I think Gas had a good point that the Republicans won't try to grandstand this again.Lets punt this shit down the road 3 months so we can do it all over again. Sweet merciful christ, here we go again.
I have no confidence in that. To make that assumption you'd have to assume those representatives who kept up with the charade have learned a lesson from this. I don't think they have, and if it was up to the leadership it wouldn't have gone on this long. There is NO power in John Boehner.I think Gas had a good point that the Republicans won't try to grandstand this again.
That said, I have zero confidence that Congress could work out a real budget no matter how little or how much time was given under the current political climate, so I expect CR. No chance this would happen next October though--it'll be an election year.
Ooo, I bet anyone (especially anyone who might've had definite prior knowledge of tonight's events) who made any large purchases in the stock market recently is reaping some sweet, sweet rewards about now.Aaaaaaand it's finally over. For now. It's passed both the senate and the house.
Excuse me I just need to go get something from the garage.But hey, at least Mitch McConnell got $3 Billion for a dam back home in Kentucky out of the deal he helped put together. So . . . yay?
I'm sorry you took my personal post talking about what I'd get if I chose a certain path to insult you or others having difficulty in the job market. Of course I was focused on explaining what I thought universal healthcare meant, but I can see why you'd want to change topics since you really have no way to claim that the US has no form of universal healthcare coverage.Choose not to work? That's fairly insulting, not to mention presumptuous. Must be nice to have never had to worry about being unemployed.
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2013/10/...-taken-from-the-floor-after-bizarre-outburst/I hear a stenographer went bat shit and started screaming about God during the house vote.
Since you've decided to be a huge dick, I'm gonna go ahead and call you on your bullshit.I'm sorry you took my personal post talking about what I'd get if I chose a certain path to insult you or others having difficulty in the job market. Of course I was focused on explaining what I thought universal healthcare meant, but I can see why you'd want to change topics since you really have no way to claim that the US has no form of universal healthcare coverage.
But since you've decided my statement cuts to the heart, how about you travel to a county with your idealized universal healthcare which undoubtedly has higher unemployment. Harder to get a job, still get free healthcare, but it'll be more the markets fault you can't get a job than your own, so you should be able to feel the burn of my unintentional but apparently hideous insult more keenly.
While I'm at it, why don't I give you a nice paper cut and pour lemon juice in it?
So the EU as a whole has 11.1 percent unemployment rate, which is comparable to the US as a whole. I suppose we could start comparing individual states to individual countries, or we could compare particular countries against the US as a whole, for instance the UK, France, and Finland all have higher, or slightly higher unemployment.I'm gonna go ahead and call you on your bullshit.
No, I'm not going to argue with someone who has their own definition of "universal healthcare". Pretending that it's universal when it doesn't include everyone is comical, and not worth arguing.I'm sorry you took my personal post talking about what I'd get if I chose a certain path to insult you or others having difficulty in the job market. Of course I was focused on explaining what I thought universal healthcare meant, but I can see why you'd want to change topics since you really have no way to claim that the US has no form of universal healthcare coverage.
But since you've decided my statement cuts to the heart, how about you travel to a county with your idealized universal healthcare which undoubtedly has higher unemployment. Harder to get a job, still get free healthcare, but it'll be more the markets fault you can't get a job than your own, so you should be able to feel the burn of my unintentional but apparently hideous insult more keenly.
While I'm at it, why don't I give you a nice paper cut and pour lemon juice in it?
No, I'm not going to argue with someone who has their own definition of "universal healthcare". Pretending that it's universal when it doesn't include everyone is comical, and not worth arguing.
Better go update wikipedia, Krisken. ACA does indeed involve gov't action aimed at extending access to healthcare as widely as possible and sets minimum standards.Universal health coverage is a broad concept that has been implemented in several ways. The common denominator for all such programs is some form of government action aimed at extending access to health care as widely as possible and setting minimum standards.
The ACA provides those things. There are groups within the US that are currently falling between the cracks. That's due to the effort of those who oppose the system, found existing small cracks, and widened them - such as the gap between medicare and ACA that the supreme court blew out as illegal. These are small minor cracks that will be patched up over time, but if this is what you're claiming means we don't have universal healthcare, then I suppose you're right.The goal of universal health coverage is to ensure that all people obtain the health services they need without suffering financial hardship when paying for them. This requires:
• a strong, efficient, well-run health system;
• a system for financing health services;
• access to essential medicines and technologies;
• a sufficient capacity of well-trained, motivated health workers.
Yeah, that's exactly what I'm doing. Dink.WON"T SOMEONE THINK OF THE CHILDREN!!!!
