Category Archives: U.S. Congress

Torture in Obama’s Hood

In our nation’s capital, unborn babies can be legally tortured to death right up to the moment of natural birth. Only five nations in the world have a legal policy that is this extreme.


Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2296208510056011884JEKyms

In our nation’s capital, the responsibility for legislating abortion restrictions lies with Congress and the President. So far, 194 legislators have sponsored the District of Columbia Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act (H.R. 3803).


Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2650298570056011884DawCYK

Abortion – This is a Dismemberment Abortion [3:46]

Source:
Congress Told Nation’s Capital OKs Abortions Until Birth
by Steven Ertelt | Washington, DC | LifeNews.com | 5/17/12 5:51 PM
http://www.lifenews.com/2012/05/17/congress-told-nations-capital-oks-abortions-until-birth/

1 Comment

Filed under Abortion, U.S. Congress

Nancy tells a whopper

Click on graphics to embiggen.

Q. Is Nancy Pelosi lying?
A. Are her lips moving?

Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2482032680056011884qINOzn

In that interview, Nancy Pelosi also said that the current Congress is “a mockery” whose current 17% approval rating is well deserved. The words GLASS HOUSE come to mind. Gallup says it is normal for split Congresses (like the 112th) to have lower ratings than one-party dominant Congresses (like the 111th).

Yet at a comparable time (i.e., the early spring of the 2d year) in the 111th Democrat Supermajority Congress’ tenure, when 46% of Americans were registered Democrat or leaned Democrat, Nancy Pelosi’s Congress clocked in with a pathetic 16% approval rating.

Forty percent, Ms Pelosi? You wish!


Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2446091510056011884OskHJk

If you like this, you might also enjoy @ https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/02/09/democrat-rule-book/

1 Comment

Filed under Democrats, Nancy Pelosi, National Debt, U.S. Congress

Joe makes the baby cry

Chrissy’s Site Bites @ http://news.webshots.com/photo/2535531260056011884FJKxhE

Click on graphic to embiggen.

Sources: www.youtube.com/watch?&v=ZDl6lw2VcVM

http://www.thebitteramericans.com/2012/01/national-debt-chart-circulating-on.html

If you like this, you might also enjoy @ https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/04/11/obamas-rate-of-debt-increase-is-three-times-bushs/

8 Comments

Filed under Barack Obama, Budget, Democrats, Joe Biden, National Debt, U.S. Congress

Obama’s rate of debt increase is THREE TIMES Bush’s

July 3, 2008: The day before Independence Day, Candidate Obama said that it was irresponsible and unpatriotic of Bush to allow the national debt to rise by $4 Trillion over his 8 years in office. What is three times worse than irresponsible and unpatriotic? Criminal and treasonous?

In 2008, Obama said that Bush added $4 Trillion to the national debt “all by his lonesome.” Not that he wants to take sole credit for the $6 Trillion that’s piled on since he moved into the Oval Office. We wouldn’t want to confuse the issues by noting that it’s Congress that writes the budget or that it was the Democrat-controlled Congress that took over in 2007 that did most of the debting Obama attributed to Bush.

At least, under Bush, Congress actually produced a budget. The Democrats who have been in charge of the Senate since Obama took office don’t much bother themselves about doing what is undoubtedly their single most important job and something they are paid handsomely to perform … but don’t, because they’re way too busy blaming the Republican minority for keeping Obama from creating Ameritopia. This is also what Obama does whenever the debt comes up. Blame Bush. Blame Republicans.

It’s astonishing how much raw power one acquires simply by checking R on a voter registration card, isn’t it?

Republican Bush managed to add $4 Trillion to the national debt “all by his lonesome” and the Republican minority under Obama has managed to block just about everything poor old Obama and his good-hearted Democrat majority have tried to do over the past three years!

I really must look in the back of my closet. Seems to me, there should be a red, white and blue Spandex body suit back there somewhere. I wonder if it has a cape.

Chrissy’s Site Bites: http://news.webshots.com/photo/2164541450056011884xjAcKS
Click on graphic to embiggen.

If you like this, you might also enjoy https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/02/21/stop-the-insanity/

1 Comment

Filed under Barack Obama, Budget, Democrats, Economy, George W. Bush, National Debt, Republicans, U.S. Congress, U.S. Senate

Obama lies like a rug

Click on graphics to embiggen.


Chrissy’s Site Bites: http://news.webshots.com/photo/2942032520056011884oEonFp


Chrissy’s Site Bites: http://news.webshots.com/photo/2491778740056011884SgLNfw

Chrissy’s Site Bites: http://news.webshots.com/photo/2985766520056011884nUPKJQ

Obama also reminded Conservatives that we have complained about judicial activism, as if should should automatically agree with him that SCOTUS should keep their mitts off ObamaCare. But the judicial activism that we abhor is justices making rulings based on how they personally feel about an issue, rather than on what the Constitution of the United States says about it … like this guy: https://polination.wordpress.com/2012/03/24/another-supreme-who-ignored-the-law/

SOURCES:
President Obama attacks Supreme Court on health care – April 2, 2012
www.youtube.com/watch?&v=WO1UiWrt_rE

Political Word Games By Thomas Sowell – Apr 4, 2012
http://townhall.com/columnists/thomassowell/2012/04/04/political_word_games

Appeals court fires back at Obama’s comments on health care case By Jan Crawford – April 3, 2012
http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-504564_162-57408827-504564/appeals-court-fires-back-at-obamas-comments-on-health-care-case/

8 Comments

Filed under Barack Obama, Constitution, Democrats, Law, Obamacare, Republicans, Supreme Court, U.S. Congress

Say good-bye to Gerry Mander!

