You just want to be part of the HERO corps.
This is true.
You just want to be part of the HERO corps.
I think the best part is that McConnell is refusing a confirmation vote for AG on Loretta Lynch until the Senate passes the bill. No way refusing to vote on a pretty much universally accepted nominee that is a black woman due to petty partisanship will blow up in your face. Nope, nothing to see here.
In situations like this, you yield to what initiated the issue in the first place.I don't really have an objection with your framing that the "Democrats killed the bill over lack of abortion funding", but wouldn't an equally valid framing be that "Republicans were only willing to pass the bill with an abortion funding ban attached to it"? Like, when you have an adversarial system, one party being obstinate is the other party being obstinate, since both can equally object or yield to the others' objection?
I sort of feel the same thing about people who make arguments that "Why are gay people trying to force bakers to lose their business if they won't bake a cake?" I mean, yeah, that's a valid framing, but an equally valid framing is "Why are cakebakers refusing to bake the cakes even when facing the loss of their business if they don't?" Either side is clearly able to object or resolve the objection.
I mean, I just think as far as gotcha goes, the procedural side of this is sort of a non-starter. Like, if you want to start with "Abortion is wrong and the Democrats take the wrong side on the issue and it's wrong and they're wrong and it's bad" then whatever, that's a pretty coherent position, but I just don't see how the procedural side of the argument is going to persuade anyone that wasn't already persuaded by the moral dimensions of abortion argument.
But if this stops the bill from passing considering some of the things pointed out in this thread that are in it...
I think what you've correctly demonstrated is that framing of poll questions matters--I know this already--but I'm not really sure how that relates to my questions to you here[.]
The thread is presented primarily as an issue of procedural obstinacy, and I think you and I both know that's not the root issue here--the root issue here is the normative dimensions of abortion itself. That's fine.
Perfect. Even more reason to pass the bill without this amendment.
The differences between those efforts and this one, though, is that budget riders arent permanentthey need to be reauthorized each yearand that the previous provisions only concerned taxpayer dollars, not criminal penalties like the ones that would pay for the victims fund.
Adding some intrigue to the somewhat wonky sticking point is that the legislationcomplete with the controversial abortion languageactually managed to sail through the Senate Judiciary Committee last month without Democrats so much as noticing it. The provision itself is on Pages 4 and 5 of the 68-page bill, although whoever wrote it appears to have gone to considerable lengths to avoid actually using the word abortion. Instead the provision makes a rather convoluted reference to the Hyde amendment, declaring that the victims fund shall be subject to the limitations on the use or expending of amounts described in sections 506 and 507 of division H of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2014 ... to the same extent as if amounts in the Fund were funds appropriated under division H of such Act.
Oh please, you knew what I meant. I'm aware of how the bill was crafted in the Senate. Amendment, addition to the House version, etc. Please don't be patronizing.
How in the world does a person look at a bipartisan bill that ensures nothing but benefits for victims and say "you know what we should do? Add in a completely partisan addendum and torpedo it 'cause fuck people who need help".
That's what they're doing.
I offer my sincere apologies. When you said "amendment," I thought you meant "amendment." That's the only reason I offered my correction.
They're doing it clearly as a "tactic" to say "See! See! Dems are obstructionists! Not us!" And will continue to build this sort of narrative "against the obstructionist Dems" into Election 2016. Sadly, the average voter will buy it, too.
You should know how strict Metaphoreus is about language. Except, you know, when he isn't.Oh please, you knew what I meant. I'm aware of how the bill was crafted in the Senate. Amendment, addition to the House version, etc. Please don't be patronizing.
I really no problem in voting for the bill. It doesn't do anything new to abortion funding.
This is what happens when you read Reason.com.
If that was the case it wouldn't need to be in there. Clearly you are wrong, the politicians are right and the Republicans are specifically being heartless by indirectly forcing rape babies on the victims..
Note that, in the case of rape, the restrictions on funding do not apply:
Sec. 507. (a) The limitations established in the preceding section shall not apply to an abortion--
(1) if the pregnancy is the result of an act of rape or incest; or
(2) in the case where a woman suffers from a physical disorder, physical injury, or physical illness, including a life-endangering physical condition caused by or arising from the pregnancy itself, that would, as certified by a physician, place the woman in danger of death unless an abortion is performed.
Now back to how Coryn torpedoed his own bill by slipping in an amendment that he never told any Democrats about that explicitly didn't mention the words abortion or Hyde amendment.
Like I asked the dude on the first page, do you have a particular complaint about the summary of the bill provided by Reason?
Also mentioned on the first page:
Other than giving them the bill so they could read it, I guess.
I find it funny how the Reason entry is about how bad the rest of the content of the bill is, downright opposing its passage in any form and really only mentions the abortion hangup in relation to the politics of the bill in the Senate. Yet it's the one that gets attacked.Like I asked the dude on the first page, do you have a particular complaint about the summary of the bill provided by Reason?
Where did you find that bill?How in the world does a person look at a bipartisan bill that ensures nothing but benefits for victims
This is what happens when you read Reason.com.
It's almost like they should have been made aware of a change using very obscure language. Yes, the bill should have been combed through word by word. Now it wasn't. And this is what happened because the Democrats weren't made aware. Congrats?
What do we pay members of Congress and their staffers for if not to do basic due diligence on the bills that come before them?
This is what happens when you read Reason.com.
The outright pro-abortion magazine?Yep.
