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-   -   The Obama Presidency - 2008 & 2012 (https://forums.operationsports.com/fofc//showthread.php?t=69042)

JPhillips 05-24-2013 07:44 AM

Probably. I think it's important to raise hell when these things first happen, because once the executive gets away with something the next President is going to do more of the same.

I hope congress takes Obama's advice from yesterday and rescinds the AUMF, but I can't really imagine that happening.

JonInMiddleGA 05-24-2013 09:26 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2826309)
You do agree though that if '08 went to McCain and he was on his second term that the drone killings might have a little more opposition?


I think it might be argued - as a hypothetical - that McCain might have actually been more reluctant to use them in the first place. He would have likely been the subject of more backlash (as you suggest) and honestly I don't trust him to have had the good sense to use them if it cost him too many political points.

Yeah, as expected, I'm exceptionally comfortable with the practice as described here ... although the pollsters haven't called me to ask.

JPhillips 05-24-2013 12:15 PM

Holy shit.

Quote:

Detroit emergency manager Kevyn Orr is considering whether the multibillion-dollar collection at the Detroit Institute of Arts should be considered city assets that potentially could be sold to cover about $15 billion in debt.

Mizzou B-ball fan 05-24-2013 12:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 2826453)
Holy shit.


That's just asinine. There's plenty of places to cut budget. That's not a good option and does nothing to eliminate their real problem.

DaddyTorgo 05-24-2013 12:19 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2826309)
You do agree though that if '08 went to McCain and he was on his second term that the drone killings might have a little more opposition?


No.

I dunno whether it's because you're a libertarian or what, but you seem overly eager to reduce everything to D/R.

I believe that most people are fine with drone killings because "those people attacked America." It doesn't matter the political party of the President authorizing them. Not EVERYTHING is about that.

DaddyTorgo 05-24-2013 12:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 2826453)
Holy shit.


Surprised?

panerd 05-24-2013 12:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaddyTorgo (Post 2826458)
No.

I dunno whether it's because you're a libertarian or what, but you seem overly eager to reduce everything to D/R.

I believe that most people are fine with drone killings because "those people attacked America." It doesn't matter the political party of the President authorizing them. Not EVERYTHING is about that.


Sorry DT everything political is about D and R. Go to the comments section of any article, listen to any liberal or conservative friend of yours, watch any news show, read any two page stretch in this thread. I know you aren't that naive either. Anything Obama does good or bad is bad, anything Bush did good or bad was bad. The support or non support really comes down to that.

DaddyTorgo 05-24-2013 01:09 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2826476)
Sorry DT everything political is about D and R. Go to the comments section of any article, listen to any liberal or conservative friend of yours, watch any news show, read any two page stretch in this thread. I know you aren't that naive either. Anything Obama does good or bad is bad, anything Bush did good or bad was bad. The support or non support really comes down to that.


For stupid people, yes. I like to think that smarter people are capable of evaluating individual actions/policies on their own merits without resorting to partisan-goggles immediately.

panerd 05-24-2013 01:24 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaddyTorgo (Post 2826483)
For stupid people, yes. I like to think that smarter people are capable of evaluating individual actions/policies on their own merits without resorting to partisan-goggles immediately.


Absolutely agree with everything you just said and I will let you throw out a percentage for stupid and uninformed about politics and then tell me why I was wrong at all in my initial post.

DaddyTorgo 05-24-2013 01:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2826486)
Absolutely agree with everything you just said and I will let you throw out a percentage for stupid and uninformed about politics and then tell me why I was wrong at all in my initial post.


Oh yes, the vast majority are stupid and/or uninformed about politics. But I think you do yourself a disservice when you begin a conversation making those assumptions. They're quite likely true, but it's (a) disrespectful to the person you're talking to, and (b) makes you look similarly uneducated/uninformed.

Take the higher road, and then you can roll your eyes and shake your head righteously when the person you're conversing with demonstrates they're on the lower road.

panerd 05-24-2013 01:44 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaddyTorgo (Post 2826488)
Oh yes, the vast majority are stupid and/or uninformed about politics. But I think you do yourself a disservice when you begin a conversation making those assumptions. They're quite likely true, but it's (a) disrespectful to the person you're talking to, and (b) makes you look similarly uneducated/uninformed.

Take the higher road, and then you can roll your eyes and shake your head righteously when the person you're conversing with demonstrates they're on the lower road.


