excellent political analysis that gives me serious hope in the event of the complete repeal of the ppaca (obamacare, a term i really wish they’d tried harder to reclaim).
personally, i just hope if kennedy’s gonna do his bullshitty thing they at least answer the severability question like decent human beings—that is, the mandate that requires all citizens purchase insurance unconstitutional but sever it from the good bits of the bill. so many provisions in the ppaca are extremely important, like the pre-existing conditions and children on parents’ care clauses. those terrifying charts about how expensive it is just to be a woman in this country can go away forever, no matter what you think of the mandate.
this shit is important, and i hope every u.s. citizen is paying damn close attention right now.
“As we noted in our post about people just discovering ACTA this week, some had put together an odd White House petition, asking the White House to “end ACTA.” The oddity was over the fact that the President just signed ACTA a few months ago. What struck us as a more interesting question was the serious constitutional questions of whether or not Obama is even allowed to sign ACTA.
In case you haven’t been following this or don’t spend your life dealing in Constitutional minutiae, the debate is over the nature of the agreement. A treaty between the US and other nations requires Senate approval. However, there’s a “simpler” form of an international agreement, known as an “executive agreement,” which allows the President to sign the agreement without getting approval. In theory, this also limits the ability of the agreement to bind Congress. In practice… however, international agreements are international agreements. Some legal scholars have suggested that the only real difference between a treaty and an executive agreement is the fact that… the president calls any treaty an “executive agreement” if he’s unsure if the Senate would approve it. Another words, the difference is basically in how the President presents it.
That said, even if Obama has declared ACTA an executive agreement (while those in Europe insist that it’s a binding treaty), there is a very real Constitutional question here: can it actually be an executive agreement? The law is clear that the only things that can be covered by executive agreements are things that involve items that are solely under the President’s mandate. That is, you can’t sign an executive agreement that impacts the things Congress has control over. But here’s the thing: intellectual property, in Article 1, Section 8 of the Constitution, is an issue given to Congress, not the President. Thus, there’s a pretty strong argument that the president legally cannot sign any intellectual property agreements as an executive agreement and, instead, must submit them to the Senate.
It looks like folks have figured this out, and there’s now a new White House petition, demanding that ACTA be brought to the Senate before it can be ratified/signed by the US. This petition should be a lot more interesting than the other one if it gets enough signatures (so encourage people to sign, please!).”
(via techdirt.com)
Reblog this, because it’s MUCH more important and potentially effective than petitions asking President Obama to reverse his position.
Right now, Republicans are more anti-SOPA/PIPA (and by extension ACTA) than Democrats. If we question Obama’s authority to override Congress, they’re going to latch on and help us get this out of his hands, and at the very least they’ll bring it to public attention.
Believe it or not, Republicans are our biggest ally in the internet war right now, and this is the kind of politics fight they love most.
Scumbag Rick Perry
Asshat.
Unless he is executing fetuses… I am unsure what the correlation is exactly. xD
…………………
….okay imma use my indoor voice
the ‘pro-life’ main rhetoric is rooted in hating government-sanctioned ‘murder’, and in protecting the ‘sanctity of life’. people who are pro-‘life’ and simultaneously pro-death penalty are endorsing government-sanctioned murder of a different kind based on personal moral judgments
and sure, some of them can argue bullshit like ‘but babies are innocent and death penalty convicts aren’t’, but there are plenty of proven people we’ve killed in this country who were legitimately innocent. here, have ten of them.
rick perry is a flaming asshole. don’t defend him.
EDIT: unless you’re saying that fetuses aren’t actually life so even making fun of him that way doesn’t make sense, in which case, AWESOME YOU ARE CORRECT SORRY FOR MISINTERPRETING
