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October 28, 2010

Accepting their reality

Obama, at an interview with a group of bloggers:

Q: Mr. President, you've said that you want to work with Republicans after the election, but there's probably a pretty good chance that they're not going to advance with you. Is there sort of a breaking point you have of where you try to work with them and they just refuse to budge, which they've indicated so far? Is there a breaking point for you just like you're going to have to go off on your own and find a way around them?

THE PRESIDENT: Look, the -- I'm a pretty stubborn guy when it comes to, on the one hand, trying to get cooperation. I don't give up just because I didn't get cooperation on this issue; I'll try the next issue. If the Republicans don't agree with me on fiscal policy, maybe they'll agree with me on infrastructure. If they don't agree with me on infrastructure, I'll try to see if they agree with me on education.

So I'm just going to keep on trying to see where they want to move the country forward.

....
I'm President and not king. And so I've got to get a majority in the House and I've got to get 60 votes in the Senate to move any legislative initiative forward.

Now, during the course -- the 21 months of my presidency so far, I think we had 60 votes in the Senate for seven months, six? I mean, it was after Franken finally got seated and Arlen had flipped, but before Scott Brown won in Massachusetts. So that's a fairly narrow window. So we're right at the number, and that presumes that there is uniformity within the Democratic caucus in the Senate -- which, Barbara, you've been around a while. You know that not every Democrat in the Democratic caucus agrees with me or agrees with each other in terms of complicated issues like health care.

So it is important for me, then, to work every angle I can to get as much done as I can. If we had a parliamentary system, then this critique would make sense to me because you do as much as you can to negotiate with the other side, but at a certain point you've got your platform and you move it forward and your party votes for it.

But that's not the system of government we have. We've got a different system. I will say that the damage that the filibuster I think has done to the workings of our democracy are at this point pretty profound. The rate at which it's used just to delay and obstruct is unprecedented. But that's the reality right now.

And then there's this, at least:

Q On that same issue, because a lot of progressives -- and you said you're not the king -- well, a lot of progressives feel that senators, especially in the minority they think -- we call them the House of Lords.

...

And can we get -- or are you for any of the bills that are out there to support -- to change this rule that is paralyzing the administration?

THE PRESIDENT: Well, I've got to be careful about not looking like I'm big-footing Congress. We've got separate branches of government. The House and the Senate have their own rules. And they are very protective of those prerogatives.

I will say that as just an observer of our political process that if we do not fix how the filibuster is used in the Senate, then it is going to be very difficult for us over the long term to compete in a very fast moving global environment.

What keeps me up at night is China, Germany, India, Brazil -- they're moving. They make decisions, we're going to pursue clean energy, and the next thing you know they've cornered half the clean energy market; we're going to develop high-speed rail in the span of five years -- suddenly they've got high-speed rail lines going; we're going to promote exports, here's what we're going to do -- boom, they get going.

And if we can't sort of execute on key issues that will determine our competitiveness over the long term, we're going to fall behind -- we are going to fall behind.

And the filibuster is not part of the Constitution. The filibuster, if you look at the history of it, may have arisen purely by accident because somebody didn't properly apply Robert's Rules of Procedure and forgot to get a provision in there about what was required to close debate. And folks figured out very early, this could be a powerful tool. It was used as a limited tool throughout its history. Sadly, the primary way it was used was to prevent African Americans from achieving civil rights.

But setting aside that sordid aspect of its history, it was used in a very limited fashion. The big debates, the big changes that we had historically around everything from establishing public schools to the moon launch to Social Security, they weren't subject to the filibuster. And I'm sympathetic to why the minority wants to keep it. And in fairness, Democrats, when we were in the minority, used it on occasion to blunt actions that we didn't think were appropriate by the Bush administration.

Q On occasion.

THE PRESIDENT: And in fairness, there were a whole bunch of folks here who were already writing blogs at the time who were saying, filibuster, block them, do anything you can to stop them. And so if we're going to call for reform, it's got to be with open eyes and an understanding that that also means that if Republicans are in power, it's easier for them to move their agendas forward.

