MonroeTalks.com > Categories > Politics and Government > The Republican Agenda


Pages: 1 ... 14 15 [16] 17 18 ... 38   Go Down

Author Topic: The Republican Agenda  (Read 18401 times)

0 Members and 3 Guests are viewing this topic.

Baby Hitler

  • Guest
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #225 on: October 22, 2010, 09:24:36 AM »

Or maybe be called the worst name of all. A member of that dastardly, and evil, Chamber of commerce. Business bad, Socialism good.
You mean the group that has meetings on how to further profits by outsourcing even more jobs overseas?

Yeah, I'd consider that pretty evil, you just call it business as usual.
Logged

Baby Hitler

  • Guest
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #226 on: October 22, 2010, 09:56:08 AM »

Ignorant voters are the heart and blood of the Republican party. A large portion of them believe that Obama was born in Kenya, that "Government should get out of Medicare" and numerous other ignorant statements.

And when confronted with facts, they start with the verbal assaults and the inevitable "drinking Obama's Kool aid" rhetoric instead of debating the issues.
Nonsense. I would venture to say vast majority of the (R)'s that said Obama was Muslim knew better, but answered in the affirmative because it burns your butt. And it does.
Because it burns my butt? Thanks for reminding me of that other trait. Deliberately pissing people off, because they have no facts to support their cause. Then, when they are attacked for deliberately pissing people off, they cry innocent.

SB (AKA FF)
You ask for the evidence. You get it. Then you deny the obvious. Fine. I'm the one that has seriously violated forum standards. If you are the one that has been violated, then report me to the administration. Like I said, I'll take my chances. Will you? Not a chance. Weasels can't back up being a weasel


FF: (AKA Scumbag)
No, and I'm not the scumbag that took a totally smarmy shot at Sidecar for his use of loose, rather then lose, by insulting his wife either. That would be you.



Thank you John. I knew I wouldn't have to wait long for you to prove me correct.

Logged

ducksoup

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 8670
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #227 on: October 26, 2010, 07:32:33 AM »

Mitch McConnell admits to The Limbaugh Strategy of only caring about the 2012 Presidential Election

When Rush Limbaugh started president Obama's term off by saying he hoped that Obama would fail, it wasn't a shock to progressives because that's what he does, but the Villagers all were kind of laughing it off as just an entertainer having some fun. Why would somebody want the government to fail when America faced a complete financial meltdown which would be followed by a depression that would have gutted everybody? We've witnessed the Republican tactics of obstructionism and they've done all they could to stop progress from happening, but never clearly defined it as an attempt to make Obama fail, but McConnell is not holding back any longer.

Political Wire caught Mitch McConnell saying this to the National Review:

"The single most important thing we want to achieve is for President Obama to be a one-term president."

Shouldn't Mitch be worried about how people are going to deal with the fraudulent foreclosure mess and getting people back to work instead of his party politics? McConnell is also posturing for the Tea Partiers, but when a country is struggling so much to recover mass job losses one would think that our politicians would do the best they could at trying to help struggling Americans. Not true with Republicans. They never cared about 'you." They only care about their real constituents, Big Business and about the 2012 presidential election.


brooklynbadboy says:

I'm gonna fax this over to the White House just in case they are gearing up for "good faith bipartisan negotiations" and "mutually beneficial compromise."


Jed Lewison:

For all the olive branches extended to Republicans by President Obama, all they ever give back is a sharp stick in the eye:

GOP says compromise not on the agenda if they retake the House

Republicans aren't interested in compromising with President Obama on major issues if they retake the House or Senate, a senior GOP lawmaker said.

"Look, the time to go along and get along is over," said Rep. Mike Pence (Ind.), the chairman of the House Republican Conference. "House Republicans know that. We’ve taken firm and principled stands against their big government plans throughout this Congress, and we’ve got, if the American people will send them, we’ve got a cavalry of men and women headed to Washington, D.C. that are going to stand with us."

Pence said his party wouldn't compromise on issues like spending or healthcare reform, two of the weightiest items on Congress's agenda next year, when the Republicans could control one or both chambers.

"Look, there will be no compromise on stopping runaway spending, deficits and debt. There will be no compromise on repealing Obamacare. There will be no compromise on stopping Democrats from growing government and raising taxes," Pence told conservative radio host Hugh Hewitt Thursday evening. "And if I haven’t been clear enough yet, let me say again: No compromise."

Pence's vow isn't exactly a shock. After all, his party believes that the federal government is the root cause of every problem in this country. If they had their way, we wouldn't have things like Social Security, Medicare, interstate highways, student aid, civil rights legislation, or Constitutional protections for individual privacy. To paraphrase Scott McAdams, Republicans want to repeal the entire 20th century. And when your goal is to repeal the 20th century, there really isn't any room for compromise.

