Phatscotty wrote:So Mets, are you saying, on principle, you think a majority should rule, and the minority should have no voice?
Do you support any checks or balances on power?
All the filibuster option does is change the definition of a majority.
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Phatscotty wrote:So Mets, are you saying, on principle, you think a majority should rule, and the minority should have no voice?
Do you support any checks or balances on power?
Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:
Do you support any checks or balances on power?
All the filibuster option does is change the definition of a majority.
Phatscotty wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:
Do you support any checks or balances on power?
All the filibuster option does is change the definition of a majority.
okay....
and the previous definition was one with checks and balances and forced compromise, and the new definition is majority rules with no checks or balances since the minority has no say....so, that being pointed out in black and white.... are you saying, on principle, you think a majority should rule, and the minority should have no voice?
The prospects are very strong that the Democrats will lose the Senate next year and there is an excellent chance of [them] losing the White House. When Republicans come into power, theyāre going to include Supreme Court nominees.
http://www.politico.com/story/2013/11/c ... z2lWSOeaTG
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
Phatscotty wrote:I know your answer is yes. I'm only trying to help you think it through. I suppose it doesn't really matter since what's done is done. I just don't buy your argument about how it's better to transform the rules that have served us well for over 200 years than it is for Democrats to just nominate someone who is more agreeable. That's some Nazi shit.
Metsfanmax wrote:How about "the only people you may appoint to carry out your executive functions are people that don't threaten our political ambitions." This chart says it all:
Now either Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and Ford all managed to choose perfectly agreeable nominees where Clinton, Bush and Obama failed, or something is wrong with the Senate.
Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:I know your answer is yes. I'm only trying to help you think it through. I suppose it doesn't really matter since what's done is done. I just don't buy your argument about how it's better to transform the rules that have served us well for over 200 years than it is for Democrats to just nominate someone who is more agreeable. That's some Nazi shit.
Nazi shit? How about "the only people you may appoint to carry out your executive functions are people that don't threaten our political ambitions." This chart says it all:
Now either Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and Ford all managed to choose perfectly agreeable nominees where Clinton, Bush and Obama failed, or something is wrong with the Senate.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
thegreekdog wrote:Maybe I don't understand a fillibuster, but doesn't it just lengthen the amount of time for a law to pass? In other words, if Rand Paul stops talking, doesn't the Senate just go and ratify the guy 51-49 anyway?
But you assume Obama's picks are good picks, don't you? We haven't even named the people we are talking about, but you are defending them anyways. What do you know about the nominees? In your mind, is there even room for a valid discussion whether these people are good people, to talk about their past, to see if they are qaulified? Doesn't any of that matter to you? Why should these people not be filibustered?
The minority party was apparently filibuster-ineligible (had fewer than 40 seats) for 14 of the 24 years of Eisenhower, Kennedy, Johnson, Nixon and Ford, so this seems like one of those charts that look snazzy in a JPG but don't really mean a whole lot. [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Party_divisions_of_United_States_Congresses]
thegreekdog wrote:Maybe I don't understand a fillibuster, but doesn't it just lengthen the amount of time for a law to pass? In other words, if Rand Paul stops talking, doesn't the Senate just go and ratify the guy 51-49 anyway?
By the way PS, I'm taking notes for 2016. Hopefully you remain consistent.
Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Maybe I don't understand a fillibuster, but doesn't it just lengthen the amount of time for a law to pass? In other words, if Rand Paul stops talking, doesn't the Senate just go and ratify the guy 51-49 anyway?
Yes, but at any time a Senator may choose to filibuster by continuing debate by speaking as long as he or she wishes. So what people called "filibustering" of nominees was almost always using the term indirectly -- it was the threat of a filibuster that was really doing the job. Any time someone attempted to end the debate and bring a vote to the floor, a person from the objecting party could simply get up and speak, which meant that effectively the vote could not occur. The way to prevent such a filibuster was with three-fifths of the Senate voting to end debate immediately -- this is why, if you have 40 people on your side, you have effectively filibustered the process even without speaking. Under the new rules, it only requires a majority of the Senate to end debate and preclude any filibuster.But you assume Obama's picks are good picks, don't you? We haven't even named the people we are talking about, but you are defending them anyways. What do you know about the nominees? In your mind, is there even room for a valid discussion whether these people are good people, to talk about their past, to see if they are qaulified? Doesn't any of that matter to you? Why should these people not be filibustered?
Now you're flip-flopping. First they had to be acceptable nominees -- now they have to be good nominees? Which is it? And does good mean good character or good at their job? The point is, unless Obama is picking nominees that are outrageous in historical context, then the problem here lies with the Senate and not the President.
Phatscotty wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Maybe I don't understand a fillibuster, but doesn't it just lengthen the amount of time for a law to pass? In other words, if Rand Paul stops talking, doesn't the Senate just go and ratify the guy 51-49 anyway?
Yes, but at any time a Senator may choose to filibuster by continuing debate by speaking as long as he or she wishes. So what people called "filibustering" of nominees was almost always using the term indirectly -- it was the threat of a filibuster that was really doing the job. Any time someone attempted to end the debate and bring a vote to the floor, a person from the objecting party could simply get up and speak, which meant that effectively the vote could not occur. The way to prevent such a filibuster was with three-fifths of the Senate voting to end debate immediately -- this is why, if you have 40 people on your side, you have effectively filibustered the process even without speaking. Under the new rules, it only requires a majority of the Senate to end debate and preclude any filibuster.But you assume Obama's picks are good picks, don't you? We haven't even named the people we are talking about, but you are defending them anyways. What do you know about the nominees? In your mind, is there even room for a valid discussion whether these people are good people, to talk about their past, to see if they are qaulified? Doesn't any of that matter to you? Why should these people not be filibustered?