In a new Akron Beacon Journal op-ed, Rep. Tim Ryan (D-Ohio) explains what led him from ardently opposing legal abortion to thinking the government should stay out of the issue. Since he was first elected to Congress in 2002, Rep. Ryan has supported a variety of anti-abortion legislation.
Raised Catholic, "I always considered myself pro-life," he writes. But talking to more and more women about abortion, as well as becoming a father himself, changed his thinking.
These women gave me a better understanding of how complex and difficult certain situations can become. And while there are people of good conscience on both sides of this argument, one thing has become abundantly clear to me: the heavy hand of government must not make this decision for women and families.
"This is not a partisan issue, but instead a personal one," Ryan continued. "I have come to believe that we must trust women and families—not politicians—to make the best decision for their lives."
Good for Ryan for coming to this realization where it concerns reproductive freedom
It's not obscure. Google "Pub. Law 113-76." Find division H. Read sections 506 and 507. All of that information is specifically mentioned in the bill, and the resources necessary to understand their import are readily available even for those of us who do not work in the Capitol. What do we pay members of Congress and their staffers for if not to do basic due diligence on the bills that come before them?
Shouldn't you be happy they caught it then?
The reason this bill is even undergoing controversy is because people are reading the bill before it hits the floor. The only thing you might have on the democrats is not fully reading the bill and letting it get through committee in which case it is on those specific committee members.
Because they knew the Democrats would be against it. They inserted a poison pill into the bill seeing an opportunity to make the Democrats look bad. It's not exactly an uncommon tactic.Why did they feel the need to compound restrictions on abortion funding in a bill about human trafficking?
It's not obscure. Google "Pub. Law 113-76." Find division H. Read sections 506 and 507. All of that information is specifically mentioned in the bill, and the resources necessary to understand their import are readily available even for those of us who do not work in the Capitol. What do we pay members of Congress and their staffers for if not to do basic due diligence on the bills that come before them?
Why was such a thing never mention in any correspondence between Coryn and Leahy?
It's dumb that it was caught only now. It was simultaneously shady that such a provison was not explicitly pointed out to Democrats in committee. And here we are now because of it.
Because they knew the Democrats would be against it. They inserted a poison pill into the bill seeing an opportunity to make the Democrats look bad. It's not exactly an uncommon tactic.
Why was such a thing never mention in any correspondence between Coryn and Leahy?
It's dumb that it was caught only now. It was simultaneously shady that such a provison was not explicitly pointed out to Democrats in committee. And here we are now because of it.
Regardless, the language should be stripped so this bill can pass. We should all be able to agree on that.
I just can't believe Democrats aren't poring through each bill. They try to sneak awful shit into even the most mundane bills.
If one is to assume all pregnancies in human trafficking are the result of rape, why is the hyde act language included in the first place?
If a woman is involved in human trafficking, would she willingly be raped? All sex involved in human trafficking is rape.... It's human trafficking.Sure, if we assume that all pregnancies with respect to which some funds might be disbursed under the bill are the result of rape, then the Hyde Amendment serves no purpose. But why would we assume that to be the case?
If a woman is involved in human trafficking, would she willingly be raped? All sex involved in human trafficking is rape.... It's human trafficking.
(A) sections 202, 203, and 204 of the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2005 (42 U.S.C. 14044a, 14044b, and 14044c);
(B) subsections (b)(2) and (f) of section 107 of the Trafficking Victims Protection Act of 2000 (22 U.S.C. 7105); and
(C) section 214(b) of the Victims of Child Abuse Act of 1990 (42 U.S.C. 13002(b))
damn, this aint going well for op
A lot of people only know McConnell from his recent years of prominence.That said, using this to postpone the hearing on the AG seems more like McConnell being really opportunistic as opposed to it being part of any larger plan. Like he saw this particular wedge floating in the shitty water, and snatched it up all sorts of fast. Almost reflexive.
I think the fact that there isn't definitive evidence of the merit of its inclusion, not even from the Republican perspective, establishes sufficient rationale to remove it in favor of language that better achieves at least that much.if existing law already imposes the restrictions (on the proposed fund) that the controversial provision attempts to impose, then Republicans should simply remove the controversial provision, as they have nothing to gain from its inclusion. But, as I said, I don't think that's the case.
I think the fact that there isn't definitive evidence of the merit of its inclusion, not even from the Republican perspective, establishes sufficient rationale to remove it in favor of language that better achieves at least that much.
Huh? It would no doubt do what it says it does--that's how laws work. The scenario I was addressing was one in which what the provision does is already done by existing law. In that scenario, there's no reason to have an argument over the provision under discussion here. But the burden there would be on the person claiming the provision is duplicative.
That's how I understand it at least from what I heard on NPR
The difference is where the money comes from. The Hyde amendment comes from government funds. The funds in this bill are from FINES from cases of human trafficking.
There is a difference because the fines are essentially private money being directed to fund this bill and the abortion clause is needed because the Hyde amendment doesn't cover those fines.
That's how I understand it at least from what I heard on NPR
I don't think that's quite right. The Hyde Amendment (which, by the way, isn't a single law, but a type of provision added to many different laws) doesn't distinguish between the source of funding;
I thought it did. The Hyde Amendment is supposed to only apply to funds from the year's Dept of Health and Human Services appropriations. The funds for THIS bill wouldn't be coming from those appropriations, but from fines assessed against child traffickers, hence the attempt to insert wording into the bill that specifically prevents THOSE funds from being used for abortions.