Tag Archives: congress

Senator, Your days are numbered.

“Politicians are like diapers; they need to be changed often and for the same reason.” — Mark Twain http://www.petitionspot.com/petitions/firetherulingclass#signForm In the time when our founding fathers drafted our Constitution, and created the U.S Government, they did not intend on government service to become a career. It is the purpose of this petition to be the voice of the people to limit the terms of Senators to two (12 years maximum), and Representatives to six terms (12 years maximum). (Reelections have stayed above 85% since 1965, and in 2008 are at 94%) – http://www.firetherulingclass.org/ruling.asp In March 21, 1947, the Twenty-second Amendment (Amendment XXII) was ratified, and so set limits to the office of The President…but none for anyone else. The last ratified Amendment in the constitution was in 1992, and dealt with issue of their pay raises. No such limits have been proposed, or ratified for the very people who write the laws which impact our daily lives. “Power tends to corrupt, and absolute power corrupts absolutely. Great men are almost always bad men.” -Lord Acton In a time when our nation seems so polarized by either left, or right; this one thing, I hope we all can agree upon. We do not need members in Congress or the House, who ignore the voice of the people, or who lend an ear to the highest bidder. We do not need Legislators who grow comfortable with their seat, and do all they can to latch on to it. We need leaders, representatives who heed our voice, and perform a service to the people of these United States. It is not a seat of power to be used to make oneself a fortune, but should be used to better the lives of all. I propose this be added as the 28th Amendment of the Constitution. (for the benefit of all) ” XXViii Section 1. No person shall be elected to the office of Senator more than twice, and no person who has held the office of Senator, or acted as Senator, for more than two years of a term to which some other person was elected Senator shall be elected to the office of Senator more than twice (two six-year terms). This article shall be retroactive when applied. Those who currently serve as Senator shall stay for the remainder of the term. Those who have served a prior, consecutive term, will not be eligible for reelection. Those who have served two or more prior consecutive terms will also be ineligible for reelection, upon ratification, and there after. Section 2. No person shall be elected to the office of Representative more than six terms (one term is for two years), and no person who has held the office of Representative, or acted as Representative, for more than eleven years of a term to which some other person was elected Representative shall be elected to the office of Representative more than six terms. This article shall be retroactive when applied. Those who currently serve as Representative shall stay for the remainder of there term. Those who have served a prior six consecutive terms, will not be eligible for reelection. ” Section 3. The terms and length of service for Senators and Representatives shall not be changed or abridged by the United States or by any State. Only a popular vote, won by no less than 85% of US Citizens shall over turn the limits. added by: mitekillem

Open Thread: Colbert Disgraces Congress

For general discussion and debate. Possible talking point: Stephen Colbert disgraces the Halls of Congress! Was this a sad moment in American history, or a good way to publicize the immigration issue? How does this make Democrats look moving into the midterm elections? Any other thoughts? 

Follow this link:
Open Thread: Colbert Disgraces Congress

Harwood On Congressional Colbert: ‘One Of Dumbest Stunts I’ve Ever Seen’

John Harwood was not amused . . .   Harwood, chief Washington correspondent for CNBC and political writer for the New York Times, offered a surprisingly harsh assessment of Stephen Colbert’s testimony, in Colbert Show character, before Congress yesterday. Harwood ripped the episode in response to Lester Holt’s observation, on this morning’s Today show, that he didn’t know whether to cringe or laugh. Harwood had no doubts, saying “it was all cringing for me,” and went on to lambaste it from there . . . LESTER HOLT: We showed a moment ago, Stephen Colbert testifying on immigration before a congressional hearing yesterday.  I didn’t know whether to cringe or to laugh.  I think members of Congress kind of felt the same. Give me your take on what happened yesterday. JOHN HARWOOD: Well it was all cringing for me.  I thought that was one of the dumbest stunts that I’ve ever seen in the Congress, making a mockery of a congressional hearing.  I understand the reason why, which is that they thought Stephen Colbert, as he said, has some star power that can bring some attention to an issue that isn’t getting a lot of attention. But if you think that the attention from that hearing was on immigration, that proved out to be a terrible miscalculation, because it was more about the theater, the comedy, and as Savannah [Guthrie] indicated in her piece, it deepened that sense among many Americans I suspect that Congress is a joke.  And you look at Congress’ approval ratings, they’re 15, 20, 25% and I don’t think that’s what they needed.

