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Re: It was bound to happen...
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If the act of taking the money back was not something that was allowed by the original agreement, then that's the base california would be fighting on. But they're not, so obviously they have the right to threaten taking back the bail out since california is not adhereing to the agreemnt they had. (And unfortunately, this is not unconstitutional.) Now, of course I don't have the paperwork or anything to back me up on that.. but this is why some states turned down the funds, and this is why california had every right to turn it down too. So once again, this problem rests on the irresponceability of the state, not of the federal government. |
Re: It was bound to happen...
You're missing my point. The details of the "agreement" should have been made BEFORE the stimulus was voted for. Once the fed has the money, it can be used to twist arms. Conditions like the ones the Federal government demanded of states should never have happened to begin with. Regardless of whether or not the state agreed to the terms, the very act that there were terms on such a detailed level is a breach of trust, IMO.
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The problem is, in learning from past mistakes... the current administration had no choice BUT to include more regulations on their bail outs. Because the fact is, if they just give states or companies or anybody money without any rules or regulations attached to it, the use of the funds will be abused. So what they did, is use an unfortunate fact from history to help mold how they handle money hand outs. Its not their fault that people took government money and ran with it before. So now they have to be more anal about how money is given out, but they are NOT EVEN CLOSE to abusing this power as I see it. Deciding how 1% of the money they loaned out wen they can decide 100% of it if they wanted to, is showing GREAT constraint and allowing the state to keep a lot of power. This is where you have to trust that two things happen. One is that the state government handles the majority (98%?) of the money that they were given correctly. Because if they don't its going to cause the fed to start showing even more oversight. And the other thing we have to trust is that the federal government doesn't unnessicarily step out of bounds and abuse this power. We can only hope that they continue to be very lose about their oversight on state financial policy as they are NOW. (I don't care what you say, 1% is not even worth this thread) This is why we will have to continue to vote into office people who are trustworthy, and not extremely greedy and power hungry. And people who are looking to the better benifit of everybody and not just their rich buddies who funded their campaign. |
Re: It was bound to happen...
Game, considering how this hoopla got started over funds directly related to UNION related workers, I fail to see how "buddies" aren't being serviced considering how unions were central to getting pres. Obama elected.
Bottom line: Governing power is being centralized and states have less. Business power is being nationalized, and the private investor and entrepreneur has less to the point legal contracts were essentially broken. As for the trust issue, let me put it this way... If Jesus Christ were president I would not trust him with any more power than was intended by the rule of law. I fail to see how these actions fit in with our current laws or even setting them aside, how this can be viewed as a moral victory. Once again, we'll see what happens, but this is not a good precedent to be setting for the rest of the Presidency. We're repeating ourselves at this point, so unless you have anything new, I'll retire from the conversation. |
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The government tried to give away money with little to no oversight, and that plan failed misserably. So now they have to take a new direction and make sure the money is used for what it was intended for in the first place. That's what lead to things being the way they are now. At the end of the day, the other option that Bush and Obama had in the time of crisis, was to do nothing. Guess we'll never know if sitting back and letting everything burn with no help would have worked. But last I checked both of our presidential canadates last run voted for a bail out... so t shows what we'd have been left with either way. Both Mccain and Obama would have tried to take action, and both of them would have recognized that what actions were taken before did NOT work without regulations. Quote:
If anything, Obama has been very wise about how both his forgien and financial policies have been planned out. At the end of the day though, I understand where our base disagreements stand, so I don't really care if you chose not to reply anymore. I just don't like that the right wing is trying to pin every world issue on Obama's shoulders even though many of the issues people have already existed long before he stepped foot into office. I remember when 9-11 happend, and EVERYONE gave bush a pass on it because of how soon into his presidency it happend. But with how the right wing is treating obama now, I bet if another attack like 9-11 happend tomorrow they would pin the reasoning RIGHT on Obama's shoulders, blaming him for stopping torture and for having a more open minded international policy. And you KNOW they would, only 5 months into his presedency. They would ignore everything Bush and Cheany did to piss the international community off, and all their failures.. and put it on Obama. But now I'm just ranting, I'd just say give it some time and we'll see what happens. |
Re: It was bound to happen...
Game, you've continually reinterrpreted my opinions on the California issue to fit with your idea of what the oppositition stands for. I don't think this is intentional, but probably a failure of articulation by the both of us.
My comments stand as they are, and I would encourage anyone who reads this thread to read the opinions as I've written them shared and not Game's version of them. Read the thread and make your own interpretations. There are considrable arguments on both sides. |
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Re: It was bound to happen...
Lets reverse the question then bond, do you think the money was given to California with no rules attached and no ability to oversee or recollect on the money if it was not used for some designated reasons? Honestly I think its a lot more naive to belive that the fed gave them money with no strings attached.
And as for your second quote, no I'm not talking about the amendment process. That's why its better to have context and reply to the whole post instead of quoting one paragraph. I'm talking about the fact that what Obama is doing is not illegal, and it probably should be. I personally don't think that states or the country in general should be able to take loans that compromises the power structure of the country. But unfortunately, its not illegal. Hasn't been, and probably won't be made illegal any time soon. As I discussed with strangler, the responceability here is placed squarely on the state's shoulder's because its its the state's job not to compromise its own power. Thus why people rejected government money in the first place. |
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Sorry if I interrupted the discussion. |
Re: It was bound to happen...
Oh, the discussion is over on my part. I've said my piece. Please continue. :)
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Re: It was bound to happen...
It is my opinion that if the Union had a contract which was violated by the state of California, then they damn well should have the money brought back to them. A contract is a contract and thats some serious bullshit if they can just simply violate that contract with no repurcussions.
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Beyond that, it is not the in the Executive branch's power to enforce contracts. That falls with the judicial branch. Something tells me that if the state of California really couldn't break the union contracts, this federal interference wouldn't have been necessary. The union could have simply taken the case to court and the action would have been stayed until trial if they had a case. But that is exactly what we're talking about here: The executive brach's assumption of powers that they do not have nor are entitled to. Man, out schools need to do WAY better job of teaching civics... |
Re: It was bound to happen...
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For Bond and Strangler: http://www3.signonsandiego.com/stori...imu/?uniontrib Just posting a site where the focus isn't on the money being taken back, but on the fact that california violated the terms of the stimulus package. I've found the terms for multiple states, but when I search california its cluttered with news stories about how california violated it and there's not many actual government sites listed. However, the fact that there is terms for it means that there are rules attached to the money. Rules that can be broken, and that could lead to the fed taking action. The state still has the full power here, its just that they agreed to taking the money and violated the terms of the reasoning behind them taking the money. And the reason the state took the money is because the state made a ton of stupid decisions in the past and got to the point where they needed help. |
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I posted only to clarify a point about executive powerrs related to judicial powers, not to rehash the same tired arguments. |
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Am I extorting the state when I loan them money to build highways with? And if they use the money for something different, and agreed that those are the terms, am I really guilty if I take the money back (and this is part of the pre written agreement)? The answer is no. |
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