So? Does that mean he can't compromise? Or change his mind? Why does that have to be a negative thing?
Because it'd make him look weak and foolish, which he apparently hates more than anything. It's what he should do, but like the "red line" comment, he painted himself into a corner. Plus, I can't really blame him for thinking the Republicans would flinch before the Democrats. Frankly I'm surprised they've stuck to their guns this long.
Citation on the favorite friend waivers?
Here, and GE gets waivers from both TACA and the EPA.
And no it's not a fair middle ground. The business mandate was pushed back a year because the infrastructure for the business mandate wasn't ready. Give me one reason why the individual mandate should also be pushed back despite the fact that the infrastructure for it is already in place and chugging along.
Well, obviously the infrastructure for everything still needs work. But part of the act's purported balancing act was "if you have coverage you like, you can keep it," meaning employer provided coverage, obviously. But with the business mandate to provide coverage moved back, many are finding it even more enticing simply to drop coverage and save the money. But the individual mandate still requires individuals to purchase insurance of some sort, so really it becomes a cattleprod to herd more people through the exchanges.
Yeah lord knows that the way I always balance my budget is to quit my job. Paul Ryan's budget's have always been on shaky ground requiring multiple years of growth at a pace that far exceeds growth during the clinton administration.
That's a disingenuous characterization of the Ryan budget.
If it gets sold to China it's still lowering the price of oil the exact same amount. Oil is a fungible good. Only difference is that we would be putting our aquifer at risk by pumping that junk into our country.
Poppycock. The pipeline isn't IN the aquifer, and you'd prefer the risk of putting the oil in tankers? Because that doesn't seem any safer. China is on a mad expansion boom, they're buying all the resources (and in some cases, production facilities outright) they can get their hands on. If you think that bodes well for the US economy... you're mistaken.
Come on do you seriously oppose banking regulation? Unregulated banks nearly destroyed the entire economy and you want to take away the only legislation that even tries to reign them in?
Dodd-Frank was ostensibly meant to address the whole "too big to fail" issue which led to the supposed requirement to hurriedly fork over the bailout cash. Instead, it enshrines it into perpetuity, via the Financial Stability Oversight Council, and authorizes the government to de facto seize any institution it deems critical. Meanwhile it also does absolutely nothing about Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
Pardon me, OFFSHORE production has, especially after the Deepwater Horizon incident gave an excuse to curtail it, in the name of environmentalism. Pity that hasn't stopped other nations from stepping up their drilling in the gulf to fill the void.
All of those ideas are atrocious for the job market. Probably why the Republicans have proposed them.
Yes, because if there's one thing Republicans hate, it's businesses and jobs. Why, look at the unemployment rate during the Bush years, at a staggering 5% and change!