Go here to read the rest:
Harwood On Congressional Colbert: ‘One Of Dumbest Stunts I’ve Ever Seen’

Rep. Weiner’s Anti-Goldline/Beckophobia Crusade Falls Flat

An organization once headed by former Obama administration official Van Jones tried it. Other so-called grassroots organizations have given it a shot. Now Rep. Anthony Weiner, D-N.Y., with the power of Congress in tow, has taken his best shot to shut Glenn Beck down. But so far it isn’t really working. On Sept. 23, Weiner called a representative from Santa Monica, Calif.-based Goldline to testify before the Commerce, Trade and Consumer Protection Subcommittee about what he deemed to be the firm’s unfair business practices. However, it just so happens that Goldline sponsors Beck and other conservative media personalities. With congressional hearings, you’d expect the media to be all over this, right? Not exactly, at least thus far. The most attention Weiner’s charade could muster was a segment at the end of MSNBC’s bomb-thrower show, “Countdown with Keith Olbermann.” Olbermann asked Weiner on his Sept. 23 broadcast if Goldline was in cahoots with “willing partners like Glenn Beck,” since anyone who suggests gold be a part of someone’s portfolio is up to no good. “The scare, lie, rip-off cycle that you outlined in your opening remarks – is it any wonder that Goldline seeks and finds willing partners in people like Glenn Beck?” Olbermann asked. According to a spokesman from Goldline, out of the 30 to 40 television advertisements the company runs on a daily basis, only one runs during Glenn Beck’s Fox News Channel programming. In fact, Goldline runs regular advertising on CNBC, the sister network to Olbermann’s MSNBC. But Weiner faulted Beck and others, including “angry radio hosts” for suggesting gold should be a part of someone’s financial portfolio. “You know this is where the angry radio host works hand-in-glove with these sellers,” Weiner said. “You know, you see Glenn Beck say, be careful, the economy’s a mess. Deficits, debts, you better invest in gold. Now let’s go to a word from our sponsor.” But Goldline offers a product that even media financial experts advise people to have in their portfolio. Take CNBC’s Jim Cramer, who on his May 17 program explained why gold is important, not necessarily as an investment to make money, but as a hedge against inflation – a point Weiner refuses to concede. “First off, gold hedges you against the eve-of-destruction pessimists,” Cramer said. “It’s a safe haven that tends to go up when everything else goes down. Second, as the commercial says, ‘Central banks are printing money like mad.’ That’s a great reason to own gold. Third no, matter what happens in keeping with the pessimistic zeitgeist, people are going to say what central banks around world are doing is inflationary. Doesn’t matter that it’s done to counter deflation – gold’s the antidote to the chatter. Fourth, there’s not a lot of gold being found.” Nonetheless, Weiner took a few more shots at Beck, which has been a pattern for the New York congressman on the gold issue . He argued that Beck was abusing the public’s trust, even though Beck was conveying a perfectly legitimate view and speaking on the behalf of a legitimate sponsor. “It got so bad that even Fox News said to Glenn Beck, you can’t be a paid sponsor for these guys anymore, because it was just — the line was getting blurred,” Weiner continued. “Now, that’s Fox News’ problem. That’s Glenn Beck’s problem. I think he does have some responsibility to his viewers. You know, it’s odd of me to be saying this, but I want to stand up for Glenn Beck’s viewers in this case.” And Weiner maintained that the laws he is proposing, which are motivating his witch-hunt, wouldn’t even be applicable to Fox News or Beck. “But the laws that we’re proposing obviously don’t impact Fox News,” he continued. “And Glenn Beck can say and do whatever he wants. But I would hope he takes a step back and looks at our study and looks at the testimony today, and realize that his viewers are middle class people who are struggling. He should not be aiding and abetting a rip off.” That begs the question – why is Weiner bringing up Beck in the first place?

