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Politics : Formerly About Advanced Micro Devices -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Alighieri who wrote (713814)5/7/2013 2:13:23 PM
From: tejek1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 1578927
 
Ayotte of NH is starting to jump hoops.

I would love to see her do the jig...nasty witch.

It looks like she might be history in her next election.



To: Alighieri who wrote (713814)5/7/2013 2:15:09 PM
From: jlallen3 Recommendations  Respond to of 1578927
 
lol

I think Ayotte was a poor choice for the Senate....but she is one of the nicest individuals I have ever met....she's no nasty witch.......now Hillary.......Wasserman-Stooge.......Boxer, etc......those are some witches....



To: Alighieri who wrote (713814)5/7/2013 6:52:43 PM
From: tejek  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 1578927
 
'That's absurd beyond the word absurd'

By Steve Benen
-
Tue May 7, 2013 4:40 PM EDT

You know Republican state lawmakers in Texas are pursuing a troubling agenda when "birther" legislation starts to move, and it's not the most ridiculous proposal worth watching.

Rather, this is (thanks to Anneli Kunze on our Facebook page for the tip).

Perhaps the most controversial of the gun-related items, HB 1076 would ban state agencies from enforcing any new federal gun laws, including background checks. The bill passed the Republican-led House on a largely party line vote Monday, but legal experts say the attempt to "nullify" possible future federal laws likely wouldn't pass the scrutiny of the U.S. Supreme Court.

"That's absurd beyond the word absurd. I like the author personally but that's just pure political grandstanding," said state Rep. Lon Burnam (D-Fort Worth).

I know I talk about the problems of the right-wing "nullification" agenda quite a bit, but it's only because it represents such a hysterical, reactionary radicalism that has no place in modern American politics.

In this case, Texas' nullification bill effectively hopes to freeze the status quo of federal gun laws in place indefinitely. The state is prepared to honor federal laws as they currently exist, but if policymakers in Washington expanded current laws in any way, Texas would ignore those changes -- based on the "because I say so" theory of modern jurisprudence.

It wouldn't matter if new federal laws are entirely constitutional; it wouldn't matter if the new laws saved lives; it wouldn't matter if the new news enjoyed broad, bipartisan support. Under the proposal pending in Texas, current laws have reached a ceiling, and any effort to raise that ceiling must be ignored.

This is, of course, crazy. Whether Texas likes it or not, states can't pick and choose which federal laws they'll honor and which they'll ignore.

I can't say at this point whether the pending bill has a chance of passing, though it seems like the sort of thing Gov. Rick Perry (R) would like to sign. But I can say the bill, if it becomes state law, would not withstand a legal challenge.