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How did the Lame Dem Duck cross the road?

Deaf elephants refused to lock the grid

If the din of acts of civil  American Drive In obedience in January doesn’t penetrate the big ears of Congressional elephants, we will have no choice but to finally resort to conservative MLK-like civil disobedience against the Dumbo in the White House, aka President Barack Hussein Obama, and those Republicans and dog-eared Dems on Capitol Hill that are still deaf to the message sent by We the tea-drinking and voting People last Election Day.

The first act of the first session of Congress after the great conservative wave election was a 73-25 vote for SB 510 and the ”modernization” of food safety which means a food dictatorship that puts federal government minders in charge of vegetable gardens, much like they have been put in charge of “free” private health insurance-killing medical services:

The U.S. Senate has just voted, 73-26, in favor of S.510 – the Food Safety Modernization Act. The bill offers a sweeping overhaul of the nation’s current food safety regulations, empowering the FDA with oversight of mandatory recalls of potentially contaminated food, requirements for food producers to develop written food safety plans, accessible by the government in case of emergency and implementation of a food tracing system.

And they didn’t even need a crisis to not waste since so many Republicans tired of drinking tea not only refused to filibuster the latest executive branch power grab but also actually voted affirmatively to let government bureaucrats keep Big Food’s competitors down:

It is a dangerously broad regulatory bill giving extensive discretionary power to the FDA over the entire food supply chain without proper checks and balances to avoid abuse of power;

It would impose one-size-fits-all-regulations on thousands of small and mid-sized farmers, small-scale local farms and food producers,  and would drastically burden, to extinction,  basic natural and organic food suppliers, thus endangering the lives of Americans who depend on local wholesome foods;
It does not reflect a well-thought-out solution, or address the real causes of food safety issues stemming from the industrialized food supply chain; and
It attempts to limit the authority of our own domestic U.S. laws when it includes language ensuring that our US law will not disturb other international agreements that we have made.  It states: “Nothing in this Act shall be construed in a manner inconsistent with the agreement establishing the World Trade Organization or any other treaty or international agreement to which the U.S. is a party.”

Before this vote, this rooster, cognizant of the GOP betrayal of the last conservative wave in 1994, had already decided to support a minimum-speed attention-getting, D.C. welcoming committee in January when the new Republican-majority House gavels into session. I was helped in reaching the conclusion to prospectively endorse gridlock with Senate Democrats and a veto pen-wielding Chief Executive, despite the need for some relief for recession-savaged lower income Americans when I heard Mitch McConnell’s begrudging surrender on earmarks. The mere 30+ Republican votes today on banning earmarks shows that too many in the GOP still wish to play God with pork and still don’t know that the ears on the sides of their heads are for listening to their bosses, i.e. the voters.

So by all means, let the rooster crow in favor of rogue gridlock politics on K Street and every other street in The District:

Time and again we have been promised rescue from this bloated and corrupt government. This time we will not be denied, we will not walk away.

On November 2 American voters elected a hostage rescue team. We are the hostages…

If we assume half of the Republicans in the House really want to do the right thing we must assume also the other half will need to be beaten and whipped and driven to it…

The 1994 Republican revolution was a failure. It failed because no great effort was made to hold Republicans accountable until AFTER the compromises and the capitulations had occurred.

The 2010 Republican revolution will also be a failure if we are not considerably more proactive in holding the newly elected Republicans responsible if they sell us out and BEFORE they sell us out.

So what comes on January 5, 2011?

TheAmericanDriveIn.com

A rolling protest to send a clear message to the Republicans in the House, in particular, that we are not going away and we will hold them accountable.

I’m not sure that such civil obedience will work, even if conducted every day of the session. I have long thought that Americans would have to resort to civil disobedience in the streets to save the Liberty and this nation, given my assumption that it would take at least three GOP wave election cycles to seize the requisite legislative majorities and the executive branch to repeal ObamaDem legislation. The latest actions of tea-powered Republicans during the Lame Duck makes me think that even winning three such elections may not be enough. But the back-off of TSA from unreasonable searches over the Thanksgiving holiday, at the mere threat of mild civil disobedience, gives me hope that We the People can eventually take back the country from our Washington rulers.

Pre-American Drive-In gridlock vs. Bush Tax Cut-extension stimuli

More votes are yet to come by the not-so-lame donkeys with elephant ducks in a row.

Supposedly, the “need” for the post-election session is to pass a continuing resolution, lest Big Brother shut down. Given the federal government’s starring role in shutting down all but Goldman Sachs and GM’s UAW union over the past two years, this gamecock would welcome the company of laid-off government employees in job application lines at Wal-Mart and elsewhere.