Except the only point I was making in my original post way up the page was that had McCain won the election more of the electorate would be up in arms with the drone strikes. (Which would be a good thing for me. Not the McCain win, which would have been horrible, but more people in favor of due process) I wasn't attacking people for D/R mindset(and I definitely wasn't being critical on anyone on this board) I was saying that this would be an instance where the D/R mindset would be a positive thing.

DaddyTorgo 05-24-2013 01:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2826501)
Except the only point I was making in my original post way up the page was that had McCain won the election more of the electorate would be up in arms with the drone strikes. (Which would be a good thing for me. Not the McCain win, which would have been horrible, but more people in favor of due process) I wasn't attacking people for D/R mindset(and I definitely wasn't being critical on anyone on this board) I was saying that this would be an instance where the D/R mindset would be a positive thing.


But see I disagree. I don't think if McCain won anymore people would have been up in arms. I think that's an instance of a case where you're misattributing partisan bias. I don't think that people give Obama a pass on drones because he's a Democrat, I think they (on both sides of the aisle) give him a pass because "brown people attacked us on 9/11...brown people are bad."

Edward64 05-24-2013 09:11 PM

Obama, good to see him as typical teen (but I did grimace some).

Obama's Prom Photos | TIME.com
Quote:

Tucked away in someone else’s shoe box of adolescent artifacts, there might be a picture of you in garish clothes and with an outdated ‘do, your arm around a high school squeeze. The President of the United States is no different. These previously unpublished photos, obtained exclusively by TIME from Obama’s schoolmate Kelli Allman (née McCormack), show a 17-year-old Barack Obama on the night of his senior prom.


DaddyTorgo 05-26-2013 11:05 AM

Re: Austerity

Here's something to chew on from the latest issue of Businessweek (part of my Sunday morning reading).

According to the nonpartisan Congressional Budget Office, the economy is operating about 6% below it's potential (that's about $1 trillion per year).

According to budget policy analysts at the Economic Policy Institute (also nonpartisan), every dollar that the economy operates below its optimal level increases the defecit by 37 cents due to cyclical factors such as lower tax receipts, etc.

JPhillips 05-26-2013 11:36 AM

If only we had projects to do, people to do them and historically low borrowing rates. Oh well...

Edward64 05-27-2013 09:05 AM

Although pro Obamacare, not sure if I'm convinced based on one state and its possible that CA insurers have underestimated (e.g. got it wrong). Let's see what happens in an update in a couple years ... but I'll take the good news.

California Obamacare premiums: No ‘rate shock’ here
Quote:

These premium rates, released Thursday, help answer one of the biggest questions about Obamacare: How much health insurance will cost. They do so in California, the state with 7.1 million uninsured residents, more than any other place in the country.

Multiple projections expected premiums to be relatively high.

The Congressional Budget Office predicted back in November 2009 that a medium-cost plan on the health exchange – known as a “silver plan” – would have an annual premium of $5,200. A separate report from actuarial firm Milliman projected that, in California, the average silver plan would have a $450 monthly premium.

Now we have California’s rates, and they appear to be significantly less expensive than what forecasters expected.


lynchjm24 05-27-2013 04:14 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2826863)
Although pro Obamacare, not sure if I'm convinced based on one state and its possible that CA insurers have underestimated (e.g. got it wrong). Let's see what happens in an update in a couple years ... but I'll take the good news.

California Obamacare premiums: No ‘rate shock’ here


Interesting numbers. A single person at 150% of FPL makes what? Just over 17k?

The silver plan premiums may work - the question is how much do they subsidize the rest of the cost sharing because the silver plans I have seen have 3k deductibles before coinsurance.

Mizzou B-ball fan 05-28-2013 04:15 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by JPhillips (Post 2810522)
The past few months of explosive Bitcoin value and then the crash of the past couple of days is a very good example of why the gold standard is a bad idea.


Secret Service busts $6 billion money laundering scheme | Fox News

Grammaticus 05-28-2013 10:13 PM

What does Bitcoin or any digital currency have to do with the gold standard?

SirFozzie 05-29-2013 04:19 AM

Michelle Bachmann announces she will not seek re-election (H/T to Politico).

cartman 05-29-2013 07:28 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Grammaticus (Post 2827475)
What does Bitcoin or any digital currency have to do with the gold standard?


The idea of pegging your currency value to any single commodity.

Edward64 05-29-2013 09:46 PM

A Pakistani AQ #2 which might make him a #3 or #4 level overall.

Waliur Rehman Dead: Pakistan Taliban No. 2 Reportedly Killed In U.S. Drone Strike
Quote:

PESHAWAR, Pakistan — A suspected U.S. drone strike killed the No. 2 commander of the Pakistani Taliban on Wednesday, Pakistani intelligence officials said, although the militant group denied he was dead.

