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EagleFan 09-22-2013 07:22 PM

Way to politicize a memorial service douchebag...

Edward64 09-22-2013 08:55 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EagleFan (Post 2857697)
Way to politicize a memorial service douchebag...


Uh ... okay, whatever.

cartman 09-25-2013 01:29 PM

So Ted Cruz talked for 21 straight hours to try and delay the Senate vote on funding. The end result: the measure passed 100-0. What a crock.

sterlingice 09-25-2013 01:56 PM

So he spoke for 21 hours against it and then voted for it? Ha!

SI

flere-imsaho 09-25-2013 02:18 PM

The best part was that at one point he read "Green Eggs & Ham" by Dr. Seuss, substituting "Obamacare" for "Green Eggs & Ham". However, he appears to have forgotten that at the end of the book the protagonist tries the green eggs and ham (i.e. "Obamacare") and decides he likes them. :D

So, maybe that's why he voted in favor. Or something.

panerd 09-25-2013 02:25 PM

My guess is the 100-0 is some sort of procedural thing and not the final vote. Don't really care to research it since I think the GOP are just as big of actors on all this "OMG the sky is falling the government is going to shut down!" as the Democrats. But I doubt the vote would be 100-0 on speifically Obamacare funding knowing some of the current members of the Senate.

JPhillips 09-25-2013 03:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cartman (Post 2858510)
So Ted Cruz talked for 21 straight hours to try and delay the Senate vote on funding. The end result: the measure passed 100-0. What a crock.


It was a crock because Cruz negotiated when he would stop withe Reid beforehand. He wasn't really filibustering because the bill includes defunding. He was simply grandstanding.

ISiddiqui 09-25-2013 03:39 PM

It was 100-0 for cloture - to end the debate and actually vote. So no filibuster.

digamma 09-25-2013 04:05 PM

Obama won the America's Cup. YAY!

HomerSimpson98 09-25-2013 04:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 2858544)
He was simply grandstanding.


This.

ISiddiqui 09-25-2013 04:28 PM

Fun article here:

Wal-Mart Returning To Full-Time Workers-Obamacare Not Such A Job Killer After All? - Forbes

Quote:

Wal-Mart is finally learning what all American businesses who seek to avoid their health care responsibilities to employees will soon learn.

It may be a clever enough dodge to cut employees below the 30 hours per week in order to avoid the expectations of Obamacare, but the move comes at a substantial price to be paid in lost revenue and profits. Given that the entire point of business is to show a profit, it is only a matter of time before employers learn what Home Depot learned some years ago and what Wal-Mart is slowly beginning to figure out—you get what you pay for.

Cut back on employees and you will, eventually, cut back on your profits as the savings a business creates by cutting worker hours leads to greatly decreased sales as customer satisfaction disappears.

HAW HAW!

JonInMiddleGA 09-25-2013 05:57 PM

Thus ended the world's longest presidential campaign commercial, with a whimper rather than a bang.

Edward64 09-25-2013 09:16 PM

Does this mean the GOP multiple challenges to Obamacare is finally over? I hope so.

DaddyTorgo 09-25-2013 09:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2858603)
Does this mean the GOP multiple challenges to Obamacare is finally over? I hope so.

:lol:

JonInMiddleGA 09-25-2013 10:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2858603)
Does this mean the GOP multiple challenges to Obamacare is finally over? I hope so.


Hopefully we'll just lock it down with the budget.

At this point, shutting the government down indefinitely would be preferable afaic.

EagleFan 09-25-2013 10:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2858603)
Does this mean Obamacare is finally over? I hope so.


Fixed it for ya

flere-imsaho 09-26-2013 07:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2858603)
Does this mean the GOP multiple challenges to Obamacare is finally over? I hope so.


The GOP's still fighting against Social Security, so, er, probably not.

panerd 09-26-2013 07:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by flere-imsaho (Post 2858685)
The GOP's still fighting against Social Security, so, er, probably not.


The GOP doesn't really care or fight against any of this but I know that every time I point this out I get called out for not having a "solution" to the fake two party system.

JPhillips 09-26-2013 07:51 AM

In a new report on the exchanges run by the Feds:

Quote:

Premiums before tax credits will be more than 16 percent lower than projected.

flere-imsaho 09-26-2013 11:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2858688)
The GOP doesn't really care or fight against any of this but I know that every time I point this out I get called out for not having a "solution" to the fake two party system.


I think you'll find that privatizing Social Security was a key element of the last GOP Presidential Candidate's (or his veep's) platform. Now, we can argue if that's meant to destroy or save Social Security, but....

sterlingice 09-26-2013 12:07 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by flere-imsaho (Post 2858791)
I think you'll find that privatizing Social Security was a key element of the last GOP Presidential Candidate's (or his veep's) platform. Now, we can argue if that's meant to destroy or save Social Security, but....


Hell, GWB floated that idea.

SI

Solecismic 09-26-2013 01:49 PM

I just got the letter from my insurance provider telling me my insurance will be canceled on 1/1 and directing me to the exchange. Yay. From what I'm seeing, I'll wind up with less coverage for about a 10% hike. Not as bad as I had thought, but thanks Obama.