But since we have the session of losers, I had been hopeful of preventing a Democrat-imposed sun-set law tax hike with an extension of the Bush tax cuts for all Americans for at least two years.

I had been on the fence with respect to whether Republicans should, in the final analysis, reject any Democratic Party tax bill that did not extend them all indefinitely. Given my life-long (even as a Democrat from birth through A.D. 2000) support for any tax cut I could get, I even endorsed Herman Cain’s suggestion that we maintain that position in the Lame Duck.

But can conservatives have any hope that a GOP that would vote FOR the further socialization of America, even down to the level of a backyard vegetable garden, would have any spine strong enough to face down class warfare accusations about tax cuts for the rich? No.

The GOP I see in D.C. just now, is about the business of waging class warfare on behalf of Big Business in lock step with ObamaDems. We had hoped that one of the priorities of the new GOP majority would be to rein in executive branch regulatory powers, even thru pre-emption.

Yet, today, only 17 Republican Senators refused to grant new, broad executive regulatory powers over the very food we eat.

Another year of the Chicken, hold the (too expensive) Le Sueur peas

I would have no problem with yet another extension of the already 99 weeks of unemployment benefits that total more than non-war defense budgets in the 1990s if we could get a three year extension of the tax cuts before 2011. This jobs recession with under-employment at 1930s levels has Americans on their knees choosing between store brand peas and Le Sueur peas so they have enough gas money to get the soon-to-be-more-regulated-and-thus-more-expensive groceries home.

God knows we need a REAL stimulus, unlike the $800B “government growthulus” named Stimulus that Jeffrey Miron outlines as:

A few weeks after President Obama’s victory in the 2008 election, adviser Rahm Emanuel quipped that “[y]ou never want a serious crisis to go to waste . . . [because it] provides the opportunity for us to do things that you could not do before.”

Emanuel was correct:
The situation in which the new Administration found itself constituted an unusual political dynamic that, properly used, would have allowed the Obama Administration both to stimulate the economy and make it more productive over the long haul.
The Administration should have endorsed a stimulus package based on a repeal of the corporate income tax and reductions in employment taxes. This policy would have accomplished its stated goals, and the budgetary implications would have been less negative than those of the package ultimately adopted because this alternative plan would have enhanced rather than detracted from economic efficiency. This approach would also have been difficult for Republicans to oppose.

Amen Dr. Miron. It should have been easy for Republicans, even in a Lame Duck session as a minority, and especially given the tea partier message that even some incumbent Democrats got, to oppose food czars for every household with a tomato plant and to support a moratorium on oil drilling. The nearly 20 Republicans so voting, got nothing in return for that Big Brother-growing vote. I can only assume that they still insist on being our masters rather than our servant, as the Constitution envisions via consent of the governed.

Given the above, how much hope can conservatives have for a Miron-like supply-side stimulus? How about the lifting of regulations that continue ade facto oil drilling ban? Can we even dream of repealing ObamaCare? I doubt it, and even wonder if Republicans will so fear being accused of anti-Hispanic bigotry that they will vote for the abominable DREAM Act.

Atlas shrugged at ObamaDem congressional policies over the past four years. Many Atlases walked to Brazil when Obama used the oil spill crisis to waste American lives along the Gulf of Mexico. Wall Street Atlases have bid up hope in anticipation of the GOP wave election victory.

I fear the GOP healing of a hoped-for Lame Duck will send Atlas on a slow boat to China and so simply must endorse civilly obedient gridlock as our only hope to avoid  uncivil disobedience before too long as more and more Americans slip through the cracks and crack up over food, much less jobs and oil.

As a Christian, I am thankful for the bounty of the flesh from the American cornucopia and will praise Emmanuel everyday, including Christmas Day 2010. But I weep for my country given the Big Deafness of too many pairs of GOP elephant ears.

Mike DeVine

“One man with courage makes a majority.” – Andrew Jackson

Charlotte ObserverThe Minority Report and Examiner.com archives

www.devinelawvista.com

COMMENTS

  • Scope

    The fact that the food killing bill passed today with so many yucking Republicans voting for it made me sick. Then you have 8 yucking Republicans voting against the earmark ban. Good Lord I hope that Joe Miller stays in the election fight against the thief Murkowski, and, that the courts start reling according to the law, not who they want to send back to DC. Murkowski voted for the food killing bill, and, no surprise, against the earmark ban. She ain’t the only fool though.

    If the food and earmark votes weren’t bad enough, there has been some fluff going on today about Cantors statements that the House Republicans planned on keeping some sections of Ocare. I read the article at the Hill this morning, and, after Rush and Hannity knocked Cantors position, the article was changed, but, the changes didn’t make any difference.