Will wonders never cease!  Following the 2010 census, DEEP BLUE New York was forced to surrender two of its 29 seats in the United States Congress.  (That means, we also will have 2 fewer electoral votes this fall, thank God.)

Following the utter failure of our State pols to agree where the new districts should go, a panel of federal judges took over and decided for them.

And none too soon, I might add, seeing as New York candidates for Congress have to begin collecting signatures to qualify for a spot on the state’s primary ballot and kinda sorta need to know what districts they’re going to be running in. Duh.

Amazingly enough, the judges decided to go with compact, common-sense districts, putting people together based on geography and population density, rather than on how they’re likely to vote or on where the current incumbents happen to live.

The new map eliminated the mid-Hudson Valley district represented by retiring Democrat Maurice D. Hinchey, as well the Brooklyn-Queens district formerly represented by Democrat slime-bucket Anthony Weiner.

Weiner’s special election replacement, Republican Bob Turner, is seeking the Republican nomination to challenge Democrat Senator Kirsten E. Gillibrand who occupies the seat Hillary Clinton vacated to become Secretary of State.

I’m feeling very schadenfreude-ish* over the fact that The Socialist Republican of Ithacastan is no longer gerrymandered to benefit the red diaper babies and effete elite ivory tower types, but instead is grouped with the rural, predominantly Conservative and Republican, wine-and-dairy counties of southwestern New York. Hee hee hee!

*Would you believe? Schadenfreude-ish is actually in the WordPress spell check dictionary! LOL I spelled it wrong at first, but it’s correct now, in case you’re ever wanting to use it. Such a cool word, dontchathink?


Chrissy’s Site Bites: http://news.webshots.com/photo/2447037180056011884NEcKfl
Click on graphic to embiggen.

5 Comments

Filed under Elections, U.S. Congress

Establishment of Atheism


Chrissy’s Site Bites: http://news.webshots.com/photo/2513306460056011884iOSpZb
Click on graphic to embiggen.

On the establishment of religion:

What the Constitution really says

By Alan Keyes – August 26, 2003

http://www.wnd.com/2003/08/20465/

This is quite a long and detailed article, so I have made an outline to help you decide if you want to spend the time reading it in more detail or just trust that I’ve hit the high points correctly. 🙂

Introduction

Federal judges do NOT have the right to interfere with State actions that may or may not constitute an establishment of religion.

The first clause of the 1st Amendment to the Constitution plainly states:

“Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion.”

Since there can be no federal law on the subject, there appears to be no lawful basis for any element of the federal government – including the courts – to act in this area.

The 10th Amendment to the Constitution plainly states:

“The powers not delegated to the United States by the Constitution, nor prohibited by it to the States, are reserved to the States respectively, or to the people.”

This means that the power to make laws respecting an establishment of religion, having been explicitly withheld from the United States, is reserved to the States or to the people.

Taken together, the 1st and 10th Amendments clearly forbid federal judges from doing stuff like banning Ten Commandment displays on State property.

An erroneous premise

Federal judges and justices who do this stuff claim they have the right under the 14th Amendment:

“No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”

But, the 14th Amendment only restricts the legislative powers of the States where they deal with the rights of individual citizens.

And the first clause of the 1st Amendment deals with the rights of States, not individuals. Specifically, it reserves to each State the right to establish religion if a majority of the people of that State decide they want it.

Distinguishing rights of the people from individual rights

The first two clauses of the 1st Amendment are often treated as if they were one. This is incorrect.

The first clause — “Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion” — designates a power of government that is reserved to the States. Congress is forbidden to address the subject at all.

The second clause — “or prohibiting the free exercise thereof” — deals with an action or set of actions (the free exercise of religion) that cannot be free unless they originate in individual choice. This clause allows for some federal action, but severely restricts the character of such action in favor of free exercise by individuals.

When federal judges ban a Ten Commandments monument on State property, they are violating both the clearly stated right of any State to establish religion and the right of individuals to freely exercise religion.

Parallel rights and actions

The assumption made by the judges that do this stuff is that the right of a State to do something somehow means individuals cannot do that thing.  That is wrong.

  • The government’s power to arm soldiers does not interfere with an individual’s right to arm himself.
  • The government’s power to establish schools does not interfere with an individual’s right to educate his kids at home or start a private school.
  • The government’s power to run a postal service does not interfere with an individuals right to operate a messenger service or set up a company like UPS.