Autumn 09-26-2013 03:11 PM

Well, in a few days I get to choose an insurance plan for my family that I can possibly afford from a spectrum of choices. As a self-employed business owner in a state with one insurance provider, which I couldn't possibly afford, that makes a world of difference. So thank you, Obama, for real.

Edward64 09-27-2013 05:01 AM

Quote:

I just got the letter from my insurance provider telling me my insurance will be canceled on 1/1 and directing me to the exchange. Yay. From what I'm seeing, I'll wind up with less coverage for about a 10% hike. Not as bad as I had thought, but thanks Obama.

Quote:

Well, in a few days I get to choose an insurance plan for my family that I can possibly afford from a spectrum of choices. As a self-employed business owner in a state with one insurance provider, which I couldn't possibly afford, that makes a world of difference. So thank you, Obama, for real.

Interested in know if the below chart is somewhat accurate for you?

Obamacare premiums - CNNMoney

Edward64 09-27-2013 05:21 AM

The article below is pretty critical of the GOP and Tea Party. Boehner and Cantor don't seem to have a good grip on them. The article made me ask two questions

(1) Should Obama concede to the 1 year delay of the individual mandate (from what I understand) but still do everything else? Is this one of those situations where he needs to help GOP save face but think about the bigger picture?

(2) Should the GOP be affiliated with the Tea Party at all? If the GOP was completely separated, they could go back to the good old days and make deals with the Dems and essentially isolate the Tea Party.

Republican hard-liners block strategy to avoid federal government shutdown - The Washington Post
Quote:

“Now, the president says, ‘I’m not going to negotiate [over the debt limit].’ Well, I’m sorry, but it just doesn’t work that way,” Boehner told reporters after a morning meeting where he presented the proposal to GOP lawmakers.

Senior advisers explained that passing the debt-limit bill was key to keeping the government open: Once lawmakers had voted for the debt-limit bill, with its one-year delay of the health-care law, they might be more willing to support a measure to fund federal agencies without provisions to defund the health-care law.


flere-imsaho 09-27-2013 08:31 AM

The problem the GOP would have if the Tea Party split off is that it would stop winning elections. Imagine a 2012 election with Obama, Romney and Bachman. Obama probably wins by 15-20 points at least.

The Democrats would have the same issue if a sufficiently-sized left-wing group broke off.

flere-imsaho 09-27-2013 08:37 AM

IMO, Obama shouldn't negotiate on any of the terms the GOP is trying to use for the government shutdown. Not only will he not be up for re-election, but the issue isn't shaping up as a winner for the GOP, which is why you see all the GOP "moderates" in Congress really worried about it.

I remember all this from 95/96. Prior to the shutdown the GOP thought it had a winner on its hands. People would be on board with the idea that the government needs to "live within its means", etc....

But the fact is that once the government shuts down and basic services that people across multiple spectrums have come to love, enjoy and depend upon go away, people get angry, and their anger turns towards the obstructionists. In this situation, it's easier for the President (because he's one, singular voice, because he has the bully pulpit, but also because he doesn't write legislation) to cast himself as just another victim of the obstruction (which is what Clinton did).

Honestly, I'd actually like to see Obama go nuclear with the shutdown. Instead of the way it's usually done, where non-essential services are slowly turned off, and it's "relatively" gradual, I'd like to see him shut as much down as possible. An example? Send all the air traffic controllers home and shut down domestic aviation. When people get mad, just shrug and say "hey, we don't have the money".

JonInMiddleGA 09-27-2013 09:01 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by flere-imsaho (Post 2858989)
Obama probably wins by 15-20 points at least.


And there's a risk of a GOP'er finishing 3rd electorally, which would be even more troubling.

Autumn 09-27-2013 02:39 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2858966)
Interested in know if the below chart is somewhat accurate for you?

Obamacare premiums - CNNMoney


I'm in Maine, one of the highest on that chart at $961/mo for a family of four, which I am. But that's still much cheaper than the options we've had available to us, as Maine has been one fo the most expensive states for insurance for some time, I believe. I don't remember the exact figures as I haven't looked at them in a while, but I believe our monthly cost previous to this would have been roughly $1,250 a month, and I think that was for much less benefits.

It's not going to be a huge benefit to us to begin with, as our state is booting borderline people like us off of the state system. But my hope is that rates in states like ours will go down as more competition is added.

Edward64 09-27-2013 10:09 PM

Pretty good week for Obama.

Gets consensus on Syria. May not have teeth but gets him off his redline fiasco.

Looks diplomatic with Iran. We'll see what happens but can't hurt.

And of course, GOP infighting and a can't lose situation right now. I think most will blame the GOP if the shutdown or default happens.

U.N. Security Council OKs resolution on Syrian chemical weapons - CNN.com
Quote:

United Nations (CNN) -- The U.N. Security Council, capping a dramatic month of diplomacy, voted unanimously late Friday to require Syria to eliminate its arsenal of chemical weapons -- or face consequences.
:
:
The resolution did not authorize the automatic use of force if Syria is said to be in violation, as was previously sought by the United States


Obama and Rouhani make history with phone call, thawing three decade freeze between US and Iran - First Read
Quote:

President Barack Obama revealed Friday that he talked with Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, marking the first time leaders from the U.S. and Iran have directly communicated since the 1979 Iranian revolution.