But my general view is, what that does at least is it opens it up to serious public debate. Things don't get bogged down in the kinds of procedural nonsense that makes it just hard for us to do business. I mean, during the financial crisis, half my Treasury slots weren't filled -- couldn't get them filled. And this is a time when we were worried that the entire financial system was melting down. So that's -- I believe it's something that we've got to take seriously.

All right?


By fnord12 | October 28, 2010, 1:06 PM | Liberal Outrage | Comments (2) | Link



October 26, 2010

Notable quotables for $500

"I hate toys. They stare at you and you have to make up games for them." - min


By fnord12 | October 26, 2010, 7:22 PM | My stupid life | Comments (2) | Link



October 25, 2010

Hydro-man's dog killed

Link:

A Hydro man sprung his poodle from the pound using a lawn tractor and bolt cutters, only to land himself behind bars with no one to rescue him. And while he was in jail, his dog was put back in the pound and euthanized.

By fnord12 | October 25, 2010, 7:02 PM | Ummm... Other?| Link



October 22, 2010

Marvel Sales

August.


By fnord12 | October 22, 2010, 11:33 AM | Comics| Link



October 19, 2010

Mr. T

By John Byrne. From the lettercol for FF #261.


By fnord12 | October 19, 2010, 11:04 PM | Comics| Link



For All You Library Geeks

I miss card catalogs. When i was a kid, i made one of all the books i owned. Looking things up electronically just isn't the same.

By min | October 19, 2010, 2:09 PM | Ummm... Other?| Link



I want to vote for Jimmy McMillan of the "Rent Is Too Damn High Party"

Might have to move to NY.


By fnord12 | October 19, 2010, 9:48 AM | Liberal Outrage & Ummm... Other? | Comments (2) | Link



The Secret to Success - A Squeaky Clean Vajayjay

An actual ad in Women's Day magazine.

Link

And ladies, don't forget to pack your feminine cleansing cloths for that middle of the day freshness pick-me-up.

h/t to wnkr


By min | October 19, 2010, 8:17 AM | Ummm... Other? | Comments (1) | Link



October 17, 2010

Valley Girls in the 25th Century


By fnord12 | October 17, 2010, 7:04 PM | Comics & Video Games| Link



October 13, 2010

Pat Sajak: Public employees shouldn't be allowed to vote.

Seriously.


By fnord12 | October 13, 2010, 10:08 PM | Liberal Outrage| Link



October 12, 2010

Grumpy Old Men

The poll of 2,000 Britons found those over 50 laughed far less than their younger counterparts and complained far more.
...
One reason for the decline in mirth might be the lack of joke-telling skills. The study found the average Briton only knows two jokes.

Link

I'm already there, baby. Stupid kids on my lawn, being all loud. Grr.


By min | October 12, 2010, 2:16 PM | Ummm... Other?| Link



Now Who's Got Monkey Toes?

I'm extremely impressed and a little skeeved at the same time. Toe socks. *shudder*

An armless pianist who plays with his toes has won the first series of China's version of the internationally popular television talent show "China's Got Talent."

Liu Wei, 23, who lost both his arms at age 10 when he was electrocuted during a game of hide-and-seek, defeated 7-year-old standup comedian Zhang Fengxi at the final on Sunday at the Shanghai Stadium, the Shanghai Daily reported.

The pianist, from Beijing, who taught himself to play the piano at age 18, impressed the audience with his performance of "You're Beautiful," singing and using his feet to play the piano.

Article link


By min | October 12, 2010, 12:10 PM | Ummm... Other? | Comments (1) | Link



October 11, 2010

Some things just can't be included in a MAME cabinet

Museum of Soviet Arcade Games


By fnord12 | October 11, 2010, 2:15 PM | Video Games| Link



October 8, 2010

Mike vs. Guitar Center

Skelly Gang leader Mike Toscarelli entered Guitar Center's Drum Off contest last night, and won the first round! Awesome. We were there to get the performance on film:


By fnord12 | October 8, 2010, 10:09 AM | Music| Link



October 1, 2010

What If...

Mega Shark and Giant Octopus had a baby?

You'd end up with Sharktopus!

Link

Remember when Syfy was SciFi and didn't suck mega monkey balls? Ok. I don't either so much. But c'mon. Farscape was decent.


By min | October 1, 2010, 1:21 PM | Movies | Comments (2) | Link



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