This part is false- the individual provisions of the ACA are generally quite popular, and even when bundled together poll rather well. When named “Obamacare” a plurality might disapprove (though not by a huge margin, and the margin has been shrinking). Taking all this into account, it’s hardly a “very unpopular law”.
How about not? The law passed.
After the midterms, if the Republicans take Congress, they’ll have enough votes not to defund the ACA but to repeal it. If not, we’re right back where we started, and that’s pointless. The concept of continually delaying is simply a middleman. Cut that guy out and either fund it or repeal it.
So he should agree to another year of bad PR/bullshit from Republicans because…?
It’s not absurd. If a shutdown is that bad, simply pass the resolution that the house put forth. Shutdown avoided.
If Obama then wants to fund Obamacare, he better hope that the Democrats win enough seats in the mid terms to be able to pass a bill that does allow funding it.
The House controls the purse strings. That’s a feature, not a bug.
I agree that this situation isn’t a desirable one. But the circumstances are very unique. It’s rare for there to be such a set of circumstances: a game changing law that wouldn’t pass today, but did pass a while ago, but hasn’t been funded and hasn’t really kicked in yet, that the American people oppose, etc.
It’s not as if this is happening every week.
This ignores that Obamacare is legally passed legislation. There is a democratic process to defund it but it does not involve shutting down the government. If Republicans cannot defund it - then make your case and win more electoral positions so that you can.
This precedent of shutting down the government because a particular viewpoint does not get there way is a dangerous slope to go down. It can work both ways too, and we don’t want or need government that works like this. In the end nobody wins - we all just lose. Financially pretty much every American will hurt from this. Maybe you less than others - but it’s economic impact will be there.
The problem is that Obamacare is like all entitlements: Once put in place it will be impossible to repeal.
That gives a special motivation to stop it that isn’t there for typical legislation. You can outlaw abortion tomorrow and then legalize it next week. Same goes for many other issues. But once you start handing out money it never get undone.
I’m not saying he would agree. You are the one that started throwing hypotheticals out there. I’m simply altering it to be a reasonable compromise.
All the better reason not to pay the Danegeld, lest this become a habit. If the Republicans think they can overturn already established law by shutting down the government they will do it over and over again. There is a way to overturn a law, and this isn’t it.
I agree with most of this. This isn’t an optimal situation, and I wish there were a better solution. However, this situation is unique and this legislation if not stopped now will never go away.
So then the Republicans can get literally anything they want by threatening a shut down.
That’s why this tactic must be opposed- just like you don’t negotiate with terrorists, because it might encourage more terrorism, you don’t negotiate with a party that threatens government shutdown and debt default, because it will encourage them to do it again.
Basically, in strategic terms, the Democrats CANNOT give in- even negotiate- because then the Republicans will see this as a legitimate tactic and do it again. It doesn’t matter if the demands were very small- the Democrats can’t allow this tactic to be seen as legitimate.
If he’s going to beat you super bad, just suck the rapist’s dick. It’s better for everyone. :rolleyes:
Your position on this is pure nonsense.
He has enough seats to fund it. One group is trying to turn the wheel and grind us into the guardrail, heedless of the damage it would cause.
The House is bound to pay our debts and run the country. Not threaten to burn the house down every time they don’t get their way.
Oh well then. By all means, hurt hundreds of thousands of people and damage the economy, so long as you only do it once in awhile.
Also, check your polling, they don’t oppose it when informed about what it does.
If so, that’ll be due to massive popularity. Entitlements are hard to repeal because people like them, not because of some magical, innate property.
And if Obamacare is really as unpopular as you claim, there should be no problem repealing it if/when the Republicans are in office. Otherwise, it actually does enjoy more popular support than the Republicans claim.
And actually, this is the part I’m supremely confused by. Are Congressional Republicans convinced Obamacare will work or that it won’t? It seems like they’re arguing it both ways. That it will work so well that it can’t be repealed later. But also that it will fail so badly that they need to kill it now, now, now. Maybe they should make up their minds first.
So again, either fund it or repeal it.
Unless your party ever wins a national election.
A goal for which the extreme factions of the Republicans seem very anxious to ensure never happens again.
What I was refering to by that line was the part from the list which I posted - and you blew off - of agencies affected by the shutdown. Here is the section to which I was referring:
FOOD SAFETY
The Food and Drug Administration would handle high-risk recalls suspend most routine safety inspections. Federal meat inspections would be expected to proceed as usual.