    Cantor is saying that the Republicans want to keep the provisions about the pre-existing condition requirements for insurance companies, and, that the adults that refuse to leave mom’s basement can stay on mom’s insurance until they are 26. The way I see it, you cannot keep the pre-existing requirements with also adopting the mandate that everyone purchase insurance. Insurance works on the basis that enough healthy people will purchase healthcare insurance, in order to help cover the costs of those that are sick. To keep the pre-existing requirement means that many people will not buy insurance until they are sick, and, the insurance companies go bust, and here comes socialized medicine.

    If the newly elected Reps. don’t start stamping their feet and screaming against the Republican leaderships plans, we are soooooooo screwed. I suspect the House Republicans will vote to fund the massively fraudulent Pigford settlement next. Today is very depressing.

  • Scope

    I meant to say you can’t keep the pre-existing mandate “without” also keeping the individual mandate.

  • http://impudent.edublogs.org/ kyle8

    we have only made a start in the last election, we have to keep pushing, the tea parties have got to concentrate now on getting good candidates to run against Rino republicans, and we have to keep up the pressure.

  • usadying

    This makes me sick. We are heading towards a three party system. The Progressives, the so-called moderates forming the Progressive Lite party, and the tea parties forming the Conservative Party. Nothing but trash will be legislated out of this, as coalitions will be necessary to pass laws. Conservatives lose.

  • KBDay

    For a long time now I’ve said the GOP needs new Senate leadership. I rest my case.

  • http://hillbillypolitics.com Steph C

    when I go to the feed and seed in the coming spring. I guess I’ll start there with civil disobedience because I’ll darn well plant my garden anyway.

    Seriously, our government seems to think we need saving from ourselves; the consequences of our own actions and decisions. It is what happens when a government tries to be everything to everybody. Mayhem and misery are sure to follow.

  • avgjo

    But let’s be honest.

    We all know the GOP, esp the bstrds in the Senate, will do crap like this all day long if we don’t apply consistent pressure over a period of time.

    As I said in another post. the conservative media dropped the ball on this bill. I hardly heard anything about this anywhere. Indeed, today, after its passage, Beck talked about it for about 20 minutes on his radio show, and that was the most I’d heard about it from anyone on our side.

    It is my firm conviction that if this had been made into an issue by conservative media much earlier on, we could have applied the appropriate pressure and perhaps stopped this; I say ‘perhaps’ because, unlike the Dems, we cannot count on all of our Senators (NE RINOs) to vote in unison with the rest of the GOP. At the very least, the vote would have been much closer and we could have avoided the numbers we saw today which, judging by the comments I have read here and elsewhere, were a blow to the morale of conservative activists like us.

    The lesson is that, in order to turn our lumps of coal (most GOP Senators and many GOP reps) into diamonds, we must apply lots of pressure over time. And to be able to do this, we must pay attention. All of the time.

    Have we as constituents done what we always do and let our guard down since the repudiation of the democrats meted at the polls four weeks ago? A good gauge of this will be to see whether phone calls, emails and faxes cause the House GOP leadership to back off the buddy-buddy. ‘reach across the aisle’ tone they seemed to take on today with BO. Rush was pretty upset, asking what the GOP doesn’t get about ‘hell no’. If conservative bloggers and other conservative radio hosts join the chorus, we may well see a clarification from our esteemed house leadership that they will not compromise on important things.

    We’ll see.

    Gamecock, as always, well-written, timely and pertinent. It is amazing to me how certain RS folks can write such thought-out and well-structured diary entries so shortly after an issue is raised. You, sir, are one of those folks.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    get their minds focused thru civil disobedience or more. First they came for the currency. Then for your medicine. Then they came for your oil drilling jobs. Then they came for your food…then….WAIT, they came for my damn food?

    THIS MEANS WAR…or ought to.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    people take to the streets. In order to fix America BEFORE we reach the Liberty-denial tipping point, it will have to be because many incumbent Republicans and even some Dems get the message and CHANGE NOW.

    I for one am seeing everything I have taken especially including an economy so bad that I haven’t made $500 in two months. I can’t wait for 3 elections to have the right and ability to bail myself out.

    I really don’t buy Le Sueur peas.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
  • http://impudent.edublogs.org/ kyle8

    told us what kind of toilets we could have and how to take a crap.

    But I am afraid that there just is not enough fire left in the US to fight for our rights anymore. We have made a start with the tea parties, but only a start.

  • http://impudent.edublogs.org/ kyle8

    even now, we are still too rich, fat, lazy, old, and cynical.

    If we haven’t had anything more angry than the tea party rallies by now, then we never will.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    get violent first.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
  • renny

    I don’t even care that they didn’t pass “no earmarks.” I would rather they passed nothing in the lame duck session.

