing. The IRS will still be taxing as much as before, but the timing of those tax collections will have changed.
DeepElemBlues
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States5079 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 20:51:09
September 15 2013 20:39 GMT
#8705
And my original point is that Republican party stands for the disregard for women, minorities, and workers.


Blacks vote 90% Democratic for 50 years and have given Democratic control of every major city for decades. Blacks have never reached the same level of poverty or unemployment as whites in this time. Republicans stand for the disregard of minorities. Race huckster black leaders who live the 1% life while most of the people they claim to represent live the opposite 1% life say "Republicans are racist!" so it must be so. Minorities who do not stay on the Democrat plantation are routinely accused of betraying their race and are subjected to insulting racist slurs like "Uncle Tom," "Twinkie" and "Oreo," have prominent liberals 'hoping their wives feed them full of fat and salty food so they have a heart attack' (because you know blacks are very susceptible to heart disease thanks to an unhealthy dietary culture) and are generally assaulted ad nauseum in a racial way. But remember, Republicans have a disdain for minorities.

Democrats pass punishment laws against businesses they don't like (see: Washington, DC and Wal-Mart) preventing the opening of businesses that would bring thousands of jobs to horribly depressed low-employment low-income areas. Democrats are in favor of compulsory union membership and compulsory dues-paying and at times have flirted with being against the secret union ballot. The longest and largest example of Democrat care for workers is California, which has one of the largest unemployment rates in the nation at 8.7% and one of the largest income inequality gaps in the nation. Last fall 35 of 58 California counties had double-digit unemployment. For the last 5 years the rich have gotten richer and the poor poorer in California and the US in general faster than any time in generations. Democrats passed a law that has employers cutting many employees' hours to under 30 a week, with which it is impossible to make a middle-class living on at most hourly wages. I suppose we shouldn't care about this as it was unintended and you can't make an omelet without breaking a few lives, right?

But remember, Republicans have disdain for workers, because uh well because some 1% union boss living the fat life off the compulsory dues his "brothers" have to pay said so. Or some 1% fake Indian from Massachusetts vomits agitprop every time she opens her mouth yet doesn't actually accomplish anything. Or a fake financial reform bill was rammed through by Democrats 4 years ago that accomplished basically zero thanks to huge parts of it not being implemented because it was so convoluted and badly written that the government is afraid to implement those parts because unintended consequences are scary. Democrats passed a law claiming it would lower consumer costs and we'd have to pass it to find out what was in it, oops it doesn't cut costs and will actually act as a regressive tax. But hey, it's for a good cause, namely the enrichment of insurance companies and soothing the egos of Democrats. But remember, the Republicans have disdain for workers.

Democrats embrace a culture of casual consequences-free sex and Republicans don't. This means Republican have disdain for women. A certain president of the United States can tell patronizingly tell his female rival "you're likeable enough" when he was running for president. This president can ignore the misogynist frenzy that erupted when his opponent nominated a woman to be his vice president. A well-known homosexual former conservative-turned-liberal can go on a shameful campaign suggesting that her down-syndrome baby isn't hers and figuratively camps out in her uterus for over a year. Barely a word of criticism is spoken of him by anyone but conservatives. "Hate-fucking" women who have the wrong opinion is a common joke. A prominent minority conservative woman is described as a "mashed-up bag of meat" by a popular liberal firebrand. At least he had to apologize. Women who do not share the right opinion are commonly implied to be Stepford Wives or some similar insult. But remember, it is the Republican Party that has disdain for women. The wife of the last Republican presidential candidate, who has multiple sclerosis, was criticized as an awful bad person out of touch 1%er because she loves horses and used horse therapy for her MS and has an expensive hobby called "horse dressage" that is basically no different from a dog show. Because don't you know you gotta be rich to get with the horsees.

How dare she, that rich bitch. She should have foregone a treatment for her MS that a lot of people can't afford. She should have suffered for egalitarianism I guess. And her dreams as a woman? Well if one of your dreams is to be some rich bitch playing with horsees that's obviously some kind of plutocratic bullshit. Talk about disdain for women.

Opposition to abortion and belief in a two-parent family means you think women are inferior (somehow). By the way, on the racism front, how has the 1-parent experiment worked out for the black community? Where were the Democrats and liberals and progressives while black society imploded? That's right, saying Republicans hated women for supporting "family values" whose disappearance in the black community has been hugely destructive to black people in America.

You can see this quite clearly in their rhetoric and their policies.


Hahahahahahahahahahahahaha

"White people are the problem" -


A common view in the left-dominated intelligentsia and academia that shapes left-wing thought in America.