Will the bipartisan fetish fanboys in the media actually attack Republicans for once? I doubt it because as we know, IOKIYAR.
http://crooksandliars.com/john-amato/mitch-mcconnell-admits-limbaugh-strateg
Logged
After one taste, you'll duck soup the rest of your life ... Groucho Marx.

Frenchfry

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 27230
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #228 on: October 26, 2010, 10:36:47 AM »

Thanks for posting duck. At least there are others that haven't been fooled.

The republicans shouldn't have surrounded themselves with nothing but cheerleaders from the hard-right....they're actually starting to believe the nonsense the right stands for.

Guess it's like telling a lie over and over....

Republicans are the largest group of airheads I've ever seen.

Oh, and there are lots more comments on that link as well.
Logged
WARNING! Reading Republican/Conservative/Tea Party comments will lower your intelligence quotient!

The new motto of the obstructionist Republican Party/Conservative-right/Tea Party...refuse to legislate, just investigate.

Frenchfry

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 27230
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #229 on: October 31, 2010, 10:34:21 PM »

Republican party must evolve to maintain sustainability
October 5, 2010
The 2008 election was called many things. It was historic. It was decisive. Many went as far as to call it a political realignment.

There was a consensus that the Republican Party had strayed too far right during the Bush years and would have to pivot to the center to remain viable in an increasingly diverse America.

Oh, how the times have changed.

Less than two years since their historic victory, Democrats are bracing for huge losses in both the House and the Senate. High unemployment due to a lagging economy, two wars and a woefully mishandled health care reform bill have sparked voter anger which the Republicans look to capitalize on come November.

It was barely a year ago so-called expert and political analyst James Carville predicted the Democrats would be in power for "40 more years."

So what happened?

Did the Republicans move to the political center and broaden their appeal?

Not exactly.

In fact, Republicans have instead shifted even further to the right on a number of key issues, and they continue to lessen their appeal to moderates and minorities.

For example, Republicans across the nation expressed support for Arizona Gov. Jan Brewer's radical immigration law, which gave law enforcement the power to demand documentation from anyone who was suspected of being an illegal immigrant. The provisions of this law essentially sanction racial profiling.

Republicans have also proposed the repeal of the 14th Amendment of the Constitution, which grants citizenship to anyone born in the U.S.

More recently, Republicans blocked the repeal of "Don't Ask, Don't Tell," enabling the continuation of a policy that discriminates based on sexual preferences.

They also came out strongly against the proposed Muslim community center in Lower Manhattan and have attacked President Barack Obama for his outreach to the Muslim world.

Here in West Virginia, Democratic Congressman Nick Rahall is under attack by his Republican opponents for his Arab heritage. In an ad sponsored by the West Virginia Conservative Foundation, Rahall, the descendent of Lebanese immigrants, is shown describing his outreach to the Arab-American community while sinister music plays in the background.

All over the country, Republicans are staking out staunch anti-immigrant, intolerant positions in an effort to fire up their base. This political pandering to the radical elements of their party may provide substantial short-term advantages, but it is not a sustainable political strategy. These radical positions and scare tactics may succeed in increasing turnout among the far-right, uneducated, white voters, which will have a significant impact on this year's election.

However, these tactics will not succeed in the long run. In a rapidly changing America, catering to only one segment of the population will not be good enough.

According to Census Bureau projections, Caucasians will no longer be the majority in this country by the year 2042. The new majority will be comprised of Hispanics, Blacks, Asians, Native Americans and Pacific Islanders.

Democrats swept in to power in 2008, largely due to the minority vote. Now, thanks to a combination of irresponsible legislating and an economic recession, the Democrats will be punished at the polls.

Republicans will likely gain control of the House and put a big dent in the Democratic majority in the Senate, according to E.J. Dionne and Thomas Mann, senior fellows of governance studies at the Brookings Institution.

However, if the Republicans wish to remain a viable political party in the long term, they must become more accommodating to minorities.

The fabric of this country is rapidly changing, and if they fail to adapt, their role will steadily diminish.
http://www.thedaonline.com/opinion/republican-party-must-evolve-to-maintain-sustainability-1.1666956
Logged
WARNING! Reading Republican/Conservative/Tea Party comments will lower your intelligence quotient!

The new motto of the obstructionist Republican Party/Conservative-right/Tea Party...refuse to legislate, just investigate.

