• Hey Guest. Check out your NeoGAF Wrapped 2025 results here!

US Federal Government Shutdown | Shutdown Shutdown, Debt Ceiling Raised

Status
Not open for further replies.
But at this point, any congressman/woman who is saying 'I am heroically sacrificing my income during the shutdown!' is just pissing me off. As if that puts them in the same position as the people that actually need that income to live, you know?
Hah, now that's true.
 
I don't think the majority of voters either know enough about Obamacare or care enough to make that distinction.

You're right, the majority of voters knew squat about what Obamacare actually is. The majority of voters received an uninformative negative slant on Obamacare from mainstream media and conservative advertising. And they still voted to keep it around.
 
Salaries are rather unimportant to most of these people, partially because most of them are already rich, and partly because their primary concern is to keep their base happy, a base who will be paying them MUCH higher salaries through speaking fees/think tanks/foundations/lobbying firms/etc. once they leave office.
 
based on what information?

Q: Do you feel that you personally do or do not have the information you need to understand what changes will occur as the new health care law takes effect?

DO HAVE THE INFORMATION 35%
DO NOT HAVE THE INFORMATION 62%

http://www.washingtonpost.com/page/.../20/National-Politics/Polling/release_263.xml

and that's probably pretty generous

You're right, the majority of voters knew squat about what Obamacare actually is. The majority of voters received an uninformative negative slant on Obamacare from mainstream media and conservative advertising. And they still voted to keep it around.

there's a ringing endorsement if I've ever heard one.
 
Based on the well known fact that the general public at large is dumb as a box of rocks.

Well yeah, thats my understanding, but a number of stupid rocks wanted health care. And other morons were protesting the rocks for wanting hand-outs/free healthcare from the Government(while keeping their medicare).

**Its definitely confusing, and I don't think that even Obama & Co are on top of it. But people were supporting Obama, with dreams of healthcare in mind, as nebulous as it was/is. Alls im saying.
 
True, but I think it would also reveal that the Republicans are doing it solely for the image rather than getting any portion of government running again. Plus it would be funny. Especially if they put in programs/language that many people consider essential but go completely counter to republican ideologies.

As it stands though I think most people can see through the Republicans little game in this case.
It's a nice idea but people aren't smart enough to pick up on this and you're right, anyone who is paying attention already sees through the GOP's tactics. The Dems need to not play into this game at all and stand strong by the message that what the GOP is doing is simply not ok. It's undemocratic, unamerican, childish and wrong.
 
Schattenjäger;84581113 said:
I'm embarrassed for all level headed republicans

This is beyond stupidity

If they're level headed they wouldn't be republicans.
 
Schattenjäger;84581113 said:
I'm embarrassed for all level headed republicans

This is beyond stupidity

There are none. People I've known for years that are moderate Republicans are still defending this bullshit.

Guess any real progress on this is out the window today, wonder if there's a chance of anything happening before the weekend.



We'll be lucky if we get anywhere by the end of this month...
 
We'll be lucky if we get anywhere by the end of this month...

I think if nothing happens before 10/17 when the debt ceiling limit comes up, that's the latest it will happen. Already a bunch of GOP members in the House openly saying they would vote for a clean CR if given the chance, Boehner isn't allowing a majority vote because of the lunatic stranglehold on his position.
 
I think if nothing happens before 10/17 when the debt ceiling limit comes up, that's the latest it will happen. Already a bunch of GOP members in the House openly saying they would vote for a clean CR if given the chance, Boehner isn't allowing a majority vote because of the lunatic stranglehold on his position.

It really doesn't seem fair that a single man can hold the country hostage like this. Isn't there some kind of revolt that members of congress could do? Nothing too violent, maybe just lock him in a broom closet for a day while they fix things...
 
On my base a lot has been shut down.

-no more reserves working with us, which means more work for civilians and active duty
-commissary is shutdown, our on base grocery store
-education office is shutdown, i cant finish the process on my degree i was working on
-mail services down, no more delivery. you have to go pick it up from the building instead of your mailbox.
-movie kiosks are gone, they are pretty much red boxes
-tv/cable are gone from the fitness center and other buildings.

probably more i don't know about

Sounds good, we should make that permanent
Sorry, but that was a joke right? If not, have you even set foot on a military base?
 
