Kathianne
05-03-2010, 05:30 AM
The Bullying National Party=DNC
Not a whine rather an observation. Anyone with a bit of the brains God gave them know that bullies are based on insecurity and inferiority. The Democrat Party is fully invested in the strategy:
http://weeklystandard.com/articles/bully-party
The Bully Party
When bipartisan debate fails, Dems fall back on a knuckle-sandwich approach to politics.
BY MATTHEW CONTINETTI
May 10, 2010, Vol. 15, No. 32
SHARETHIS
The omens are everywhere. Iran is close to obtaining nuclear weapons. The eurozone is in crisis. The U.S. unemployment rate is near 10 percent. America’s social insurance programs threaten to bankrupt the country. And—most unusual—the Washington Nationals are above .500.
But rest easy. None of this is distracting the Obama administration and congressional Democrats from their fulltime occupation: demonizing the political opposition.
Consider the debate over financial reform. This is a complex issue where both parties share the same (perhaps unachievable) goal: preventing another systemic financial crisis that requires massive taxpayer bailouts. And free-market conservatives have real concerns about Senator Chris Dodd’s legislation. Take, for example, the proposed resolution authority’s credit guarantees for large, complex financial institutions on the brink of failure. The worry is that the market will interpret these loopholes as signs the government will never allow such firms to go under. If that’s the case, Too Big to Fail lives on....
Not a whine rather an observation. Anyone with a bit of the brains God gave them know that bullies are based on insecurity and inferiority. The Democrat Party is fully invested in the strategy:
http://weeklystandard.com/articles/bully-party
The Bully Party
When bipartisan debate fails, Dems fall back on a knuckle-sandwich approach to politics.
BY MATTHEW CONTINETTI
May 10, 2010, Vol. 15, No. 32
SHARETHIS
The omens are everywhere. Iran is close to obtaining nuclear weapons. The eurozone is in crisis. The U.S. unemployment rate is near 10 percent. America’s social insurance programs threaten to bankrupt the country. And—most unusual—the Washington Nationals are above .500.
But rest easy. None of this is distracting the Obama administration and congressional Democrats from their fulltime occupation: demonizing the political opposition.
Consider the debate over financial reform. This is a complex issue where both parties share the same (perhaps unachievable) goal: preventing another systemic financial crisis that requires massive taxpayer bailouts. And free-market conservatives have real concerns about Senator Chris Dodd’s legislation. Take, for example, the proposed resolution authority’s credit guarantees for large, complex financial institutions on the brink of failure. The worry is that the market will interpret these loopholes as signs the government will never allow such firms to go under. If that’s the case, Too Big to Fail lives on....