The budget battles Is discussion possible?
#521
Posted 2011-August-01, 07:16
#522
Posted 2011-August-01, 07:18
http://view.ed4.net/...TION=1&FORMAT=H
for a depressing summary of the situation.
#523
Posted 2011-August-01, 07:29
George Carlin
#524
Posted 2011-August-01, 07:30
gwnn, on 2011-August-01, 07:29, said:
Ken's password is "Bridge_SUX"
#525
Posted 2011-August-01, 09:25
#527
Posted 2011-August-01, 09:36
George Carlin
#528
Posted 2011-August-01, 09:52
gwnn, on 2011-August-01, 09:36, said:
OK, corrected. These posting mistakes can have interesting consequences sometimes. Hopefully this one proves innocuous. The mail I get is very boring.
And actually my password is Congress_SUX
#529
Posted 2011-August-01, 10:11
#530
Posted 2011-August-01, 20:18
With the disdain for the working class and the elderly demonstrated by Republicans, it might not be too late to win the independents over again with a better Democratic candidate, although I'm not sure who that would be - I don't think Hillary Clinton is electable, but I am fairly certain at this point that Obama is a de facto lame duck.
#531
Posted 2011-August-01, 20:37
Quote
The eye of the beholder...
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#532
Posted 2011-August-02, 02:54
Winstonm, on 2011-August-01, 20:18, said:
I was thinking the same. People must be so fed up with Washington that an outsider must have a huge edge over someone who is in the mess already.
If Warren Buffet is on the Democratic ticket they may still have a chance. Gabrielle Giffords as running mate, she has some conservative views that could attract some borderline voters and besides the shooting incident sells.
#533
Posted 2011-August-02, 03:26
kenberg, on 2011-August-01, 09:52, said:
That's what they said at the University of East Anglia, too!
#534
Posted 2011-August-02, 03:37
helene_t, on 2011-August-02, 02:54, said:
Only if the Democratic party is unable to put the blame for crisis and to the recession caused by the shortening to the Tea Party and Republican party.
#535
Posted 2011-August-02, 06:22
Winstonm, on 2011-August-01, 20:18, said:
With the disdain for the working class and the elderly demonstrated by Republicans, it might not be too late to win the independents over again with a better Democratic candidate, although I'm not sure who that would be - I don't think Hillary Clinton is electable, but I am fairly certain at this point that Obama is a de facto lame duck.
I have been thinking much along the same line. I have seen claims that this deal shows Obama as a centrist, or that the center has won, or Obama will get support from the Independents. Total rubbish, I think. I think of myself as somewhere around the political center and I am appalled.
The deal has all the marks of "Good God, we have to do something, here is something that is sufficiently dumb that it might get some votes". Obama looked totally clueless as a leader. This guy is in charge of our negotiations with, say, Iran? They may have noticed that he folds in the crunch.
Not defaulting (assuming this gets through the Senate) is good. Other than that, the deal itself and what it says about our leaders is awful. We will set up some dysfunctional commission to do something sometime. Are there any grounds whatsoever for thinking that this will result in anything good? No, I don't think so.
Obama will not be re-elected. Once it becomes clear that a person does not have the courage of his convictions, or lacks the skill to advance those beliefs, he is finished. True, Bill Clinton was once reduced to advocating a policy on school uniforms in a State of the Union speech, and he came back. I don't see this as happening again. For all his faults, people actually liked Clinton. Obama lacks the warmth to pull it off.
#536
Posted 2011-August-02, 06:35
kenberg, on 2011-August-02, 06:22, said:
The deal has all the marks of "Good God, we have to do something, here is something that is sufficiently dumb that it might get some votes".
But .... people like you will probably still vote for Obama if the alternative is a Palin/Bachmann ticket or similar? Or will they vote for some micky-mouse independent candidate that runs only in their own state? Or will they emigrate to Canada?
#537
Posted 2011-August-02, 06:55
#538
Posted 2011-August-02, 07:35
Aberlour10, on 2011-August-02, 06:55, said:
Here's my take on matters
We started with a fake crisis
We appear to have ended up with a fake solution
The debt ceiling has been raised. forstalling a crisis
There are no real spending cuts in the short term
The can has been kicked down the road
Arguable, the Democrats are going to be in a strong position to negotiate this next time around.
They'll be able to trade the Bush tax cuts off against spending cuts
The trigger will impact defense much more heavily than other programs
Don't get me wrong... I would have loved to see Obama take the Tea Party caucus by the neck and rub their face in a big pile of dog *****. I'd be happier if had a few of them taken out and shot. However, realistically, I think that he did about as well as he could have done.
Obama's real mistake was not ramming more through - including a Debt Ceiling increase - back when the Democrats controlled the house. However, given where we were last week, it could have gone a lot worse.
#539
Posted 2011-August-02, 08:06
Aberlour10, on 2011-August-02, 06:55, said:
No, it doesn't solve the debt problems at all. This deal did not accomplish anything except getting the tea party faction to vote to pay the bills. There are no tax increases, but there are no significant spending cuts either. This was a bipartisan deal by the white house and the old hands in congress to convince enough tea party people to "drive the car" for Boehner to prevent another economic disaster for the US.
I would have preferred that Obama insist on a clean debt ceiling increase or else invoke the 14th amendment, but my personality is not suited to politics (to say the least). However, to suggest that he'll lose the next election because he did not do so is emotional non-thinking. By 2012 there will be a lot more water under the dam. In fact, the next four months will be very interesting.
The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists — that is why they invented hell. — Bertrand Russell
#540
Posted 2011-August-02, 09:41
hotShot, on 2011-August-02, 03:37, said:
fyp