"Just now I spoke on the phone with President Rouhani of the Islamic Republic of Iran," he said from the White House.

Senate tosses shutdown hot potato back to House - CNN.com
Quote:

In a congressional version of hot potato, the Senate on Friday passed a short-term spending plan that would prevent a looming government shutdown and sent it to the House for a weekend showdown between Republican tea party conservatives and their more moderate party leaders.

The 54-44 vote on strict party lines came after Senate Democrats pushed through an amendment to restore funding for Obamacare that House Republicans had eliminated in their version of the spending measure, which would prevent the start of a government shutdown on Tuesday.

Now House Speaker John Boehner must decide whether to urge his divided Republican caucus to vote with Democrats to pass the Senate plan, or yield again to a hardline conservative wing that demands making continued government funding contingent on undermining Obamacare.


sterlingice 09-28-2013 09:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2859224)
Pretty good week for Obama.

Gets consensus on Syria. May not have teeth but gets him off his redline fiasco.

Looks diplomatic with Iran. We'll see what happens but can't hurt.


I have a lot of criticism for Obama but very little of it is in the foreign policy sphere. The Iran talks are probably a non-starter but you have to give it a chance as it looks better than it has in 30 years. I think Kerry bailed him out and has made Syria mediocre rather than a big loser.

SI

Mizzou B-ball fan 09-28-2013 11:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2859224)
And of course, GOP infighting and a can't lose situation right now. I think most will blame the GOP if the shutdown or default happens.


I'm not sure that 'blame' is the correct word for it. I'm not sure the motivation is correct as far as the GOP forcing a default, but there's a whole lot of people that want to see meaningful change and these false standoffs with deadlines for political gain are getting really old. I'm tired of someone getting 'credit' for saving us from politics. I wouldn't blame them at all, nor would I thank them. I think giving credit to either side each time is only furthering the stupidity of these faux deadlines.

JPhillips 09-28-2013 12:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Mizzou B-ball fan (Post 2859285)
I'm not sure that 'blame' is the correct word for it. I'm not sure the motivation is correct as far as the GOP forcing a default, but there's a whole lot of people that want to see meaningful change and these false standoffs with deadlines for political gain are getting really old. I'm tired of someone getting 'credit' for saving us from politics. I wouldn't blame them at all, nor would I thank them. I think giving credit to either side each time is only furthering the stupidity of these faux deadlines.


How are they faux deadlines? The budget expires Monday and the Treasury says the extraordinary measures used to keep paying the bills expire on the 17th. Are people lying about the budget and the debt limit?

Edward64 09-28-2013 02:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 2859308)
How are they faux deadlines? The budget expires Monday and the Treasury says the extraordinary measures used to keep paying the bills expire on the 17th. Are people lying about the budget and the debt limit?


The sequester certainly wasn't as bad as some made it sound. I am sure there were those impacted but not as a whole.

The lead up to this seems pretty low key. There's not been the buildup as there was earlier this year.

I don't know if its faux deadlines. I doubt we will default on government bonds but I can see we will stop paying government, civil servants.

When this happened with Clinton, the GOP was "blamed". Its the correct word in politics for sure.

sterlingice 09-28-2013 09:47 PM

Did the drop in credit rating from AAA to AA last year have real, tangible implications? I would argue so, particularly for a country that likes to borrow.

SI

Edward64 09-29-2013 07:22 AM

Here we go ... let see how this plays out.

Hope any civil servants on this board won't be affected too much.

Any predictions on how this will impact the stock market? I'm thinking relatively nil in the near term as shut down as been a real possibility in the past week and investors would have already accounted for it?

Defiant House delays Obamacare; government shutdown looms - CNN.com
Quote:

In a move that makes a government shutdown very likely, House Republicans approved a spending plan early Sunday morning that would delay Obamacare for a year and repeal its tax on medical devices.

The temporary budget resolution now goes back to the Senate, where Democrats have consistently said any changes to President Barack Obama's signature healthcare law is a deal-killer.

On top of that, Obama has already issued a veto threat.

If Washington can't reach a deal, a government shutdown will begin at 12:01 a.m. Tuesday.

"The Republicans' first try was to defund Obamacare. Now they are slowly chipping away at it," said Dana Bash, CNN's chief congressional correspondent. "They want the president to negotiate. That is their line: the president needs to come to the table and negotiate."

A Senate Democratic source told CNN there were no plans for the Senate to meet before Monday -- the day the current fiscal year ends.

Congress could avert a shutdown by passing a temporary spending measure while the two chambers work out their differences. But neither side is talking about that now.

"I've not talked to anybody here who doesn't think it's a very, very big possibility, even Republicans, that the government won't shut down -- even for a short time," Bash said.


Edward64 09-29-2013 07:35 AM

I like that Congress has to do the exchanges also.

Why Congress is (or isn't) exempt from Obamacare
Quote:

Of all the arguments against the Affordable Care Act that congressional Republicans are mustering in the debate over the spending bill, one hits closest to home. Congress, they say, is exempt from the very law that applies to everyone else.

