Skip to comments.
John Stossel: What Congress Did Is Disgusting
Creator's Syndicate ^
| October 26, 2005
| John Stossel
Posted on 10/25/2005 11:37:35 PM PDT by RWR8189
click here to read article
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61 next last
Tom Coburn is a true patriot.
We could use 50 more like him in Washington.
1
posted on
10/25/2005 11:37:36 PM PDT
by
RWR8189
To: RWR8189
I'd be delighted with a Senator Stossel as a start.
2
posted on
10/25/2005 11:41:59 PM PDT
by
peyton randolph
(Warning! It is illegal to fatwah a camel in all 50 states)
To: RWR8189; Stellar Dendrite
---Unfortunately, Congress has an unwritten code: "Don't threaten the other congressmen's loot." The Senate reprimanded Coburn by voting 82 to 15 to save the Bridge to Nowhere---
I will await the free republic "don't question your betters in office" contingent to tell us how lucky we are to all these great (R)epublicans in charge!
3
posted on
10/25/2005 11:42:41 PM PDT
by
flashbunny
(What is more important: Loyalty to principles, or loyalty to personalities?)
To: RWR8189
How many of the 15 is up for re-election in 2006 ? I'm not counting Mary Landrieu's vote since I think she wouldn't have voted for it if it hadn't had benefited her state. DeWine is up for re-election and I think this makes up for his betrayal earlier in the year.
4
posted on
10/25/2005 11:46:51 PM PDT
by
Rumple4
To: RWR8189
To: peyton randolph
Tax, tax, tax. Spend, spend, spend. Tax and spend. See the taxman tax. He is taxing us. We do not get to spend our money. Put the check in the mail.
6
posted on
10/25/2005 11:49:36 PM PDT
by
carumba
To: RWR8189
"Once Republicans were in power, they started spending money even faster than the Democrats did." No they did not John!
It was 7 years before they spent like democrats. Let's get ot straight.
7
posted on
10/25/2005 11:50:18 PM PDT
by
Brimack34
To: Brimack34
8
posted on
10/25/2005 11:51:54 PM PDT
by
flashbunny
(What is more important: Loyalty to principles, or loyalty to personalities?)
To: RWR8189
John Stossel: proof that you CAN recover from the disease of liberalism. Well I sent a note back to the RNC instead of a check. My itty bitty 2 cents doesn't mean much, but I told them what I thought anyway. These guys are forgetting about the voters who put them in office. We need to give them a few reminders.
9
posted on
10/25/2005 11:53:04 PM PDT
by
Just Lori
(Tony Schaeffer, Curt Weldon, Able Danger....... PAY ATTENTION.)
To: RWR8189
Hey CONgress.......your fired
10
posted on
10/25/2005 11:59:08 PM PDT
by
bobbyd
(Damn, I've been tagged.....)
To: Rumple4
"DeWine is up for re-election and I think this makes up for his betrayal earlier in the year."
I don't think it makes up for it at all. I think it is BECAUSE of his betrayal--and his son's subsequent spanking--that he is now running scared prior to the 2006 election. He wins that, he'll change his stripes back from pork hater to RINO faster than you can say McCain-Feingold.
11
posted on
10/26/2005 12:01:17 AM PDT
by
LibertarianInExile
(Miers: A meticulous, detail-oriented woman...who forgets to pay her bar dues twice.)
To: LibertarianInExile
Yeah but I don't think there's going to be any republican opposition for him, so it's DeWine or Hackett? Springer? Hagan?. Ohio had decades of Glenn and Metenbaum, DeWine and Voinovich might be as the best they can do here.
12
posted on
10/26/2005 12:12:47 AM PDT
by
Rumple4
To: Rumple4
The Pres. and the Pubs are going to have to be taught a lesson from the conservatives in this land. The GOP had better get their act straight.
I'm sick of paying taxes for these pork projects. This is the party of limited government or it's not. If they decide not, they're in hurting electoral shape.
The free market will bring in some politicians who will respect it again when the need is evident.
To: Rumple4
I am not at all surprised there is no GOP opposition. But though it's a long time before next November, right now, I think it will be the Rat winning. Too many pissed-off locals won't carry water for DeRINO any more.
14
posted on
10/26/2005 12:29:11 AM PDT
by
LibertarianInExile
(Miers: A meticulous, detail-oriented woman...who forgets to pay her bar dues twice.)
