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Ignored facts still exist |
Funny, we don't hear anything about Hunter Biden and his employment at a Ukraine Gas Company. hmmm...... . | |||
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Member |
Amen to that. Whenever you saw McConnell, you'd see Blunt standing dutifully beside him dourly nodding in assent to whatever drivel McConnell was spewing at the time. Goodbye and good riddance. | |||
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Member |
Mitch is working hard for US, 194000 pay, net worth 35,000,000. In office since 1985, his Chinese wife's net worth 9 million. Not only term limits, but not allowed to invest in stock market while serving, or severe penalties for insider trading or bribery, but of course they make the laws, so that would never pass. “Let us dare to read, think, speak and write.” John Adams | |||
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Gracie Allen is my personal savior! |
This. In spades. And no one wants to be that douchebag's fig leaf. | |||
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Just because you can, doesn't mean you should |
I guess that means Mitch has a private meeting with the big guy of Ukraine. Can't risk electronic communications for important issues like these. Kicking up to both parties has it's benefits. ___________________________ Avoid buying ChiCom/CCP products whenever possible. | |||
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Staring back from the abyss |
We need a process for federal ballot initiatives. Desperately. ________________________________________________________ "Great danger lies in the notion that we can reason with evil." Doug Patton. | |||
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quarter MOA visionary |
The more I hear about Russia-Ukraine the less I care. | |||
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Ignored facts still exist |
hopefully today's meetings don't result in direct USA involvement, as in sending "advisors" over there, etc. . | |||
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Ignored facts still exist |
I would be careful with ballot initiatives. At the state level, it seems to boil down to which side lies the most and gets the most money from Billionaires. Yeah, tell a good lie backed by money and that's pretty much the winning formula. . | |||
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Member |
<p><a href="https://giphy.com/gifs/readingrainbow-money-reading-rainbow-treasury-3o6ozz2umAQRE3VXa0">via GIPHY</a></p> Don't. drink & drive, don't even putt. | |||
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Member |
DING! DING! DING! And to paraphrase Gunnery Sgt. Hartman: "He's a puke. He's the lowest form of life on earth. He's not even a human fucking being! He is nothing but an unorganized, grabastic piece of Amphibian SHIT!!!" FHATHHRIO!!! "If you’re a leader, you lead the way. Not just on the easy ones; you take the tough ones too…” – MAJ Richard D. Winters (1918-2011), E Company, 2nd Battalion, 506th Parachute Infantry Regiment, 101st Airborne "Woe to those who call evil good, and good evil... Therefore, as tongues of fire lick up straw and as dry grass sinks down in the flames, so their roots will decay and their flowers blow away like dust; for they have rejected the law of the Lord Almighty and spurned the word of the Holy One of Israel." - Isaiah 5:20,24 | |||
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Member |
Correct, however he will follow McConnell’s lead and do more damage until he’s gone. ΜΟΛΩΝ ΛΑΒΕ | |||
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Victim of Life's Circumstances |
McConnell can't be beat in Kentucky because he brings home the bacon, after he gets his cut and 10% is chump change. Same way with 45 year house member Hal Rogers from Pulaski County, another world class grifter. Kentucky had a great governor last term in Matt Bevin R but Mitch sabotaged his campaign and gop refused to fight when Bevin loses by 5000 votes with 115% voter turnout in Louisville - nothing to see here. Confirmed douchebag Andy Beshear.This message has been edited. Last edited by: doublesharp, ________________________ God spelled backwards is dog | |||
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Unflappable Enginerd |
Yeaaah, that would lead directly to mob rule. We do have this thing called an article 5 convention of states though. __________________________________ NRA Benefactor I lost all my weapons in a boating, umm, accident. http://www.aufamily.com/forums/ | |||
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Member |
It truly is the "Ukrainian Money Initiative" The corruption is so deep, it can never be irradiated. you either live within the system or die within it. _________________________ | |||
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Non-Miscreant |
I notice the absence of replies from Mitch's voters, which I'm one. We have 2 senators, which Rand Paul is the other. I like them both, and regularly vote for them. I dislike the idea of a federal voter initiative because we're a small state that seems to be very conservative. There's no way in hell we'd support the laws Kali and New Yerk would love. It would make us slaves to the Liberal commies. So yeah, we could talk about Cutting back the senators from Rhode Island and the other original tiny states up east. But here in Hillbilly heaven we're pretty happy with what we've got. Those of you who don't like KY voters and our priorities can go to hell. Unhappy ammo seeker | |||
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Lawyers, Guns and Money |
rburg, I can understand and relate to your attitude toward your native Kentucky and disdain for Kali and New York. But I can't really understand this:
Rand Paul and Mitch McConnell are completely different in every way except they both hail from Kentucky. Mitch McConnell would rather work with Democrats to accomplish his spending goals than put this off until January when a new Congress takes over with Republican control of the House. "Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." -- Justice Janice Rogers Brown "The United States government is the largest criminal enterprise on earth." -rduckwor | |||
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7.62mm Crusader |
