Tuesday, October 01, 2013

Harry Reid admits the entire populace of the nation is being punished by ACA

THe House passed a bill to fund the govt and REMOVE any EXCESS subsidy for the high paid staffs AND enforcing that Congress and Senate NOT be exempted from Obamacare.
Reid’s reaction …
“This time the House has attached a poison pill that would punish 16,000 congressional staff,” he said.

Read more: http://thehill.com/homenews/senate/325679-senate-quickly-rejects-house-latest-funding-measure#ixzz2gTEdjX3l
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So the staff is getting punished by having to live by the same rules as the rest of us? Doesn’t that mean we are all being punished as well?
And then the coup de grace…
“We are not going to mess around with ObamaCare, no matter what they do,” Reid said.

“They should get a life,” he said of House conservatives. “It is the law, declared constitutional. The exchanges are coming on board tomorrow.”
So a look at some other constitutional laws of the land ..
Plessy v. Ferguson (1896), is a landmark United States Supreme Court decision in the jurisprudence of the United States, upholding the constitutionality of state laws requiring racial segregation in public facilities under the doctrine of “separate but equal”.
The decision was handed down by a vote of 7 to 1 with the majority opinion written by Justice Henry Billings Brown and the dissent written by Justice John Marshall Harlan. “Separate but equal” remained standard doctrine in U.S. law until its repudiation in the 1954 Supreme Court decision Brown v. Board of Education.
The National Prohibition Act, known informally as the Volstead Act, was enacted to carry out the intent of the Eighteenth Amendment, which established prohibition in the United States. The Anti-Saloon League's Wayne Wheelerconceived and drafted the bill, which was named for Andrew Volstead, Chairman of the House Judiciary Committee, who managed the legislation.
Dred Scott v. Sandford, 60 U.S. 393 (1857), was a landmark decision by the U.S. Supreme Court in which the Court held that African Americans, whether slave or free, could not be American citizens and therefore had no standing to sue in federal court,[2][3] and that the federal government had no power to regulate slavery in the federal territories acquired after the creation of the United States.

1 comment:

Always On Watch said...

Can the man even listen to what spewing out of his mouth?