If confirmed, the death of Waliur Rehman would be a strong blow to the militant group responsible for hundreds of bombings and shootings across Pakistan. The United States has a $5 million bounty out on Rehman, who Washington has accused of involvement in the 2009 suicide attack on a U.S. base in Afghanistan that killed seven Americans working for the CIA.


Grammaticus 05-30-2013 06:57 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by cartman (Post 2827519)
The idea of pegging your currency value to any single commodity.


Bitcoin is more like our fiat currency. It is not pegged to anything tangible. It is a digital algorithm which the founders say has a limited or finite amount. But they can really have as many as they want made.

Gold is a tangible object. You can find more through mining, which would introduce more into the market and impact the price. The Bitcoin people try to make it sound like their product is similar because you can "find" some through gimicks. But, they have control over the amount and how it is introduced.

The whole Bitcoin thing is a giant firecracker waiting to blow up. Mostly because Governments will use their monopoly on force to make it eventually go away. The whole value of a product like Bitcoin is the anonymous nature of the currency.

DaddyTorgo 05-30-2013 07:33 PM

Man, you really gotta love Fox news.

WTF!??!!?

All-Male Fox Panel Laments Female Breadwinners - YouTube

JPhillips 06-03-2013 11:32 AM

The death of Sen. Lautenberg marks the end of an era. There are no more WW2 vets serving in the senate.

JonInMiddleGA 06-03-2013 11:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaddyTorgo (Post 2828402)
WTF!??!!?


Despite Megyn Kelly's eventual rant, the lamenting of the trend actually matches the responses to the poll that prompted the subject in the first place.

Quote:

About three-quarters of adults (74%) say the increasing number of women working for pay has made it harder for parents to raise children, and half say that it has made marriages harder to succeed.

Edward64 06-04-2013 11:43 PM

Hard to believe recession officially ended 4 years ago. Housing market is only just recovering in the past year.

Recession ended 4 years ago: How far have we come? - Economy
Quote:

It's been four years since the Great Recession officially ended. Stocks have fully recovered, but the job market hasn't. Neither have home prices -- but then again, who wants to get back to that unhealthy boom?

Here are the cold, hard facts on where the economy stands, according to the most recent data


SteveMax58 06-05-2013 07:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Edward64 (Post 2830052)
Hard to believe recession officially ended 4 years ago. Housing market is only just recovering in the past year.

Recession ended 4 years ago: How far have we come? - Economy



We are in such a transitional time in both the country & the world I believe. We are literally not doing things because we have impossible stagnation in the government. And thats due to corruption & useful idiots to the corrupted.

I'd like to think we'll see a major uptick of jobs in the near future but not so long as we continue to keep the construction industry on the sideline waiting to build houses or something else we dont need. Thats the sector of employment that was hit the hardest when the economy tanked & its the sector that has the most to contribute in my view still. Maybe we'll actually get of our asses & do something about it...or not.

SirFozzie 06-05-2013 08:48 PM

What the actual fuck is this shit:

Report: Gov't collecting millions of phone records under top secret order - POLITICO.com

"IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that, the Custodian of Records shall produce to the National Security Agency (NSA) upon service of this Order, and continue production on an ongoing daily basis thereafter for the duration of this Order, unless otherwise ordered by the Court, an electronic copy of the following tangible things: all call detail records or "telephony metadata" created by Verizon for communications (i) between the United States and abroad; or (ii) wholly within the United States, including local telephone calls. This Order does not require Verizon to produce telephony metadata for communications wholly originating and terminating in foreign countries. Telephony metadata includes comprehensive communications routing information,. including but not limited to session identifying information (e.g., originating and terminating telephone number, International Mobile Subscriber Identity (IMSI) number, International Mobile station Equipment Identity (IMEI) number, etc.), trunk identifier, telephone calling card numbers, and time and duration of call. Telephony metadata does not include the substantive content of any communication, as defined by 18 U.S.C. ? 2510(8), or the name, address, or financial information of a subscriber or customer."

panerd 06-05-2013 09:54 PM

Its called living under a federal government that no longer cares about the 4th amendment. (and hasn't for some time this is not an Obama thing) But I what do I know I am just a nutcase Libertarian conspiracy nut? Anyways the people get exactly what they vote for so they have no one to blame but themselves.

And remember this is just the shit that is being reported on or the press (British) is figuring out. The top story in the American press right now is whether or not the pro ball players used drugs to give them an advantage.

