Tuesday, May 18, 2010
The Collapse of The Left
Oblahma always the aloof idiot, said he isn't following the campaigns. Does the Idiot-In-Chief think he can take over America all by hisssself, self better wake up.
Oblahma isn't passing diddly squat from here on out. What remains is living a high lifestyle at taxpayer expense, jetting around the world as a neutered usurper.
Liberal Take Over ----Failed----.
Oblahma isn't passing diddly squat from here on out. What remains is living a high lifestyle at taxpayer expense, jetting around the world as a neutered usurper.
Liberal Take Over ----Failed----.
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With mountains of stimulus money (AKA jobs package, AKA redistributive withholdings, AKA slush fund) and a 1,000 page "health care" mandate under the control of the current and future administrations... how much is left for Obama to pass?
ReplyDeleteIf people rely entirely on the political wrangling of their own party, the Country will never be safe. However, if we hold all of our representatives to the Constitution, even legislation which has already passed is legally invalid, unenforceable, and to no effect.
Does anybody recall that in the passing of the national health care mandate, the Senate for expediency's sake was compelled to introduced their own financial legislation? Read the first sentence of Article 1, Sec. 7, of our Constitution...
http://www.senate.gov/civics/constitution_item/constitution.htm#a1_sec7_a
...then read the following excerpt from an article on Wikipedia.org...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient_Protection_and_Affordable_Care_Act
"The Senate failed to take up debate on the House bill and instead took up H.R. 3590, a bill regarding housing tax breaks for service members.[13] As the United States Constitution requires all revenue-related bills to originate in the House,[14] the Senate took up this bill since it was first passed by the House as a revenue-related modification to the Internal Revenue Code. The bill was then used as the Senate's vehicle for their health care reform proposal, completely revising the content of the bill."
...What might have happened if a CEO tried to circumvent the law by this type of evasion?
Besides all of this, the length alone of the Health Care Bill might very well be considered an assault on the inalienable right to liberty.
mattw@inbox.com