Technobabel
Member
It'd be cool if the gov workers on furlough all sued Boehner for back-pay for his reckless endangerment of their livelihood.
Don't the congressmen and women who are shutting down government still receive their paychecks? I'm lucky that my mom works in an area that isn't getting furloughed, but I think it's pretty disgusting that they'd do this while still collecting their pay. PEACE.
53% of mothers are irresponsible and have no business having children? I'd venture that percentage is even higher. Probably 3 in 4.
47% of all people know that.53% of Neogaf posters don't understand statistics.
This list from CNN is as specific as I can find, minus what it will cost for closings and programs not helping people.
The Republicans would absolutely LOVE that development. Seriously, it's like you folks are willfully ignorant of the politics being played here or the extremely low level of trust and sympathy for government employees by the general public. Most people don't give two craps about furloughed workers (who are on a paid vacation, according to the main media narrative). Why do you think that both parties in Congress are getting hammered in the public relations and the Tea Party is copacetic (pro tip: they see this as helping them in their push to secure more local elections).It'd be cool if the gov workers on furlough all sued Boehner for back-pay for his reckless endangerment of their livelihood.
So the federal Government shutdown does not effect people employed by their individual states?
Like the DMV & such?
Who's gonna stop ya?
No seriously who is getting paid to stop people from going to national parks, that part confuses me. They are closed, but how do they enforce it?
Has this been posted?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xKiQp-RB0Yw
Regardless, I think it is a fine video.
Well, I won't be getting that image out of my head anytime soon. Thanks for that.
This time is different. What is at stake in this government shutdown forced by a radical Tea Party minority is nothing less than the principle upon which our democracy is based: majority rule. President Obama must not give in to this hostage taking not just because Obamacare is at stake, but because the future of how we govern ourselves is at stake.
If democracy means anything, it means that, if you are outvoted, you accept the results and prepare for the next election. Republicans are refusing to do that. It shows contempt for the democratic process.
President Obama is not defending health care. Hes defending the health of our democracy. Every American who cherishes that should stand with him
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/02/opinion/friedman-our-democracy-is-at-stake.html?hp
This is why Obama will not negotiate
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/02/opinion/friedman-our-democracy-is-at-stake.html?hp
This is why Obama will not negotiate
The more I understand how much the Tea Party does not give a shit about the well-being of anyone or anything but themselves in this ordeal, the more appealing it seems that Obama should use the 14th.
#usethe14th
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/...-pay_n_4025437.html?ncid=txtlnkushpmg00000037WASHINGTON -- If and when the federal government reopens for business, congressional lawmakers will have to decide whether or not to retroactively pay federal workers for the time they were out of work. So far, Republicans appear split on the question of back pay for furloughed civil servants -- even though members of Congress are guaranteed to get paid regardless.
Sen. Susan Collins (R-Maine) said she would support such a measure. "They're being furloughed for no fault of their own, and this is very poor policy," she said.
Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) agreed. "Oh, of course," he said when asked by HuffPost if he would support back pay legislation. "Why penalize these good people for our malfeasance?"
The Arizona Republican even predicted that it wouldn't be too difficult to get a bill retroactively paying federal workers through Congress.
But some of McCain's colleagues weren't so sure federal workers should be made whole for their lost time.
"I think it's way too early to even consider that, but again we're $7 trillion more in the hole now than we were [in 1995-1996]," said Sen. Richard Burr (R-N.C.). "It makes it that much more difficult."
Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) also raised the issue of the national debt, signaling what might prevent many Republicans from getting on board.
"I think there would be less chance of that now considering the great big budget deficit we have now," Grassley said. "We're in a much worse situation."
So how would he vote if a measure were brought to floor to back pay federal employees?
"I would not make a judgment at this point," Grassley responded.
Sens. Jeff Flake (R-Ariz.), John Barrasso (R-Wyo.) and Tim Scott (R-S.C.) also said it was too early for them to make a determination, while Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-Utah) said he "probably" would support the move.
Back pay for furlough days requires an act of Congress once a shutdown ends. During the last shutdown, in 1995 and 1996, lawmakers decided to pay workers after the fact. But with a Congress that's focused on deficit reduction -- and that's already furloughed many workers this year through the automatic budget cuts known as sequestration -- plenty of federal employees are bracing themselves for a rebuff from lawmakers.
Been gone for the day, are we closer to a reopening of the most powerful government in the world?
actually...i believe American democracy was built to protect the minority from the majority.
or else, you can just have a bunch of racists ppl pass laws and say those laws are okay because they were passed by majorities
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/...-pay_n_4025437.html?ncid=txtlnkushpmg00000037
Members of furloughed-GAF should contact their GOP congressman ASAP because some of these fucks are pure evil.