The truth: Members of Congress are treated differently under Obamacare, but they're not exempt. In fact, by forcing them to purchase health insurance through publicly run exchanges, they're impacted more by that key provision than similar employees in private sector — or even in government.

But members of Congress will also be able to purchase their insurance under terms that are more favorable than other employees — in government or in business — who have access to employer-provided health care.

Here's the history: During the 2010 debate over the Affordable Care Act, Sen. Chuck Grassley, R-Iowa, proposed an amendment requiring members of Congress and their staffs to purchase health insurance though state exchanges. Democrats, viewing the amendment as a political stunt, co-opted the idea as their own and inserted it into the bill.

Edward64 09-29-2013 07:43 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sterlingice (Post 2859452)
Did the drop in credit rating from AAA to AA last year have real, tangible implications? I would argue so, particularly for a country that likes to borrow.

SI


Good question. Not sure, I was not able to find any analysis of this.

However, the stock market is up so isn't that rough barometer?

Jon 09-29-2013 10:17 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2859490)
Here we go ... let see how this plays out.

Hope any civil servants on this board won't be affected too much.



I've been notified I'm non essential so I stop working mid-day Tuesday.

Hopefully it doesn't last too long as there are bills to be paid.

DaddyTorgo 09-29-2013 11:00 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2859490)
Here we go ... let see how this plays out.

Hope any civil servants on this board won't be affected too much.

Any predictions on how this will impact the stock market? I'm thinking relatively nil in the near term as shut down as been a real possibility in the past week and investors would have already accounted for it?

Defiant House delays Obamacare; government shutdown looms - CNN.com


There's plenty of analysis from the last go-round out there. Just came across this piece

Shutdown politics to dominate investor attention - Market Snapshot - MarketWatch

duckman 09-29-2013 11:23 AM

We were told Thursday that they enough cash on hand nationally for the VBA to stay open through October 4 then we'll be furloughed.

tarcone 09-30-2013 09:09 PM

Im referring to the movie Brewsters Millions.
What would happen if the public voted "None of the Above" in the next 2 or 3 elections? In national elections the people voted for no one?
Would the incumbents retain their seats? Or would the offices go empty?

cartman 09-30-2013 09:13 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 2860180)
Im referring to the movie Brewsters Millions.
What would happen if the public voted "None of the Above" in the next 2 or 3 elections? In national elections the people voted for no one?
Would the incumbents retain their seats? Or would the offices go empty?


Only the votes that are cast count. There is no concept of a quorum for Congressional/Presidential elections.

tarcone 09-30-2013 09:15 PM

What I mean is 300 million people vote but no one votes for any politicians running for national office. People vote for local issues or alderman seats, but leave the House, Senate and Presidential empty.

cartman 09-30-2013 09:18 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by tarcone (Post 2860183)
What I mean is 300 million people vote but no one votes for any politicians running for national office. People vote for local issues or alderman seats, but leave the House, Senate and Presidential empty.


Good luck with that.

molson 09-30-2013 09:41 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cartman (Post 2860184)
Good luck with that.


I don't know about 300 million but I bet we can get at least 9 people to submit blank ballots for national offices.

JonInMiddleGA 09-30-2013 09:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cartman (Post 2860182)
Only the votes that are cast count. There is no concept of a quorum for Congressional/Presidential elections.


This.

And nobody is gonna get shutout completely since candidates do have a tendency to vote for themselves.

RainMaker 10-01-2013 12:09 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sterlingice (Post 2859452)
Did the drop in credit rating from AAA to AA last year have real, tangible implications? I would argue so, particularly for a country that likes to borrow.


It had no effect on our borrowing. Heck, we've never been able to borrow money cheaper. In fact, we're making money by borrowing.

Atocep 10-01-2013 08:28 AM

I'm a contractor at an Army hospital so I keep going to work. The direct impact on me would be my VA disability pay if this becomes extended for whatever reason.

The hospital will probably feel empty this afternoon though.

Thomkal 10-01-2013 09:43 AM

Just a question: So now that Congress has allowed a shutdown of the government, is it possible for the citizens of a state to call for a recall of their federally elected representatives? Not going to happen of course, but just curious if it could happen.

The thing that burns me the most about the shutdown is thanks to the 27th amendment, Congress continues to get paid during it.

cartman 10-01-2013 09:58 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Thomkal (Post 2860267)
Just a question: So now that Congress has allowed a shutdown of the government, is it possible for the citizens of a state to call for a recall of their federally elected representatives? Not going to happen of course, but just curious if it could happen.

The thing that burns me the most about the shutdown is thanks to the 27th amendment, Congress continues to get paid during it.


Only if the state has a law on the books allowing a recall election of an elected official to a federal office. A lot of states don't have that.

