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Old 01-20-11, 05:12 PM   #1
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Old 01-20-11, 05:22 PM   #2
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This always irks me

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Finally, though, Lewis’s statement begs the question: what happens of many people’s “pursuit of happiness” doesn’t include buying health insurance
No, you EEJITS! It doesn't BEG the question, is RAISES the question. Learn the difference.
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Old 01-20-11, 06:01 PM   #3
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That is a commonly misused term.

It aint the way to speak English good.
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Old 01-20-11, 06:16 PM   #4
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Somebody slept through grade school history class.
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Old 01-20-11, 06:25 PM   #5
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Uh Representative Lewis. The Pursuit of Happiness aint in the Constitution. It happens to be in the Declaration of Independence. The DOI may be an important historical document, it is not a legal document and really has no legal standing as a source of "rights".

Now if he wanted to reference "Promote the General Welfare" he might have a point.

Why can't we have a test on the constitution that all our congresscritters must pass?

Doctors need to be certified, lawyers need to be certified. But congresscritters, probably the most powerful group of people in the nation.....no test.
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Old 01-20-11, 07:13 PM   #6
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Originally Posted by Platapus View Post
Doctors need to be certified, lawyers need to be certified. But congresscritters, probably the most powerful group of people in the nation... no test.
That's what scares me.
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Old 01-20-11, 08:52 PM   #7
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Now if he wanted to reference "Promote the General Welfare" he might have a point.
I've never understood that argument from either a legal or a philosophical perspective. It hardly seems likely that the founders, after arriving at a compromise that took so many steps to limit the national government by granting it only the enumerated powers, would then throw one thing in there that you can cram anything through.

In any other legal argument, that would never fly because it is obviously contrary to the intent of the law, but it's allowed as justification for legislation because legal precedent was set by two major cases - Marbury v Madison and Missouri v Holland, neither one of which makes any damn sense whatsoever as far as judgements are concerned, but were supported by propnents of the "Living Constitution", even though the term itself wasn't coined until the 1920's, I think.

The argument is that the Constitution was intended to be a document that would maintain contemporary relevance, and that is true, but that's why there is an amendment process. There's also a good reason why that process is so difficult. I simply cannot fathom how any reasonable person would believe that the concepts of "enumerated powes" and "all other powers not listed belong to the states and the people" leave some kind of room for interpretation unless they just don't care what the Constitution says and are too short on integrity to just say it.

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Why can't we have a test on the constitution that all our congresscritters must pass?
Most of them would pass it. Most of them are legal professionals who know damn well what the constitution stipulates because constitutional law is a required area of study for just about any legal subset, unless you're specializing in foreign law or something. Even with this knowledge, they are still possessed of the desire to use our founding principles as a doormat because the system rewards them for doing things that make them popular and well-funded; like giving free stuff to idiots with a vote and helping lobbyists for companies that are too immoral and/or worthless to compete properly.

Even worse, then congress would be limited to lawyers, and we have a preponderance of them as it is.

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Doctors need to be certified, lawyers need to be certified. But congresscritters, probably the most powerful group of people in the nation.....no test.
I think I have a good test for them. I suggest that we take away all their power except what is specifically enumerated, and then we pass a balanced-budget amendment that requires them to stay in the black and also limits taxation except in cases of war or national distress. I'd even be happy to accept current levels of taxation with the exception of the corporate tax, which needs to be way lower, or better yet, gone. The market is powerful, and the day will come when the standard of living outpaces the tax rate, just as long as it doesn't get higher and the dollar isn't destroyed by abundance and bad credit.

That would keep them honest because nobody is going to throw money or time at a Congressman who has no power other than that which is already clearly outlined and has no money to give out. Problem solved.

As long as I'm dreaming, I'd also throw in a requirement that any congressperson who votes for war must have at least one serving immediate family member in combat arms, abdicate and enlist themselves, or have no family at all. That ought to fix the whole "uneccesarry wars and international resentment" problem in about 5 seconds flat.

Finally, I'd pay them more. Quite a bit more. Yeah, you just heard me say that. Good salaries attract good, skilled workers, and we need them. Even better, they discourage attempts to find other sources of income. My hope is that the increased pay will offset the loss of power and that some actually skilled and properly motivated civil servants will be incentivized to throw their hats in the ring. Good companies pay exorbitant sums for CEOs because there is no other way to attract competent people. We could use a Warren Buffet or two at the helm of a newly efficasized (hmm..that's not a word, is it?) national government.

Of course, were it in my power, I'd probably do even more, such as abolishing a lot of expensive agencies that do little for what we pay for them and aren't constitutionally mandated. No entitlements, I think, not without more reform. I'd abolish the Fed, for sure.

