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Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96340)12/4/2010 10:45:17 AM
From: locogringo2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224748
 
Now we are on an "unsustainable fiscal path," to quote the report, which threatens our future economic viability.

Who gets the blame for this? President Bush again, as the ridiculous article begins by blaming him for something?

But there is another grave threat to both our economy and our democracy, and that is the alarming redistribution of wealth that is shrinking the middle class. The top 1% of Americans now owns 34% of our nation's wealth - more than the combined wealth of 90% of Americans.

Why is this a "grave threat"?

Is it because it not take into account reparations for the freeloaders who pay nothing, and in reality, are spending my money?



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96340)12/4/2010 11:59:04 AM
From: Jorj X Mckie6 Recommendations  Respond to of 224748
 
"It pays to remember that just 10 years ago we had a budget surplus and the debt was rapidly decreasing.

And then Reid and Dodd and Rangle and Waters and Pelosi pretty much forced fannie and freddie to give out loans to people who they knew couldn't pay them back and we had a little implosion. They aren't even ashamed to admit that they supported the policies. ACORN loves to talk about how they pushed for it too.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96340)12/4/2010 12:28:02 PM
From: Hope Praytochange  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224748
 
As Rangel Stands Silently, Censure Vote Rings Loudly


By DAVID KOCIENIEWSKI
Published: December 2, 2010
WASHINGTON — Representative Charles B. Rangel, his gaze steady and his hands clasped before him, stood silently in the well of the House of Representatives on Thursday as Speaker Nancy Pelosi somberly read a resolution censuring him for bringing discredit to the House.



Ms. Pelosi issued the punishment minutes after the House voted 333 to 79 for the censure, the most severe sanction it can administer short of expulsion.

The vote made Mr. Rangel, a Democrat, the 23rd member of the House to be censured, and the first in nearly three decades.

After receiving his punishment, Mr. Rangel, 80, asked for a minute to address his colleagues and told them: “I know in my heart I am not going to be judged by this Congress. I’ll be judged by my life in its entirety.”

Mr. Rangel and his allies had pleaded for mercy, arguing that his transgressions, which included failure to pay income taxes and misuse of his office to solicit fund-raising donations, deserved the more lenient punishment of a reprimand. But that effort failed, 267 to 146.

The censure marks a staggering fall for Mr. Rangel, who has represented Harlem for half of his life, and had risen to become one of the most prominent and well-liked members of Congress. Ms. Pelosi, Democrat of California, called upon Mr. Rangel to appear before her, and, in a subdued tone, read the one-paragraph resolution noting his 11 violations of Congressional ethics rules.

Still, talking to reporters after leaving the House floor, Mr. Rangel’s old pugnacity returned as he denounced the vote as partisan.

“I am confident that when the history of this has been written,” he said, “people will recognize that the vote for censure was a very, very, very political vote.”

Referring to misdeeds of others who had been censured, he said: “I did not curse out the speaker. I did not have sex with minors. I did not steal money.” When a reporter asked him what he felt as he stood in the well, he asked, “Are you a licensed psychiatrist?”

Only two Republicans, Representatives Peter T. King of New York and Don Young of Alaska, voted against the censure resolution. African-American members largely stood with Mr. Rangel, too, with just one member of the Congressional Black Caucus casting a vote for the censure.

“I have never heard anyone question Charlie Rangel’s integrity,” Mr. King said in his remarks on the House floor.

Mr. Rangel, a veteran of the Korean War and the civil rights movement, has been one of the most recognizable political figures in New York and Washington, known for his feisty advocacy of liberal policies. When Democrats seized control of the House in 2006, he earned the title of his career: chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee.

That prominence, however, was short-lived. In July 2008, news reports detailed his acceptance of several rent-stabilized apartments from a Manhattan real estate magnate at prices far below market. Mr. Rangel denied any wrongdoing but asked the ethics committee to investigate.