I agree with Hentor’s take. It’s fundamental ignorance to pretend that the Food & Drug Administration’s regular safety inspections are pointless make-work jobs which no one really needs. I would say further that it’s laughably ignorant to characterize an understanding of the many functions of our government as “needing the government to guide our every move.”
Let’s talk about the Food and Drug administration and what it does. Here is a short list of recalls with which the FDA was involved just last month. This is only the last month - the full list is here:
http://www.fda.gov/Safety/Recalls/default.htm (apologies for the text formatting)
Date Brand Name Product Description Reason/ Problem Company Details/ Photo
09/30/2013 Big Blue Fisheries, LLC Salmon, Cod The products may not have been properly cooked, potential to be contaminated with Clostridium botulinum
09/30/2013 AVEA AVEA® VENTILATOR Patient may receive a higher than expected tidal volume.
09/27/2013 Breeze C Scooter Breeze C Scooter Scooter may become unresponsive
09/26/2013 Safeway Angel Food Cakes Undeclared milk and soy Safeway
09/24/2013 Virilis Pro, PHUK, Prolifta Marketed as a dietary supplements for sexual enhancement Undeclared drug ingredients
09/23/2013 Badger Sunscreen Lotions Pseudomonas aeruginosa, Candida parapsilosis and Acremonium fungi. W.S. Badger Co., Inc.
09/21/2013 Market Pantry, Archer Farms, D'Amico And Sons, Roundy's, more Salads, slaw, and dip products Listeria monocytogenes
09/19/2013 Baxter Dual Luer Lock Caps loose particulate matter
09/19/2013 Wegmans Apple Cinnamon Mini Muffins Undeclared soy
09/18/2013 P.F. Chang's Frozen Appetizers Undeclared fish and shellfish
09/16/2013 Semifreddi's Biscotti Undeclared milk and soy Semifreddi's Inc. S
09/13/2013 Hospira 0.25% Bupivacaine HCl Injection & 0.75% Bupivacaine HCl Injection Particulates - Stainless Steel & Iron Oxide
09/13/2013 HeartSine Samaritan® 300/300P PAD public access defibrillators Potential early battery depletion
09/12/2013 Ge Pharma Dietary Supplement Contains 1,3 dimethylamylamine (DMAA)
09/12/2013 Dutch Valley Food Distributors, Inc. Honey Roasted Peanuts Undeclared Milk and Wheat Dutch Valley Food Distributors, Inc.
09/11/2013 Schwebel Baking Company Golden Rich Buns with Honey Undeclared Eggs
09/10/2013 Park Compounding Testoserone Cypionate (Sesame Oil) 200mg/ml Sterile
09/10/2013 Leiter's Bevacizumab and Lidocaine/phenylephrine Sterility Assurance
09/09/2013 Avella Bevacizumab 1.25 mg/0.05 mL PF and Vancomycin PF (BSS) 1% Sterility Assurance
09/09/2013 Talenti Talenti German Chocolate Cake Gelato Undeclared Almonds
09/09/2013 First Street Bakery Blueberry Muffin 14oz and Blueberry Loaf Cake 16oz. Undeclared Milk and Soy
09/06/2013 Equate (Wal-Mart), CVS, up & up (Target) Lubricant Eye Drops, Carboxymethylcellulose Sodium 0.5% Ophthalmic Solution Concerns regarding the effectiveness of the preservative
09/06/2013 University Compounding Pharmacy Testosterone Cypionate (Sesame Oil), Testosterone Cypionate/Testosterone Proprionate, PGE-1 NS, more Lack of assurance of sterility
09/06/2013 MOTRIN® Infants’ Drops Original Berry Flavor 1/2 fl oz bottles Particulate matter
09/06/2013 Pillsbury Pillsbury Cinnamon Rolls with Icing Pieces of Plastic General Mills
09/05/2013 Olde Cape Cod Olde Cape Cod Chipotle Ranch Salad Dressing, 16 oz Undeclared Milk and Egg
09/05/2013 Chobani Greek yogurt products Reports of bloated, swelled product Chobani, Inc.
09/04/2013 Hubbard Life Homestead Poultry feed Elevated calcium level Hubbard Feeds Inc.
09/04/2013 Medaus Pharmacy Testosterone CYP, Lipo injection with lidocaine, Taurine, more
09/03/2013 GoPicnic Brands Professor Zim Zam’s Extraordinary Sweets Dark Chocolate with Orange and Dark Chocolate with Sea Salt Undeclared Milk
Notice how many items on that list are not meat? Oh, and hands up everyone who thinks all these companies would be announcing their product defects if no one was checking - because as we all know, a corporation’s first and only duty is to care for its customers, even if it cuts into the shareholder’s bottom line!
While you’re at the FDA, notice that they are responsible for products in the following areas:
Food
Drugs
Medical Devices
Radiation-Emitting Products
Vaccines, Blood & Biologics products
Animal & Veternary Products
Cosmetics
Tobacco Product
Still think it doesn’t matter if we skip the safety inspections for everything except meat products?
Small government is not a plan - it’s a catchphrase.
Real people have real problems, many of which are bigger than any one individual. A government is the way people join together to solve their problems as a team. The FDA is a government program which people have created to address the problem that each individual cannot test and trust every single item that is sold in the global market. The FDA tests the items and then reports their findings to the people. This is a proper government function for two reasons: first, because it addresses the common welfare of society in a way that each individual cannot do for him or herself and secondly, because it promotes commerce which generates wealth and trade for society that the people can purchase goods with confidence.
Gutting the government’s ability to solve problems for the people and dismissing the real world consequences of doing so, all in order to cripple the government’s ability to implement a popular plan for improving the peoples’ health, all in service to some pointless and empty slogan - a slogan, mind you, that is fundamentally intended to disguise corporate greed behind myths of rugged individualism - frankly, this behavior is appalling, dishonest and deeply unAmerican.
I could write a similar post about any other item on that list, of course, but really - who wants to hear it?