But remember, racism is the province of Republicans and it is very clear from their rhetoric and their policies that they have disdain for minorities.

That holds true just as much with libertarians and fiscal conservatives.


Hahahahahahahahahahahahaha

How disgusting and pathetic, do you have anything to say that isn't a direct copy-paste of a DNC fund-raising e-mail? Pretty lazy on your part.

Why would you think any Republican or conservative or libertarian would ever, ever want to work with you or compromise with you or do anything but try to destroy you politically when you hold opinions about them that are clearly aimed towards destroying them politically? We're Nazis to you. We should be thrown out into the street until we conform to your opinion, maybe then we'll be acceptable. You're just parroting propaganda to further your dream of a one-party state. You aren't interested in democracy, you're interested in the never-ending rule of the non-conservative party. Why don't you stop with the indirect campaign and just admit it.
no place i'd rather be than the satellite of love
KwarK
Profile Blog Joined July 2006
United States42955 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 20:45:31
September 15 2013 20:43 GMT
#8706
Damn right we're hoping for the never ending rule of the non-Republicans. Those guys are fucking insane. Like seriously no shit we don't want that. That doesn't mean we want a one party state though, there can be any number of parties, we'd just rather the insane ones don't rule. Like seriously, when you wrote that did the words make sense to you. "You don't want the party which will implement policies you disagree with to win so you want a one party state because you hate democracy!".
Good logic man. Well done. You are clearly a very astute individual and not just spewing words onto the keyboard.
ModeratorThe angels have the phone box
{CC}StealthBlue
Profile Blog Joined January 2003
United States41117 Posts
September 15 2013 20:45 GMT
#8707
Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers has removed his name for chair of the Federal Reserve, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Summers notified President Barack Obama on Sunday via phone call, and sent a letter shortly after.

"I have reluctantly concluded that any possible confirmation process for me would be acrimonious and would not serve the interest of the Federal Reserve, the Administration or, ultimately, the interests of the nation's ongoing economic recovery," Summers said in the letter.


Source
"Smokey, this is not 'Nam, this is bowling. There are rules."
Sermokala
Profile Blog Joined November 2010
United States13984 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 20:57:58
September 15 2013 20:47 GMT
#8708
On September 16 2013 05:43 KwarK wrote:
Damn right we're hoping for the never ending rule of the non-Republicans. Those guys are fucking insane. Like seriously no shit we don't want that. That doesn't mean we want a one party state though, there can be any number of parties, we'd just rather the insane ones don't rule. Like seriously, when you wrote that did the words make sense to you. "You don't want the party which will implement policies you disagree with to win so you want a one party state because you hate democracy!".
Good logic man. Well done. You are clearly a very astute individual and not just spewing words onto the keyboard.

We don't want a 1 party state we just don't want the parties we don't agree with in our state.

You can't clearly state that you don't want the other party to ever get a chance to rule and then bash someone else for being incoherent on saying that they don't want the other party to exist anymore. Its just the clearest example of liberal hypocrisy if you can ever see it.

Its a war on women because we don't want women to be able to murder babies with the states money?

Its a war on minorities because minorities have done so well under complete democratic control?

Its a war on the poor and middle class to not embrace and engage in constant class warfare?
A wise man will say that he knows nothing. We're gona party like its 2752 Hail Dark Brandon
Shiragaku
Profile Blog Joined April 2010
Hong Kong4308 Posts
September 15 2013 20:51 GMT
#8709
And I thought the Republican conspiracy theories ended after the election.
JonnyBNoHo
Profile Joined July 2011
United States6277 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 21:14:08
September 15 2013 20:55 GMT
#8710
On September 16 2013 05:45 {CC}StealthBlue wrote:
Show nested quote +
Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Larry Summers has removed his name for chair of the Federal Reserve, the Wall Street Journal reported on Sunday.

According to the Wall Street Journal, Summers notified President Barack Obama on Sunday via phone call, and sent a letter shortly after.

"I have reluctantly concluded that any possible confirmation process for me would be acrimonious and would not serve the interest of the Federal Reserve, the Administration or, ultimately, the interests of the nation's ongoing economic recovery," Summers said in the letter.


Source

Yellen!

Edit:
In a post in July, Cardiff Garcia made the case for Janet Yellen, and included one sentence which has really stayed with us:

"Not that Yellen can predict the twists and turns of the economy with perfect clarity — nobody can — but rather she has consistently shown a deep early understanding of the underlying pressures building in the economy and the scale of their potential consequences."

This is true.

In the late '90s, Janet Yellen was worried about the economy overheating. This was thoroughly discussed in Lawrence Meyer's book, "A Term At The Fed."

