Alternate Character Interpretation, eh? I see you discuss politics alot. Well, that won't distract me. You know what I'm talking about.Big_Willie_Styles said:Snip
Alternate Character Interpretation, eh? I see you discuss politics alot. Well, that won't distract me. You know what I'm talking about.Big_Willie_Styles said:Snip
What does any of that have to do with what I'm saying? The Republicans know that Reid's not going to let that legislation get to the Senate floor, that's WHY they're sending so much of it over, so they can play it up like they'd totally fix things if the Dems would just get out of the way. But we saw what happened to tort reform, immigration reform and tax reform when the Republicans held both houses and the Presidency. A fat lot of almost nothing. Did the 108th and 109th give us any of those big ideas the Republicans are screaming for, or was it business as usual with a bunch of debt ceiling hikes thrown in for good measure?Big_Willie_Styles said:Odd, because the Senate passed a lot less bills and zero budgets during the last session while the House 700+ bills and even passed a budget both fiscal years.
And "getting shot to pieces" and not even letting there be a vote on it are two totally different things. Harry Reid was concerned they'd pass.
We'll try a new tack:Big_Willie_Styles said:The power exists with the unions, trial lawyers, and environmentalists as long as Obama is president. Or did you not see him dither on the Keystone XL pipeline decision for years after review after review said it would be peachy and create jobs in the process? Or his gutting of the DC school choice program in the "stimulus" bill? Or the lack of any tort reform in Obamacare? Think, man!
In looking to reform education we should study the examples of other countries. Nordic countries have highly successful education, Finland in particular. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Education_in_Finland] Finland has fully unionized teachers and no American-style private schools.Big_Willie_Styles said:Public schools are failing students in various places, especially black males in inner city schools (the drop out rate is just atrocious.) Students and their parents deserve choices. And the unions are fighting every single effort to give them more choices. The unions are pro-teacher and anti-student (because, as one case of a very candid union official, when kids start paying dues he'll care about their concerns.)
Fracking gets us more natural gas. The fracking boom will make the United States a net exporter of energy in a few years. And all the jobs. Look to North Dakota. Seems really simple to me why I or anyone would support it. (And let's remember how many falsehoods people like Josh Fox peddle.)
We have pipelines all over the country. It is the safest and most efficient way to transport oil and natural gas. Rail, which is what is getting the brunt of the slack because of the lack of this pipeline, is dirtier, much riskier, and not anywhere near as efficient.
Wild claims? The 108th and 109th Congress were Republican majorities in both houses. Whether or not they had a filibuster proof majority is not the issue, the issue is whether they even tried to press their advantage in a meaningful way to create reform on tort, immigration or tax reform. They didn't and it's a matter of public record for anyone interested in looking. They also did raise the debt ceiling again and again, which is also a matter of public record. My claims about what the 108th and 109th did and did not accomplish are all a matter of record.Big_Willie_Styles said:That's quite the argument you're making. Mine has evidence. Yours doesn't. Try to find some. Because I'm through debating you with those wild claims.Gorrath said:What does any of that have to do with what I'm saying? The Republicans know that Reid's not going to let that legislation get to the Senate floor, that's WHY they're sending so much of it over, so they can play it up like they'd totally fix things if the Dems would just get out of the way. But we saw what happened to tort reform, immigration reform and tax reform when the Republicans held both houses and the Presidency. A fat lot of almost nothing. Did the 108th and 109th give us any of those big ideas the Republicans are screaming for, or was it business as usual with a bunch of debt ceiling hikes thrown in for good measure?
They haven't had 60 votes in the Senate since, like, ever. Democrats did for two years. A "filibuster-proof" majority.
I don't think the reason there isn't a flat tax system is because politicians are in the pockets of companies when you consider that any flat tax system would disproportionately benefit the wealthy and shift far more of the tax burden to the poor and middle class than is actually reasonable (unless you think they shouldn't be able to afford things like homes and food anyway).Neronium said:Personally I've always believed in a flat-tax system as they are simple and they close a lot of the loopholes that many companies use. Problem is that will never come to be in the US because both major parties, Republican and Democrat, are basically in the pockets of companies and as a result they would lobby against such a thing. There are downsides to a flat-tax system yes, but compared to the current system we have know anything would be better.
I'd ask you if you even know who McCarthy was and what he did, but you obviously don't.Big_Willie_Styles said:Especially considering the Senate Majority Leader (a Democrat) just declared his critics un-American on the floor of the Senate. Seriously. He's gone Full McCarthy. Again.