I might have missed it, but I'm surprised no one has brought up this Lincoln letter:

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. A year will not pass, till we shall have to take Cuba as a condition upon which they will stay in the Union.

It's just amazing to me where we are right now. It's like we've learned all the wrong lessons... We went through this in 2011. At that point, although Obamacare had a role, the issue was debt. Those events in and of themselves were counterproductive, and from them we got an unjustifiable sequestration policy. But suddenly, the government has actually been shut down, and this time the issue wasn't even debt. Instead, Republicans decided to take aim at Obamacare ... even though between 2011 and 2013, the Supreme Court upheld it, and the side who passed it then proceeded to roundly defeat them in a presidential election.

It's quite something. For one, I love how the debt is no longer what's being emphasized here. Since 2011, we have heard almost nothing but positive news about debt related issues. To the extent it was a problem then, it's much less of a problem now - at least in the short term. Perhaps that's beginning to actually sink in? Another reason is probably the GOP's effort to repeal Obamacare rapidly running out of time.

But I think the core reason lies elsewhere. Something else has happened since 2011: the gerrymandering of 2010 had a chance to play out in practice, and this (combined with other things) only resulted in a more extreme GOP overall; and besides that, getting ridiculously close to, say, defaulting didn't actually result in some sort of new love for good governance, but only made it even easier to step toward that ledge. Both things, but especially the latter, shine a horrible light on our entire political system.

In any case, it's incredible Republicans have decided to go to this extreme over an issue they were never going to get their way on. It seems they've pushed Obama to the same place Lincoln was at when he wrote that letter. Obama seems strongly invested in the idea caving in to their demands would set (or reinforce) a horrible precedent, badly distort the political system, and ultimately weaken the country. How he maneuvers through this will have huge ramifications.
 
I have a brother who is pretty smart, a wonderful person...

He's been suffering from a broken shoulder for YEARS. And I mean years. He could never afford to get it fixed. His shoulder is literally only hanging there, his arm barely works...

And he still believes that Obamacare is the devil and will ruin everyone. Because of how he was raised and where he gets his news from. It's so upsetting.
 
I might have missed it, but I'm surprised no one has brought up this Lincoln letter:



It's just amazing to me where we are right now. It's like we've learned all the wrong lessons... We went through this in 2011. At that point, although Obamacare had a role, the issue was debt. Those events in and of themselves were counterproductive, and from them we got an unjustifiable sequestration policy. But suddenly, the government has actually been shut down, and this time the issue wasn't even debt. Instead, Republicans decided to take aim at Obamacare ... even though between 2011 and 2013, the Supreme Court upheld it, and the side who passed it then proceeded to roundly defeat them in a presidential election.

It's quite something. For one, I love how the debt is no longer what's being emphasized here. Since 2011, we have heard almost nothing but positive news about debt related issues. To the extent it was a problem then, it's much less of a problem now - at least in the short term. Perhaps that's beginning to actually sink in? Another reason is probably the GOP's effort to repeal Obamacare rapidly running out of time.

But I think the core reason lies elsewhere. Something else has happened since 2011: the gerrymandering of 2010 had a chance to play out in practice, and this (combined with other things) only resulted in a more extreme GOP overall; and besides that, getting ridiculously close to, say, defaulting didn't actually result in some sort of new love for good governance, but only made it even easier to step toward that ledge. Both things, but especially the latter, shine a horrible light on our entire political system.

In any case, it's incredible Republicans have decided to go to this extreme over an issue they were never going to get their way on. It seems they've pushed Obama to the same place Lincoln was at when he wrote that letter. Obama seems strongly invested in the idea caving in to their demands would set (or reinforce) a horrible precedent, badly distort the political system, and ultimately weaken the country. How he maneuvers through this will have huge ramifications.

Dang, this sounds like Civil War Part II is about to come. I'm ready to join the Union.
 
I might have missed it, but I'm surprised no one has brought up this Lincoln letter:



It's just amazing to me where we are right now. It's like we've learned all the wrong lessons... We went through this in 2011. At that point, although Obamacare had a role, the issue was debt. Those events in and of themselves were counterproductive, and from them we got an unjustifiable sequestration policy. But suddenly, the government has actually been shut down, and this time the issue wasn't even debt. Instead, Republicans decided to take aim at Obamacare ... even though between 2011 and 2013, the Supreme Court upheld it, and the side who passed it then proceeded to roundly defeat them in a presidential election.

