No, not the good one, the current one, Biden: Agenda would come to ‘screeching halt’ under GOP:
Vice President Biden renewed his warning on Tuesday that the administration’s agenda would come to a “screeching halt” if Republicans win control of Congress.
Biden said he was right to warn that the administration’s work would be scuttled if the GOP manages to pick up enough seats in this fall’s elections to win back the House, or possibly, the Senate.
So, the Administration’s big-government agenda would be scuttled if Republicans make big gains? Sounds like something most Americans would like to see happen.
Haha, this is so true. I came across two articles in a row, from Slate and the Christian Science Monitor, which reflect the current night blindness of liberal self-reflection.
In this one — http://colorfulconservative.blogspot.com/2010/09/csm-thinks-nobody-cares-about-leftist.html — the organizers of a big counter-rally on Saturday can’t understand why the public doesn’t care about leftist protest anymore. Their conclusion is that liberals are too civilized for their own good. [laugh]
In this one — http://colorfulconservative.blogspot.com/2010/09/in-salon-case-of-liberal-pots-calling.html — Slate decries Rahm Emanuel as a “jerk” who screwed up the Democrats by not being liberal enough. According to Slate and Moulitsas, the liberals should be glad to see Emanuel gone.
I am stunned, now, that even Joe Biden is revealing the same lack of understanding about the public’s rejection of statism and nanny-state overbearance. It’s shocking.
As far as fiscal matters go, it’s difficult to see why this would be a bad thing Mr. Vice President.
Biden cannot grasp the stunning blow from the baseball bat that is pounding him into the ground.
We don’t want no stinkin’ ruling class. But, for Biden, that means he has to pretend harder to feel our pain and jack up the entitlements and talk more about Katy’s and Home Depot and do some “aw shucks” jive and act all common and rube like.
Joe, read my lips: You couldn’t qualify for honest employment. You are not very bright, Joe. You couldn’t afford your life style if you had to earn a pay check. You have “made it” in the three card monte world of politics which is no different than being a pay-day lender. Get it? Like a giant slug, you leave a trail of slime. We are tired of all that. Have a nice day.
This is a very psotive reason to vote Repbulican!!!! Thanks Joe
President Obama’s legislative agenda is so radical that he cannot pass something with super-majorities in the House & Senate because the Obama Democrat caucuses in both chambers are split with the looming midterms. Therefore, in the aftermath with even one chamber under control of the Republicans, Biden is correct; Obama’s Marxist agenda will come to a halt. This is what the people want.
If we want to go back to the root causes of this Bush depression,then vote Republican.
It all started and ended with BUSH/CHENEY fiscal and tax policies,and their launching two unfunded ,trillion dollar wars,topped off by givng the biggest tax breaks to the very richest friends and corporations,while raping the middle class,of money and jobs.
Proud Liberal, your information is wrong. The Housing bubble began with Freddie Mac & Fannie May buying into toxic loans with the sub-prime mortgages; this problem remains given the Democrats refused to deal with Fannie May & Freddie Mac due to their collusion by receiving campaign cash from the corrupt entities. Bush tried repeatedly to deal with the problem, but the Democrats refused.
Get your facts straight before you make any attacks. You come across more of a buffoon than anything else with your cliched, grandiose statements.
It all started and ended with BUSH/CHENEY fiscal and tax policies,and their launching two unfunded ,trillion dollar wars
Wrong, Kicked Puppy. Neither Bush or Cheney demanded that banks be forced by the government to loan to people who could not make payments.
Do you know who did? Your pathetic Barack Obama and his Barack Obama Party.
”These two entities — Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac — are not facing any kind of financial crisis,” said Representative Barney Frank of Massachusetts, the ranking Democrat on the Financial Services Committee. ”The more people exaggerate these problems, the more pressure there is on these companies, the less we will see in terms of affordable housing.”
Representative Melvin L. Watt, Democrat of North Carolina, agreed.
”I don’t see much other than a shell game going on here, moving something from one agency to another and in the process weakening the bargaining power of poorer families and their ability to get affordable housing,” Mr. Watt said.
Now spin. Or run away, as you invariably do.