Thomkal 10-01-2013 10:02 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cartman (Post 2860273)
Only if the state has a law on the books allowing a recall election of an elected official to a federal office. A lot of states don't have that.


ah pretty much what I thought, thanks Cartman

Thomkal 10-01-2013 10:03 AM

and I'm now burned on a personal level as my twin brother just minutes ago found out he's been furloughed. :(

panerd 10-01-2013 10:14 AM

Remember during the next election how hard both sides worked for the last year and a half or so and how they didn't just let it come to a showdown at the last minute. (And of course just keep voting for the lessor of two evils and complaining when you get results like this)

sterlingice 10-01-2013 10:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2860280)
Remember during the next election how hard both sides worked for the last year and a half or so and how they didn't just let it come to a showdown at the last minute. (And of course just keep voting for the lessor of two evils and complaining when you get results like this)


I would certainly expect a third party candidate further to the left or right from the Dems or Reps to be even more willing to sit down at a table

SI

JonInMiddleGA 10-01-2013 10:19 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2860280)
Remember during the next election how hard both sides worked for the last year and a half or so and how they didn't just let it come to a showdown at the last minute. (And of course just keep voting for the lessor of two evils and complaining when you get results like this)


I'm not really complaining, because I don't see an intellectually/philosophically acceptable way to avoid it.

It's the curse of split bodies in the legislature. If every person votes their conscience (or the conscience of their constituency) then loggerheads is the result if it comes down to each having a line they cannot/will not cross. And in a country as divided as we are, those splits are also consistent & predictable.

cartman 10-01-2013 10:25 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JonInMiddleGA (Post 2860282)
And in a country as gerrymandered as we are, those splits are also consistent & predictable.


FTFY. 1.5 million more votes were cast for the Democratic candidates in the House elections, yet the Republicans hold a 232-200 edge in seats held.

panerd 10-01-2013 10:37 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sterlingice (Post 2860281)
I would certainly expect a third party candidate further to the left or right from the Dems or Reps to be even more willing to sit down at a table

SI


I guess you could say Americans are different but the 3rd and 4th parties in other countries don't seem to have the same problems with issues like this that we do. (Again like I said the United States is a whole different animal but to say 3rd/4th parties will be just as bad is just as big of a leap as me saying they would make things better)

larrymcg421 10-01-2013 11:29 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2860291)
I guess you could say Americans are different but the 3rd and 4th parties in other countries don't seem to have the same problems with issues like this that we do. (Again like I said the United States is a whole different animal but to say 3rd/4th parties will be just as bad is just as big of a leap as me saying they would make things better)


Well the 3rd and 4th parties would be the Libertarians and the Greens. They would be even more entrenched in their positions on this debate, not less. And I've said before that I would love a parliamentary, proportional representation system, but as long as we have first past the post, single member districts, we are going to have two parties. (Duverger's Law).

I fully admit that I vote for lesser of the two evils, but if the Democrats caved on this showdown, then I'd consider them more evil.

Marc Vaughan 10-01-2013 12:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by larrymcg421 (Post 2860313)
but as long as we have first past the post, single member districts, we are going to have two parties. (Duverger's Law).


You are aware that 'law' indicates that the current system is biased towards two parties - not that its always the case ... there are lots of counter examples which can be dredged up showing coalition governments in similar setups (England today for example).

Kodos 10-01-2013 12:12 PM


RainMaker 10-01-2013 12:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sterlingice (Post 2860281)
I would certainly expect a third party candidate further to the left or right from the Dems or Reps to be even more willing to sit down at a table


Fringe activists seem to think their plan is what everyone wants but they just don't know about it yet!

larrymcg421 10-01-2013 12:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marc Vaughan (Post 2860328)
You are aware that 'law' indicates that the current system is biased towards two parties - not that its always the case ... there are lots of counter examples which can be dredged up showing coalition governments in similar setups (England today for example).


Sure, it's not always the case, but it's true that plurality, single member district systems have fewer parties than in a proportional representation setup by a statistically significant amount.

And even the counterexamples have significant differences. If the US President was selected via a coalition setup where the Dems/Greens could combine their numbers, and the GOP/Libertarians could combine theirs, then you'd end up with far more votes for the Greens and Libertarians than in our current setup.

You would also definitely see a Tea Party split from the GOP. That doesn't make sense now, because it would doom both their chances. A Dem could be very unpopular and get only 40% of the vote, while the GOP and Tea Party candidate got 30% each. The Dem wins in our system despite 60% of the public preferring a conservative candidate.

molson 10-01-2013 12:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by larrymcg421 (Post 2860334)

You would also definitely see a Tea Party split from the GOP. That doesn't make sense now, because it would doom both their chances. A Dem could be very unpopular and get only 40% of the vote, while the GOP and Tea Party candidate got 30% each. The Dem wins in our system despite 60% of the public rejecting them.


It's fantasy scenario stuff but I'd think a moderate Republican party without the Tea Party and religious fundamentalism would appeal to more Democrats and independents, at least in some elections. Especially if Dems in power took the opportunity to move further to the left.

ISiddiqui 10-01-2013 12:46 PM

On furlough... hopefully this doesn't go too long. There are cracks developing in the GOP caucus already.

RainMaker 10-01-2013 12:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marc Vaughan (Post 2860328)
You are aware that 'law' indicates that the current system is biased towards two parties - not that its always the case ... there are lots of counter examples which can be dredged up showing coalition governments in similar setups (England today for example).