In the mid-2000s, Yellen was worried about the housing bubble, and the impact of a bust.

Post-crisis, Yellen has recognized that inflation is the least of our problems, and that everything the Fed does should be oriented towards addressing the unemployment problem. (Hence the "dovish" reputation.)

This shows a flexibility of thought and an ability to recognize what the key issues of the moment are that would make her a prime Fed chair. ...

Link
DeepElemBlues
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States5079 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 21:01:25
September 15 2013 20:55 GMT
#8711
On September 16 2013 05:43 KwarK wrote:
Damn right we're hoping for the never ending rule of the non-Republicans. Those guys are fucking insane. Like seriously no shit we don't want that. That doesn't mean we want a one party state though, there can be any number of parties, we'd just rather the insane ones don't rule. Like seriously, when you wrote that did the words make sense to you. "You don't want the party which will implement policies you disagree with to win so you want a one party state because you hate democracy!".
Good logic man. Well done. You are clearly a very astute individual and not just spewing words onto the keyboard.


Unlike you I don't think I am the smartest person to have ever lived including smarter than the entire British judiciary, and no, I don't want the Democrats to always lose. I don't want them to become a slightly less conservative Republican party either.

Good argument man. Well done. You are clearly very capable of not putting words in people's mouths so you can masturbate all over the screen. Your constitutional inability to not do so is no longer constitutional. Congratulations. It must have been very hard to end that little propensity of yours.

You've made so much improvement in your intellectual and rhetorical capabilities, in fact, that I would not be surprised if you were smarter than all the judges on earth who have ever lived or ever will live now.

Of course you're the person who once thought that the word "thug" was a racial term with the exclusive meaning of "black" and then made an accusation of racism because of it, so perhaps your opinion of your intelligence is slightly inaccurate. Or maybe, not only are you smarter than all the judges, you're smarter than all the men who make the dictionaries, and you're also psychic as well. Who sees the darkness that lurks in the minds and hearts of men? Get the fuck out of the way Shadow, KwarK knows...

KwarK: he's Blackstone, and Einstein, and the Amazing Kreskin, all rolled into one.
no place i'd rather be than the satellite of love
KwarK
Profile Blog Joined July 2006
United States42955 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 21:20:03
September 15 2013 21:07 GMT
#8712
People who want policies that are opposed to those proposed by a rival party are not in favour of a one party state, they are in favour of the party whose policies they disagree with not winning. You don't have to want there to be only one party to not want the party whose policies you disagree with to win. You can have a whole range of parties, all but one of which won't win. Or you can have the party espousing the dumb ideology fade away or reform and have different parties fight the future battles. Your attempt to paint your rivals as totalitarians didn't even begin to make sense. That's why engaging with you is frustrating, it's like you genuinely cannot see how stupid the stuff you write is. I have sufficient humility that I can't quite believe I can see it and you can't because I'm just that much smarter than you but you make it difficult to draw any other conclusion.

When you write this about being ideologically opposed to the Republicans
You're just parroting propaganda to further your dream of a one-party state. You aren't interested in democracy, you're interested in the never-ending rule of the non-conservative party.

I'm not sure you even know what any of the words you're using mean. The only way you can conclude that not supporting the Republican party and its ideology is supporting a one party state is if your starting assumptions are
1) There can only ever be two parties
2) One of these parties must always be the Republican party.
3) The ideology of the Republican party cannot ever change.

If those assumptions are true and you disagreed ideologically with the Republicans then you would be in favour of a one party state. Not a totalitarian state, you just wouldn't want the other guys to win so you'd vote against them. But I'm not sure you actually believe those assumptions are true so I'm not sure where to go from here. Your post really didn't make any kind of sense.



As for the thug argument, that just went
DEB: But if he used it in the 70s it wouldn't have been racially charged.
Me: But he didn't.
DEB: Yeah, but back then "thug" wasn't associated with "thug life".
Me: But he used it now, when it is.
DEB: Yeah but it wasn't always.
Me: No, I know it wasn't always, but now, the time when it was used, it is.
DEB: No, but you see, there was a time when it was not.
Me: I understand that, but that time did not overlap with the use of it we are talking about.