Read more:
Rep. Weiner’s Anti-Goldline/Beckophobia Crusade Falls Flat

Uranium Rush Prompts Grand Canyon Fears

A new “gold rush” is under way in the American West, but this time the prospectors are out for another metal: uranium. The Grand Canyon region in the US state of Arizona holds one of the nation's largest concentrations of high grade uranium, the fuel for nuclear power. As global demand for nuclear power has increased so has interest in the metal and, across the south-west, companies are seeking permission to restart uranium mining. In the US, President Barack Obama has called for an increase in nuclear power to help reduce the country's dependence on foreign oil. The US government is currently weighing the costs and benefits of mining, with Arizona Congressman Raul Grijalva proposing a ban on mining near the Grand Canyon. But with the increase in uranium exploration come concerns about the future of the Grand Canyon, a Unesco World Heritage Site and one of America's foremost natural wonders. And Native American populations living near uranium mines fear exploration could contaminate their drinking water. For now, the sole active uranium mine near the Grand Canyon's northern rim is run by Denison Mines Corporation, a Canadian firm. The Arizona 1 mine employs 30 miners, and the firm says it goes to great lengths to protect them in the hazardous environment. Among other precautions, large fans pump clean air into the mine and suck out most of the radioactive radon gas, while workers spray water across the site to keep down potentially harmful dust. The firm also says past accidents were swiftly and effectively cleaned up. ****************************************!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! On a recent trip into the mine, none of the miners wore masks, and their hands and face were caked with uranium ore. “It washes off,” miner Cody Behuden, 28, told the BBC while licking his ore-caked lips. Vice-president of US operations Harold Roberts said the miners were under no danger from ingesting uranium. *************************************** added by: toyotabedzrock

Mr. Colbert Goes To Washington

Scroll down for a live-blog of the hearing Comedy Central host Stephen Colbert testified before Congress today about immigration during a hearing called “Protecting America's Harvest.” Colbert appeared with United Farm Workers (UFW) President Arturo S. Rodriguez before the House Judiciary Committee's Subcommittee on Immigration, Citizenship, Refugees, Border Security, and International Law. In August, the comedian spent a day working at a corn and vegetable farm in New York state after Rodriguez appeared on his show to discuss UFW's “Take Our Jobs” campaign. The effort is intended to debunk the theory that undocumented immigrants are taking jobs away from American citizens and highlight the fact the nation's food supply is dependent on these farm workers. Watch Colbert's opening testimony today: http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2010/09/24/stephen-colbert-hearing-v_n_737813.html… added by: atomiclegion

Joe Scarborough Hints He Would Like to See Bill Clinton Run Again for President – If Only It Were Constitutional

