Bubba
Cyburbian
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EBOLA...and two nurses have to be delivered to a fancy pants hospital in Georgia for treatment...
Jealous?
EBOLA...and two nurses have to be delivered to a fancy pants hospital in Georgia for treatment...
Jealous?![]()
CNBC said:"If I was going to give guidance to the Republican Party, ... I'd say, 'Stay completely out of social issues," Cuban said Tuesday morning on CNBC's "Squawk Box."
Last election my wife asked the poll worker to point out who the old rich white guys were, so she didn't vote for themI figured the old people and high school kids working there needed some amusement.
WOW
The NC Senate race keeps getting nasty
http://fortressamerica.gawker.com/n...at-votes-to-republic-1654048010/+laceydonohue
I was #73 at my polling place this morning.
First I refused to show picture ID and opted to sign the affidavit of identification instead and the old lady working at the desk had no idea how to handle that.
Then after finally making it to the booth I complained aloud that my right to vote was being infringed because all of the pens in all of the booths were tied up on the right hand side making it difficult for us lefties to vote and that next time I was bringing an election observer with me. I think I could audibly hear the eyes rolling behind me.
I figured the old people and high school kids working there needed some amusement.
I was amused last night by many of the comments made by newly elected (or re-elected) GOP'ers along the lines of 'after this election we're looking to work together and reach across the aisle'
Yeah right. How, specifically?
One thing we certainly can depend on is seeing the GOP waaay overplaying their hand the next couple years. Historically that's been the MO following midterm gains. Depend upon no "compromise" legislation seeing the light of day. Two more years of gridlock is a-coming.
We spend more on beer than was spent on Midterm Elections. (LINK)
As least with beer, the hangover goes away by mid afternoon, whereas with elections, you need to wait years to vote another joker into office.
I did not vote straight ticket voting yet again. :not: Although, out of the 10 of us voting at the same time, I was in a suit and tie and everyone else looked like a hipster. Perhaps it is time to move.
I'm just hoping the GOP doesn't go nuts with the house and senate. Try to do something for the country and the states and lets not focus on party specific agenda items like health care is bad. If you're going to repeal it, replace it. I don't really care how, just not a flat repeal. If not you just sound like the spoiled kid who taking his toys and going home.
Ha haw! (can we get a Nelson emoticon?) your vote was canceled out by nine hipsters!
I'm just hoping the GOP doesn't go nuts with the house and senate. Try to do something for the country and the states and lets not focus on party specific agenda items like health care is bad. If you're going to repeal it, replace it. I don't really care how, just not a flat repeal. If not you just sound like the spoiled kid who taking his toys and going home.
I was amused last night by many of the comments made by newly elected (or re-elected) GOP'ers along the lines of 'after this election we're looking to work together and reach across the aisle'
Yeah right. How, specifically?
One thing we certainly can depend on is seeing the GOP waaay overplaying their hand the next couple years. Historically that's been the MO following midterm gains. Depend upon no "compromise" legislation seeing the light of day. Two years of gridlock is a-coming.
. . . Then after finally making it to the booth I complained aloud that my right to vote was being infringed because all of the pens in all of the booths were tied up on the right hand side making it difficult for us lefties to vote and that next time I was bringing an election observer with me. I think I could audibly hear the eyes rolling behind me.
I figured the old people and high school kids working there needed some amusement.
I was amused last night by many of the comments made by newly elected (or re-elected) GOP'ers along the lines of 'after this election we're looking to work together and reach across the aisle'
Yeah right. How, specifically?
One thing we certainly can depend on is seeing the GOP waaay overplaying their hand the next couple years. Historically that's been the MO following midterm gains. Depend upon no "compromise" legislation seeing the light of day. Two years of gridlock is a-coming.
Ha haw! (can we get a Nelson emoticon?) your vote was canceled out by nine hipsters!