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/10/02/opinion/friedman-our-democracy-is-at-stake.html?hp
This is why Obama will not negotiate
"At stake is nothing less than the principle upon which our democracy is based: majority rule."
"If you are outvoted, you accept the results and prepare for the next election."
Forgive me if I'm wrong here because American politics is far from my forte, but in the House of Representatives, the GOP are the majority and, if you "accept the results" then the Democrats were outvoted. If it is to be purely about majority voting over-all, why not just do away with the separation of the legislature(s) and executive, whilst maintaining voting? People seem to be talking as if the Republicans are in there with guns enacting a siege, but - whatever you view as the merits of Obamacare, and as a right-leaning person I actually think it's a pretty great policy for the US - should the GOP really feel obligated to do something that they don't believe is in the interests of the people that elected them (and clearly they don't) purely because the other house and executive disagree with them?
The republicans who pushed for this are a minority within the republicans themselves that happen to be running the show because the less conservative GOP members consistently find themselves on the ropes. If this goes on long enough you might see some infighting among Republicans though because plenty of GOP members are waiting for a lifeboat off that sinking ship.
Work at an Army Depot. The colonel actually got on the announcer and said we wouldn't be impacted in any fashion, so I have to assume it's true, 'cause there would be an uproar if they just sprung it on us after that. As far as everyone's been told, we'll still be getting our checks.
Of course if it goes on for weeks it may be a different story, but it's not going to go on for weeks.
That may well be true but they were, nonetheless, voted in.
That may well be true but they were, nonetheless, voted in.
After heavy gerrymandering.
The actual popular vote reflected a Democrat majority in the House. The way the House was redistricted meant your vote was nulled because the republicans attached your Democrat-heavy section of city to the entire rest of the state so all the rural voters votes work together to outweigh yours.
You guys need to reform how you draw your electoral boundaries. It's been used by both sides of politics over history to rig the HoR.
it just seems odd that the author doesn't extend this definition of democracy to the House of Representatives.
They are trying to nullify a law that was was the centerpiece of TWO presidential elections AND a Supreme Court challenge while having just the House majority. And if they don't get their way, they shut down the government. Do you not see how crazy this would be if Obama capitulated?
This funding would be just for 6 weeks. After that, what will they demand next? For him to step down? They might as well if he gives in to this extortion lol. Ther GOP is the bully that won't stop until you punch them in the face...
Forgive me if I'm wrong here because American politics is far from my forte, but in the House of Representatives, the GOP are the majority and, if you "accept the results" then the Democrats were outvoted.
Been gone for the day, are we closer to a reopening of the most powerful government in the world?
So do we
Edit: Wait, you're an Aussie, right? Sorry, I always forget because you're in UK Poligaf so much! I meant the UK needs to. Cameron got a higher vote share in 2010 than Blair did in 2005, yet limped away with fucking Chris Huhne whilst Blair got a healthy majority.
I know. I was responding to the article which suggested that democracy is at threat and we should "accept the result and prepare for the next election" - it just seems odd that the author doesn't extend this definition of democracy to the House of Representatives.
I know. I was responding to the article which suggested that democracy is at threat and we should "accept the result and prepare for the next election" - it just seems odd that the author doesn't extend this definition of democracy to the House of Representatives.
When can we get algorithms to do all the redistricting? Because however they carve it up, it would be a damn sight better than the lunacy America labours under now.
So do we
Edit: Wait, you're an Aussie, right? Sorry, I always forget because you're in UK Poligaf so much! I meant the UK needs to. Cameron got a higher vote share in 2010 than Blair did in 2005, yet limped away with fucking Chris Huhne whilst Blair got a healthy majority.
Yep, Lib Dems get it even worse and I guess any of the smaller parties just don't stand any kind of chance. How gerrymandering can exist when it's so damn obvious is beyond me.
We all get you are a bitter internet douche who has no substantial life experience.
It honestly sounds like this backpay business is going to be their next fight right before the debt ceiling. 'Oh yeah, we'll let you raise the debt ceiling, let us just attach this bill to it that says all those people we screwed over don't get back pay.' And then we have another big fight on our hands because they want to be unreasonable.http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/...-pay_n_4025437.html?ncid=txtlnkushpmg00000037
Members of furloughed-GAF should contact their GOP congressman ASAP because some of these fucks are pure evil.
It honestly sounds like this backpay business is going to be their next fight right before the debt ceiling. 'Oh yeah, we'll let you raise the debt ceiling, let us just attach this bill to it that says all those people we screwed over don't get back pay.' And then we have another big fight on our hands because they want to be unreasonable.
This really shouldn't be a hard question or even a question at all; these people deserve backpay. Why can't we just make that a law after all this, in the event of a gov't shutdown, all furloughed employees get back pay.
You are literally putting people out of jobs because you failed to do your own job. That's crazy that you would hem and haw about giving them backpay.