Frenchfry

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 27230
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #230 on: October 31, 2010, 10:47:41 PM »

Say No to 'More Food Stamps': Newt Gingrich and the Republicans' Anti-Poor Agenda
10/06/10
"More food stamps? Or more paychecks?" Former Speaker of the House Newt Gingrich, one of the Republican Party's best rabble rousers, suggests that's how the GOP should couch the national policy debate in the final four weeks before this November's midterm elections.

According to news website Politico, Gingrich sent a memo to GOP candidates Tuesday suggesting that they frame the election as a "vivid contrast" between the policies of food stamps vs. jobs. In the memo, he links to this recent news of the record 41.3 million Americans receiving federal food aid, or the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program.

The Republicans should craft a "closing argument" this way, writes Gingrich: "This year, the House Republican's Pledge to America has set the stage for a powerful, symbolic closing argument for candidates seeking to unseat the left-wing, big spending, job killing Democrats: paychecks versus food stamps."

And so one of the party's loudest voices creates a new Republican agenda: demonizing the poor.

Trickle-Down Economics: The Sequel

It's certainly true that Republicans have been singing the job-creation tune, but their version of the song includes the chorus that repealing the Bush tax cuts for the 4% of Americans who make more than $250,000 a year would be "job-killing." Repeat that as often as they might, it's hard to figure the math that would demonstrate the cause-and-effect relationship this assertion suggests.

In fact, lack of cash in the system is clearly no longer the main problem on the jobs front. Thanks to corporate stimulus, bailout funds and huge corporate cost-cutting measures (i.e., layoffs), companies now hold a record level of cash and equivalents in their coffers, but new jobs are nowhere to be seen. As Bloomberg Businessweek writer Howard Silverblatt puts it: "Given the current profitability level and environment, the risk-reward trade off appears to support their actions, and until that climate of uncertainty clears up, for better or for worse, increased spending and job creation will be difficult to obtain. And as stated, no jobs means no recovery."

So, even if we had not been convinced by the general agreement among economists that "trickle-down" policies don't work, we now have more proof that simply putting more cash into corporate coffers does not lead to more job creation. This can only be more true when applied to individual wealthy so-called "job creators," who would not, after all, be getting more money, but simply paying the same level of taxes they are now if the Republicans were to prevail on this topic. The Congressional Budget Office supports this viewpoint: As CBO Director Douglas Elmendorf stated in February, "increasing the after-tax income of businesses typically does not create much incentive for them to hire more workers in order to produce more, because production depends principally on their ability to sell their products."

A Decade-Long Rise in Food Stamp Usage

The examples given by Republican campaigners are typically of small-business owners making just over $250,000: These job creators, as the rhetoric goes, are just waiting to gain "certainty" so they can hire more people and, based on Gingrich's logic, pay them enough so that they won't qualify for food stamps -- at least $28,668 for a family of four, plus more for employers' contributions for FICA and, we'd hope, health care and other benefits. So, if you were paying $40,000 or so less in taxes, would you spend it to hire someone?

Whether the answer is "no," "yes" or "maybe if it was under the table," the net of this political spin is that the poor are stigmatized as illegitimate members of society -- even as they are becoming a larger and larger portion of it. When one summarizes an election as food stamp recipients vs. job creators, it's easy to see who the angels and demons are. Those who have seized the American dream and hired another human being -- no matter how much money they're making -- wear the halos. Those who have lost their jobs, or are working under the poverty line, and need federal assistance so badly they're willing to suffer the considerable stigma of being a food stamp recipient, get horns and a barbed tail.

As they say, statistics lie just as well as they tell the truth. While food stamp participation has been rising and rising over the past 10 years -- during the majority of which, let's recall, Republicans controlled both the White House and Congress -- so too has the number of recipient households that get some of their income from paychecks. While this number fell during the 1990s, it has increased more or less steadily since 2000 to peak at 40% in 2008, the most recent data available, says a representative from the USDA, which runs the program.

At Election Time, Money Talks

At a time when 41.3 million Americans are receiving food stamps, labeling that key safety net for the economically disadvantaged as the archetype of wrongheaded policies seems -- well, wrongheaded. Of course, as the USDA representative reminds us, "half of them are children." Food stamps are protecting the future of America -- just not the future of the funding sources for those Republican campaign ads.

And therein may lie the very reason Gingrich finds it acceptable to paint food stamp recipients as abhorrent. It's not really the people who elect candidates any more (that is, not "the people" the way I used to define them -- as individual, corporeal bits of flesh, blood and human fallibility that sometimes leaves them hungry): It's the money. Corporations and those who lead them are the ones who contribute to the political campaigns of both major parties, and now, thanks to the Supreme Court's Citizens United ruling, run campaigns independently and without scrutiny.