You're cold-hearted.Call me cold-hearted, but it don't think the US taxpayer should be responsible for undocumented immigrants. .
"The Tea Party’s favorability rating has fallen across most groups since June, but the decline has been particularly dramatic among moderate and liberal Republicans. In the current survey, just 27% of moderate and liberal Republicans have a favorable impression of the Tea Party, down from 46% in June," a release from the Pew Research Center said.
So go ahead and keep hammering away on those tea party ideals in the most obstructionist way possible republicans. It can only end well for your party. I'm guessing the primaries for the next presidential election will be brutal if the tea party still has significant sway.Cruz has become much more visible during the shutdown and the showdown leading up the shutdown. And the poll indicates Cruz's popularity among tea party Republicans has soared, from 47% in July to 74% now. But among those who say they are non-tea party Republicans, the freshman senator from Texas and possible 2016 GOP White House contender's unfavorable rating jumped from 16% to 31%.
Non-tea party republicans are part of the problem. A more accurate term would be diet democrat.[DOUBLEPOST=1382023540,1382023434][/DOUBLEPOST]The republicans are going to be hurting if they keep pushing back on any type of immigration reform. They're weak spot is minorities, and they have done nothing except make it worse. Delaying immigration reform won't help them, and will most likely hurt more than anything.
One of the most telling polls shows moderate ruplicans views on the tea party now.
So go ahead and keep hammering away on those tea party ideals in the most obstructionist way possible republicans. It can only end well for your party. I'm guessing the primaries for the next presidential election will be brutal if the tea party still has significant sway.
Nobody listens to the equivalent on the liberal side, according to the ratings. But to answer your question, they have such listenership because until fox news came along, the mainstream media was all liberalism all the time, with a hefty side of America-bashing. Right now half the country calls themselves conservatives, and these talk hosts trumpet ideas that they largely agree with, and it feels like fighting back to them.Why do people even listen to Glenn beck, Limbaugh, coulter, and so forth? Or the equivalent on the liberal side? Extremist radio personalities get the listeners, unfortunately, but it's just not useful.
It's too bad stupid people have such long lifetimes.
One of the reasons they want to keep people focused on budget and fiscal policy, which is more important than immigration reform anyway.The republicans are going to be hurting if they keep pushing back on any type of immigration reform.
Budget and fiscal policy should not take up 100% of a lawmakers time. There is no reason it can't be worked on. The reason they don't want to is because, once again, it's a "Democrat" issue. It would be a sign of the dems winning.[DOUBLEPOST=1382023879,1382023809][/DOUBLEPOST]One of the reasons they want to keep people focused on budget and fiscal policy, which is more important than immigration reform anyway.
That's fine. Like I said, they can keep it up. It will only push more people away from their party.Non-tea party republicans are part of the problem. A more accurate term would be diet democrat.
I'm willing to bet there are millions of Americans with friends and relatives trying to immigrate that would disagree. Immigration reform is something you can put a face on... but budget and fiscal policy? Not so easy.One of the reasons they want to keep people focused on budget and fiscal policy, which is more important than immigration reform anyway.
I'd make the argument that the "pushed" were never really there in the first place. That mythical 20%. Every time the Republicans try to be the center, they lose. When they push right, they start winning.That's fine. Like I said, they can keep it up. It will only push more people away from their party.
They don't have to go to the center. They just need to be a bit less end of the world and try to be a little more open to compromise. It's the obstructionist behavior that's souring people to the Tea Party.I'd make the argument that the "pushed" were never really there in the first place. That mythical 20%. Every time the Republicans try to be the center, they lose. When they push right, they start winning.
But if you turn out to be right, there's also a silver lining to the breakup of the republican party. Once they roll that whale's carcass out, it can make room for something new.
Immigration reform, as currently discussed by the democrats anyway, won't help people outside the country. It's really only aimed at people already here illegally.I'm willing to bet there are millions of Americans with friends and relatives trying to immigrate that would disagree. Immigration reform is something you can put a face on... but budget and fiscal policy? Not so easy.
The whole point of the tea party is these people believe the end IS nigh, something's got to give, and a line must be drawn right here, right now if the nation is to survive. There's no compromising that without the movement losing its very identity. The knife must stop cutting. Any compromise is just pushing the knife in slower instead of faster. And if it takes obstructionism to do it, then so be it - that is what their constitutents sent them to do, after all - to stop with gridlock if necessary, to reverse if possible, but definitely not to do the same stabbing just slower.They don't have to go to the center. They just need to be a bit less end of the world and try to be a little more open to compromise. It's the obstructionist behavior that's souring people to the Tea Party.