In the months that followed, new problems emerged, including his failure to pay taxes on rental income from a villa in the Dominican Republic or to report hundreds of thousands of dollars in assets on financial disclosure forms.

Mr. Rangel’s fund-raising for a City College school being built in his honor also became part of the ethics inquiry because he used Congressional stationery and postage to request donations and asked for contributions from companies and executives with business before Congress.

In one case, Mr. Rangel’s committee helped preserve a tax loophole worth hundreds of millions of dollars for an oil-drilling company that pledged $1 million.

Mr. Rangel denied using his office to benefit donors or to enrich himself, saying he was guilty only of bookkeeping errors. But under heavy pressure, he gave up his cherished chairmanship of the Ways and Means Committee.

After dragging out the ethics investigation for two years with aggressive legal challenges, Mr. Rangel walked out of a public hearing on the matter last month, saying he no longer could afford a lawyer. The ethics committee brushed aside his objections and found him guilty of 11 of 13 charges against him.

While the vote on Thursday seemed a foregone conclusion, suspense built when Mr. Rangel’s allies forced a floor vote on a motion to reduce the punishment to a reprimand. They argued that his misconduct did not approach the seriousness of others who had been censured, and that such a sanction would be extreme. The last two members who were censured, for example, had each been found guilty of having sexual relations with a Congressional page.

Mr. Rangel received unexpected support from Representative John S. Tanner of Tennessee, a leader of the conservative Blue Dog Democrats.

“As a lawyer, I also respect precedent,” said Mr. Tanner, who urged his colleagues to vote for a reprimand. “I have searched this record and find no activity involving moral turpitude, or any activity that could be classified as one with criminal intent.”

Representative Robert C. Scott, a Virginia Democrat who took part in the ethics committee’s investigation, also urged members to use restraint in meting out punishment.

“He knows he messed up,” Mr. Scott said. “He knows he will be punished. He just asks that he is punished like everyone else.”

The remarks echoed those contained in an e-mail that Mr. Rangel had sent to some 25,000 constituents and admirers over the past week, in which he asked them to call their representatives and seek mercy for him.

“I brought it on my myself, but I still believe this body has to be guided by fairness,” Mr. Rangel said, repeatedly asserting that he had not tried to enrich himself by his actions.

But other members said Mr. Rangel’s violations were too serious to warrant only a reprimand.

Representative Zoe Lofgren, a Democrat of California and the chairwoman of the ethics committee, said that in the past, censure had been used for members who had used unparliamentary language and that Mr. Rangel had promised voters that Democrats would run the most ethical Congress in history.

“We need to hold ourselves to a higher standard,” Ms. Lofgren said. “Mr. Rangel himself has acknowledged that.”

Representative Michael McCaul, a Texas Republican who sits on the ethics committee, said members needed to take a firm stand in order to restore the public’s trust in Congress, which is near all-time lows.

“Credibility is exactly what is at stake at here,” Mr. McCaul said. “The credibility of the House of Representatives before the American people.”

Mr. Rangel’s long battle over the ethics charges has transfixed New York City’s political establishment and set off speculation about how long he will remain in office. Several Democrats are eyeing the seat, but no major figure dared to challenge Mr. Rangel this year, when he easily won re-election.

After the censure vote, reporters pressed the congressman about whether he would serve out the rest of his term, and run again. “At my age,” he replied, “I don’t buy green bananas.”

Raymond Hernandez contributed reporting



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96340)12/4/2010 2:03:13 PM
From: MJ7 Recommendations  Respond to of 224748
 
In reference to the Huffington huff post-------it also pays to remember that 10 years ago--------Deceomber 2000-----the terrorists had not attack us on this continent of North America,------New York City, Washington, D.C., and the plane that went down in Penns. headed for the Capitol Building in D.C.

It also pays to remember that Nancy Pelosi came in 2006 with her frosh.

It also pays to remember that Barrack Hussein Obama was nominated by the Democrat Party to be their candidate for POTUS.