It's quite something. For one, I love how the debt is no longer what's being emphasized here. Since 2011, we have heard almost nothing but positive news about debt related issues. To the extent it was a problem then, it's much less of a problem now - at least in the short term. Perhaps that's beginning to actually sink in? Another reason is probably the GOP's effort to repeal Obamacare rapidly running out of time.

But I think the core reason lies elsewhere. Something else has happened since 2011: the gerrymandering of 2010 had a chance to play out in practice, and this (combined with other things) only resulted in a more extreme GOP overall; and besides that, getting ridiculously close to, say, defaulting didn't actually result in some sort of new love for good governance, but only made it even easier to step toward that ledge. Both things, but especially the latter, shine a horrible light on our entire political system.

In any case, it's incredible Republicans have decided to go to this extreme over an issue they were never going to get their way on. It seems they've pushed Obama to the same place Lincoln was at when he wrote that letter. Obama seems strongly invested in the idea caving in to their demands would set (or reinforce) a horrible precedent, badly distort the political system, and ultimately weaken the country. How he maneuvers through this will have huge ramifications.

Oh wow, looking at that letter now...
 
There are level headed republicans. Just not in congress. The simple fact that he's admitting their stupidity now shows this.
It actually sounds like they ARE in congress, just not with the influence (or just the spine) necessary to negate the 20-40 crazies.
 
Dang, this sounds like Civil War Part II is about to come. I'm ready to join the Union.

I know, right? I've been immersed in Ancient Rome stuff lately, and it's made me think about this situation in rather dramatic terms. I don't see us actually defaulting on our debt, but if we were to do so, I don't think our country would ever be the same again. On the other hand, even if we manage to avoid going over that ledge, something has to change.
 
Could someone explain exactly what that park ranger thing was? Did that rep actually plan that weird shaming as a photo op? It just seems like the most out of touch thing you could do, if that's the case.
 
Could someone explain exactly what that park ranger thing was? Did that rep actually plan that weird shaming as a photo op? It just seems like the most out of touch thing you could do, if that's the case.

There was a similar photo op thing yesterday, where a few House GOP members kicked up a fuss over veterans wanting to visit memorials that were closed. Not sure if this is from the same event, or just a copycat.

But yes, it was certainly planned.
 
I might have missed it, but I'm surprised no one has brought up this Lincoln letter:



It's just amazing to me where we are right now. It's like we've learned all the wrong lessons... We went through this in 2011. At that point, although Obamacare had a role, the issue was debt. Those events in and of themselves were counterproductive, and from them we got an unjustifiable sequestration policy. But suddenly, the government has actually been shut down, and this time the issue wasn't even debt. Instead, Republicans decided to take aim at Obamacare ... even though between 2011 and 2013, the Supreme Court upheld it, and the side who passed it then proceeded to roundly defeat them in a presidential election.

It's quite something. For one, I love how the debt is no longer what's being emphasized here. Since 2011, we have heard almost nothing but positive news about debt related issues. To the extent it was a problem then, it's much less of a problem now - at least in the short term. Perhaps that's beginning to actually sink in? Another reason is probably the GOP's effort to repeal Obamacare rapidly running out of time.

But I think the core reason lies elsewhere. Something else has happened since 2011: the gerrymandering of 2010 had a chance to play out in practice, and this (combined with other things) only resulted in a more extreme GOP overall; and besides that, getting ridiculously close to, say, defaulting didn't actually result in some sort of new love for good governance, but only made it even easier to step toward that ledge. Both things, but especially the latter, shine a horrible light on our entire political system.

In any case, it's incredible Republicans have decided to go to this extreme over an issue they were never going to get their way on. It seems they've pushed Obama to the same place Lincoln was at when he wrote that letter. Obama seems strongly invested in the idea caving in to their demands would set (or reinforce) a horrible precedent, badly distort the political system, and ultimately weaken the country. How he maneuvers through this will have huge ramifications.

To be honest, I don't think it's too much of a stretch to say that Obama's stance/decision on this matter is probably the most important of his presidential career. For better or worse, I do not think that this country will be the same after this thing is over.

Which is why I'm hoping that he remains resolute in his convictions on this one and encourages the rest of Congress to do the same. Giving into the GOP's demands will set a horrible precedent for the future and would ruin the integrity of the democratic process, and hopefully he understands this.
 
