Showing posts tagged GOP
(Reblogged from reallyfoxnews)
(Reblogged from think-progress)
communism-kills:

In the real world, people get fired for this.
“WASHINGTON — He’s been in Congress for nearly 13 years, but Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) has only seen two of his bills pass into law during that time.
Ryan, who Mitt Romney has tapped as his running mate, passed a bill into law in July 2000 that renames a post office in his district. Thanks to Ryan, the post office on 1818 Milton Ave. in Janesville, Wis., is now known as ‘Les Aspin Post Office Building.’
The other time Ryan saw one of his bills become law was in December 2008, with legislation to change the way arrows (as in bows and arrows) are hit with an excise tax. Specifically, his bill amended the Internal Revenue Code to impose a 39-cent tax per arrow shaft, instead of a 12.4 percent tax on the sales price. The bill also ‘includes points suitable for use with arrows in the 11 percent excise tax on arrow parts and accessories.’”

Honestly, and I know since he’s such a joke it’ll be difficult, but I think all the democrats need to take the Paul Ryan threat seriously. Charisma is a very powerful thing.
Also - I really don’t think he’s all that hot. Maybe I’m too young to have a thing for middle aged men yet, but seriously… He actually creeps me out a little. And Romney just reminds me of some uncle that was a middle child and doesn’t know how to handle himself around the family.

communism-kills:

In the real world, people get fired for this.

“WASHINGTON — He’s been in Congress for nearly 13 years, but Rep. Paul Ryan (R-Wis.) has only seen two of his bills pass into law during that time.

Ryan, who Mitt Romney has tapped as his running mate, passed a bill into law in July 2000 that renames a post office in his district. Thanks to Ryan, the post office on 1818 Milton Ave. in Janesville, Wis., is now known as ‘Les Aspin Post Office Building.’

The other time Ryan saw one of his bills become law was in December 2008, with legislation to change the way arrows (as in bows and arrows) are hit with an excise tax. Specifically, his bill amended the Internal Revenue Code to impose a 39-cent tax per arrow shaft, instead of a 12.4 percent tax on the sales price. The bill also ‘includes points suitable for use with arrows in the 11 percent excise tax on arrow parts and accessories.’”

Honestly, and I know since he’s such a joke it’ll be difficult, but I think all the democrats need to take the Paul Ryan threat seriously. Charisma is a very powerful thing.

Also - I really don’t think he’s all that hot. Maybe I’m too young to have a thing for middle aged men yet, but seriously… He actually creeps me out a little. And Romney just reminds me of some uncle that was a middle child and doesn’t know how to handle himself around the family.

(Reblogged from truth-has-a-liberal-bias)
(Reblogged from kevinwayne-deactivated20121212)
(Reblogged from andrewmin)

Right Wing

mkgj:

Paul Ryan’s ideals are so far to the Right that even the Catholic Church has said they disagree with his policies and proposed economic development plans as so stated in the New York Times.

…even the Catholic Church…

(Reblogged from ifonlyitwasnttrue)

The World’s Greatest Democracy?

canadian-communist:

DURING THE last presidential debate, John McCain fired off a desperate last-minute accusation about forces “on the verge of maybe perpetrating one of the greatest frauds in voter history…maybe destroying the fabric of democracy.”

His claim was that the anti-poverty organization Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN) was trying to fix the election for Barack Obama by turning in fraudulent registrations. The charge didn’t seem to have any grounding in fact—since ACORN itself pointed out the questionable registrations to election officials.

The Republican complaints about ACORN make a mockery of the very real stories of disenfranchisement in the U.S.—most notoriously, hundreds of thousands of African American voters in Florida, who were struck from the rolls in 2000, assuring George Bush’s theft of the White House.

The fact that ACORN pays workers to go out and sign people up to vote—mostly in poor and minority neighborhoods—raises another problem. Why, if the right to vote is so important to the fabric of U.S. democracy, doesn’t the government make its own effort to register the disenfranchised?

The truth is that even when no one is stealing a vote or intimidating a voter, American elections are far from democratic.

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TAKE THE way the president is actually chosen. The president isn’t elected by popular vote, but by the Electoral College. Each state has electors based on their number of senators and representatives in Congress—which means every state gets at least three electors (for the two senators plus at least one member of the House of Representatives), no matter how many people live there. Because of this, states with small—and usually rural and overwhelmingly white—populations are overrepresented in the presidential election.

There are only two political parties in the U.S. that get a real hearing at election time. There have been times in U.S. histories when third parties threatened to shake up the two-party system—such as the 1930s, when there was sentiment for a labor party to represent workers—but these initiatives were almost always smothered.

Thus, third parties are kept out of most debates by rules and regulations written by the mainstream establishment, they are forced to jump through often insurmountable hoops to even appear on the ballot, and they are shut out of the media.