The way the Constitution is written puts religion into the same kind of category — i.e., a matter of parallel individual and governmental possibilities.

Federal and State governments are both forbidden to coerce or prohibit individual choice and action in matters of religion.

The Federal government is further forbidden to get involved in any way with a constitutional majority’s decision within a State to express or support religious beliefs or values. The point of this was to secure the right of the people of the States to live under a State government that reflects their religious inclination.

Subverting the wisdom of the Founders

Federal judges who over-turn State laws on religion violate Article IV, Section 4 of the U.S. Constitution:

“The United States shall guarantee to every State in this Union a republican form of government.”

Federal judges who ban Ten Commandments displays on State property say the majority is not allowed to have that right, because some minority … possibly even one person … does not like the result of the vote.

But the Constitution protects the right of State majorities to choose on religious matters. Furthermore, it guarantees the rights of every individual in the losing minority to either stick around and try to convince fellow State citizens to change their votes or else move to some other State that upholds a value system they find more congenial.

What it does NOT do is allow federal judges to establish atheism as the official religion of the entire United States.

Unlawful usurpation and lawful resistance

These federal judges put the force of law and the punishment of force behind their orders. These are the very definition of what constitutes “establishment of religion.” Thus, while pretending to protect religious freedom, they actually destroy it.

Ordinarily, we have a duty to obey a court order. But where that order is unlawful, we may have a right or even a duty to disobey it. For example, if a federal judge orders the governor of a state to take actions that he conscientiously believes violates a fundamental and constitutionally protected right of the people of his State, that official is duty-bound to refuse the order.

An aside from CtH: For our military, this duty is encoded in the UCMJ; there is no “I was ordered to commit that crime” exemption allowed to American Soldiers. For Catholics, the moral rights to and limits on civil disobedience were defined by Pope Paul VI in section 74 of his 1965 encyclical Gaudium et Spes.

Judge Moore and the people of Alabama

The citizens of Alabama are justified in bringing suit against those State officials who carried out the judge’s unlawful order. But since the federal judiciary is the perpetrator, what chance do they have?

Judicial self-interest

Federal judges are human and humans are prone to look first to their own self-interest. Thus expanding their own power is likely to distract federal judges from the legal merits of the case.

The people and their representatives

This is why the U.S. Constitution did NOT make federal courts the ultimate judges of their own powers. That job rests with the Congress.

The right and duty of Congress

Congress must pass legislation that says “hands off” to federal courts on matters of State religious expression, such as the placement of a Ten Commandments monument on State property, which neither prevent nor coerce any individual’s practice of religion.

Comments Off on Establishment of Atheism

Filed under Constitution, First Amendment, Religious Liberty, U.S. Congress

Republicans, Democrats and Blacks

Click on graphics to embiggen.

The Civil Rights Act of 1871 is still one of the most powerful authorities with which state and federal courts may protect those whose rights are deprived.

Ku Klux Klan means “Circle of Brothers” [kuklos = Greek for circle].

1869–1871   41st Congress   3 Blacks, all Republicans, 1 Senator
1871–1873   42nd Congress  5 Blacks, all Republicans
1873–1875   43rd Congress   7 Blacks, all Republicans
1875–1877   44th Congress   7 Blacks, all Republicans, 1 Senator
1877–1879   45th Congress   4 Blacks, all Republicans, 1 Senator

Enforcement of the Civil Rights Act of 1871 suppressed Klan activity. In 1874 and later, newly organized and openly active paramilitary organizations, such as the White League and the Red Shirts, started a fresh round of violence aimed at suppressing blacks’ voting and running Republicans out of office.

The violence and laws designed to prevent Blacks from voting allowed segregationist white Democrats to regain political power in all Southern states by 1877.

The number of Blacks elected to Congress began to decline until, from 1902 to 1929, there were none.

————-
Sources:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/42nd_United_States_Congress
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Civil_Rights_Act_of_1871
http://millercenter.org/president/events/04_20
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ku_Klux_Klan
http://baic.house.gov/historical-data/representatives-senators-by-congress.html

7 Comments

Filed under Civil Rights, Democrats, KKK, Race Relations, Republicans, U.S. Congress

The Third Anniversary of Porkulus

The Great Depression was also overseen by a Democratic President and a Democrat-majority Congress.

Chrissy’s Site Bites: http://news.webshots.com/photo/2153032390056011884ABajen
Click on graphic to embiggen.

Pete posted this video in today’s Grudge. It’s so important, I am repeating here.

Comments Off on The Third Anniversary of Porkulus

Filed under Barack Obama, Democrats, Economy, U.S. Congress, Unemployment

It’s still the economy, stupid!


Chrissy’s Site Bites: http://news.webshots.com/photo/2602812260056011884zxBmnf

Click on graphic to embiggen.

Graphic by http://terrellaftermath.com/

4 Comments

Filed under Barack Obama, Budget, Democrats, Republicans, Ronald Reagan, U.S. Congress, Unemployment