Home » Fast track…

Comments

Fast track… — 11 Comments

  1. Is Sessions going to fillibuster?

    Cruz?
    Paul?

    Way more important than whatever Rand fillibustered before.

    And does anyone know if a secret law has ever been passed before?

  2. And the fact that not a single Dem Senator from a northern union state did not fillibuster this bill tells me the unions are completely impotent.

    That’s right. Impotent.

    Or maybe toothless.

    I’m talking to you Richard Trumpka.
    The Dems take your money, you get them elected and they flood the country with low wage illegals, screw you on NAFTA and can’t stop the screw job of this century.

  3. …does anyone know if a secret law has ever been passed before?

    Well, there was Obamacare (that they had to pass to find out what was in it). Does that count?

  4. The unions already had their deals backdoor. You just don’t know about it.

  5. Folks this is an enabling act for … bureaucrats.

    Alien bureaucrats at that!

    It also has a provision that allows Barry Soetoro to re-craft our immigration laws — de facto — by executive order.

    This pact transforms immigrants into tradable chattel, essentially goods.

    That’s why they’re in this ‘trade agreement.’

    And, I gather that this document will outlast the next presidency.

    It never seems to occur to our Congress that the opfor is going to game this deal — something brutal — and that America will suffer epic trade imports — beyond anything seen to date.

  6. Trade is a weapon used to weaken or empower a country. Soon America won’t have the super power status any more.

    Unless of course some naive village doodads think Americans are being “empowered” somehow with the Leadership actions.

  7. The Congressional Republicans apparently believe our next President will be a Republican, and they’ll be able to pull with the TPP what Obama did with the Patriot Act.

    This is going to be the biggest mistake ever if Hillary wins.

  8. The abject refusal to meet the responsibilities prescribed by the Constitution is ruining the USA. By all three houses:Executive, Legislative, and Judiciary. Yes, they are all human, but this has become a Perfect Storm. It is based on refusal to do one’s sworn duty.

  9. Spent the last decade mocking patriots, calling them neo-reactionary nationalists, and for some reason now we’re shocked that our modern exemplars of loyalty and fidelity are men like Edward Snowden and Chelsea Manning.

    Excise the organ, but demand the function remain. Soon we literally will be wondering why the men we geld never seem to bear children of their own.

  10. The Senate vote was interesting. Democrats representing union interests and a handful of constitution minded Republicans voted against it – Cruz, Paul, Sessions, Shelby, & Collins(?)

    This quote from Rand explains the union vote.

    Organized labor has been much more sensitive to the danger of government power and much more aware of ideological issues. Its spokesmen have fought the government in proper, morally confident terms whenever they saw a threat to their rights. (To name a few examples of such occasions: the attempt at labor conscription in World War II, the issue of U.S. contributions to the Soviet-dominated International Labor Organization, President Kennedy’s attempt to impose guidelines in the steel crisis of 1962.) Labor’s concern was aroused only in defense of its rights; still, whoever defends his own rights defends the rights of all. But labor was pursuing a contradictory policy, which could not be maintained for long. In many issues–notably in its support of welfare-state legislation–labor violated the rights of others and fertilized the growth of the government’s power. And, today, labor is in line to become the next major victim of advancing statism.

  11. Pingback:more here

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published.

HTML tags allowed in your comment: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <s> <strike> <strong>