Yeah. Maybe if we could get a majority in both houses that didn’t include Manchin, Sinema, or Lieberman. Maybe some people could run that were able to win?
Here’s the thing. You, and most Americans, don’t have the balls to put these people in a guillotine. Those are just big words you’re using on the internet.
You aren’t getting Universal Healthcare in the next election. Or the one after that. Reality, especially in this country of fat asses sitting on their couches, is not going to be we get it all now or they get executed. The reality is we’re going to have to dig in and start the long process of reforming the Democrat party by primarying people that won’t get onboard with our demands. Conservatives literally just did that to the Republican party over the last decade or so.
No offense but the rate things are deteriorating, the new gestapo are going to have people like me and you in the guillotine within the next decade. Thanks for fucking us both over and ensuring NO ONE gets medical funding, jackass.
The only way you get universal healthcare is a DNC supermajority AND a DNC president, which is literally not an option.
You could get maximum 67 DNC in the midterms if you magically removed every Republican up for reelection, and then use that to remove Trump, but then the order of succession falls on other Republicans.
The one thing I am tired of more than excuses and being blamed for inciting fascists is doom and gloom bullshit that only serves GOP interests.
Your options are Universal Healthcare, or the guillotine. You seem to be suggesting that the first choice is impossible. I will concede it is difficult, but it is considerably better than the second choice. I urge you to choose wisely.
You had a D president and D majorities in the house (39 seat) and the senate (7 seat). Best you could do was Obamacare. If a single guy can neutralize a 7-seat majority, and you can’t take away his power to do that (you could, but you didn’t) then the game is clear. It’s been a controlled opposition scenario for a long time now.
There’s a method of getting rid of the filibuster with a simple majority - the so called “nuclear option” we’ve been hearing about. Perhaps you agree that the public option wasn’t worth it. I don’t. And I claim that was a deliberte choice made by the controlled opposition to protect private capital. They could have passed it, but they didn’t and the story sold that time was bad Joe Lieberman killed it.
It’s literlly called that. For as long as I’ve been following US politics, it hasn’t been a question of whether the filibuster could be removed to pass legislation with 51 votes. Instead the discussions have been around whether something is worth setting the precedent.
So basically a Senator claims that the Senate rules have been violated, the (senate) president disagrees, the senator appeals and a simple majority decides right or wrong.
Given that quite clearly no rules were actually broken, whats to stop State Attorney Generals from suing the US Federal Government to prevent implementation just like they did with countless other things, namely student loan forgiveness?
Given that quite clearly no rules were actually broken
You and I, and 50 state AGs might feel that there have “clearly” been no rule violations, but neither you nor I nor a state AG, nor a federal judge are constitutionally empowered to make that determination.
According to Article I Section 5 Clause 2, the power to “Determine the rules of its proceedings” is granted to… The Senate.
If the Senate says its rules have been broken, the Senate’s rules have been broken.
The student loan forgiveness failed as far as I’m aware because Biden used a previous legislation which didn’t actually allow for this instead of passing new legislation. If you write a law and you do something that the law doesn’t let you do, you may get stopped by the courts. If you however want to do all the things that are needed to establish universal healthcare, you can put them in a bill and pass it with a simple majority in the United States of America. Don’t ask me why it hasn’t happened. I already said what I think.
The nuclear option is made possible by the principle in Senate procedure that appeals from rulings of the chair on points of order relating to nondebatable questions are themselves nondebatable.
“Points of order” are different than legislation like healthcare.
The use of the nuclear option to abolish the 60-vote threshold for cloture on legislation has been proposed, but not successfully effected.
I don’t see an argument here that says it can’t be used for legislation. The arguments in the article as well as made by politicians have been that it abaolutely can be used. The arguments against the usage not the possibility have been about the effect of losing their own ability to filibuster legislation after that. There are so many examples out there that I get the feeling you just haven’t heard or read about it. Here’s one. And here’s Chucky’s plan from 2022 which got torpedoed by Manchinema. Please read about it because it’s important to know what shit politicians are spinning when they don’t do what you elected them for. I used to believe that the filibuster was some ironclad barrier that required 60 votes or cooperation from the opposition, cause that’s how it’s was spun. I had’t paid enough attention at the time to understand there’s always been an asterisk - can remove the barrier, don’t want to becauae X, Y or Z.
the republican neutered the original bill of "ACA’ and they wernt going to agree with it unless its watered down, plus there were a ton of DINOS at the time too.
I’ll settle for Universal Healthcare.
Yeah. Maybe if we could get a majority in both houses that didn’t include Manchin, Sinema, or Lieberman. Maybe some people could run that were able to win?
I’m tired of excuses. Universal Healthcare, or guillotine.
Here’s the thing. You, and most Americans, don’t have the balls to put these people in a guillotine. Those are just big words you’re using on the internet.
You aren’t getting Universal Healthcare in the next election. Or the one after that. Reality, especially in this country of fat asses sitting on their couches, is not going to be we get it all now or they get executed. The reality is we’re going to have to dig in and start the long process of reforming the Democrat party by primarying people that won’t get onboard with our demands. Conservatives literally just did that to the Republican party over the last decade or so.
Make your choice.