The two party stuff is overblown. The parties have huge variances between members. A Republican in Illinois is not the same as a Republican in Alabama. Same for a Democrat in Montana vs a Democrat in New York.

If we had a bunch of other parties involved, it'd end up with a similar makeup in Congress with similar coalitions. When it comes to Congress, people are generally happy with their own representative.

thesloppy 10-01-2013 01:38 PM

At some point I wish Democratic constituents would take their party (or themselves?) to task for saying "Awww shucks they wouldn't let us have our way" while the conservative agenda marches on. This is a perfect case, where it's easy for most liberals like myself to point at the obvious distinctions of public intentions and say that there's only one party at fault, while ignoring that the Dems have been basically comically fumbling with the government like it's the clock on their VCR for the last 50 years, while essentially changing nothing. "Geez, we'd love to get some of these changes through, but it just keeps getting gummed up in the works. We've only been at this political stuff a couple hundred years....just give us a little more time. If only the other guys would play by the rules."

I'm starting to think I'd just prefer some sort of Thunderdome based government. Seems more honest and graceful.

panerd 10-01-2013 01:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 2860341)
The two party stuff is overblown. The parties have huge variances between members. A Republican in Illinois is not the same as a Republican in Alabama. Same for a Democrat in Montana vs a Democrat in New York.

If we had a bunch of other parties involved, it'd end up with a similar makeup in Congress with similar coalitions. When it comes to Congress, people are generally happy with their own representative.


You may want to study the roll call on this one.

Either you are correct and the votes are all over the place or you are wrong and the votes are strictly along party lines. Please feel free to rebut what I am saying and show me the Democrat in Montana who voted to shutdown the government or the Republican in Illinois who voted against the shutdown. All I am seeing votes strictly along party lines.

Arles 10-01-2013 01:58 PM

A company I used to work with (as a consultant) just completed a benefits study for the next two years. The good news is, they plan to continue to offer their employees health care. The bad news is that their size was just big enough to cover it. As the HR guy just told me, if you are worried about going onto the healthcare exchanges, maybe look at switching jobs to a bigger company over the next year or so. He thinks a lot of small businesses will be dropping coverage. Just an FYI.

***EDIT - To be fair, the guy is fairly conservative and I just talked with someone else who doesn't think it's that dire. Still, I do think there needs to be a real debate on the impact of this and not the "We are turning into 1980s USSR with bread lines" from the right and the "no one will lose coverage options and all costs will go down" from the left.

chadritt 10-01-2013 02:15 PM

My payroll company, who i suppose I technically work for, included a letter with our last paychecks informing us that we will not be receiving healthcare from them. Im freelance so I never thought I would, the only way I get healthcare is to work a set amount of union hours, but it was interesting to all of us.

RainMaker 10-01-2013 02:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2860365)
You may want to study the roll call on this one.

Either you are correct and the votes are all over the place or you are wrong and the votes are strictly along party lines. Please feel free to rebut what I am saying and show me the Democrat in Montana who voted to shutdown the government or the Republican in Illinois who voted against the shutdown. All I am seeing votes strictly along party lines.


Lot of other issues they vote on which sees party lines crossed. Baucus from Montana hasn't supported the Democratic budget in the Senate. 10% of the Dems (mostly in red districts) voted for repealing the Medical Device Tax the other day.

Do you really think Mark Kirk and John Cornyn are similar? What about Bernie Sanders and Jon Tester? There are pretty huge gaps in what members of a particular party support.

Ronnie Dobbs3 10-01-2013 02:25 PM


RainMaker 10-01-2013 02:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Arles (Post 2860368)
A company I used to work with (as a consultant) just completed a benefits study for the next two years. The good news is, they plan to continue to offer their employees health care. The bad news is that their size was just big enough to cover it. As the HR guy just told me, if you are worried about going onto the healthcare exchanges, maybe look at switching jobs to a bigger company over the next year or so. He thinks a lot of small businesses will be dropping coverage. Just an FYI.

***EDIT - To be fair, the guy is fairly conservative and I just talked with someone else who doesn't think it's that dire. Still, I do think there needs to be a real debate on the impact of this and not the "We are turning into 1980s USSR with bread lines" from the right and the "no one will lose coverage options and all costs will go down" from the left.


As a small business owner I get a nice credit for offering health insurance under this new plan. Not sure how big the company you're talking about is, but for my company, it works out well. The tax credit goes up I believe in 2014 which will be nice too.

Arles 10-01-2013 02:43 PM

I think it's more for companies in the 25-100 range. If you have under 25, you get a credit. But, if you are between 25 and 50, there's a pretty big incentive to move a bunch of people to part-time to avoid the new cost. From 50 to 100, it might be worth just paying the fine as well.

JonInMiddleGA 10-01-2013 02:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 2860341)
When it comes to Congress, people are generally happy with their own representative.


+1

mckerney 10-01-2013 02:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 2860374)
10% of the Dems (mostly in red districts) voted for repealing the Medical Device Tax the other day.


Probably all local issues there. A number of Minnesota democrats were against the tax due to the significant medical device industry in the state.

rowech 10-01-2013 03:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RainMaker (Post 2860341)
The two party stuff is overblown. The parties have huge variances between members. A Republican in Illinois is not the same as a Republican in Alabama. Same for a Democrat in Montana vs a Democrat in New York.

