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I agree about the filibuster. If they really want to do it, read the phone book out loud for ten hours straight. Make it painful. |
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My guess is it's the bodies of all his primary foes. |
I voted early yesterday 7:20 am, there was no wait. Not sure if that is good or bad because I didn't have a chance to watch the local news since yesterday morning---it was that kind of day---but chances are it is indicative of low voter turn out in my area. Happily however, much of my state went blue---no surprise---and Deval was re-elected governor. The Republicans made some inroads at the statehouse, so we'll see how it goes.
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I just found out that one of my fraternity brothers from our Rho Chapter (Texas State) is now the mayor of San Marcos
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:) |
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I am, however, extremely sad to see the defeat of most of the area school levies. |
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Whoops, my bad. In this day and age when someone says, "I blame Bush", 99.99999% of the time they are speaking of GWB. Quote:
Speaking of, I find it funny you complain about VW, Mercedes, Nissan, etc building plants here in the U.S. but you fail to criticize the Detroit auto companies for leaving Detroit to build their cars in Mexico so they only have to pay their workers $5 a day. I believe we can thank Clinton and NAFTA for that one. Quote:
I never solely blamed Granholm, there has been decades of lawmakers that have focused on courting manufacturing as their number one money maker for Michigan, her included. All of these alternative industries that she has been pushing in the later years all came AFTER half the U.S. manufacturing industry left for China or Mexico and it became obvious that the jobs weren't coming back. |
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we're still red. not surprised.
in other news, the sky hasn't fallen and the rapture hasn't happened. |
We lost our blue dog and he has been replaced with someone who wants to remove all illegal immigrants, give businesses tax breaks, and not tax individuals, and dismantle the Department of Education. Since our main business is agriculture, I'm not sure how that is going to keep going without the labor of undocumented workers; workers who spend their money here and aren't filing tax returns so they aren't getting money back so the state can use it. I guess his plan to provide jobs to Idaho is removing all the migrant workers and we can have those? There's also his support of nuclear power plants, as a way to have cheap energy we can sell to Oregon and California, but I guess he hasn't left the center of the universe (Boise metro area) because if he got on I-84 and headed west he'd see the massive amount of windmills in Oregon. I'd rather have some not so aesthetically pleasing windmills on an already fugly landscape than Chernobyl.
He also worked with the NRA to make gun ownership less stringent for the documented mentally ill, is a believer that marriage is between one man and one woman, and defending the rights of the unborn. Why are people who want less government so interested in what is going on in my bed, home, and my uterus? He is a total hater of Planned Parenthood (which doesn't provide abortion services here) but why not, as this means people can get sexual health needs privately or low cost and not on Obama Care. You think he'd be happy people are not being a drain on the economy but no, let's use our religious agenda to control others. No other races in the state bothered me as much as this one. We got rid of Bill Sali the breast cancer hater, got still kooky but tolerable Minnick, and now we're back to Sali if not further away. |
We still don't have a clear-cut winner in the Connecticut gubernatorial race. Malloy was declared the winner, but News12's counts put Foley in the lead, and Foley is going to challenge. Nor does my congressional district have a clear-cut winner. Again, Jim Himes has been declared the winner, but News12's counts put Debicella ahead. (The New York Times doesn't appear to have updated since last night.)
The votes are so close that I really do believe my one vote made a difference. It wouldn't have mattered for which ticket I voted in 2008 for President/VP - Connecticut was going to Obama. (I voted nonetheless.) But I'd be surprised if there isn't a recount in at least one of the races I mentioned. And they ran out of ballots in Bridgeport, which is heavily Democratic and in my CD. And here I thought Florida had locked down the Election Mishap Award back in 2000... |
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How are these even remotely bad things? What is bad? A morally hazardous economic environment consistently controlled by the rich at the expense of the poor. That is what the economic statists have consistently (but unintentionally) promoted and compounded. They have truly proved that the road to hell is paved with good intentions. Quote:
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How would the corporations be able to sell their goods if American citizens made .02 cents an hour (or some other absurdly low wage)? Furthermore, it doesn't make alot of sense for corporations to offer absurdly low wages due to new intelligence and data gathering. In order to retain people, they usually pay alot more. For example, I'm currently a human resource manager in a production plant for a fairly large company. I would say that our hourly workers average at least nine dollars an hour (probably more if we could do better at retention). It's non-union. Most of the workers do not have a high school degree. Why don't we pay anywhere close to minimum (I believe our starting salary is around 8.30 an hour or so)? Retention. We could probably pay less, especially in this economic climate. But it doesn't really make economic sense. Under your theory, we should definitely be paying minimum, right? I know you haven't actually thought about any of this, which doesn't surprise me. If you ever have the chance, read some Classically Liberal literature...such as F.A. Hayek's The Road to Serfdom. |
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