No offense but the rate things are deteriorating, the new gestapo are going to have people like me and you in the guillotine within the next decade. Thanks for fucking us both over and ensuring NO ONE gets medical funding, jackass.
I’m even more tired of taking the blame for “inciting fascists to fascist” than I am tired of excuses.
Your options are “Universal Healthcare” or “Guillotine”.
The only way you get universal healthcare is a DNC supermajority AND a DNC president, which is literally not an option.
You could get maximum 67 DNC in the midterms if you magically removed every Republican up for reelection, and then use that to remove Trump, but then the order of succession falls on other Republicans.
The one thing I am tired of more than excuses and being blamed for inciting fascists is doom and gloom bullshit that only serves GOP interests.
Your options are Universal Healthcare, or the guillotine. You seem to be suggesting that the first choice is impossible. I will concede it is difficult, but it is considerably better than the second choice. I urge you to choose wisely.
You don’t have those options. You can either work slowly towards a better future or do what you’re doing now: nothing of value.
Roko’s Basilisk wants universal healthcare. I’m not lsitening to your doom and gloom bullshit.
This choice is no more difficult than Eddie Izzard’s “Cake Or Death”. Make it.
Universal healthcare, or guillotine.
Sure, good luck!
You had a D president and D majorities in the house (39 seat) and the senate (7 seat). Best you could do was Obamacare. If a single guy can neutralize a 7-seat majority, and you can’t take away his power to do that (you could, but you didn’t) then the game is clear. It’s been a controlled opposition scenario for a long time now.
Well yeah, 57 isn’t 60, so it couldn’t pass filibuster. They could remove the need for filibuster but that ALSO REQUIRES 60 VOTES.
Ending the filibuster forever requires only 51. Don’t lie on behalf of the people who won’t do it just because you like the results.
There’s a method of getting rid of the filibuster with a simple majority - the so called “nuclear option” we’ve been hearing about. Perhaps you agree that the public option wasn’t worth it. I don’t. And I claim that was a deliberte choice made by the controlled opposition to protect private capital. They could have passed it, but they didn’t and the story sold that time was bad Joe Lieberman killed it.
Whats your magical solution to remove the filibuster with 50 votes and a VP?
It’s literlly called that. For as long as I’ve been following US politics, it hasn’t been a question of whether the filibuster could be removed to pass legislation with 51 votes. Instead the discussions have been around whether something is worth setting the precedent.
So basically a Senator claims that the Senate rules have been violated, the (senate) president disagrees, the senator appeals and a simple majority decides right or wrong.
Given that quite clearly no rules were actually broken, whats to stop State Attorney Generals from suing the US Federal Government to prevent implementation just like they did with countless other things, namely student loan forgiveness?
You and I, and 50 state AGs might feel that there have “clearly” been no rule violations, but neither you nor I nor a state AG, nor a federal judge are constitutionally empowered to make that determination.
According to Article I Section 5 Clause 2, the power to “Determine the rules of its proceedings” is granted to… The Senate.
If the Senate says its rules have been broken, the Senate’s rules have been broken.
The student loan forgiveness failed as far as I’m aware because Biden used a previous legislation which didn’t actually allow for this instead of passing new legislation. If you write a law and you do something that the law doesn’t let you do, you may get stopped by the courts. If you however want to do all the things that are needed to establish universal healthcare, you can put them in a bill and pass it with a simple majority in the United States of America. Don’t ask me why it hasn’t happened. I already said what I think.
“Points of order” are different than legislation like healthcare.
I don’t see an argument here that says it can’t be used for legislation. The arguments in the article as well as made by politicians have been that it abaolutely can be used. The arguments against the usage not the possibility have been about the effect of losing their own ability to filibuster legislation after that. There are so many examples out there that I get the feeling you just haven’t heard or read about it. Here’s one. And here’s Chucky’s plan from 2022 which got torpedoed by Manchinema. Please read about it because it’s important to know what shit politicians are spinning when they don’t do what you elected them for. I used to believe that the filibuster was some ironclad barrier that required 60 votes or cooperation from the opposition, cause that’s how it’s was spun. I had’t paid enough attention at the time to understand there’s always been an asterisk - can remove the barrier, don’t want to becauae X, Y or Z.
the republican neutered the original bill of "ACA’ and they wernt going to agree with it unless its watered down, plus there were a ton of DINOS at the time too.
How many republicans agreed to vote for it at the end?
What do you mean they watered it down? It started out as their halfway plan, ie Romneycare.
Then why did the Republicans filibuster Romneycare and then recently froze all of it’s funding? Why did they campaign on removing it, twice?
Because it was implemented by dems and gave things to the poors and minorities.
It’s also why they don’t have a replacement because it was their plan.
So its both leftist anti-elite legislation and also corrupt republican-lite legislation, got it.
In republican eyes yes. But they don’t care about being hypocritical.
For example Romney taking credit for it and saying it’s terrible
https://www.npr.org/sections/itsallpolitics/2015/10/23/451200436/mitt-romney-finally-takes-credit-for-obamacare
Technically the Republicans didn’t even agree with the watered down bill, the one we had to convince to pass via supermajority was Ind Joe Leieberman.