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1: Nov 28, 09:42
2: Nov 27, 18:07
3: Nov 27, 12:04
4: Nov 27, 08:26
5: Nov 26, 18:06
6: Nov 26, 12:05
7: Nov 26, 08:29
8: Nov 25, 18:33
9: Nov 25, 11:12
10: Nov 25, 07:08
11: Nov 24, 13:17
12: Nov 23, 18:13
13: Nov 23, 06:17
14: Nov 22, 13:24
15: Nov 22, 09:09
16: Nov 21, 22:36
17: Nov 21, 14:03
18: Nov 21, 10:18
19: Nov 21, 07:35
20: Nov 20, 15:19
Posts: 156
In response to
"
Which came first, the chicken or the egg?
"
by
Stephen
ugh. are they really? they won easy points with this, i wish they would just leave it at that and move on
Posted by
Guy (aka lostatlimbo)
Sep 15 '09, 14:38
dragging this out is going to backfire on the Dems
Responses:
[deleted]
They're certainly losing any moral high ground to criticize the right for muddying the debate with silly partisan bickering. -- nm
-
Dr.Vermin
Sep 15, 14:40
36
Censure procedures exists precisely to record moments of breaking of decorum. All parliamentary bodies have a form of it. -- nm
-
con_carne
Sep 15, 14:44
18
I'm pretty sure the moment has been recorded. -- nm
-
Dr.Vermin
Sep 15, 14:54
1
I meant the notion that it broke decorum. "Here's where the line is, future Congressmen." -- nm
-
con_carne
Sep 15, 15:01
Like say when someone boos and hisses and heckles a president...? -- nm
-
Stephen
Sep 15, 14:47
11
"heckles"? you might want to look up the definition of that one, champ.
-
Guy
Sep 15, 14:54
6
Why, are you unsure of the definition there champ? I'm pretty sure shouting out "No" during a speech would fall under the definition of "heckling"
-
Stephen
Sep 15, 15:06
5
During Bush, the Democrats didn't have the context of the "raucous town halls." Bravo to them for saying "you crossed the line." Enough is enough. -- nm
-
con_carne
Sep 15, 15:09
1
Oh come on, now you're arguing that they're somehow taking the moral high road here?
-
Stephen
Sep 15, 15:26
hardly - to harass (a public speaker, performer, etc.) with impertinent questions, gibes, or the like; -- nm
-
Guy
Sep 15, 15:08
1
Now would you care to look up the definition of gibe?
-
Stephen
Sep 15, 15:24
"No" is not "Lie". It's the crux of the issue.
-
Reagen
Sep 15, 15:08
It may be an odd rule, but isn't there a specific rule about "lie" and "liar"? -- nm
-
Dano
Sep 15, 14:53
or applauds? -- nm
-
dogbert183
Sep 15, 14:52
I'll grant, it's no Sumner caning incident -- nm
-
con_carne
Sep 15, 14:52
in the general sense it's tolerated (and whether it's the President or not isn't the issue) -- nm
-
Reagen
Sep 15, 14:51
and this is *exactly* why most people feel so out of touch with their government.
-
Guy
Sep 15, 14:46
3
Well if you believe decorum and rules of conduct should all be forgotten, then yes, by all means this censure is a waste of time. -- nm
-
con_carne
Sep 15, 14:49
2
i toured the Parlimentary building in Victoria this weekend and read that they were originally seated at "swords-length" apart to avoid any injuries
-
Guy
Sep 15, 14:57
1
Mostly that's symbolic. I mean, why not jsut bring a longer sword? -- nm
-
Reagen
Sep 15, 14:58
so, in your opinion, how badly would a GOP congressman have to break the rules for it *not* to be "silly partisan bickering"
-
znufrii
Sep 15, 14:42
16
I think given the exposure this has received, and the fact that the direct apology to the President was accepted, the case should be closed. -- nm
-
Dr.Vermin
Sep 15, 14:53
15
I would have agreed except for the fact that he's basically backed away from his apology.
-
Reagen
Sep 15, 14:56
14
I haven't read/heard about him 'backing away' from the initial apology. My only point is that intentionally or not, those pushing for this censure...
-
Dr.Vermin
Sep 15, 15:03
9
The Dems censuring someone for bringing down the healthcare debate is an example of bringing down the healthcare debate? You sound preposterous. -- nm
-
con_carne
Sep 15, 15:07
2
In the sense that the censure just keeps the attention on Wilson, and does nothing to redirect attention back to the debate. -- nm
-
Dr.Vermin
Sep 15, 15:19
1
As I said on B2, I think it might help put the matter behind us, esp. if he does the floor apology thing. Of course, we will see. -- nm
-
con_carne
Sep 15, 15:21
From what I've read, Pelosi was content to let it die until Wilson played the "i had my fingers crossed when i said that" game.
-
Reagen
Sep 15, 15:06
5
Again, I don't care what happens to Wilson. I'm just agreeing with Guy [twitch] that this is all counter-productive...
-
Dr.Vermin
Sep 15, 15:14
4
The House deals with hundreds of bills a year. Do you want someone yelling out "Liar!" at everyone who makes a speech?
-
Reagen
Sep 15, 15:17
2
I see your point, but don't agree that that would be the result of skipping this censure. -- nm
-
Dr.Vermin
Sep 15, 15:22
(or, say, look at Taiwan's parliament. Remember those wacky brawls?) -- nm
-
Reagen
Sep 15, 15:19
[deleted]
using your IM analogy - censuring him is like tattling to the teacher that someone called you a 'doody-head' -- nm
-
Guy
Sep 15, 14:59
3
Hmm? Congress *is* the teacher. -- nm
-
Reagen
Sep 15, 15:00
2
i was thinking more as it relates to the media (and thereby us) -- nm
-
Guy
Sep 15, 15:01
1
But you're stuck on this being for the media instead of being an internal procedural matter. -- nm
-
Reagen
Sep 15, 15:03
240-179 -- nm
-
znufrii
Sep 15, 14:40
1
they may as well pass a resolution rebuking Kanye West too. good use of your time, congress. -- nm
-
Guy
Sep 15, 14:40
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