I'm just hoping the GOP doesn't go nuts with the house and senate. Try to do something for the country and the states and lets not focus on party specific agenda items like health care is bad. If you're going to repeal it, replace it. I don't really care how, just not a flat repeal. If not you just sound like the spoiled kid who taking his toys and going home.
The President made a hilarious comment after the elections. Something to the effect of "the results tell us that people want us to get things done." No, Mr. President. If that were the case people would have voted Democrat. They voted for the GOP so YOU won't get things done. He just doesn't get it. Yes the stock market is booming and gas is cheaper than before Katrina but the reality is folks are scared for their jobs, many make less than they did a few years ago, our infrastructure is falling apart and our foreign policy seems to be on a "du-jour" basis. I'm all for gridlock in Congress that way they will hopefully stay out of my pocket as much as possible.
People didn't vote for the GOP because they didn't want the President to get things done. I think the idea that the democratic policies are these things that nobody supports is proven wrong pretty quickly when you look at what issues passed - legalizing weed, minimum wage increases, etc. These are democratic positions that people support. Yet people voted for the GOP. Why? To me it is simple. The democrats went out and found poor candidates. Most weren't even average. I can tell you in Ohio, the Governor's race was a joke. Kasich has killed local government, and yet he still won by 10 points. Why? Because the democrats got a guy who drove without a license.
The republicans got seats because 1. They didn't support the crazy tea party, and they went more mainstream with their candidates. And 2. They took this race MUCH more seriously than the democrats. That is a good thing for the republicans. The sooner the R's realize that all they need to do is stop trying to shrink their tent, the sooner they might actually get some support. They also did as much as they could to get away from the social issues that they are losing horribly with. That will continue to help them.
P.S. I think in the end though this will bode well for the democrats in 2016. A Mitch McConnell led Senate with a John Boehner led House will be hilarious. Their failure to get anything done will be the downfall of 2016 for them. Blaming the President for not rubber stamping their ignorance won't work twice. Unless they can center their crazy ideologues (Cruz, Paul, Gohmert, etc.) they aren't going to get any serious business done because of the internal fighting. Focus on the economy, the tax code, and things that you can "fix" in 2 years. Then you might have a chance. But I bet they go after Obamacare....![]()
One of the reasons Kansans didn't for the D's candidate for governor was because he went a strip joint when he was 26. Seriously? I guess my hope for a political is over.![]()
The Republicans entire campaign strategy across the country was "We don't support President Obama and my opponent does" Plain Simple Effective.
Well everything will be perfect now that the Rs are in charge. That's the rhetoric I'm hearing.
Talking to the wife last night I mentioned the the GOP has a chance to come out as some shining beacon of how government should work. They could unroll some grand plan to end hunger or create jobs or something, anything and it would get passed since they have all the power (okay most). They would be heroes and make Mr. O look bad, which is their goal I believe, but instead we'll just pull some stupid crap like restrict voter ID laws, bash the gays, or do some other far right wing move on abortion or something. Why solve the real problems when I can solve fake ones (or at least ones that shouldn't be decided by the feds).
Its the shell game or distraction. Look at this stupid crap, so we can pas other corporate friendly regs without being noticed.
If you play the gerrymander game, you either spread the Dems so thin they can't win anything which seems to be the Texas way (i could be wrong) or you narrow it down to just a couple pockets of Dem support so they only get 1 or 2 reps and would never be able to hold a majority the way Arizona did and it sounds like Michigan did (don't know). I'm sure the blue states just flip the script. What ever happened to just dividing the population evenly without looking at political support? Maybe that's something that only gets done at the local level like my last city redistricting, although not with my current county redistricting.
If you play the gerrymander game, you either spread the Dems so thin they can't win anything which seems to be the Texas way (i could be wrong) or you narrow it down to just a couple pockets of Dem support so they only get 1 or 2 reps and would never be able to hold a majority the way Arizona did and it sounds like Michigan did (don't know). I'm sure the blue states just flip the script. What ever happened to just dividing the population evenly without looking at political support? Maybe that's something that only gets done at the local level like my last city redistricting, although not with my current county redistricting.