Now you're flip-flopping. First they had to be acceptable nominees -- now they have to be good nominees? Which is it? And does good mean good character or good at their job? The point is, unless Obama is picking nominees that are outrageous in historical context, then the problem here lies with the Senate and not the President.
lol I'm not flopping at all. I already said, just like the rules said and the Constitution says and our tradition and our heritage has always been, the nominees have to be good for the people we sent to judge them as good or not according to the people we sent to Washington to judge just such things. If the American people sent Obama a supermajority, then this would be fine. But the American people took away the majority from Obama. I am repeating myself again.
Now Obama and the Democrats just changed the rules to go around the election results.
Phatscotty wrote:But you assume Obama's picks are good picks, don't you? We haven't even named the people we are talking about, but you are defending them anyways. What do you know about the nominees?
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
saxitoxin wrote:Phatscotty wrote:But you assume Obama's picks are good picks, don't you? We haven't even named the people we are talking about, but you are defending them anyways. What do you know about the nominees?
We know one of the nominees was appointed by Obama on the recommendation of Marco Rubio. After the appointment was formalized, Rubio then filibustered his own recommendation.
Metsfanmax wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Phatscotty wrote:But you assume Obama's picks are good picks, don't you? We haven't even named the people we are talking about, but you are defending them anyways. What do you know about the nominees?
We know one of the nominees was appointed by Obama on the recommendation of Marco Rubio. After the appointment was formalized, Rubio then filibustered his own recommendation.
I have to agree with Rubio, though, that less than two years in prison is far too lenient a sentence for killing a cyclist. But that's an issue with the weak laws protecting cyclists and making them second-class citizens on the road, and not as much with the judge's ruling in that case.
mrswdk wrote:The US legal system could benefit from increased discretionary powers for judges. In China a judge's primary concern should be the outcome that is best for society, rather than following the very exact letter of the law even if doing so is clearly absurd (e.g. petty criminals who receive life sentences under 'three strikes' legislation).
BigBallinStalin wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:saxitoxin wrote:Phatscotty wrote:But you assume Obama's picks are good picks, don't you? We haven't even named the people we are talking about, but you are defending them anyways. What do you know about the nominees?
We know one of the nominees was appointed by Obama on the recommendation of Marco Rubio. After the appointment was formalized, Rubio then filibustered his own recommendation.
I have to agree with Rubio, though, that less than two years in prison is far too lenient a sentence for killing a cyclist. But that's an issue with the weak laws protecting cyclists and making them second-class citizens on the road, and not as much with the judge's ruling in that case.
So somehow if a motorists kills a cyclist, then there's no way the motorist can be charged with vehicular manslaughter or plain old vanilla manslaughter?
If not, then how is the underlined true?
Metsfanmax wrote:Phatscotty wrote:Metsfanmax wrote:thegreekdog wrote:Maybe I don't understand a fillibuster, but doesn't it just lengthen the amount of time for a law to pass? In other words, if Rand Paul stops talking, doesn't the Senate just go and ratify the guy 51-49 anyway?
Yes, but at any time a Senator may choose to filibuster by continuing debate by speaking as long as he or she wishes. So what people called "filibustering" of nominees was almost always using the term indirectly -- it was the threat of a filibuster that was really doing the job. Any time someone attempted to end the debate and bring a vote to the floor, a person from the objecting party could simply get up and speak, which meant that effectively the vote could not occur. The way to prevent such a filibuster was with three-fifths of the Senate voting to end debate immediately -- this is why, if you have 40 people on your side, you have effectively filibustered the process even without speaking. Under the new rules, it only requires a majority of the Senate to end debate and preclude any filibuster.But you assume Obama's picks are good picks, don't you? We haven't even named the people we are talking about, but you are defending them anyways. What do you know about the nominees? In your mind, is there even room for a valid discussion whether these people are good people, to talk about their past, to see if they are qaulified? Doesn't any of that matter to you? Why should these people not be filibustered?
Now you're flip-flopping. First they had to be acceptable nominees -- now they have to be good nominees? Which is it? And does good mean good character or good at their job? The point is, unless Obama is picking nominees that are outrageous in historical context, then the problem here lies with the Senate and not the President.
lol I'm not flopping at all. I already said, just like the rules said and the Constitution says and our tradition and our heritage has always been, the nominees have to be good for the people we sent to judge them as good or not according to the people we sent to Washington to judge just such things. If the American people sent Obama a supermajority, then this would be fine. But the American people took away the majority from Obama. I am repeating myself again.
Now Obama and the Democrats just changed the rules to go around the election results.
This is a third unique point in this discussion. First the nominees have to be acceptable -- then they have to be good people -- now it doesn't matter whether they are acceptable or good people if there's a supermajority in the Senate.
Pack Rat wrote:if it quacks like a duck and walk like a duck, it's still fascism
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=241668&start=200#p5349880
It's called the nuclear option for hyperbolic reasons.Phatscotty wrote:
It's called the nuclear option for a reason. Senate Democrats and the Obama administration have crossed the line, plain and simple.
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