The poor aren't paying for the campaigns, so it's OK to use them as scapegoats when you trumpet your "closing argument" for the 2010 election. Newt Gingrich may realize this ad hominem argument is a logical fallacy: If it works, no one will care.
http://www.dailyfinance.com/story/taxes/newt-gingrich-food-stamps-republican-anti-poor-agenda-memo/19661623/
Logged
WARNING! Reading Republican/Conservative/Tea Party comments will lower your intelligence quotient!

The new motto of the obstructionist Republican Party/Conservative-right/Tea Party...refuse to legislate, just investigate.

Frenchfry

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 27230
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #231 on: October 31, 2010, 10:53:51 PM »

Logged
WARNING! Reading Republican/Conservative/Tea Party comments will lower your intelligence quotient!

The new motto of the obstructionist Republican Party/Conservative-right/Tea Party...refuse to legislate, just investigate.

Frenchfry

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 27230
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #232 on: October 31, 2010, 11:01:45 PM »

Logged
WARNING! Reading Republican/Conservative/Tea Party comments will lower your intelligence quotient!

The new motto of the obstructionist Republican Party/Conservative-right/Tea Party...refuse to legislate, just investigate.

Frenchfry

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 27230
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #233 on: November 01, 2010, 11:01:15 PM »

Logged
WARNING! Reading Republican/Conservative/Tea Party comments will lower your intelligence quotient!

The new motto of the obstructionist Republican Party/Conservative-right/Tea Party...refuse to legislate, just investigate.

Baby Hitler

  • Guest
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #234 on: November 01, 2010, 11:10:17 PM »

Fry I love your tag line signature.

“Voting is like driving a car. Select "D" to go forward, select "R" to go backwards.”
Logged

PXaiver

  • Guest
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #235 on: November 02, 2010, 12:36:39 AM »

I don't know if he was being political when he wrote "Burning Beard", but I think this quote from Neil Fallon has some meaning.

"Choking on bits of falling bread crumbs..."


 I think it perfectly describes "trickle down" economics.
Logged

boater

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 821
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #236 on: November 02, 2010, 09:21:41 AM »

Why does the right hate America?
Logged
Heaven, the ultimate welfare state.

Frenchfry

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 27230
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #237 on: November 02, 2010, 12:41:42 PM »

Republicans' response to creating more jobs, "We Do not care."

Latest Vote on Jobs Bill Shows Just How Out of Touch Republicans are to the Crisis Facing Families

Washington, DC - Service Employees International Union (SEIU) President Mary Kay Henry released the following statement after the Senate's 56-40 vote last night that prevents the American Jobs and Closing Tax Loopholes Act from receiving a fair up-or-down vote:

"Tonight, another father will put his child to bed consumed with worry about the drawer full of unpaid bills. Tonight, a nurse will start her second shift of the day because she knows she has to work more to keep her house out of foreclosure. Tonight, a laid-off police officer who has languished for a new job even if it pays half as much will face a brutal reality, next month there will be no more income. It is nighttime in America and Republicans want to keep us there.

"America's workers are in crisis. America's states are in crisis. And the Republicans response? 'We just don't care about jobs.'

"How out of touch, how righteous must the Republican party be that they won't allow an up-or-down vote on legislation that will keep people working, will keep states from slashing services, will keep families' roofs over their heads.

"It is unconscionable.

"This cynical game Republicans are playing with Americans lives and well-being must end. Elections are not worth losing 900,000 jobs, costing a worker his remaining dignity, and forcing more families out of their homes - enough is enough."
http://www.seiu.org/2010/06/seiu-republicans-response-to-creating-more-jobs-we-do-not-care.php
Logged
WARNING! Reading Republican/Conservative/Tea Party comments will lower your intelligence quotient!

The new motto of the obstructionist Republican Party/Conservative-right/Tea Party...refuse to legislate, just investigate.

Frenchfry

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 27230
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #238 on: November 05, 2010, 10:35:03 AM »

Logged
WARNING! Reading Republican/Conservative/Tea Party comments will lower your intelligence quotient!

The new motto of the obstructionist Republican Party/Conservative-right/Tea Party...refuse to legislate, just investigate.

boater

  • Hero Talker
  • ******
  • Offline Offline
  • Posts: 821
Re: The Republican Agenda
« Reply #239 on: November 05, 2010, 10:54:52 AM »

What is the repube plan for extending tax cuts? What will more tax cuts accomplish? We need an explanation as to why the previous cuts didn't work and a detailed plan how more cuts will help the economy. When I present proposals to my company, I have to demonstrate how it will work. They want the government run like a business? They have to spell out their proposals.
Logged
Heaven, the ultimate welfare state.
Pages: 1 ... 14 15 [16] 17 18 ... 38   Go Up