cobra_ky said:
Alex_P said:
shotgunbob said:
why doesnt it suprise me that everyone voted with their parties
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They didn't. Quite a few Republicans (every Republican woman in the Senate, for example) voted "Yea".
-- Alex
If this had been a Republican sponsored amendment, I bet we would have seen the same thing from democrats. it's the nature of our political system nowadays and it's a disgrace.
Not really. Democrats have voted yes on everything from Welfare Reform to the Defense of Marriage Act. From the coverage I saw, the hearings on Alito and Roberts were nowhere near as confrontational as the Sotomayor nomination. The disgrace is that the Republicans have caused people to lose so much faith in our political system we just assume every politician is a dick.
Which Republicans love--then they get to act like dicks while the Democrats try and actually work with them without any backlash from the populace over their behavior.[/quote
Look up Robert Bork. Democrats aren't any better (or worse) than Republicans are. Liberals (of which I am one) in general don't notice how Democrats act, because we agree with it. When Democrats stall, vote against, and interfere, we think of it as a legitimate protest and an attempt to force restraint on the part of the Republican steamroll. When Republicans do it, it's obstructionist and disgraceful.
The vast majority of Democrats voted against DOMA, and welfare reform under Clinton got huge swaths of bi-partisan support. The Alito and Roberts confirmations were less confrontational, but largely because they were less confrontational candidates. Democrats didn't work any better with Reagan, or Bush Sr., than Republicans have with Obama. Nattering nabobs of negativism, indeed.
Cheeze_Pavilion said:
Seldon2639 said:
The fundamental question (as it ever was) is twofold: should the government become involved in contractual agreements made between willing, informed, and not-coerced individuals, and where do we draw the line? If this kind of involvement is justified and necessary, will this particular bill have any positive effect?
I would add that we're talking about the government as employer here, not the government as government. There's a big difference between the government getting involved by changing the law of contracts, and the government making certain demands on its contractual partners just like those partners are making on THEIR employees by way of these arbitration clauses.
In other words, I don't see how you can argue that the contractors should be free to demand whatever terms the workers will agree to, and then say the government shouldn't have that same freedom to make demands in its negotiations with the contractors.
In terms of philosophy, I don't disagree. I can even agree that the government has the prerogative to do whatever they like with contracts it makes. That said, do we accept that there should be a limit to the amount of interference the government (as a contractor) can have on the relationship between its contractors and their employees? The government can (without violating the constitution) do a hell of a lot of really stupid things, does the ability to do so make it right or sane to do so? It's an analogy, but I believe a proper one.
From a pure contracts law perspective, my argument is largely without merit. The government has the power and the authority to do whatever the hell it likes to its subcontractors. But, that doesn't address whether this is actually a good idea. My defense of the 30 senators who voted against this amendment is that there can be a legitimate argument against the amendment (that it will be ineffective and have unintended consequences) without wanting to "shield" anyone from rape.