I saw an article this week about how the House of
Representatives passed another anti-abortion bill;
this one to further strengthen the ban on public funding for the procedure.
Now, the merits of this particular bill aside, this kind of
thing further demonstrates what’s wrong with politics in the last five
years. (And isn’t it funny how it
coincides with having an African-American president, huh?) What I’m talking about is repeatedly passing
bills in one chamber (almost always the House) that have zero chance of
becoming law.
Perhaps our fine congressional leaders should go back and
review their episodes of Schoolhouse Rock, and learn how a bill becomes a
law.
The Democratic-controlled Senate also has to approve the
bill. Then after House and Senate
leaders meet to work out the differences, it has to be signed by the President.
So this bill will not pass the Senate, (nor will it even come up for a vote),
and if it somehow did, the President would veto it.
When the House passes bills on these super-partisan issues
like abortion, birth control, tax cuts, and most often, health care, it’s all
done strictly for show. The Congressmen
want to be able to go home and tell the voters, “I voted for all of these things multiple times, so please send me back
to I can keep on voting for them. If it
wasn’t for those miserable Democrats, the bills would actually become law.”
As long as they’re bemoaning the state of these D.O.A.
bills, they don’t have to explain why they keep funding high-end tax cuts and
subsidies for the richest companies on the planet. When have you ever heard a Republican insist that farm or oil
subsidies need to be “paid for” through other cuts? But unemployment benefits?
Food stamps? School lunch
programs or after-care? They want
offsets, because after all, the people who would benefit are really just a
bunch of lousy “takers.”
Anyway, repeatedly passing useless bills is 100% politics
and it accomplishes nothing for anyone, except for the Congressmen trying to
keep their own jobs. It renders the
political process inert, and doesn’t fund a single project, put a single
American to work, or make anyone’s life better.
Sending bill after bill that revokes the very laws the other
side worked exceedingly hard to pass is an exercise in futility. It just feels good for them to do it;
essentially, it’s political masturbation.
But that’s what you get when you elect so many jerk-offs.
I hope 2014 proves to be a good year for you and yours.
ReplyDeleteThanks, Jerry. You too.
Deleteand the beat goes on... Farm subsidies and food stamp cuts now go to the Senate.
ReplyDeleteI read that they backed off the food stamps cuts, at least severe degree that they were. (Although it still shows exactly whose side the Republicans are on; I don’t see how anyone that’s not wealthy can vote for them.) I don’t mind a little horse-trading… that’s inevitable. It’s those pointless bills that repeal an item the other side has passed, which have zero chance of going anywhere.
DeleteThey are a bunch of jag offs. I'm just irritated with how shitty our government has become. Maybe they've always been asshats, but gosh darn it, media on demand reminds me often of how shitty they areas humans.
ReplyDeleteI think they've always been asshats, but they were pragmatic asshats, who didn't threaten to blow up the whole thing if they didn't get their way.
DeleteYou got that right, Dude. Even back in Nixon's day, both parties could work together. Who ever thought we'd be calling those the "good ol' days?"
DeleteTip O'Neil never held the country hostage because he didn't like what Nixon was doing.
ReplyDelete