MSNBC’s Joe Scarborough – who when a Republican congressman voted to impeach President Clinton – seems to believe that a former President should be able to legally  run for office again after taking “a term or two off.” His comments followed a gushing slew of praise for former President Bill Clinton, and he noted that many viewers “are just sitting there thinking ‘Why can’t [Clinton] run for President in a couple of years?'” “It seems so short-sighted, just because the Republicans were upset that FDR was President for four terms,” Scarborough complained of the 22nd Amendment, ratified during Truman’s second term but passed out of Congress four years earlier in March 1947. Republicans did control both houses of Congress then, but the amendment would have excluded then-President Harry Truman and was supported by some Democrats. Co-hosts of MSNBC’s “Morning Joe” Joe Scarborough and Mika Brzezinski conducted a glowing  interview of the former president at the Clinton Global Initiative in New York City. Topics ranged from Clinton’s charitable work around the world to the 2010 elections to Newt Gingrich. Scarborough worked in some sharp criticism of his former GOP colleague and former Speaker Gingrich, due to his recent comments about the New York City mosque. Yet Scarborough had nothing but praise reserved for Clinton.”Listening to you talk right now, you’ve always been known as the brightest, the first-class, however you want to put it – but you’ve had the ability the past decade to go all around the world, start this initiative, understand issues – you’ve understood issues better than anyone in Washington, when you were President.” Scarborough, treading carefully, asked the former president why it wouldn’t make sense for someone to run again for President. “I’m just wondering, not for you, but doesn’t it make sense for this country to say, ‘Okay, let a guy serve, or a woman serve for eight years, then they can take a term or two off – but then if they have something to give back to America in the terms of leadership, give them that opportunity’?” President Clinton agreed with Scarborough, but added that an amendment shouldn’t apply to him, but to future candidates for the Presidency. “If we change the Constitution, it shouldn’t apply to me. That is, it shouldn’t apply to anybody that served, it should all be forward-looking, so no one would think it was personal.” The interview about Clinton’s organization became a slobbering love-fest for the Democratic president, conducted by the former Republican congressman. Scarborough, in describing the conflict resolution between the GOP Congress and Clinton’s Presidency in the 90’s, asked Clinton this gem: “Could you explain to Washington, DC, on both sides – how did you do that? How did you rise above it? How did everybody learn to work together, even if they fought each other like hell? A transcript of this segment, which aired on September 23 at 8:17 a.m. EDT, is as follows: JOE SCARBOROUGH: You know, it’s a unifying concept, too. Because you speak to the small-government conservative in me, because conservatives always complained that government can’t do everything, that government can’t – it’s actually Kennedy-esque, “Ask not what your country can do for you.” You’re saying “We’re minding the gap. We’re not expecting the federal government to do everything. We’re expecting you to help.” (…) MIKA BRZEZINSKI: Well I actually think the formula that you just described – not left/right, not right/wrong, and bringing people together from both sides – could apply beyond the Clinton Global Initiative. It could apply in Washington. BILL CLINTON: I think so, too. I think that what we ought to talk about – I urged my fellow Democrats to tell the American people that the country wasn’t back to work, nobody was happy, but according to all the numbers, the recession bottomed out and it was job-time, showtime. So the only real issue in this election should be what is each party going to offer to get the country moving again, which idea is most likely to work. I think that ought to be the debate. What are we going to do, who’s more likely to do it? And I think – I believe they should say “Give us two more years to do this. If it doesn’t work, you can throw us all out. We’ve got another election in two years, throw us all out. We’re in a deep hole, couldn’t get going in time.” That’s what I – I think we ought to all be willing to be judged by what ___ does not empower other people. SCARBOROUGH: I’ve talked to you about this before. We go out and give speeches all across the country, and sometimes to progressive crowds, and I always start with when I ran in ’94, I couldn’t stand Bill Clinton’s image on TV! And they’ll all rustle out there. I’ll say “I came up to Washington, DC,” and I’ll go through this, and as I explain the story away, well he didn’t really like us that much, either. But look what we accomplished together. Look what we – we learned. I learned so much from those five years, and they were tough, tough years for you, and for Hillary, and for a lot of people. Balance – Terry was talking about this. We balanced the budget four years – for four years, the first time that happened since the 1920’s, reformed welfare, created 22 million new jobs. And those were two sides that didn’t exactly love each other. Could you explain to Washington, DC, on both sides – how did you do that? How did you rise above it? How did everybody learn to work together, even if they fought each other like hell? BILL CLINTON: Well first of all, you’ve got to know the difference between something that’s real and something that’s show. I remember one day, Senator Lott – who was a Republican senator – was on one of these Sunday morning shows. And he called me a “spoiled brat,” or something like that. And one of our guys in the staff called and said “You know what Trent Lott said?” I said, “Don’t worry about that.” He said, “How could you say that?” I said, “Let me tell you what happened. Trent Lott agreed to be on a Sunday morning show, before he thought about it. He was exhausted all weekend, because we had been working long hours. He got up early in a bad mood, and somebody goaded him, and he took the bait.” That’s all. And I called Lott, and he said ‘Oh, my God you’re calling me.’ I said, “No, I’m calling to tell you I’ve already forgotten about this.” He said, “Why?” I said, “Because you shouldn’t have done this show, you were too tired. And you woke up exhausted, you were mad you did this show, somebody goaded you, and you took the bait.” He said “That’s exactly what happened.” That’s what happens when you know somebody as a person, as well as a political opponent. When you cut people a little slack, and you realize that doesn’t have anything to do with the job, and you just work on getting the job done. When we hung Lott’s portrait in the Capitol, Newt Gingrich and I spoke for him. And we talked about the fights, but then we talked about what we achieved. That’s what I think we have to do. We’ve got to get back into “We’re all hired hands here.” And we’ve got to – it’s a good think to have a philosophy. I could give you – if you look at the stuff we’re debating here, I could give you a more conservative and a more liberal position about how to deliver health care in Haiti, or re-set-up the schools, or promote economic growth. But in the end, what matters is half the kids have never been to school – do they go to school or not? They’ve never had a health care system at all – will they have one? They’ve never had a government that functions, 17 percent of the government was killed on earthquake day – are they going to have one? And that’s – somehow we need to drive our political debate toward that. SCARBOROUGH: But we seem to be losing ground. You brought up Newt Gingrich. I talked to your wife and you and others about what I learned – that you can disagree without being disagreeable – I made a lot of mistakes in the 1990’s, I think a lot of people did. But you brought up Newt Gingrich. Here’s a guy that should know better. And yet he’s going out there comparing one of the great religions of the world to Nazism, Kathleen Sebelius to Stalin – it’s really disappointing that in some ways we seem to be losing ground. CLINTON: Well, but I think part of that is – you saw what happened in these Republican primaries, he might want to run for President, and frankly, it’s a version of what he did in ’94, as opposed to what he later came to do after we had the huge fight over the government shutting down and then we all calmed down and went to work. And I think, at least I know he knows better. And that’s not a good thing. SCARBOROUGH: Doesn’t that make it worse? MIKA BRZEZINSKI: I think that does make it worse. SCARBOROUGH: I think that’s what depresses me about it is, he’s such a bright guy, and he’s got so many gifts – CLINTON: But he sees all these other people being rewarded for it, and so I think that’s what – BRZEZINSKI: He sees the payoff. CLINTON: Hm-hmm. (…) SCARBOROUGH: Let me ask you a Constitutional question. Because sitting here listening to you talk – I know there are a lot of people that are opinion leaders and shapers that watch this show, that are just sitting there thinking “Why can’t he run for President in a couple of years?” CLINTON: There’s a little Constitutional – SCARBOROUGH: I know. I was just going to say, does it make sense – because listening to you talk right now, you’ve always been known as the brightest, the first-class, however you want to put it – but you’ve had the ability the past decade to go all around the world, start this initiative, understand issues – you’ve understood issues better than anyone in Washington, when you were President. But to go around the world for a decade, all of this knowledge – and I’m just wondering, not for you, but doesn’t it make sense for this country to say, “Okay, let a guy serve, or a woman serve for eight years, then they can take a term or two off. But then if they have something to give back to America in the terms of leadership, give them that opportunity. It seems so short-sighted, just because the Republicans were upset that FDR was President for four terms. CLINTON: Well, that’s what I believe the rules should be. But it isn’t what it is. I think if I were writing – there’s a very strong argument for telling – for saying you shouldn’t serve three terms in a row. Because by the time you’ve appointed everybody, there’s just – people get relaxed, there’s too much opportunity for people, even if not for corruption, just for bad things happening for the taxpayers. (Unintelligible) But with life expectancy being so long, and people being alert until they’re in their seventies, and sometimes in their eighties – look at Paul Volcker – he’s mid-eighties, you know, he might as well be 40 years old, in some ways. I think there’s an argument for that. But if we change the Constitution, it shouldn’t apply to me. That is, it shouldn’t apply to anybody that served, it should all be forward-looking, so no one would think it was personal. But, you know, that’s kind of what I think it should be.   SCARBOROUGH: It makes so much sense.