If you play the gerrymander game, you either spread the Dems so thin they can't win anything which seems to be the Texas way (i could be wrong) or you narrow it down to just a couple pockets of Dem support so they only get 1 or 2 reps and would never be able to hold a majority the way Arizona did and it sounds like Michigan did (don't know). I'm sure the blue states just flip the script. What ever happened to just dividing the population evenly without looking at political support? Maybe that's something that only gets done at the local level like my last city redistricting, although not with my current county redistricting.
Has your opinion of Obama changed from wat it was 6 years ago? And if so, how?
He's lost a lot of the fire that got him elected. For me I see him as an ineffectual president. Part of the job of being president is making things work between parties and leading the country to better things. He hasn't been able to do that as well as other presidents. At the same time I have to blame the GOP for some of that. They have been stubborn and outright refused to work with him on anything. I just think we need to look the president and Mitch in a room with some whisky until one kills the other with the empty bottle or they figure something out.
Has your opinion of Obama changed from wat it was 6 years ago? And if so, how?
He passed a healthcare bill, that everyone wanted to pass (both R's and D's at some point), and again all hell broke loose.
Which Republicans voted to approve Obamacare?
I agree that insurance is a good thing, and I will go as far to say that if a State Government wanted to implement something like this, but for me, it comes down to a constitutional issue that is way outside of the boundaries of the roll of federal government. It took SOTUS calling it a tax to allow it to stand, despite repeated statements by the President and his party that it was not a tax.
Heck, Obama had to make deals like the Stupak-Pitts amendment to get it passed, which on face value was a ban on federal funding for abortions, however he announced his retirement right after it got passed because 1, he knew that he would never get reelected in that district (Michigan's Upper Penninsula) and 2, many people had thought that there was a sweetheart deal in the works. Oh look, he now works for Havard.
He also told enough lies to get Obamacare passed.
.
You do realize that the Affordable Care Act was based on Republican concepts right? I didn't say Obamacare I said a healthcare bill. Republicans passed the Medicare Part D bill. Republicans passed Romneycare (which is essentially Obamacare). The idea that this alone is going to kill our country is just uninformed silliness. Or more likely political garbage that is being used to win points, not help the American people.
Amendment 10 said:The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the states, are reserved to the states respectively, or to the people.
As a note, Hilary Clinton would be the worst thing that the Democrats could do. She could be a fine candidate, but she isn't the right candidate for the County. I would say that same for Rand Paul, Ted Cruz, and any other right wing ideologue. The idea that the Republicans just need to put someone more "Republican" instead of finding someone that actually has the ability to work with the Democrats is a joke. If Ted Cruz wins the primary, the Republicans are looking a pretty dark hole.
Personally, I think that the D's will put up Hilary, but she won't win. I think Joe Manchin, Joe Biden, John Hickenlooper, or Elizabeth Warren have more likely of a chance.
As for the R's, they will end up with the crazy candidates like Paul, Cruz, Ben Carson, Herman Cain, and Huckabee. But I think more likely it will candidates like Mike Pence, Rob Portman, Chris Christie, Mitch Daniels, Jeb Bush, and even Paul Ryan will be the leaders.
My guess is Manchin v. Portman with Portman winning. A moderate social republican who focuses solely on economics will pull this off, especially if Hilary is the candidate. And maybe I want a President from Ohio....![]()
I enjoy tracking how The Noise Machine dupes the faithful and how the agitprop gets spread. This is the new ebola and Bengazi. Grubghazi? BenGruber?
Anyhoo, the Weekly Benghazi is gonna be waaaaaaay worse in the next two years as the GoOPers look for cover to break everything in sight.
Last I checked, the only Republicans who voted for Romenycare were in MA.