The Democrats and the Republicans, while they tout their differences during the election season, fundamentally represent the same interests—those few at the top of society who control the wealth.

So while the majority of people are supposed to believe that they are voting for a certain set of ideas or political positions represented by their party’s candidate, the reality is that the job of politicians, first and foremost, is to make sure that the interests of Corporate America are protected.

The U.S. calls itself the “world greatest democracy.” But there’s no real evidence to back up this claim. As Lance Selfa notes in his book The Democrats: A Critical History:

Although the Democratic Party is one of the longest-existing mainstream parties in the world, it doesn’t really compare to many of the world’s political parties on the most basic levels. It has no fixed membership or membership requirements…The party has no stated set of principles or programs…

As party conventions have developed into little more than trade shows rolling out that year’s model (the presidential candidate), the party platform is usually synonymous with the candidate’s talking points. In any event, the Democratic Party candidates—from the presidency to the city council—are free to follow or to ignore the party platform in their election drives…

The standard picture of a political party handed down to us from civics and political science classes is one of a collective body that people organize to get collectively from government what they can’t get as individuals. The political party in a democracy represents the citizens who indicate their preferences about what they want from government when they vote to put the party’s candidates in office. And yet it’s clear that the oversimplified model does not reflect reality.

A case in point, Selfa writes, is the overwhelming Democratic Party victory in 2006 congressional elections—which was mostly the result of voters’ opposition to the Iraq war and their determination to throw out the pro-war Republicans. Despite this, the Democrats didn’t lift a finger to end the war after taking control of Congress; rather, they continued to fund it.

This undemocratic democracy isn’t relegated to the U.S. It exists the world over in different forms. This is because at the heart of bourgeois democracy is the illusion that elected officials make decisions based on the best interests of the people who vote them into office.

It is not simply that politicians are bought and paid for by particular wealthy people or industries—though they are corrupted by the system of campaign contributions. Beyond this, politicians are part of a state machine whose job is to preserve the status quo.

Like the cop and the judge, the elected official ensures that the basic class relationship prevailing in society doesn’t change—that a tiny minority controls all the wealth that is produced by the vast majority, the working class. The state poses as a neutral body, but as Karl Marx and Frederick Engels put it in the Communist Manifesto, “The executive of the modern state is but a committee for managing the common affairs of the whole bourgeoisie.”

There are also many crucial decisions about the direction of society that aren’t made through the ballot box. Voters don’t decide what is a fair wage, or whether they have health insurance, or whether their working conditions are too dangerous. The majority of the population sure didn’t have a say about the $700 billion bailout for Wall Street or the future of families hit by foreclosure.

But this doesn’t mean we’re powerless to make change. The actions of ordinary people have achieved extraordinary things—the abolition of slavery, the end of Jim Crow segregation, the eight-hour day—because those people organized themselves and fought for what they wanted and needed.

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THERE IS a rich though hidden history of times when workers created the conditions in which a real democracy could take place, where workers took power and began making decisions about how to organize society in their own interests. There are examples across the globe—from Russia 1917 to Iran 1979—and even in the U.S.

In 1919, workers shut down Seattle in a general strike organized in solidarity with 35,000 longshore workers who had walked off the job for better pay. Many of the workers drew their confidence from the revolution in Russia two years before.

In order to ensure that the strike was successful, workers had to form a strike committee, which was elected out of the more than 100 striking locals in the city. In their meetings, they discussed how the strike would be carried forward, but also how essential services would be organized.

Seattle provides a glimpse of what workers’ democracy could look like. Workers took charge in the factories and workplaces, and began making decisions about how resources would be distributed. When employers refused to open dairies, the milkmen designed their own distribution service. A commissary department fed some 30,000 meals a day to strikers and the community.

As Jeremy Brecher describes in the book Strike!:

Garbage wagon drivers agreed to collect wet garbage that would create a health hazard, but not paper and ashes. Fireman agreed to stay on the job to handle emergencies…

Employers and government officials, as well as strikers came before the strike committee to request exemptions. According to one correspondent, “The extent to which the city recognized the actual rather than the titular government of the community is apparent to anyone who has read the record of the strike committee, and observes what was actually done. Before the committee…appeared a long succession of businessmen, city officials and the mayor himself, not to threaten or bully, but to discuss the situation and ask the approval of the committee for this or that step.”

The sight of workers making day-to-day decisions about the workings of society and conducting debates about what way forward in the struggle flew in the face of the lies we’re told—that only the “experts” can lead.

The general strike ended in five days—but not before Seattle showed that workers’ power was possible, even in the so-called “world’s greatest democracy.”

Source

I don’t like how this is directed almost solely at Democrats, but what can you expect under the republican tag? Anyway, is actually really eye opening, I did not think about the party system like that. I mean, I realize how more parties could potentially be less efficient, but when you put the two party system on the spot like that it does make you wonder.