More:
Joe Scarborough Hints He Would Like to See Bill Clinton Run Again for President – If Only It Were Constitutional

George Stephanopoulos Parrots Democratic Talking Points on New GOP Pledge: They’re ‘Repealing Health Care’

Good Morning America’s George Stephanopoulos on Thursday offered up Democratic talking points as he discussed a new set of Republican promises, should the GOP win Congress. The skeptical host interviewed Representative Paul Ryan and repeated, “You heard the President. He said this is the exact same agenda as Republicans had before he came to office. How is it different?” In a tease for the segment, he spun, ” Republicans unveil their plan for America: Cutting taxes and repealing health care .” It may seem like a small distinction but Republicans oppose the new law, not the concept of Americans having health care. Stephanopoulos repeatedly grilled the GOP Congressman: “…The two central items in the agenda, are extending the tax cuts passed under President Bush. Repealing the health care law by President Obama. Those are going to cost at least $4 trillion over the next ten years. And your- your pledge doesn’t spell out anything close to paying for that $4 trillion.” He followed up by pressing, “But, you say a path to balance. But, you do concede that you do not have a plan to balance the budget. And you don’t pay for the tax cuts that you are extending?” Yet, when Stephanopoulos interviewed Barack Obama for 16 minutes on September 9 , he included several softball questions, such as this empathetic example on the minister who threatened to burn a Koran on 9/11: “I wonder what this must feel like from behind your desk. You’re President of the United States. You have to deal with the fallout. And here’s a pastor who’s got 30 followers in his church. Does it make you feel helpless or angry?” A transcript of the September 23 segment, which aired at 7:06am EDT, follows: GEORGE STEPHANOPOULOS: Let’s turn now to one of the architects of the Republican agenda, Congressman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, a ranking Republican on the House budget committee. Good morning, Congressman. REP. PAUL RYAN: Hey, good morning, George. STEPHANOPOULOS: You heard the President. He said this is the exact same agenda as Republicans had before he came to office. How is it different? RYAN: Well, first of all, cutting spending, creating jobs and putting the policy of economic growth in place, and cleaning up the way Congress works is not only standing in stark contrast to this Congress and this President. But, actually, George, it stands a bit in stark contrast to way Republicans conducted ourselves a decade ago. We need to own up to the fact that when we were in the majority, we spent too much money. We lost our way. We have got to get that back. We are not here offering a plan to reinvent America. We are trying to reclaim our country by rededicating ourselves to the timeless principles that made us exceptional. These are the basic building blocks to get us on the right track. The first steps to get this country on the right track. STEPHANOPOULOS: Yet, Congressman, the two central items in the agenda, are extending the tax cuts passed under President Bush. Repealing the health care law by President Obama. Those are going to cost at least $4 trillion over the next ten years. And your- your pledge doesn’t spell out anything close to paying for that $4 trillion. RYAN: We’d put 1.3 trillion in cuts right there as well. But the President is also proposing $3 trillion of those $3.7 trillion in tax cuts be extended. So, it’s not as if the President and the Democrats aren’t saying extend some of them. We’re saying- STEPHANOPOULOS: But, how are you going to pay for the $4 trillion, if you’re going to reduce the spending? RYAN: Well, I brought a budget to the floor that reduced $4.8 trillion in spending, which would have more than compensated for these tax cuts. The point is, George, raising taxes on successful, small businesses, which these tax increases would hit 50 percent of all small business income, 70 percent of our jobs come from small businesses. It is not a good idea in this economy, to raise these kind of taxes. Even some of the President’s own economic advisers are suggesting, we should not have tax increases occur in January. What- The problem we have right now is jobs, George. We need the economy growing. We need job creations. Taxing capital gains, taxing dividends taxing small businesses will hurt us from creating jobs. Mark Zandi, Peter Orszag. Even some of the President’s own advisors are suggesting that. So, we’re saying, not only keep taxes low, but focus on spending. Cut spending. Control spending. Get the budget on the path to balance. We will begin with that. STEPHANOPOULOS: But, you say a path to balance. But, you do concede that you do not have a plan to balance the budget. And you don’t pay for the tax cuts that you are extending? RYAN: Well, we can pay for the tax cuts. I have provided budgets that do that in the past. STEPHANOPOULOS: But, the rest of the Republicans aren’t signing on to it? RYAN: No. That’s the road map which is quite different. What I’m saying is we have a plan to get this country back on track. We want to cut and control spending. The deficit is such a mess right now. It’s going to take time to balance the budget. But, what is the current government doing? Their making it worse. The President has added a budget that doubles our debt in five years. And triples it in ten years. We want to go in a different direction. So, we don’t want to balance the budget by raising taxes. We want to balance a budget by controlling spending. ‘Cause, after all, that’s the real source of our problem. STEPHANOPOULOS: You also talk about cleaning up Congress. You’re taking some heat, some surprising heat from conservatives. Erick Erickson of RedState.com says- hits you were not taking on earmarks, for not banning earmarks. He says “The lack of an earmarks ban is terrible. Cutting off the gateway drug to big government is important.” Your response? RYAN: I agree. We’ve already banned earmarks. That’s already in the Republican platform. STEPHANOPOULOS: Only for your conference. Not for the House overall. RYAN: Republicans- We’ve going to continue this earmarks ban. We’ve already done the earmark ban. So, it’s something we’ve already initiated it in our own volition within our own conference. It’s something we’re intending on continuing. That’s why it’s not new pledge. STEPHANOPOULOS: So, you’ve got the pledge. What will you pledge to pass in the first year, if Republicans take control of the house? RYAN: Right. So, this is something we could pass tomorrow. This is a governing agenda that we’re saying if we got in control of Congress tomorrow, here’s what we would do. And there’s dozens of pieces of legislation here we’re talking about. First of all, the health care bill, we think is a disaster. It’s making the deficit worse. That’s according to the President’s actuary. It’s making health care go up. We would replace this health care law with consumer-directed health care that actually gets affordable health care to everybody, regardless of preexisting condition. STEPHANOPOULOS: So, that is number one. Okay, Congressman- RYAN: We would cut spending, right away. There’s lots of things we would do. We would rescind TARP. We would rescind unspent stimulus. We would do a federal hiring freeze. That can get you 1.3 trillion in spending cuts. And we would prevent these massive tax increases from hitting our economy January 1st so that we can keep job creation going. We’re trying to remove uncertainty so the economy can grow. There’s a big uncertainty problem. Businesses aren’t hiring because of all this government uncertainty. We want to address that. STEPHANOPOULOS: Big agenda for January 1st. Thank you very much, Congressman.

