Norman Alexander
Penultimate Amazing
NOW you're getting it!Republicans stone walled for a year to prevent Obama appointing a supreme Court judge. Maybe Pelosi is taking a leaf from their playbook.
NOW you're getting it!Republicans stone walled for a year to prevent Obama appointing a supreme Court judge. Maybe Pelosi is taking a leaf from their playbook.
I think it is important to get the facts out there. To simply say Biden is not corrupt is not enough. They were actually following a sensible foreign policy initiative and then accused of doing something totally corrupt and self serving.What I don't understand is why people insist on arguing facts that aren't relevant when responding to a post.
Is Joe Biden corrupt? Not that I'm aware of. Is Hunter Biden corrupt? Not that I'm aware of. Do either of those questions matter to the post to which you were responding? No. I even called out, within that post, in a sentence that started with "Let me emphasize something...." that I didn't think they were corrupt.
I think it is important to get the facts out there. To simply say Biden is not corrupt is not enough. They were actually following a sensible foreign policy initiative and then accused of doing something totally corrupt and self serving.
There is no "getting on top of this" in the current Trump atmosphere. In a sane political environment, sure.Which is a good reason for Biden to get on top of this and not just ignore it hoping it will fade away.
I've read this in several places, and I didn't know where it came from. I saw a reference to it yesterday (in this thread) as coming from Sondland's testimony. Is there any other source for it?
If that's the only source, far too much is made of Sondland's comment.
I believe Trump wanted an actual investigation, although he didn't want it badly enough to do anything more than temporarily delay the aid after making his "suggestion" in the phone call. However, if there is evidence beyond the Sondland testimony, I'm open to it.
True. But it’s not about obstructing Mueller, but about obstructing *justice*.
Maybe they didn’t foresee senators bragging about how rigged the trial was going to be.
They don't have to genuinely believe they didn't know the GOP wasn't going to do their lawful duty to even a small degree for there to be utility in making statements as if that were the case.
That is to say, they are tailoring their message to perform best to a much lower information audience than you are in. They are well aware that far too much of the obvious criminal/corrupt behavior of the administration gets lost in the noise even though so much of it has zero reasonable defense. They're therefore simplifying the message, repeating the theme, and picking the argument that swing voters are most receptive too. That is Trump's personal corruption. Even if Dems know the GOP is going to be Trump's willing underlings, that doesn't mean they are going to pass up the chance to repeat and highlight that corruption. Mitch being openly corrupt gets to be banged on.
Other corruption can be written off as 'fake news/partisan/not from a Trump supporter doublebad' and gains no traction. With impeachment even if those things are invoked, it is 'doublebad' claims that can't be just ignored. The Dems arguments get air. They get discussed. They get called all sorts of things, but they get noted.
Since Sondland is the only first-hand witness - the only person to testify who has spoken directly with Trump about this issue - why are you hand-waving his testimony away?
One of these days, I'll come up with an off beat description that amuses rather than confounds you. Thanks for the feedback!
Get something through Congress without having to negotiate with the Democrats.
Pelosi's district is at the epicenter of one of the most extreme cases of income inequality on the entire West Coast.
Joe said Trump had not been impeached.
In my version of reality the evidence of Trump's corruption drips and drips. It not like it's a surprise to anyone.
The math just doesn't work. If we had a purely popular vote for the President a candidate could win every single vote from every person living in the top 100 (listed by population) cities in America, from the over 8 million in mighty New York, New York all the way down to the just the hair over 200,000 thousand in little Spokane, Washington and you would have a grand total of... about 60 million votes.
Yes, it does the job it was intended for. I agree. But it was a huge mistake. It is grotesquely undemocratic. And Texas is just as dominated by the GOP as California is dominated by the Democrats.
And it's not just the electoral college that is undemocratic, so is the US Senate. And the fact that the District of Colunbia has no representation in Congress. California has the approximate population of the 20 smallest population states combined. California has two Senators to 40 Senators representing individuals living in the sticks. And the Senate can stop any legislation that might be important to urban America.
At least with the Electoral College we have a potential, and while maybe not likely it's at least realistically possible and worth discussing, solution.
The National Popular Vote Interstate Compact. An agreement where states agree to give their electoral votes to the winner of the popular vote. 15 states and DC have already agreed to it and, theoretically, there's enough states with bills/proposals in the pipeline to give us a defacto popular vote by 2020.
Since Sondland is the only first-hand witness - the only person to testify who has spoken directly with Trump about this issue - why are you hand-waving his testimony away?
The House Committees have stated that their Impeachment Inquiry is ongoing - so another reason for a possible delay is to decide on further Articles of Impeachment. After all, the Senate is too busy to have a Trial every month - what with 300+ laws to bring to the floor and all.
Sondland is not the only person who spoke directly to Trump about it. Volodymyr Zelensky also spoke directly to Trump about it, and we have a transcript of that conversation, where something entirely different was said.
You keep saying this as if it were abnormal.
This is what happens when the two houses are controlled by different parties. They know that legislation passed by one house will be blocked by the other. So, they sometimes pass bills that they know will never become law, so they can then point out that they did something and the other guys blocked it. This also happens if one party controls both houses but the other controls the White House.
Sometimes, it gets comical. The most famous case is Obamacare. Republicans voted over and over and over to repeal Obamacare completely, until they won control of the White House and both houses of Congress. Now, they could do it for real. They could actually appeal Obamacare.....but they didn't. The previous votes were just show votes.
I find it disgusting and a perversion of democracy that the leadership of the parties have so much power to prevent bills from even coming to a vote, but that's the way it is, and not the subject of this thread anyway.