To: RWR8189
Anybody else tired of these useless parasites? The Republican Party can shove itself, from Big Government Bush (who happily signs any crap that hits his desk) on down.
Anybody who falls for their lies in '06 is dumber than a democRat.
15
posted on
10/26/2005 12:33:21 AM PDT
by
Hank Rearden
(Never allow anyone who could only get a government job attempt to tell you how to run your life.)
To: RWR8189
He must not drink the water in DC. Democrats put something in the water that makes people want to waste money that is not theirs. Or 99.9% of them were lying just to get into office.
To: flashbunny
I will await the free republic "don't question your betters in office" contingent to tell us how lucky we are to all these great (R)epublicans in charge! They never show up on threads like this -- too many inconvenient facts.
17
posted on
10/26/2005 12:47:17 AM PDT
by
Anthem
(The only 20th century advance in the science of government was to tax a little less to take more.)
To: RWR8189
Are you embarrassed when you think you're working for the good of the country? Oh, THAT's what he was doing when he joined the Klan!
To: RWR8189
Having lived in Ketchikan for a while, I can offer a little insight. First, without arguing whether the bridge is good or bad, the reason the bridge is so expensive is it has to be built so as to allow cruise ships to pass underneath it (a simple bridge would not due). With the timber industry (in Ketchikan, thanks to enviro-whackos) gone, and the fishing industry declining, tourism via cruise ships (a community- town and borough- of 13,000 gets 900,000 to 1,000,000 tourists on cruise ships every June through August) is what is keeping the town alive.
I have to say, a lot of the people up there do not always have the best idea of what is good for the long term. I agree pork spending is out of control, but these same people who say the bridge is worthless just voted down a proposition to expand the waterfront (to be fair, only the people within the city limits voted- the city has approx. 8,000 residents (and maybe 30% voted- but hey, if you are not going to vote, you sort of loser the right to bitch), out of the 13,000 that live in the Ketchikan-Gateway Borough. People who live in the borough would also be affected by expanding the waterfront), with the money for it coming solely from a $6 dollar per passenger port fee for all incoming cruise ships.
Further, the part of Revilla Island Ketchikan is on can not hold many more homes or people. Opening up Gravina island for sustained, "mass" living (a few people already live there, but it is not feasible to have a mass migration because the only way to get to downtown Ketchikan is via a water taxi, or one's own boat) is a viable option for bringing more revenue to the area, thus helping to sustain Ketchikan. The bridge is not necessarily the wisest choice, but calling it a "bridge to nowhere" is failing to recognize the importance (for sustaining the area) of expanding to Gravina. That said, clearly, wiser decisions could have been made, but something needs to be done. I wish the people and businesses could have made the decision (i.e., the high priced bridge is a clear example of governmental ineffectiveness). However, when given the chance, the people and businesses chose to ignore the problem, and so the government (in its every growing nanny stateness) decided to step in and make the complete decision for them.
In conclusion, I do not agree with the theatrics of Ted Stevens nor the refusal of Congress to cut their pork to help people who need immediate help, but I think it is necessary to have all the facts out in the open before labeling something completely useless. After all, standing by the facts (and pointing out and accepting the facts) is what separates conservatives from the deceit and knee-jerked ness that has become liberalism.
To: goonie4life9
I forgot to mention that expanding the waterfront would allow more cruise ships to dock (i.e., on a busy day, 5 or more cruise ships would be in Ketchikan. If they are all very large, at most three could dock, with the other two (or more) having to anchor in the channel, whch makes getting passengers to Ketchikan difficult. This does not make the passengers or cruise companies happy). Some cruise companies were threatening to bypass Ketchikan for other places that could handle the load. Losing this revenue would be devastating. On the other side, expanding the dock would allow even more than 6 cruise ships to be docked (i.e., not anchored in the channel) in Ketchikan (while I was there, the most cruise ships I ever saw at one time in one day is 6- my girlfriend tells me that is usually the most Ketchikan will get in one day). This would not only sustain current revenue, but increase it, without higher taxes (What a novel idea! I wish Washington state would realize there are more ways to get revenue than simply raising the taxes- but I guess that would be counterintuitive to the socialists "government is the provider of all" mentality).
Navigation: use the links below to view more comments.
first 1-20, 21-40, 41-60, 61 next last
Disclaimer:
Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual
posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its
management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the
exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.
FreeRepublic.com is powered by software copyright 2000-2008 John Robinson