Community > Posts By > boredinaz06
Won't be long and Slimy Greid will have Johnny McShame and Lousy Graham backing him up on the Repulsicon side. They never met a war they didn't like.... even one against the American people! Well Graham and McCain are up for election this period. Arizona pretty pissed at McCain. South Carolina, that state went off the deep end with California a long time ago. And with Graham in the house, that's one seat the Dumbocrats don't have to waste money replacing. Arizona has a lot of snowbirds who like him and unfortunately can vote in my state. |
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I see a conflict of interest in what the BLM is doing, they've been taking the grazing fees by the ranchers then using that money to buy them out. Bundy saw this a long time ago and here we are today. Any more news on Reid and the Chinese governments solar farm on those ranch lands? |
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Why was this turd entering another city? Boiling Spring Lakes PD didn't call for any backup that I read about. |
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Edited by
boredinaz06
on
Fri 04/11/14 07:35 PM
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This guy they shot was a producer for Tosh.O |
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Ya'll ready to vote Libertarian yet? How's democrap and repulsicon house and senate workin out for ya? |
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I would want to see an openly heterosexual man in the Scouts either. I don't care whether the leader is gay or not just don't be flaunting your sexuality. I'd rather my kids learn about normal sex than degenerate sex. |
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I've signed several of these, this is a disgusting barbaric practice and CanaDUH should be ashamed for allowing it. |
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Good! |
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Edited by
boredinaz06
on
Wed 04/02/14 04:42 PM
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WASHINGTON Momentum is building behind what would be an unprecedented effort to amend the U.S. Constitution, through a little-known provision that gives states rather than Congress the power to initiate changes.
At issue is what's known as a "constitutional convention," a scenario tucked into Article V of the U.S. Constitution. At its core, Article V provides two ways for amendments to be proposed. The first which has been used for all 27 amendment to date�� requires two-thirds of both the House and Senate to approve a resolution, before sending it to the states for ratification. The Founding Fathers, though, devised an alternative way which says if two-thirds of state legislatures demand a meeting, Congress shall call a convention for proposing amendments. The idea has gained popularity among constitutional scholars in recent years -- but got a big boost last week when Michigan lawmakers endorsed it. Michigan matters, because by some counts it was the 34th state to do so. That makes two-thirds. In the wake of the vote, California Republican Rep. Duncan Hunter pressed House Speaker John Boehner on Tuesday to determine whether the states just crossed the threshold for this kind of convention. Like Michigan lawmakers, Hunter's interest in the matter stems from a desire to push a balanced-budget amendment -- something that could potentially be done at a constitutional convention. ��Based on several reports and opinions, Michigan might be the 34th state to issue such a call and therefore presents the constitutionally-required number of states to begin the process of achieving a balanced budget amendment,�� Hunter wrote. With the recent decision by Michigan lawmakers, it is important that the House and those of us who support a balanced budget amendment -- determine whether the necessary number of states have acted and the appropriate role of Congress should this be the case." If two-thirds of the states indeed have applied, the ball is presumably in Congress' court to call the convention. But Article V is rather vague, and it's ultimately unclear whether 34 states have technically applied. In the past, states like Oregon, Utah and Arizona have quietly voted to approve the provision in their legislature. But some of the 34 or so have rescinded their requests. Others have rescinded, and then re-applied. Alabama rescinded its request in 1988 but in 2011, lawmakers again applied for a convention related to an amendment requiring that the federal budget be balanced. It was a similar story in Florida in 2010. Louisiana rescinded in 1990 but lawmakers have tried several times, unsuccessfully, to reinstate the application since then. It's unclear whether the applications still count in these scenarios. Some constitutional scholars like Gregory Watson, an analyst in Texas, say once states ask, there may be no take-backs. “There is a disagreement among scholars as to whether a state that has approved an application may later rescind that application, Watson told The Washington Times. If it is ultimately adjudicated that a state may not rescind a prior application, then Ohio's 2013 application for a Balanced Budget Amendment convention would be the 33rd and Michigan's 2014 application would be the 34th on that topic. Others say if a state changes its mind, it can no longer be part of the 34. Even if the requisite number of states have applied, questions remain about how such a convention would work -- and whether, as Michigan wants, such a convention could be limited to only discussing a balanced-budget amendment. It still may be a long shot, but some analysts are warning about the unintended consequences of such a move. In Louisiana, Budget Project Policy Analyst Steve Spire argued against the state's resolution, saying the convention could permanently damage the nation'��s political system. The last time there was a successful amendment was more than four decades ago the 26th Amendment which changed the voting age to 18. States ratified the 27th Amendment on congressional pay increases, but it took more than 200 years to do it. |
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Just more ******** from the republicrats, business as usual. Big wigs in the GOP are going to everything possible to derail Rand Pauls run and to me that's reason enough to vote for him. |
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Topic:
march madness
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All you need is the Wildcats, the real ones from Arizona |
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15 Beers-Johnny Paycheck |
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Sick Of You-GWAR |
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Not sure about that one. Its a real bummer though, he was a real cool guy. |
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"And if you don't have to have them out, maybe you can wait until you're in a secure environment to use them." How about instead we put criminals like this in stocks in town square and let the public humiliate them with rotten veggies. Punishment =/= prevention. Intervention = prevention. People prefer to be happy than uhappy. Hating/attacking others is unhappy. Strangers wanting to be your friend is happy. The majority of buglaries are more circumstantial than by design, nobody tries to make themselves live such a way they need to rob someone to achieve something (food, drugs, expressionism, whatever). ie. you can't stop crime with penalties, you can stop it with intervention, and you can reduce its proliference by reducing criminal environments with fruitious ones of lawful endeavour. Things like muggings are a social statement, not an alien invasion. This should be obvious. Aint got time for your hippy mess, just throw hives of wasps at them. |
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Topic:
McDonald's over minimum wage
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McDonalds is a temp gig for high school kids and college students, not a career move. |
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"And if you don't have to have them out, maybe you can wait until you're in a secure environment to use them."
How about instead we put criminals like this in stocks in town square and let the public humiliate them with rotten veggies. |
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Topic:
Fred Phelps Dead
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People should throw hives of killer bees at the mourners at his service. |
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Topic:
A new element discovered!
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One of my favorites, here is a photo to go with it
A new element discovered named Pelosium! A major research institution has just announced the discovery of the densest element yet known to science. The new element has been named Pelosium. Pelosium has one neutron, 12 assistant neutrons, 75 deputy neutrons, and 223 assistant deputy neutrons, giving it an atomic mass of 311. These particles are held together by dark forces called morons, which are surrounded by vast quantities of lepton-like particles called peons. The symbol of Pelosium is PU. Pelosium's mass actually increases over time, as morons randomly interact with various elements in the atmosphere and become assistant deputy neutrons within the Pelosium molecule, leading to the formation of isodopes. This characteristic of moron-promotion leads some scientists to believe that Pelosium is formed whenever morons reach a certain quantity in concentration. |
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