I don't especially care for another round of that one. It was pretty exhausting the last time.
ModeratorThe angels have the phone box
Leporello
Profile Joined January 2011
United States2845 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 21:17:49
September 15 2013 21:15 GMT
#8713
On September 16 2013 05:47 Sermokala wrote:
Show nested quote +
On September 16 2013 05:43 KwarK wrote:
Damn right we're hoping for the never ending rule of the non-Republicans. Those guys are fucking insane. Like seriously no shit we don't want that. That doesn't mean we want a one party state though, there can be any number of parties, we'd just rather the insane ones don't rule. Like seriously, when you wrote that did the words make sense to you. "You don't want the party which will implement policies you disagree with to win so you want a one party state because you hate democracy!".
Good logic man. Well done. You are clearly a very astute individual and not just spewing words onto the keyboard.



Its a war on the poor and middle class to not embrace and engage in constant class warfare?


The fact that you accuse anyone of the poor or middle class of engaging in "class warfare" just shows how tilted your perspective is. This is a piece of rhetoric the right-wing needs to lose, if it can. What is this class warfare that the "commie" Democrats are "embracing and engaging in", exactly? Is the mere fact that workers resent the growing income gap "class warfare"? Is anyone who creates or participates in collective workers' bargaining committing "class warfare"?

Please define this term.

For decades the income gap has been growing. We should all be engaging in "class warfare". The problem is we aren't engaging in class warfare -- we aren't raising minimum wage to even meet with inflation's standards, while we give bailouts to businesses deemed to big to fail. Instead, Republicans give vague and unproven rhetoric about how minimum wage hurts poor people, while simultaneously talking about "class warfare" so as to shame people for wanting decent pay. Classy stuff.

On September 16 2013 05:55 DeepElemBlues wrote:You are clearly very capable of not putting words in people's mouths so you can masturbate all over the screen.


If you want to write posts full of lo-o-o-ong, ranting paragraphs of highly partisan opinion and no substance -- longer then can fit on my screen -- you don't get to accuse people of crap like this. Have some taste, and don't be a total hypocrite.
Big water
Sermokala
Profile Blog Joined November 2010
United States13984 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 21:21:23
September 15 2013 21:17 GMT
#8714
I'm going to bail reallly fast here.
A wise man will say that he knows nothing. We're gona party like its 2752 Hail Dark Brandon
DeepElemBlues
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States5079 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 21:22:50
September 15 2013 21:20 GMT
#8715
People who want policies that are opposed to those proposed by a rival party are not in favour of a one party state, they are in favour of the party whose policies they disagree with not winning. You don't have to want there to be only one party to not want the party whose policies you disagree with to win. You can have a whole range of parties, all but one of which won't win. Or you can have the party espousing the dumb ideology fade away or reform and have different parties fight the future battles. Your attempt to paint your rivals as totalitarians didn't even begin to make sense. That's why engaging with you is frustrating, it's like you genuinely cannot see how stupid the stuff you write is. I have sufficient humility that I can't quite believe I can see it and you can't because I'm just that much smarter than you but you make it difficult to draw any other conclusion.


"conservatives" and "libertarians" aren't a party.

And anyone who writes as awfully as you is in no position to be making remarks about intelligence.

I have sufficient humility that I can't quite believe I can see it and you can't because I'm just that much smarter than you but you make it difficult to draw any other conclusion.


When you graduate from 7th grade English let me know okay?

I'm not sure you even know what any of the words you're using mean.


Projection is a fun activity.

As for the thug argument, that just went
DEB: But if he used it in the 70s it wouldn't have been racially charged.
Me: But he didn't.
DEB: Yeah, but back then "thug" wasn't associated with "thug life".
Me: But he used it now, when it is.
DEB: Yeah but it wasn't always.
Me: No, I know it wasn't always, but now, the time when it was used, it is.
DEB: No, but you see, there was a time when it was not.
Me: I understand that, but that time did not overlap with the use of it we are talking about.


You're a despicable liar. That is not how it went. How it went was:

KwarK: You said thug, that's racist.
Me: No it isn't, thug does not necessarily have a racist connotation.
Kwark: But it can and that must mean you did when you used it.
Me: That's retarded, here's a link to white people being called thugs for acting thuggishly.

What I said about the 70s was that in the late 70s early 80s with the birth of hip-hop and rap there was the birth of the popular culture term "thug life" as a rallying cry / marketing tool. I didn't say anything about "it didn't mean that in the 70s so it doesn't mean that now."

I never read your dipshit reply, because:

I don't especially care for another round of that one. It was pretty exhausting the last time.


It is very exhausting to deal with a psychic liar such as yourself.

If you want to write posts full of lo-o-o-ong, ranting paragraphs of highly partisan opinion and no substance -- longer then can fit on my screen -- you don't get to accuse people of crap like this. Have some taste, and don't be a total hypocrite.


