To be fair, republicans have a much easier job, they get elected by saying government cant do anything and should be lessened and then just spend the whole time there not doing anything to prove it.albino boo said:Dr. Thrax said:Before I continue, I have to ask.albino boo said:There is a difference between your opinion and that of the general public of the United States as expressed when they returned a Republican majority. Your opinion is just yours and it got outvoted. Thats democracy.
Do you have any knowledge on the concept of "gerrymandering" in US Politics?
Because we could have had a Democratic, or even a better split Congress without it.
Our Republican Congress re-drew the district lines during the pre-election process.
Meaning they had control over which voting districts included which areas.
They specifically drew district lines to make sure areas which leaned their way would be nicely clumped together, and also making sure to isolate the competition's areas to ensure they got "majority" in a district.
That's not "the will of the people" or "democracy", that's bullshit.
Translation: We win free and fair elections but they gerrymander.
BOTH SIDES REDRAW BOUNDARIES TO THEIR OWN ADVANTAGE. You are fine with it when it produces a result to your liking but its wrong and evil when its doesnt. Grow up, the democrats had majority and lost it because the Obama did not produce the results that people expected. I don't think anyone could achieve the results that was expected but if you rely on slogans instead of detailed and costed plans you will blow in the end. You really have to work out that your opinion is just yours and isn't any more valid than anyone elses.
But they are for the people. Corporations are people aren't they?Signa said:The US government, particularly the republicans, never cease to amaze me. Maybe if they at least tried to look like they were still "for the people," they would have better approval ratings.
... don't remind me.Parasondox said:But they are for the people. Corporations are people aren't they?Signa said:The US government, particularly the republicans, never cease to amaze me. Maybe if they at least tried to look like they were still "for the people," they would have better approval ratings.
I have one very important question. Do we even know what the 332 page FCC plan says yet? Because I think I'll be hilarious if it finally gets released to the public and it turns out the republicans were right about some stuff. It'll suck for us, no doubt, but it'll make some people look rather foolish...Adam Jensen said:Snip
Ok, what about Microsoft and Google being two of the top contributors to Obama's campaign? How did you put it... "You don't think that has anything to do with anything?"Dr. Thrax said:What about the $80K that Blackburn received from various telecomms companies in the last election cycle?
You don't think that has anything to do with anything?
No need to be rude to the guy.albino boo said:Dr. Thrax said:Before I continue, I have to ask.albino boo said:There is a difference between your opinion and that of the general public of the United States as expressed when they returned a Republican majority. Your opinion is just yours and it got outvoted. Thats democracy.
Do you have any knowledge on the concept of "gerrymandering" in US Politics?
Because we could have had a Democratic, or even a better split Congress without it.
Our Republican Congress re-drew the district lines during the pre-election process.
Meaning they had control over which voting districts included which areas.
They specifically drew district lines to make sure areas which leaned their way would be nicely clumped together, and also making sure to isolate the competition's areas to ensure they got "majority" in a district.
That's not "the will of the people" or "democracy", that's bullshit.
Translation: We win free and fair elections but they gerrymander.
BOTH SIDES REDRAW BOUNDARIES TO THEIR OWN ADVANTAGE. You are fine with it when it produces a result to your liking but its wrong and evil when its doesnt. Grow up, the democrats had majority and lost it because the Obama did not produce the results that people expected. I don't think anyone could achieve the results that was expected but if you rely on slogans instead of detailed and costed plans you will blow in the end. You really have to work out that your opinion is just yours and isn't any more valid than anyone elses.
Probably, considering that other countries would begin succumbing due to pressure like the UK.Zhukov said:Question: Does this stuff affect anyone outside of the USA?
Because I'm never sure if I should be worried about this net neutrality business or sitting back, sipping a drink and saying, "America lol," with an unjustifiably smug smirk.
Jesus Fucking Christ.?Once the federal government establishes a foothold into managing how Internet service providers run their networks they will essentially be deciding which content goes first, second, third, or not at all," Blackburn said in an announcement yesterday. "My legislation will put the brakes on this FCC overreach and protect our innovators from these job-killing regulations.?