As for Obamacare, healthcare (as a whole) has become more expensive, people were not able to keep their doctor, people were not able to keep their plan, it included abortive contraception, and young people are not signing up, thus old, sick, and under-insured people are paying more, when the President said that they would pay less.
New Yorker Article said:This level of interest came as no surprise. Despite the disastrous launch of Healthcare.gov, this time last year, surveys show that the exchanges are now operating largely as advertised. In the past twelve months or so, about 7.3 million Americans have used them to take out insurance plans. An estimated 8.7 million people have obtained coverage through Medicaid, which saw its income-eligibility thresholds raised under the A.C.A. With so many people getting coverage, a lot of them for the first time, the number of uninsured Americans has fallen sharply. And, moreover, most people who have purchased insurance policies on the new exchanges are happy with them.
You don't believe me? A recent article in the Times cites surveys carried out by the Rand Corporation, the Commonwealth Fund, and Gallup, all of which indicated that the percentage of working-age Americans without health coverage has fallen by about a quarter, from somewhere around twenty per cent to somewhere around fifteen per cent. And, on Friday, Gallup published the results of a new survey, which asked people who bought policies through government exchanges what they thought of them. Seventy-one per cent of respondents rated the quality of their coverage as good or excellent. Nineteen per cent said it was fair. Nine per cent said it was poor.
If your goal were to demolish large parts of Obamacare, or even to repeal it entirely, would you want voters to dwell on figures such as these? Or would you prefer that they focus on the videos of Gruber? Conservative commentators and activists, having already promoted "Grubering" as a new verb (meaning: trying to deceive people), are now pinning a new nickname to the professor: the Six-Million-Dollar Man. According to Deroy Murdock, a contributor at National Review online, that's about how much money various government entities have paid Gruber in consulting fees during the past few years for his advice and for the use of his computer models. John McCain, in remarks to the Washington Post, summarized, with commendable honesty, what purpose the Gruber saga is playing: "This gives us ammunition to make fundamental changes to the law."
Last I checked, the only Republicans who voted for Romenycare were in MA.
Meet Obamacare's Republican ancestor: Health Equity & Access Reform Today Act of 1993
It was never voted on, but includes many of the key provisions found in ObamaCare and had 20 Republican co-sponsors (all of them big names). It included an individual mandate, creation of purchasing pools, standardized benefits, vouchers for the poor to buy insurance and ban on denying coverage based on a pre-existing condition. The only differences were that it did not expand Medicaid, had a slightly different employer mandate, included tort reform and, perhaps most significant and reflective of GOP approaches to all government programs, offered no means of paying for it. But make no mistake: the root of ACA was fundamentally a Republican approach.
Sigh. And they aren't Republicans?
Says someone that isn't looking at the numbers. Although I don't like the Affordable Care Act, I do believe that the intent (and in many ways the actual implementation) have helped many people who could not have otherwise received insurance, get insurance. The idea that healthcare costs went up isn't exactly surprising. My premiums have gone up every year for the last 8 years. The ACA had nothing to do with that. I get the point about the President saying they would go down. He is a cheerleader for it, of course he is going to be positive.
My frustration is the idea that Obama is the actual Act. He is not. He is the champion of the Act. Look it over. Much of it is good stuff. Much of it has made the insurance industry better, and the stronger regulations, have made access for many more possible. The idea that the ACA is killing Americans, or that we are worse off than when it was implemented is laughable. Could we have been better off than we are now? Yep. But that would have required the Republicans to actually stand for something. Which they do not.
http://www.newyorker.com/news/john-cassidy/real-lessons-gruber-gate
This makes my point. It is the New Yorker though, so you have a point about the angle, before you even make that point. The concept is still clear:
Of Course Republican's "stand" for something........wait for it........
Continued double digit increases in health care costs, less opportunities to vote for certain specific groups of the unwashed public, increased military spending, Canada's energy conveyance and protection of nearly tax free hoarded wealth capital gains.
I just outlined the GOP strategy.