Less qq more pew pew. Accusations of hypocrisy from you are like accusations of anti-intellectualism from George W. Bush. And I understand now, when I want to make a partisan rant in response to a partisan rant, I will keep it short enough so you don't get mad that you can't afford a bigger monitor. Dear Lord you're entertaining.
no place i'd rather be than the satellite of love
KwarK
Profile Blog Joined July 2006
United States42955 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 21:23:31
September 15 2013 21:22 GMT
#8716
Wanting the party you support to win and enact policies you support does not make you anti-democratic DEB. It doesn't even make you in favour of a one party state unless there can only ever be two parties and the two parties can never, ever change what they stand for.
ModeratorThe angels have the phone box
DeepElemBlues
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States5079 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 21:26:35
September 15 2013 21:25 GMT
#8717
On September 16 2013 06:22 KwarK wrote:
Wanting the party you support to win and enact policies you support does not make you anti-democratic DEB.


Characterizing opponents as "insane" and inherently racist, sexist and plutocratic is eliminationist rhetoric. It is a brazen lie to suggest that that and "I want the side I support to win and enact policies" is the same thing. But you're a liar through and through so what a surprise.

It doesn't even make you in favour of a one party state unless there can only ever be two parties and the two parties can never, ever change what they stand for.


That's right, you're all for multiple parties as long as they all want what you support. Otherwise they might be flirting too close with insanity to be acceptable.
no place i'd rather be than the satellite of love
sam!zdat
Profile Blog Joined October 2010
United States5559 Posts
September 15 2013 21:26 GMT
#8718
it's true about there being an anti-white groupthink in the academy. It is because this makes you seem like a critical thinker in the eyes of your PCified peers and it is much easier than actually thinking about things.

this doesn't mean that republicans aren't a bunch of fucking racists because they are

also for the record I want to point out that 'class warfare' is a gop term and we talk about 'class struggle'
shikata ga nai
KwarK
Profile Blog Joined July 2006
United States42955 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 21:28:59
September 15 2013 21:27 GMT
#8719
On September 16 2013 06:25 DeepElemBlues wrote:
Show nested quote +
On September 16 2013 06:22 KwarK wrote:
Wanting the party you support to win and enact policies you support does not make you anti-democratic DEB.


Characterizing opponents as "insane" and inherently racist, sexist and plutocratic is eliminationist rhetoric. It is a brazen lie to suggest that that and "I want the side I support to win and enact policies" is the same thing. But you're a liar through and through so what a surprise.

Wanting them to be eliminated is not anti-democratic. Wanting that party to change its ideology or cease to exist and be replaced by another is not anti-democratic. None of the things you're describing are in the least bit anti-democratic and none of them advocate the creation of a one party state. You're not arguing your conclusion here. Let me know when the Democratic supporters outlaw the Republicans and you'll have a case, all they're doing at the moment is not working with them and voting against them, couldn't be more democratic.
ModeratorThe angels have the phone box
DeepElemBlues
Profile Blog Joined January 2011
United States5079 Posts
Last Edited: 2013-09-15 21:33:47
September 15 2013 21:29 GMT
#8720
also for the record I want to point out that 'class warfare' is a gop term and we talk about 'class struggle'


Class warfare is a capitalist term

Class warfare is what you're the target of if you're on the top, class struggle is what you do if you're not

this doesn't mean that republicans aren't a bunch of fucking racists because they are


I haven't met any members of the Republican Party who are, I've met plenty of Republican voters who are. The same as I've never met an anti-white racist who was formally a member of the Democratic Party but I've met plenty of Democratic voters who are.

Wanting them to be eliminated is not anti-democratic. Wanting that party to change its ideology or cease to exist and be replaced by another is not anti-democratic. None of the things you're describing are in the least bit anti-democratic and none of them advocate the creation of a one party state. You're not arguing your conclusion here. Let me know when the Democratic supporters outlaw the Republicans and you'll have a case, all they're doing at the moment is not working with them and voting against them, couldn't be more democratic.


Wanting them to be eliminated isn't anti-democratic. We've reached the height of pretzel Kwark-think.

And of course you prefer to focus on "party" when DoubleReed wasn't talking exclusively about the Republican party, he was talking about "conservatives" and "libertarians" as well.

You telling someone they aren't arguing their conclusion is as persuasive as Pat Robertson saying the earth was created 7,000 years ago.

Let me know when they appoint you as arbiter of what actually constitutes valid or invalid political delegitimization, I'm sure it won't be long after they ditch the House of Lords and replace it with you.

You've done a great job of showing how you're smarter than the entire British judiciary KwarK, why don't you quit when you're obviously so far ahead.
no place i'd rather be than the satellite of love
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