I'm not sure what country you're form, but elections in America, especially ones for Congress, are a near complete joke. Only 1/3rd of the population of a state will vote, at best. Most of those people voting are pretty uninformed and just vote for the party lines they support. Not to mention that many times in elections it's the politician with the most money who wins, not the politician with the best thought out policies. There is also a lot of problems in many state elections with gerrymandering.albino boo said:Err the Republicans were elected and the FCC wasn't. How is the elected representatives of the people passing legislation to overturn a decision by an unelected commission got nothing to to do with the will of the people. The Republicans were elected by the people expressing their will at the ballot box. You might not agree with that decision but its democratic.Adam Jensen said:http://arstechnica.com/business/2015/03/republicans-internet-freedom-act-would-wipe-out-net-neutrality/
I told you the war wasn't over. And I told you that the recent decision had nothing to do with the will of the people. This is a battle between Google, Facebook and other giant tech firms vs broadband companies.
The new idea is Orwellian in nature. It's called the "Internet freedom act" and it's supposed to take all the power away from the FCC and give it to Congress. As you may know, Congress is run by Republicans and they get payed a lot of legal bribes by ISPs and cable companies.
To give you an idea of how much they have to lie to get the people to believe them, they're actually using the arguments against them and accusing net neutrality for the things they want to do to the internet. That's amazing. There's a good chance that this will pass, by the way.
This is exactly what net neutrality is fighting against. It's keeping the internet as it is.Once the federal government establishes a foothold into managing how Internet service providers run their networks they will essentially be deciding which content goes first, second, third, or not at all
See what I mean? What FCC overreach? It's their job. They're not putting any regulations in place aside from saying that no one can mess with the nature of the internet. It's freakin' amazing how much they have to lie to get what they want.My legislation will put the brakes on this FCC overreach and protect our innovators from these job-killing regulations.
I don't quite get how or why you're arguing republican vs liberals vs IT'S JUST UR OPINIONSalbino boo said:snip
Indeed, this thread devolved into pure politics too fast. But yes, this whole Net Neutrality deal will not affect high paid executives near as much as the worse case scenario will make low income individuals will be unable to choose how to enjoy content (or even access important stuff) during what's probably the rare times when they can relax.jklinders said:Let's drop the politics here for a second and ask ourselves who benefits if net neutrality is scrapped. Is it the ISPs, the content providers or the consumer? My money is not on the latter 2. The only western nation with shittier internet than the US is Canada, and that's not by much. Are the bribes for a faster pipeline supposed to get them off their asses to get broadband out to everyone? I doubt it. It's just going to line some CEOs' wallets with no net benefit to consumers. Meanwhile everyone else pays more to get their content out there.
There is no scenario where this benefits anyone but the ISPs. So if we can assume that the GOP who are sponsoring this bill are not the fucking idiots that are acting like, how much are they being bribed to back this backwards and corrupt scheme?
uh what? You realize that the seats the republicans won last election were seats traditionally republican that they lost the previous election, who have now become upset at the Democratic party and Obama by extension. There is a reason why the democrat candidates were throwing Obama under the bus so hard that their ads could be confused for a Tea Party candidate.Dr. Thrax said:Before I continue, I have to ask.albino boo said:There is a difference between your opinion and that of the general public of the United States as expressed when they returned a Republican majority. Your opinion is just yours and it got outvoted. Thats democracy.
Do you have any knowledge on the concept of "gerrymandering" in US Politics?
Because we could have had a Democratic, or even a better split Congress without it.
Our Republican Congress re-drew the district lines during the pre-election process.
Meaning they had control over which voting districts included which areas.
They specifically drew district lines to make sure areas which leaned their way would be nicely clumped together, and also making sure to isolate the competition's areas to ensure they got "majority" in a district.
That's not "the will of the people" or "democracy", that's bullshit.
You basically hit the nail on the head already by mentioning corrupt. The system exists to protect the interests of corporations, because that is where the money comes from. Corporations can donate massive amounts to any candidate regardless of political leaning/affiliation. Once said candidate wins an election, he is already in the pocket of <corporation/rich person> and will cater to their whim. It doesn't matter what the American people want, because they won't get it. The American people aren't rich; the American people aren't corporations. No judges or politicians are in the pocket of the American people. They exist to serve corporations.thewatergamer said:Ehhh it's american politics which never cease to confuse me... you have all these people shouting at each other about the country going to shit because of Republicans or because of Democrats, and yet less than 1/3rd of Americans ACTUALLY VOTE, I will never understand why you americans can't just let the 2 sides split into more parties like we have here in Canada, it's much easier to find a party you can get behind, I find you american's are rather torn on which side to support since both sides have stuff you agree with but some stuff you disagree with, huh seems that trying to split our incredibly complex world into a simple "Left Vs. Right" debate doesn't work that well does it? (Snarky canadian comment)
Seriously though I have given up trying to figure out american politicians, all I see is 2 groups of corrupt individuals arguing over who is taking more bribes from corporations or "Special interest groups"