Well, I just had to listen to a bunch of Idaho Republican Demagoguery, and now I read your Demagoguery.Big_Willie_Styles said:The Dems are beholden to unions (oppose school choice and vouchers, check,) trial lawyers (oppose "loser pays" laws and tort reform, check,) and environmentalists (oppose Keystone XL pipeline and fracking, check,) among others.
They are taxed, and quite a bit. Do some research before throwing around your ideologies.BloodRed Pixel said:mmmh, how about higher taxing on stuff that's actually meant to kill people - like guns.
So Republican voters are "simple minded". Uh-huh. I do wonder what Democrat voters are? Enlightened?Eldritch Warlord said:The extremely corporatist GOP wants a flat tax because such a system heavily favors big business and the very wealthy (and the rhetoric appeals to their simple-minded base).
Democrat voters can be simple-minded as well, just as Republican voters can be enlightened. Really both parties at this point are completely messed up and no one is to blame, especially with how well all the bipartisan things over the last couple of years has become a he said she said argument on both sides. It shows the inherent problem with having a two party system like how the US does, as having it that in the end you have to choose with one or the other. Because let's face it, you can vote a third party that represents more of your views, but the chances of them winning anything major to where they could actually have a chance to change things is very slim. Heck there are people who will run for the positions in that party for the simple fact that they know that they won't win unless they are backed by that party.Saltyk said:So Republican voters are "simple minded". Uh-huh. I do wonder what Democrat voters are? Enlightened?
Well Democrats do have a significant advantage among people with higher education[footnote]http://www.people-press.org/files/legacy-detailed_tables/Detailed%20tables%20for%20Party%20ID.pdf[/footnote]Saltyk said:So Republican voters are "simple minded". Uh-huh. I do wonder what Democrat voters are? Enlightened?Eldritch Warlord said:The extremely corporatist GOP wants a flat tax because such a system heavily favors big business and the very wealthy (and the rhetoric appeals to their simple-minded base).
I agree with the possibilities, but think it's incredibly unlikely this will be a hole-digger for the GOP.GamemasterAnthony said:and the GOP dig themselves into a deeper hole for it.
But that's totally different because moviesSeracen said:AH yes, and while they're at it, ban all movies that rate higher than PG...because, you know, THAT'S a great idea....
Idiots...
Just because both sides are self-serving asswipes doesn't mean there's any real level of parity, either.RJ 17 said:Just because the GOP is coming up with this bill doesn't mean that both sides aren't still a bunch of self-serving ass-wipes.
Which is why guns are so cheap and accessible. That's weird. Is this like Obama being a socialist, while accidentally coming up with all these capitalist policies?Keiichi Morisato said:there already is? the government actually already taxes guns greatly. actually the government has an agenda to keep guns away from it's citizens as much as possible, if she hits the fan we would be less likely to fight back.
This is America. We love empty gestures and symbolic measures. We've repealed Obamacare symbolically like 9000 times.FalloutJack said:That's funny. It reads "Washington Tax Plan Would Punish Violent Game Makers", but is reads as "Conservative Party Makes Another Kneejerk Reaction At Things It Doesn't Understand Or Like", and then it interprets as "Stupid Politicians Wave Arms Ineffectually At Issue They Can't Actually Do Anything About". *Sigh*
Such laws have been argued on free speech ground because it's seen as a form of government advocacy in the first place. That is, it's seen as the government endorsing X over Y. But then, I find much of the fight over video games should probably come down to commerce, not free speech. Even Brown v EMA strikes me as a commerce clause deal, not a first amendment one.JoJo said:Is this proposed amendment unconstitutional though? I'm no constitutional lawyer, I'm not even American, but I'm pretty the U.S. Constitution just prohibits the government from making laws that prohibit free speech. This on the other hand doesn't prohibit anyone from making any sort of game they want, it rather restricts tax credits to certain games. I don't see how lack of government support could reasonably be taken as actually infringing on a person's freedom of speech.
Can be doesn't really address the overall trend, though.Neronium said:Democrat voters can be simple-minded as well, just as Republican voters can be enlightened.
Sure there is, and you just agreed to it: they're both a bunch of self-serving asswipes.Zachary Amaranth said:Just because both sides are self-serving asswipes doesn't mean there's any real level of parity, either.