More here:
George Stephanopoulos Parrots Democratic Talking Points on New GOP Pledge: They’re ‘Repealing Health Care’

Stephen Colbert to Testify to Congress About Illegal Immigration

Comedy Central star Stephen Colbert will be testifying before Congress this Friday about, of all things, illegal immigration. No, this apparently isn’t a joke. According to the Daily Caller, the comedian “is slated to testify at a congressional hearing Friday on immigration titled ‘Protecting America’s Harvest.'” Jonathan Strong reported moments ago: In July, Colbert interviewed United Farm Workers (UFW) President Arturo Rodriguez on his show. UFW works to legalize the millions of illegal immigrants working in the agriculture sector, and Rodriguez promoted one of their projects, “Take Our Jobs” which offers Americans the chance to try working in the fields if they really think good jobs are being lost to illegals. Since then Colbert reportedly participated in Take Our Jobs, and Rep. Zoe Lofgren, chairman of the immigration subcommittee, was there for that day. Sources said the plan for Colbert to testify arose out of Colbert and Lofgren sharing that day together. For the record, CBS News has confirmed Strong’s report. So actor Kevin Costner testified to Congress in July about the BP oil spill, and now Colbert gets to give his views on illegal immigration. As comedian Yakov Smirnoff said years ago, “America – what a country!” For those interested, this was the “Colbert Report” in question: The Colbert Report Mon – Thurs 11:30pm / 10:30c Arturo Rodriguez www.colbertnation.com Colbert Report Full Episodes 2010 Election Fox News

Visit link:
Stephen Colbert to Testify to Congress About Illegal Immigration

Don’t Tell Me – It’s Just More of the Same

Bryan Safi is a writer for infoMania and the host of “That's Gay.” Remember how Mean Old Man McCain threatened to block movement to repeal “don’t ask, don’t tell” and we were all like, “um…you’re stupid”? And then remember how last night we waited to see if Sarah Palin would show up on DWTS to cheer on her little star who’s famous for not using a condom? One of those two things didn’t happen.