Not ever going to happen, but I think that overall this is a really good plan, though I'm not sure on the pay part. Maybe a new system of districting and losing the "winner-takes-all" system would achieve the same result at less cost. No test required and no twisting of the law feasible; the system gets the right people into power with minimal effort involved, and even if it breaks, they can't do much harm.
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Old 01-20-11, 09:02 PM   #8
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Originally Posted by UnderseaLcpl View Post
As long as I'm dreaming, I'd also throw in a requirement that any congressperson who votes for war must have at least one serving immediate family member in combat arms, abdicate and enlist themselves, or have no family at all. That ought to fix the whole "uneccesarry wars and international resentment" problem in about 5 seconds flat.
Stop me if I've mentioned this before but have you read For us the living? In that book any vote for war (except in case of the US being attacked) must be voted on by all citizens. If the resolution passes those who voted 'Yes' are required to volunteer, those of abstain are the second wave of draftees, and those who voted 'No' are the third wave of draftees. Under that system the US never declared war on anyone (although it fought a few defensive wars, one against Brazil I think).
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Old 01-20-11, 09:42 PM   #9
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Originally Posted by Platapus View Post
Uh Representative Lewis. The Pursuit of Happiness aint in the Constitution. It happens to be in the Declaration of Independence. The DOI may be an important historical document, it is not a legal document and really has no legal standing as a source of "rights".

Now if he wanted to reference "Promote the General Welfare" he might have a point.

Why can't we have a test on the constitution that all our congresscritters must pass?

Doctors need to be certified, lawyers need to be certified. But congresscritters, probably the most powerful group of people in the nation.....no test.
Sarah Palin proved that point...
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Old 01-20-11, 11:09 PM   #10
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Originally Posted by TLAM Strike View Post
Stop me if I've mentioned this before but have you read For us the living?
I know you haven't mentioned it to me, personally. I think I may have read it but that would have been years ago. I don't even remember what it was about. In all honesty, I thought you were referring to "We, the Living" for a second, there.


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In that book any vote for war (except in case of the US being attacked) must be voted on by all citizens. If the resolution passes those who voted 'Yes' are required to volunteer, those of abstain are the second wave of draftees, and those who voted 'No' are the third wave of draftees. Under that system the US never declared war on anyone (although it fought a few defensive wars, one against Brazil I think).
Okay, I redact my previous statement. I never read that book. I had to look it up to see what you were talking about. In fact, I don't think I've ever seen it, but it doesn't surprise me that someone like Heinlein would come up with a similar idea long before I ever did. But it isn't as if I didn't steal most of my favorite ideas from other people. I just didn't steal them from Heinlein in this case.

My only problem with it is Heinlein's idea it is that it is addressing the problem in a bass-ackwards way. We already have an all-volunteer force, and it is the most elite military in the world in terms of total force. There is absolutely no need to call up draftees, and conscripts are usually garbage anyway. It takes someone who is not both just willing and ready to fight, but also educated enough to make a good soldier. By contrast, making the politicians sacrifice something from the outset ensures that only very just wars will be fought, and they will have a plentiful supply of recruits who are both dedicated and willing to die for ideals, not just ASVAB-waivers and droputs recruited from the dregs of society that joined because they were too stupid or had no alternative.

I'd rather that the recruiting requirements were more strict and that the military was a more professional force, and you get that automatically when force requirements are met by quality instead of quantity, something which naturally happens when politicians are reluctant to engineer wars.
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Old 01-20-11, 11:42 PM   #11
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Originally Posted by UnderseaLcpl View Post
My only problem with it is Heinlein's idea it is that it is addressing the problem in a bass-ackwards way. We already have an all-volunteer force, and it is the most elite military in the world in terms of total force. There is absolutely no need to call up draftees, and conscripts are usually garbage anyway.
Well that book was written in a different era. It was written just before WWII where the general idea of the military was to have a tiny standing force (mostly reservists) augmented by conscripts after war broke out.
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Old 01-21-11, 02:34 AM   #12
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Originally Posted by Platapus View Post
Doctors need to be certified, lawyers need to be certified. But congresscritters, probably the most powerful group of people in the nation.....no test.
Yea - but what would we certify em as??????

I vote for
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Old 01-21-11, 03:39 AM   #13
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Me no. I'm stuck with these jerks:

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Old 01-21-11, 07:49 PM   #14
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.....conscripts are usually garbage anyway.
I am sure our Korean War and Viet Nam veterans appreciate that attitude.

I can only speak for myself, but I have the utmost respect for our conscripts. They served their country when they were needed and served it honourably.

Ps. Thanks for calling my Father and my Uncles garbage.
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Old 01-21-11, 08:06 PM   #15
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My father was a conscript and didn't want to crawl into VC tunnels anymore then the guy who enlisted and volunteered to fight in Vietnam.
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