Knew I should have wrote it down. Their is a petition on line asking for signers. Seems some people want to persuit this. We need 34 States. I need to learn more. | |||
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7.62mm Crusader |
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Shall Not Be Infringed |
Anonymous GOP Aide Epitomizes The Swampiness Behind Congress’s Omnibus Spending Bill By selling out Republicans, the anonymous staffer laid down a marker for future employment among the special interest groups in Washington. Late last night, congressional negotiators revealed the long-awaited omnibus spending bill. The mammoth legislation came in at 4,155 pages and allocated $772.5 billion in spending for domestic initiatives and $858 billion for defense. On Monday, Politico reported that the omnibus would include provisions ending a requirement that states keep ineligible Medicaid beneficiaries on the rolls, effective April 1. Congress enacted the requirement in March 2020, and the Biden administration has continued to extend the public health emergency started by the federal government at the outset of the Covid pandemic despite President Biden previously declaring the pandemic to be “over.” A primary reason for the constant extension of the state of emergency was to enable the government to finance an ever-increasing amount of Medicaid recipients. Expanding programs like this is one of the main objectives of the welfare-industrial complex. However, in exchange for an end to this eligibility requirement — which was designed to be temporary and should have ended months, if not years, ago — Republicans had to agree to use the “savings” to permanently expand Medicaid eligibility and potentially help pay for a round of Medicare and Medicaid payment increases to doctors and hospitals. The timing of this nascent “deal” seems particularly questionable. With Republicans regaining control of the House of Representatives in January, lawmakers could force votes in both chambers early next year on terminating the public health emergency. (Previously, Republicans only had the ability to demand a vote in the Senate.) Such an effort would likely force Biden to veto legislation ending an emergency for a pandemic he already called “over.” Why would Republicans cave mere weeks before gaining an additional leverage point? The answer appears both cynical and obvious. A Corrupt Bargain Consider the following quote from “a Senate Republican aide” in the Politico story: Because Democrats are squeamish about this, they will use it to drive a hard bargain. Their support and openness to it is clearly contingent on reinvesting the savings into Medicaid permanently. The question is: Can they get enough wins to take the political sting off, allowing states to kick people off the rolls? When analyzing the obtuse nature of the Senate aide’s remark, it makes little difference. First of all, why would any Republican staffer talk (even if only on background) to a publication that consistently shows political bias and advocates for left-wing causes? Second, note that the Republican aide spends the entire quote analyzing the policy from the Democrats’ perspective. Why does the Republican staffer appear more concerned about giving Democrats a win than enacting good policy — or, heaven forbid, actualizing Republican prioritizes and inserting them into this legislation? Third, the aide speaks the language of the left when talking about “reinvesting the savings.” The last time I checked, “investing” in government-speak means spending someone else’s money. The fact that a purportedly Republican staffer uses such terminology reinforces the old axiom about bipartisanship occurring when Republicans agree to act like Democrats. And finally, the staffer admits that in exchange for ending a designation that was always meant to be temporary, Republicans must agree to expand “Medicaid in a permanent way.” The staffer admits that this agreement amounts to a defeat to the extent the staffer, or any Republican, actually cares about stemming the growth of the welfare state. Why would any staffer, no matter their partisan affiliation, not just admit such a stunning defeat but brag about it publicly? Quite possibly because the staffer didn’t have the public in mind when speaking to Politico — not most of the public, anyway. Appeasing Special Interests The mentalities of senate staffers, such as the one quoted in the Politico piece, aren’t hard to comprehend. The quote appears to have a non-zero possibility of being aimed right at K Street. By explicitly admitting the poor nature of the trade-off, the staffer in question has laid down a marker for future employment among the myriad of health care, lobbying, and interest groups downtown. Translated, the subtext of the staffer’s message might be, “Because I cut this bad deal for Republicans, all you medical provider groups got a legislative vehicle to receive the ‘sweeteners’ and other special deals you wanted in this massive omnibus bill. So please remember me a few years from now when I’m looking for you to pay me $300,000 or $500,000 per year to lobby my former colleagues on your behalf.” That this staffer spoke to Politico — the epitome of K Street corporatism, where lobbyists pay tens of thousands of dollars annually for subscription services with the latest Capitol Hill gossip — reinforces the crony corruption behind much legislation in Washington. As cynical as it sounds, those thoughts permeate the minds of many staffers on Capitol Hill, although few would be bold enough to say as much outright. And for those of you wondering, yes, lobbyists get paid ridiculous sums to make their pleadings before Congress. Unfortunately, taxpayers (read: you and me) get stuck with the tab for this and many other bad deals made by the anonymous staffer. This speaks to the problem in Washington that this omnibus, like other massive bills, rammed through Congress, epitomizes. https://thefederalist.com/2022...nibus-spending-bill/ ____________________________________________________________ If Some is Good, and More is Better.....then Too Much, is Just Enough !! Trump 2024....Make America Great Again! "May Almighty God bless the United States of America" - parabellum 7/26/20 Live Free or Die! | |||
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