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Patriot Act Extension
This should be interesting to see where the parties fall out on it. The Obama administration wants to see it extended with few changes. Others want more control and to tighten the restrictions on surveillence. In the midst of the fight for Healthcare reform I wonder if it will slip under the wire un-noticed.
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There will be proposed amendments by the Feingold/Kucinich wing, but there is no widespread mandate for change here. |
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The vote count:
http://educate-yourself.org/cn/patri...natevote.shtml House Votes to Revise, Extend Patriot Act, Angering Senators Quote:
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In the Senate, enough Democrats voted for it to ensure that those Democratis opposed could not fillibuster at the time. It will get more Democratic votes now because most of the new Democrats elected in 06 and 08 are moderates from Republlican-leaning distrricts and in the Senate, there are easily more than enought Democrats, along with all the Repubilcans to push it through. I dont see an issue here. It is almost a sure thing to be extended as is, after Feingold on the Senate side and Kuchinich on the Huose side attempt to tinker with it, with little success. |
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It's hard to disagree with that... I sure don't anyway.
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We need limits on all of them. We need to get rid of career politicians.
It won't help a much as some of us hope as they will all end up being lobbyists or other influential positions in and around the Gov't, but it'd be a damn good start. |
I'm with James Madison and those guys in Philly 225 years ago who considered and rejected term limits:
"a few of the members of Congress will possess superior talents; will by frequent re-elections, become members of long standing; will be thoroughly masters of the public business, and perhaps not unwilling to avail themselves of those advantages. The greater the proportion of new members of Congress, and the less the information of the bulk of the members, the more apt they be to fall into the snares that may be laid before them."I would prefer much tougher campaign finance reform and ethics/lobbying reform. Another downside to term limits is that it would likely make unelected Congressional staff much more powerful, unless you term limit them as well. |
LIMIT EVERYONE!
lets see the progression here - 2 term congressman does a good job (4 years), then 2 term senator (12 years) Thats a good 16 years of Gov't service - plenty of time. Then go open a consulting business like you. Oh and I am all for the strictest shit we can possibly enforce as far as campaign contributions and lobbyists et all. |
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Step 2: Bring on the term limits Step 3: Electrocute all new lobbyists |
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The other issue for me with term limits is loosing that expertise that takes more than 10-12 years to establish. (Don't you know more about your field of expertise after 20 years as opposed to 10-12 years?) There is probably not a guy in the Senate who knows as much about foreign affairs as Dick Lugar, Republican from Indiana, who has been around for 30 years, building that expertise. I dont want him replaced with a rookie, even if I dont always agree with Lugar. Same with the Intel Committees or Armed Services Committees, I want at least some members of those Committees who know every nook and cranny of the CIA and the Pentagon. That level of expertise takes time as does establishing credibility with colleagues as well as with the executive branch. I dont think I would want to work in any large company/organization, public or private, where no one in that institution had more than 10-12 years of experience on the job. I just want better safeguards to make sure those long-timers dont abuse the system. |
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And it makes much more sense to me to keep that expertise around (if that is the choice of the voters of that district/state) rather than building that expertise from scratch every election or even every 10-12 years. Thats not to say that I dont want to see more turnover in Congress. New blood adds new perspectives, and that is always good for any institution. But not though wholesale turnover. IMO, that is not the most productive way to run any large institution. And I simply dont want to limit one's choice to keep their current representation, but would rather expand choices through comprehensive campaign finance reform to make it easier to challenge incumbents on a more level playing field. |
Term limits in a nutshell to me:
You can work here for 10-12 years and become an expert on the most important issues to your constituents as well as foreign affairs/national security and the development of national policies affecting environment/financial services/agriculture/intergovernmental relations, etc. Then...out you go! Repeat and rinse. |
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You dont take away the fundamental choice of the people to elect their chosen representatives, which is why the framers did not include term limits in the Constitution. If the system is "broken", you dont fundamentally change what is at the very core of the system, you fix it in a manner that provides greater choice and greater safeguards to ensure that those elected don't abuse the office. |
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Seems to me that's anti-transparency. :eyebrow: |
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From a pratical perspective, I dont want the oversight of the largest public institution in the world to be in the hands of 545 men and women, NONE OF WHOM has more than 10-12 years of experience on the job. I think that is crazy! I want a high level of public policy experience on issues across the board and I want continuity in the legislative process. I understand the entrenched problems that need to be addressed and I am not convinced that term limits would address them more effectively than more comprehensive campaign finance and lobbying reform with strong enforcement penalities. From a philosphical perspective, I do not believe in limiting choice...either for the people to vote for any qualified candidate or elected offiicals being told how long then can serve. I support Constitutional amendments that extend the rights of the people (19th amendment - women's right to vote, 26th amendment - lowering voting age to 18) I do not support Constitutional amendments that limit or restrict any existing rights of the people. But now I am just repeating myself. If a term limit amendment is introduced, many here will obviously support it, I will oppose it, and you will probably be on the side with greater public support. But it aint gonna happen anytime soon. |
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You don't want Congress to be run by people with no experience, yet you have supreme faith in the average experience-less person to choose the best guy, every time? |
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The fundamental issue is limiting the choice of the people to elect their representatives. And, not loosing (throwing out) valuable expertise across the policy perspective and continuity in the legislative process....what might be characterized as efficiency....simply because it might provide greater transparency. Quote:
I believe the Constitution had it right the first time...with no term limits. |
Those are shallow arguments against term limits.
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The only way you can not support term limits is if you actually believe these men and women are working for our benefit rather than theirs. Who believes that? Show of hands please?
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As far as term limits, somewhat off-topic, but I am now curious as to how that revolutionary group in the Chiapas is doing. IIRC, all public officials were supposed to have something like week-long term limits. |
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Could you imagine what the current congressmen would do at their own accord?
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Go back to being lawyers.
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