JonInMiddleGA 06-05-2013 10:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by SirFozzie (Post 2830352)
What the actual fuck is this shit:


Trying to parse the mumbo jumbo language, I think it says they have a record of every connection made involving at least one end of the call in the U.S., time, date, duration, etc. The content of the conversation is not included.

Speculating, or even just wag'ing, about a possible use would be something like a tapped phone call where the NSA was privvy to the contents of the conversation, this would allow them to readily see who the other (i.e. non-tapped) party in the call was.

Galaxy 06-06-2013 09:19 AM

This, along with the IRS scandal, isn't going to help Obama's popularity and negotiating position.

Also, I like how it was British newspapers that broke this latest story.

rowech 06-06-2013 09:38 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Galaxy (Post 2830471)
This, along with the IRS scandal, isn't going to help Obama's popularity and negotiating position.

Also, I like how it was British newspapers that broke this latest story.


American press is too busy worrying about if the spotlight is too much for Michael Jackson's kid by putting her and her story in the spotlight.

This story is probably the worst of all of what's come out of late in my opinion. People just being listened to for the hell of it and the idea they aren't listening is BS.

Marmel 06-06-2013 10:02 AM

I thought this was established practice under Bush, and that Obama has (sadly) made it clear he was not going to do anything to change it.

Is there something different about this particular instance?

molson 06-06-2013 10:18 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marmel (Post 2830490)
I thought this was established practice under Bush, and that Obama has (sadly) made it clear he was not going to do anything to change it.

Is there something different about this particular instance?


Bush had the same program and openly defended it, where Obama continued it in secret for 5 years. I don't think it's been reported previously that Obama had continued this particular program, collecting massive amounts of private phone records from private carriers.

I feel a little guilty that I can't bring myself to care about either administration doing this. And I'm not sure how much of a reasonable expectation of privacy you have about numbers you call and how long the conversations are, when you know that information is logged by the phone companies. A couple of years ago, Obama made the argument that you have no reasonable expectation of privacy in cell phone tower data records - i.e, where your phone is at all times. That one's a tougher call to me.

panerd 06-06-2013 10:27 AM

What's humorous is that people think this is only happening with Verizon. I would be more shocked if there was a phone company/internet provider it was not happening with. You get what you vote for... who knows maybe it is keeping us more safe? My opinion is that it is not but until enough people stop reelecting politicians on both sides of the aisle that renew the Patriot Act then they have nobody to blame but themselves when someone decides to take it a step further than Obama or Bush and start doing to Americans what we already do to a lot of innocent people all over the world.

molson 06-06-2013 10:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2830515)
who knows maybe it is keeping us more safe?


It's interesting to me that the dividing line about whether stuff like this is OK isn't right/left or Democrat/Republican, it seems to be whether you're in power or not. Bush and Obama agree it's cool, most others say its not. Maybe that just shows how power corrupts. But being super-4th-amendment-protector seems like an easy position to take when you're not in the position of being responsible for national security. I'm at least willing to be open minded about it and to try to understand it from the position of someone in power - even though that's pretty impossible to do when we don't have access to a lot of the information that they're basing decisions on. I'd be more concerned if it's something that had a practical impact on u.s. citizens or regular criminal law enforcement.

Galaxy 06-06-2013 10:44 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rowech (Post 2830477)
American press is too busy worrying about if the spotlight is too much for Michael Jackson's kid by putting her and her story in the spotlight.

This story is probably the worst of all of what's come out of late in my opinion. People just being listened to for the hell of it and the idea they aren't listening is BS.


And I forgot to mention Benghazi.

panerd 06-06-2013 10:51 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by molson (Post 2830524)
It's interesting to me that the dividing line about whether stuff like this is OK isn't right/left or Democrat/Republican, it seems to be whether you're in power or not. Bush and Obama agree it's cool, most others say its not. Maybe that just shows how power corrupts. But being super-4th-amendment-protector seems like an easy position to take when you're not in the position of being responsible for national security. I'm at least willing to be open minded about it and to try to understand it from the position of someone in power - even though that's pretty impossible to do when we don't have access to a lot of the information that they're basing decisions on. I'd be more concerned if it's something that had a practical impact on u.s. citizens or regular criminal law enforcement.


No doubt. Bush, Obama, future presidents don't want a 9-11 type body count on their hands with questions about what they didn't do to stop it. I completely understand the political motivation and the people for the most part don't seem to care either so it really isn't a losing proposition for them.

