SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : President Barack Obama -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: mel221 who wrote (137907)10/1/2013 6:54:21 AM
From: ChinuSFO  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
You are contradicting yourself here and looks like you are confused. The Obamacare is not a law and you refuse to accept it because " it was not a bipartisan law". But it was constitutional, was it not.

So why are you not OK with it but you are OK with the Govt. shutdown because as you say "it's constitutional". Should humans free because it is constitutional or is it because it is a birthright and hence a moral right. I don't expect you to have a well thought out opinion of freedom since yours is steeped in slavery and the Tea Party support is also indicative of that.

No matter how hard you try to stop Obamacare, you will fail since it is a moral issue just like slavery as well as the British imperialism where they kind of enslaved people from other countries. A moral issue wins ultimately.



To: mel221 who wrote (137907)10/1/2013 11:23:29 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
Welcome to the first day of Obamacare..........the exchanges are open!



To: mel221 who wrote (137907)10/1/2013 11:28:28 AM
From: tejek  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 149317
 
A failure for the ages

By Steve Benen
-
Tue Oct 1, 2013 10:57 AM EDT


Getty Images

I find it relatively easy to feel sorry for House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio). He's weak and inept, but most of the ridiculous things that happen among House Republicans aren't by Boehner's design. The Speaker didn't want the 2011 debt-ceiling crisis; he didn't to hold several dozen votes to repeal the Affordable Care Act; and he didn't want the government shutdown he forced last night. They're all the result of a radicalized caucus he doesn't control, want, or influence.

But Jonathan Cohn makes the case that what Boehner needs isn't pity; it's blame.

He's in a difficult position, for sure, but it's partly one of his own making. Sometimes leadership means telling followers what they can and can't do. In this case, that should have meant telling Tea Party Republicans they can't get rid of Obamacare, because it became law, was upheld by the Supreme Court, and validated by a presidential election. Boehner tried to say something along those lines after the election, but conservatives howled and -- as usual -- he backed down, promising the right they'd get their chance. Now they expect it to happen.

It won't. And at some point Boehner needs to say so. It will mean taking political risks, but that's what leaders do.

As he's proven, leading isn't Boehner's principle goal. The Speaker wants to hang on to his power, his nice office, and his lovely gavel, and if that means going out of his way to placate extremists so they don't get mad at him, so be it.

That might be pathetic, but it's also the foundation of his job security.

Indeed, in the larger context, it seems the political mainstream is still coming to terms with a dynamic for which there is no modern precedent: a Speaker of the House with no power, no backbone, no accomplishments, and no prospects for success. Boehner isn't just failing in basic tasks, he's failing as Speaker at a historic level.

Boehner, who is yet to pass a major bill that became law, now has a government shutdown and at least one brutal debt-ceiling crisis on his record of "accomplishments." He introduces proposals to his caucus, which his own followers routinely reject. He talks about policy disputes, which he struggles to understand. He sets goals, which his allies derail. The Speaker asks to be judged by how many laws he repeals, apparently unaware that he's failed spectacularly in this area, too.

His 33-month tenure, in other words, has become a cover-your-eyes disgrace. Ezra recently put it this way: "Under the leadership of Speaker John Boehner, the 113th Congress -- and the House of Representatives in particular -- is a complete and total train wreck.... And he is, ultimately, the guy in charge of the worst-performing part of one of the worst-performing Congresses in history."

This, by the way, was published two weeks before the Republicans' government shutdown.

However easy it is to feel sorry for Boehner, he's a grown man with considerable power. It's not too late for the Speaker of the House to realize he's the Speaker of the House. It's within Boehner's power to re-open the government, reach a budget deal, pass immigration reform, and begin to rehabilitate his woeful reputation.

If he chooses not to, and the Speaker continues to wallow in failure, history will not be kind.