There was a similar photo op thing yesterday, where a few House GOP members kicked up a fuss over veterans wanting to visit memorials that were closed. Not sure if this is from the same event, or just a copycat.

But yes, it was certainly planned.
I know I'll be met with jokes, but why would the guy actively put any blame at all on that park worker? Is there a layer I'm missing here? They had less than zero to do with what's happening.
 
If the Republicans refuse to budge on this or raising the debt ceiling what's the end result?

Economic ruin?

Civil unrest?

Arrest of Congress members and forcing through the legislation?

14th Amendment?

Civil war?


I'm just trying to get a grasp on how this will shake out if worse comes to worse and they really are willing to take us to the brink of disaster.
 
So I've been a little bit out of the loop, what message are democrats and republicans going with today? I read that republicans are now saying they are "willing to compromise". What are democrats putting out there?
 
If the Republicans refuse to budge on this or raising the debt ceiling what's the end result?

Economic ruin?

Civil unrest?

Arrest of Congress members and forcing through the legislation?

14th Amendment?

Civil war?


I'm just trying to get a grasp on how this will shake out if worse comes to worse and they really are willing to take us to the brink of disaster.


I just read this


Basically, it'll be horrible and probably worse than the 2008 recession. What would suck is that this is completely avoidable.

Don't be the good guys always win.

I hope so.....I don't know if you're being serious or silly, but I hope you're serious :)
 
So I've been a little bit out of the loop, what message are democrats and republicans going with today? I read that republicans are now saying they are "willing to compromise". What are democrats putting out there?

Nothing, nor should they. This has to come to a head one way or the other. The gov't can't continue down this road. You don't allow a small faction of congress to over rule everyone else. In the end, the Dems might give up the medical device tax but I don't think much else and even then I think that would be the wrong move.
 
I think it's really, really shitty that these guys on the floor of congress are whining about national parks like that's the real problem here, not the families going without paychecks or the aid that keeps their kids from starving.
 
I think it's really, really shitty that these guys on the floor of congress are whining about national parks like that's the real problem here, not the families going without paychecks or the aid that keeps their kids from starving.

No WWII vets coming to visit them I guess they don't count.
 
If the Republicans refuse to budge on this or raising the debt ceiling what's the end result?

Economic ruin?

Civil unrest?

Arrest of Congress members and forcing through the legislation?

14th Amendment?

Civil war?


I'm just trying to get a grasp on how this will shake out if worse comes to worse and they really are willing to take us to the brink of disaster.

If Obama's unwilling to use the 14th amendment or any other tricks (and he's messaging very, very aggressively that he is unwilling to do so), then the end result is economic calamity of an unforeseen but definitely terrible level.

The United States dollar is the currency of last resort because US bonds are considered as good as cash -- the assumption is that they have about a 0% chance of defaulting. If they default, it's actually pretty difficult to say what would happen. People would probably sell all their US bonds and buy some other kind of currency or bonds -- China's a popular suggestion, although their current economic situation might give some pause. This would potentially cause a significant loss in value for the US dollar and everything that pegs to it, is tied to it, or is a derivative of it (or a derivative of any of THOSE, etc.).

In terms of America, we would be permanently impoverished as a nation from the collapse of the dollar, the loss of our status as currency of last resort, and our necessarily increased borrowing costs.

Personally, I think that Obama's messaging so aggressively about not being willing to use the 14th amendment that he might be covering up a willingness to use it. This might be wishful thinking, but frankly, I think you'd have to be an idiot to trust the House to handle this at this point.

The cost of using the 14th amendment is that they try to impeach Obama (which fails), tying up the rest of his term. There would probably be political costs as well. On the other hand, the argument would be that Obama overstepped his authority by SAVING THE WORLD, so I'm not sure how effective it would be.
 
So I've been a little bit out of the loop, what message are democrats and republicans going with today? I read that republicans are now saying they are "willing to compromise". What are democrats putting out there?

Keeping funding at sequestration levels that the House originally offered.
 
The cost of using the 14th amendment is that they try to impeach Obama (which fails), tying up the rest of his term. There would probably be political costs as well. On the other hand, the argument would be that Obama overstepped his authority by SAVING THE WORLD, so I'm not sure how effective it would be.

I'm getting bombarded with meme's about WWII vets valiantly breaking into the memorial that Democrats shut down. So, I would guess at least mildly effective.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Top Bottom