Corrected that for you. You’re welcome.
Dinsdale, please don’t change text inside of quote boxes. If you decide you absolutely must do a “fixed that for you,” just use quotation marks without the quote tags.

I agree with most of this. This isn’t an optimal situation, and I wish there were a better solution. However, this situation is unique and this legislation if not stopped now will never go away.
The ends justify the means?

Traffic was even worse than usual this morning. You’d think with at least a third of government employees staying home, you’d catch a break on the commute.
Most have to go in today and sign furlough notices AFAIK. You’ll see traffic improve a little this evening and a little more tomorrow.

If he’s going to beat you super bad, just suck the rapist’s dick. It’s better for everyone. :rolleyes:
Your position on this is pure nonsense.
You’ve got a rapists dick for an analogy and I’m the one spouting nonsense?
:rolleyes:

Still think it doesn’t matter if we skip the safety inspections for everything except meat products?
Ok. You predict for me, specifically, what you think will happen as a result of the FDA suspending inspections for everything but meat.
Let’s say the shutdown lasts a week. How many people do you predict will die?
Small government is not a plan - it’s a catchphrase.
There are plenty of instances where private entities do a better job than the government at things, and this includes lots of safety and inspection related tasks. Car safety standards are driven by the car manufacturers for instance, and the government regulations lag behind them and the system works just fine.
If we got rid of the FDA people wouldn’t all just start getting sick everyday because of bad food. The private sector would take it over and probably end up doing a better job.
Real people have real problems, many of which are bigger than any one individual.
This is true, President Shepherd.
A government is the way people join together to solve their problems as a team.
Now you’re incorrect. Government is one way people join together to solve their problem as a team. There are also other ways, like corporations, non-profits, churches, and on and on.
Merneith, your posts read like someone who only has a hammer and sees everything as a nail.