I just fear when enough is enough. Every new person employed by the NSA, FBI, CIA, TSA, DEA, ATF, DOD is currently adding to our debt. There is no doubt some of the great empires in the history of the world were not undone by military losses but by economic collapse. Who knows maybe Al-Queda is smarter than we think and realize that putting a scapegoat on an airplane with a bomb in his shoe or with a truck full of explosives in Times Square costs the United States billions of dollars a year and at some point we're going to go broke. I think paying someone to keep track of panerd's calls to his wife and friends is a waste of my tax money no matter how small a cost it really is. It's like searching the 90 year old white grandma getting on a plane, waste of resources that could be spent actually keeping us safe or paying down the debt.

panerd 06-06-2013 11:03 AM

.

Galaxy 06-06-2013 12:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Marmel (Post 2830490)
I thought this was established practice under Bush, and that Obama has (sadly) made it clear he was not going to do anything to change it.

Is there something different about this particular instance?


I find it interesting that the Democrats, who were critical of Bush for this program, are okay with it now.

Tekneek 06-06-2013 01:22 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Galaxy (Post 2830551)
I find it interesting that the Democrats, who were critical of Bush for this program, are okay with it now.


I find it interesting that any Republicans, that were ok with it under Bush, would be critical of this.

Is anybody really surprised by this? Obama did vote to give AT&T protection back when Bush was President and has always voted for, and supported, efforts to keep this kind of thing going. I would say that anybody surprised by this has not been paying attention. It also is yet another reason to laugh at "conservatives" who foam at the mouth about how much Obama is changing things. Overall, very little has changed. Obama is not pushing a major progressive agenda and was never going to. He is much more like Reagan than many would be happy to admit (on both sides of the aisle).

DaddyTorgo 06-06-2013 01:26 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Galaxy (Post 2830551)
I find it interesting that the Democrats, who were critical of Bush for this program, are okay with it now.


Who are you referring to?

RendeR 06-06-2013 01:42 PM

The simple fact is, its been going on for 2 administrations now, its not recording content (no matter what you paranoid gits think that would be way more data than even the NSA could collect regularly) its nothing more than the records that all carriers ALREADY KEEP ON FILE FOREVER.

When there is a warrant issued for phone records, this is the info they receive. The NSA is simply stockpiling such records for ease of access involved with tracking possible terrorist threats (granted probably a lot more too but the end result is the same)

Collecting the data en-masse simply cuts out the time delay when an actual need for the data emerges.

panerd 06-06-2013 02:23 PM

From one of the paranoid gits:

It's been going on for 2 administrations? Thanks goodness its all for my safety! No constitutional issues here whatsoever. Wonder why this had to be done in secret? Nah, why question its for our safety! Terror! Safety! Please keep me updated on what else the government is doing to keep us safe.

-Paranoid git

Galaxy 06-06-2013 04:43 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by DaddyTorgo (Post 2830584)
Who are you referring to?


Quote:

Originally Posted by Tekneek (Post 2830582)
I find it interesting that any Republicans, that were ok with it under Bush, would be critical of this.



Lawmakers Defend U.S. Collecting Verizon Phone Records - Bloomberg

Typical political posturing by both sides. Just a matter of who is doing the action and the standard reaction to the outrage to the American people, as if they had no clue to what was going on.

Easy Mac 06-07-2013 07:36 AM

Well, at least this wont get worse

panerd 06-07-2013 08:13 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Easy Mac (Post 2830848)
Well, at least this wont get worse


It's all for your safety! Again though I am more amused by a facebook user who thought that linking themselves to all of their friends and acquaintances, showing their interests and political leanings, often showing where there are at any given time would be of any interest to a national spy agency. It says it right in their agency title. Of course they aren't supposed to be spying on Americans. Except of course for terror and safety and terror.

NSA taps data from 9 major Net firms | FLORIDA TODAY | floridatoday.com

Coffee Warlord 06-07-2013 08:35 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by RendeR (Post 2830603)
When there is a warrant issued for phone records, this is the info they receive. The NSA is simply stockpiling such records for ease of access involved with tracking possible terrorist threats (granted probably a lot more too but the end result is the same)

Collecting the data en-masse simply cuts out the time delay when an actual need for the data emerges.


Yes, because circumventing the constitution in the name of expediency is such a good idea.

Because everyone who decides the law doesn't need to apply to them because it's "faster this way" has our best interests at heart.

Because there's no precedence in history for what happens when governments sieze power they were never meant to heave.

cartman 06-07-2013 08:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by panerd (Post 2830866)
would be of any interest to a national spy agency. It says it right in their agency title.


NSA doesn't stand for National Spy Agency.


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