It also pays to remember that under Pelosi and Hussein, a second war was escalated in Afghanistan-------"Obama's War of Necessity" while not extracting us from Iraq as he promised.

It also pays to remember that our Southern Border with Mexico has escalated into a crossing for the drug cartels unabated and the illegals-----from any country that wants to come into the USA through Mexico.

It also pays to remember that under Mr. Obama, the titular President, time was wasted on a so called health care bill by Obama and his Czars and the Democrat Congress.

It also pays to remember that under Mr. Obama, we have had the biggest collapse in homeownership via shortsales and foreclosures not seen since the Great Depression------a distribution and redistributionn of money and assets of Americans.

It also pays to remember that Mr. Obama may not even be qualified via our Constitution and laws to be the POTUS of the USA--------yet he has with the approval of the Democrat Congress escalated our debt to trillions of dollars.

It also pays to remember that corruption is not limited to Wall Street;however, that Corruption exists in the very halls of the Democrat Congress from 2006 to present---December 2010.

How many more "pays to remember" does Huffington and you need to understand that the Obama Nation is a failure.

mj

--------------------------------------------------------------

huffingtonpost.com

"It pays to remember that just 10 years ago we had a budget surplus and the debt was rapidly decreasing. During the Bush years, those surpluses disappeared and huge debt accumulated due to two unfunded wars, two unfunded tax cuts that mainly enriched the already wealthy, and a blind eye to the recklessness of Wall Street which caused 8 million Americans to lose their jobs and millions more to lose their savings, the value of their homes and the homes themselves."



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96340)12/5/2010 12:40:53 PM
From: lorne  Respond to of 224748
 
ken...Is Spain a socialist country like hussein obama envisions for the USA?

Spanish air traffic controllers marched back to work as airports reopen
Spain's air traffic controllers were forced to return to work – escorted by armed police – after a walkout caused chaos throughout Europe

By Edward Owen in Madrid
04 Dec 2010
telegraph.co.uk

Spain declared a State of Alert in the wake of the walkout, which has paralysed Spanish air space and all airports, and then ordered the controllers back to work.

"I cannot talk to you properly now," an air traffic controller at Madrid's Barajas Airport told The Sunday Telegraph in a half whisper, his voice quavering on his mobile.

"There are civil guards here, with pistols. If we don't start work now, we will be arrested.

"The first flights should start at 3pm (2pm UK) and that should be for the whole of Spain. All my colleagues have been forced to return to work or face the consequences."

The air traffic controllers' return to work, and the subsequent reopening of Spanish airspace, means that flights will begin to depart again.

Airports across Spain were reopening, although it was not clear whether previously cancelled flights - all those by Easyjet, Ryanair and Iberia - would be able to depart.

Once the government had turned over management of Spain's air traffic control to the military last night, the controllers' union, USCA, faced very serious opposition.

And after the State of Alert, one level below a full emergency, was ratified by the cabinet at midday on Saturday the stage was set for rapid retaliation by the government against the illegal strikers who had paralysed all Spanish air space and airports since 5pm Friday.

Threatened with immediate imprisonment for sedition if they did not obey their new military commanders, and the show of force as in Madrid, the controllers capitulated.

It may take at least a week for air services to return for normal and for all stranded passengers to reach their destinations.

José Luis Rodríguez Zapatero, the Spanish prime minister, described the wildcat strike by 2,400 air traffic controllers as "intolerable" and that the government could not accept "the blackmail of the public."

He said the elite controllers were using their position as "a work monopoly" to create "an unsustainable situation."

Air routes between Spain and the UK are the busiest in Europe, carrying over 35m passengers per year, and 20,000 Britons have been hit by the closure of Spanish air space.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (96340)12/5/2010 1:49:18 PM
From: longnshort5 Recommendations  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224748
 
"and the debt was rapidly decreasing"

no the debt went up every year with Clinton