If we had a bunch of other parties involved, it'd end up with a similar makeup in Congress with similar coalitions. When it comes to Congress, people are generally happy with their own representative.


Mostly because they have drawn the lines in such ways that there aren't even that many real races anymore. How many congressional races are decided before an election even takes place?

sterlingice 10-01-2013 03:37 PM

I wish everyone had to adopt the Iowa redistricting model.

SI

Raiders Army 10-01-2013 04:26 PM

I'm furloughed but I'm counting on them to give us back pay. Maybe.

JonInMiddleGA 10-01-2013 04:50 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rowech (Post 2860403)
How many congressional races are decided before an election even takes place?


A lot ... but like tends to attract like, at both the state level and the district level. You can't simply attribute that to how district lines are drawn, not by a long shot.

chadritt 10-01-2013 04:51 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Raiders Army (Post 2860436)
I'm furloughed but I'm counting on them to give us back pay. Maybe.


my buddy at NASA is having to use his vacation time.

JPhillips 10-01-2013 05:35 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JonInMiddleGA (Post 2860450)
A lot ... but like tends to attract like, at both the state level and the district level. You can't simply attribute that to how district lines are drawn, not by a long shot.


Sure, but gerrymandering plays a part. Look at Pennsylvania, a reliably blue state. The congressional delegation is 13 GOP and 5 Dem.

JonInMiddleGA 10-01-2013 05:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 2860457)
Sure, but gerrymandering plays a part. Look at Pennsylvania, a reliably blue state. The congressional delegation is 13 GOP and 5 Dem.


I've seen the worst of gerrymandering possible, the infamous donut hole district in Georgia a few years back. Makes it hard to flinch at something that looks like this:

Spoiler

EagleFan 10-01-2013 06:09 PM

That fraud had a perfect chance to play the leader today and instead he acted like a 5 year old blaming his sister for the mess. What a punk move. It's that kind of politics that got us in the mess, do you seriously think that is the right move. If so, you have proven that you are not anywhere close the leader that the country needs.

miked 10-01-2013 06:18 PM

What can he do, pass a budget? Fund the government by executive order?

EagleFan 10-01-2013 06:25 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by miked (Post 2860468)
What can he do, pass a budget? Fund the government by executive order?


So making a whiney speech is your choice of action for the leader? He can try to get the sides to negotiate for one. Instead he pounded a wedge farther between them with that speech. He is not a leader and that shows quite clearly by that speech.

Solecismic 10-01-2013 06:33 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by miked (Post 2860468)
What can he do, pass a budget? Fund the government by executive order?


In most countries, when a leader reaches the point where he can't lead, rather than blaming those who think his policies are wrong, he or she resigns.

In America, for whatever reason, we have this stupid two-party system where the process ensures that whomever reaches a high level of office is utterly incompetent.

rowech 10-01-2013 06:40 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Solecismic (Post 2860474)
In most countries, when a leader reaches the point where he can't lead, rather than blaming those who think his policies are wrong, he or she resigns.

In America, for whatever reason, we have this stupid two-party system where the process ensures that whomever reaches a high level of office is utterly incompetent.


How is he supposed to lead people who have clearly stated, without reservation, they are going to oppose him on everything he does?

He deserves a lot of grief for a lot of things, but what is happening here isn't on him at all. If you don't like the thing, get an idea of your own and get it passed or get the numbers to repeal the law. If we're going to just start attempting to stop legally passed laws that are verified by the courts, then wtf is the point of even passing anything anymore?

larrymcg421 10-01-2013 06:43 PM

This is hilarious. So in order for Obama to be a great leader, he'd have to cave in. But if he did that, everyone would be calling him weak.

I'd say he's doing a good job of being a leader since the public backs his position by a pretty wide margin.

Poll: Don't Shut Down the Government Over Obamacare - NationalJournal.com

Polls: Americans put more blame on GOP for shutdown

POLL: Just one in four approves of Republicans’ handling of government shutdown standoff



EagleFan 10-01-2013 06:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by larrymcg421 (Post 2860478)
This is hilarious. So in order for Obama to be a great leader, he'd have to cave in. But if he did that, everyone would be calling him weak.

I'd say he's doing a good job of being a leader since the public backs his position by a pretty wide margin.

Poll: Don't Shut Down the Government Over Obamacare - NationalJournal.com

Polls: Americans put more blame on GOP for shutdown

POLL: Just one in four approves of Republicans’ handling of government shutdown standoff




A good leader wouldn't stand on camera and act like a whiney kid trying to blame his sister for breaking a vase. It's leadership 101.

Marc Vaughan 10-01-2013 06:49 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by chadritt (Post 2860451)
my buddy at NASA is having to use his vacation time.


Hows does that work? - I'm presuming that his vacation time is normally paid ... and I thought the whole idea was that people weren't being paid?

(if you're not being paid by a company then you're not on vacation - you're simply not working because they aren't paying you, entirely different imho ...)

chadritt 10-01-2013 06:52 PM

No clue on the specifics. He just told me that he's using vacation time and that back pay isn't guaranteed for him.