And I realize democrats can be corrupt and many are in office just to be in office.

I wish we could go back to representatives who fight for their constituents, not for power; who fight for their beliefs, not for corporations; who actually do what they said their going to do.

(Reblogged from canadian-communist)

rabbleprochoice:

greenstate:

The GOP War on Women’s Health is Real

This video brings up so much. It brings up the importance of contraceptives in reproductive health care, the ridiculousness of congress, it brings up the thoughts ACTUAL physicians have on reproductive care, it brings up the disgusting slander from Rush Limbaugh. It’s just great*. It’s ten minutes long but watch itttttttt!

Love,

Rabble

*It would be perfect if it wasn’t so cissexist

(Reblogged from rabbleprochoice)
If people had been in Massachusetts under Governor Mitt Romney’s healthcare plan, they would’ve had healthcare.

Romney campaign press secretary ANDREA SAUL, in response to an ad by the pro-Obama super PAC Priorities USA that claimed Bain Capital indirectly led to the death of a woman from cancer.

To which Republican critics responded by calling for Andrea Saul to be fired.  Seriously.

LOLpublicans.

(via The Daily Show)

(Reblogged from inothernews)
It is not worth fighting for this man if this is the kind of spokes(woman) he has. …There is no point in you doing your show. There is no point in us going to a convention and pushing for this man if he’s employing morons like this.

Fox “News” contributor ANN COULTER, angrily reacting to Mitt Romney’s press secretary reminding people that Romney invented Obamacare, on The Sean Hannity Show

So now we know that Fox “News,” a supposedly unbiased, “fair and balanced” “news” network, is really there to get Mitt Romney elected.  

Surprise.

(via The Daily Show)

LMFAO

(Reblogged from inothernews)
truth-has-a-liberal-bias:

Join with Daily Kos and Democracy for America by signing our petition telling the House Democrats in ultra-safe districts who have stockpiled more than $63 million to start sending some of that money to progressive Democrats in swing districts. Please, click here to sign the petition.Democrats have a good chance to retake the House of Representatives, with eight polls in the last month showing them either ahead or tied. Still, the current Democratic lead is tenuous because negative ads from Republican Super PACs will only increase as the election approaches.Fortunately, there is a way to counter this coming onslaught of corporate cash. There are nearly 100 House Democrats in very safe districts who collectively have more than $63 million in their campaign bank accounts. If these Democrats started sending some of that money to campaigns in swing districts, they would provide the financial support needed to send John Boehner and the tea party packing.We know pushing these Democrats can work, because we’ve done it before. Back in 2006, our grassroots pressure resulted in ultra-safe Democrats sending millions of dollars to battleground districts, thus playing an important role in Democrats retaking the House that year.We can do it again in 2012, but we need to start now. Please, click here to tell ultra-safe House Democrats to stop hoarding cash and step up their support for progressive Democrats in swing districts.Keep fighting,Chris BowersCampaign Director, Daily Kos

Do eeettttt

truth-has-a-liberal-bias:

Join with Daily Kos and Democracy for America by signing our petition telling the House Democrats in ultra-safe districts who have stockpiled more than $63 million to start sending some of that money to progressive Democrats in swing districts. Please, click here to sign the petition.

Democrats have a good chance to retake the House of Representatives, with eight polls in the last month showing them either ahead or tied. Still, the current Democratic lead is tenuous because negative ads from Republican Super PACs will only increase as the election approaches.

Fortunately, there is a way to counter this coming onslaught of corporate cash. There are nearly 100 House Democrats in very safe districts who collectively have more than $63 million in their campaign bank accounts. If these Democrats started sending some of that money to campaigns in swing districts, they would provide the financial support needed to send John Boehner and the tea party packing.

We know pushing these Democrats can work, because we’ve done it before. Back in 2006, our grassroots pressure resulted in ultra-safe Democrats sending millions of dollars to battleground districts, thus playing an important role in Democrats retaking the House that year.

We can do it again in 2012, but we need to start now. Please, click here to tell ultra-safe House Democrats to stop hoarding cash and step up their support for progressive Democrats in swing districts.

Keep fighting,
Chris Bowers
Campaign Director, Daily Kos

Do eeettttt

(Reblogged from truth-has-a-liberal-bias)
recall-all-republicans-2012:

Is Making a Protest Vote in Presidential Elections a Vanity Choice? 
————-
We need to be realistic about elections and stop using them as opportunities to express disappointment, anger or even personal morality.
READ MORE»

recall-all-republicans-2012:

Is Making a Protest Vote in Presidential Elections a Vanity Choice?

————-

We need to be realistic about elections and stop using them as opportunities to express disappointment, anger or even personal morality.

READ MORE»

(Reblogged from truth-has-a-liberal-bias)
(Reblogged from motherjones)
(Reblogged from youmightbeaconservative)
(Reblogged from tinfoilandtea)