SirFozzie 10-01-2013 07:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EagleFan (Post 2860479)
A good leader wouldn't stand on camera and act like a whiney kid trying to blame his sister for breaking a vase. It's leadership 101.


Well, when the sister DID break the vase, and he accurately reports it, yeah, that's kinda sorta leadership.

The Republicans own this shutdown. They are cheering for this shutdown.

The Republicans Plan F has failed (In order: A) Defund B)Tie to debt-ceiling C) Delay entire law D) Delay mandate E) Go to Conference F) Mini-bills under rule.) What's plan G? Summon Cthulhu? Ninja Attack? The Spanish Inquisition? (no one expects the Spanish Inquisition!)

thesloppy 10-01-2013 07:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rowech (Post 2860476)

He deserves a lot of grief for a lot of things, but what is happening here isn't on him at all. If you don't like the thing, get an idea of your own and get it passed or get the numbers to repeal the law. If we're going to just start attempting to stop legally passed laws that are verified by the courts, then wtf is the point of even passing anything anymore?


I feel like the other side of this coin is that ~2009, seemingly just after this debate began, this administration pretty much immediately gave up on the idea of single payor, because it supposedly wasn't politically feasible. This administration's attempt at healthcare and insurance reform resulted in 4 years of tooth & nail fighting, bringing the government to a literal stop, with the best possible result (as far as the Dems are concerned) to be a government mandate for it's citizens to buy private health insurance, while the cost and quality of healthcare and insurance continues to spiral away. I personally think it's fair to connect those dots up to today, and call the whole thing a resounding failure, though anyone else's mileage may certainly vary.

At this point both sides seem to be passionately suggesting we're still fighting over "free healthcare", wouldn't that be nice if it were true?

JonInMiddleGA 10-01-2013 07:42 PM

I honestly don't get the angst over the deadlock, I really don't.

I mean, we're talking about choices that are unacceptable to two very diverse groups of people (at least until the GOP weak-sisters cave in after a few days of giving themselves political cover).

Each body has passed a version. Right?

Each body has operated according to its collective conscience in rejecting the other body's version. Right?

And why would it ethically fall to either side to be the one that caves in to the other?

Now, when what I suspect will happen happens (the inevitable cave of the alleged right - which I believe the ones who will switch sides could already tell you roughly what day they will do so) THEN I'll all for blasting the hell out of those hypocrites. At least figuratively.

cuervo72 10-01-2013 07:46 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JonInMiddleGA (Post 2860459)
I've seen the worst of gerrymandering possible, the infamous donut hole district in Georgia a few years back.


Maryland is pretty ridiculous these days. Basically redrawn to oust Roscoe Bartlett and cement the other seats. It actually went to a ballot measure, but most of the voters either didn't know what to make of it (didn't help that the wording was pretty ambiguous - a vote of NO implied you were voting against the Constitution) or didn't care (being Democrats).

Vote against Maryland redistricting - Washington Post

Maryland redistricting maps: Maryland's New Congressional Districts - The Washington Post

PilotMan 10-01-2013 07:48 PM

Yep, the world watches while Socialist, Dictator 4Lyfe Obama consolidates his decreasing power by closing the government and declaring free health care for all.

Or that's what you would be lead to believe by some.

PilotMan 10-01-2013 07:53 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EagleFan (Post 2860479)
A good leader wouldn't stand on camera and act like a whiney kid trying to blame his sister for breaking a vase. It's leadership 101.


whatfuckingever.

Don't let your personal feelings creep in here, every president from my memory has given speeches chastising the opposition for one thing or another. He can't make them come back and just do it. Boehner had every opportunity to get the govt funded, but his bowing to the vocal minority really shows his stripes as a leader.

PilotMan 10-01-2013 07:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by larrymcg421 (Post 2860478)
This is hilarious. So in order for Obama to be a great leader, he'd have to cave in. But if he did that, everyone would be calling him weak.



Just like Syria, he is told nearly by every hawk in Washington that nobody wants to go to war and that they need a clear vision of what they want to do or they won't authorize it. The hawks thought they had one over on him politically and that he would have to give to get. So he end runs, and gets a solution that politically is more in line with his personal beliefs and keeps +80% of the public happy and he is called out by the very same Hawks for being a weak leader and caving.

It is however it's spun. The right is way out of control here and this whole situation is just what they wanted. The waiting game favors the left here, and Boehner knows it. He is scared out of his mind. You can see it on his face, and he is terrified this is all coming down on the right.

JPhillips 10-01-2013 08:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by EagleFan (Post 2860472)
So making a whiney speech is your choice of action for the leader? He can try to get the sides to negotiate for one. Instead he pounded a wedge farther between them with that speech. He is not a leader and that shows quite clearly by that speech.


Yeah. He should really lead like Abraham Lincoln:
Quote:

What is our present condition? We have just carried an election on principles fairly stated to the people. Now we are told in advance, the government shall be broken up, unless we surrender to those we have beaten, before we take the offices. In this they are either attempting to play upon us, or they are in dead earnest. Either way, if we surrender, it is the end of us, and of the government. They will repeat the experiment upon us ad libitum.


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