  • Scope

    the Union thugs have gotten violent, and, with the declarations that Obama step it up, now widely in print, it can only get worse. I have always agreed that third parties have been particularly nasty to the Republicans. I am rethinking my positions, just as you may be. It is so critical that we get this right over the next two years, however, it is becoming more and more apparent that the Republicans are not capable of governing according to the will of the people. Three weeks after the election, we are already seeing the Republican leadership just get further down on their knees. I am so sick today with the Republicans, I want to puke, cry or grab their necks and shake the hell out of them. The mid-term euphoria has worn off very quickly.

  • JSobieski

    nt

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    I too have eschewed resort to a 3rd party but when so many Republicans can be for this Food bill just 3 weeks after the election!?!? it seems DC is the enemy, no matter who we send. Times are desperate for so many and Congress is deaf.

  • http://dreamsfrommyforefathers.com RoguePolitics

    Today was not a good day for liberty or constitutional rule of law.

    If the Republican House fails we have nowhere to go in 2012. No viable third party, no chance to overturn enough RINO’s in our own party to undo national bankruptcy.

    In 2012, $15 to $18 Trillion in direct debt with another $100+ Trillion in IOU’s.

    In 2012, our own party having yet again blown its credibility on all conservative issues, representing the country club circuit and wining and dining with the K Street elite.
    In 2012 an election fought to a draw because nobody can decide who they hate more the socialists or the wannabees.

    No, the future of the Republic will not be decided in 2012, the future of the Republic will be decided during the next six months.

    The next six months will determine if House Republicans will stand tall. If they do not break hard right out of the chute in January, 2011, then November, 2012 will be an insignificant by-election.

    If history notices 2012 it will be couched in the language of Caesar crossing the Rubicon, the Anschluss, or Red October (the original). It can happen here. It will happen here if we don?t prevent it.

    Make no mistake, we ARE on the edge. Most folks know it. We cannot escape history. There are laws of economics as rigid as the laws of thermodynamics and just as unforgiving. We have disobeyed these laws at our peril. We cannot spend our way to wealth. We have arrived at the abyss. On Nov 4 the American People did the only peaceable thing they could do. They pulled back from the edge as best they were able. They looked at the options on the table and picked the best one they could.

    We have entrusted our future, our children?s future, to that ignoble class of blackguards, the politicians. We had no-one else to place it with; we had nowhere else to go.

    If today proved nothing else, it proved they WILL betray us, IF we let them.

    There are no other elections of consequence between now and 2012. There is no higher court of appeal. No high council capable of delivering us from our current calamity.

    We have only one horse that can carry us across that line and today he showed lame.

    From the Searchers
    “Brad: They gotta stop sometime. If they’re human men at all, they gotta stop.
    Ethan: No, a human rides a horse until it dies, then he goes on afoot.
    Comanch comes along and gets that horse up, rides him twenty more miles, then eats him”

    So we have a lame horse, at least he ain?t dead. We can be human men and watch our nation die. Or we can figure out how to get that extra 20 miles outa this lame horse.

    Riding lessons start in Jan. Be there, bring the steak sauce.

    Great piece GC. You are all over it.

    http://THEAmericanDriveIn.com

  • http://www.heavyhorsesfarm.com heavyhorses

    The Tester Amendment, later grouped with others to become the “Managers Amendment” exempts small producers, like me :-)

    So there is no worry about any producer who earns less than $500,000 from on-farm income, or sells locally.

    It was supported by some before the Tester Amendment was added, then the same groups rallied against it. Believe it or not, their biggest worry is the rapid growth of small, local producers eating into their market… Like me :-)

    Big Ag even offered to pay for these new regs if small producers were included because doing so would drive us small guys out of business, leaving corporate agriculture in complete control.

    That is the crux of this bill, which many seem to be missing!

  • Menlo

    From what I gather, they still need a house vote.

  • http://www.gmsplace.com/ civil_truth

    One is more a question: is the $500K threshold relate to net income or to sales. If the latter, not many farms will be exempt.

    It would seem that independent organic farms would be hit rather hard by this, and perhaps may be the major group being targeted by the big ag, as these are running operations not under big ag’s thumb.

  • The_Gadfly

    to get through March of next year, but other than that they should just go home.

    I know the argument is that tax rates will go up on January 1 if they don’t pass it now. But the reality is, since they didn’t pass it before the election, taxes are going to go up January 1 anyway, because there isn’t sufficient time for the IRS to write the rules, print the regs, and distribute them to employers in time for the new tax rates to take effect by January 1. Which means employers will switch to the new tax rates regardless of what happens in congress over the next week. They’ll make up for it with adjusted tax tables later in the year. But that will also be true if the pass the changes in January instead of December.

    I’ll take an extension of the Bush tax cut for two years if they can get it for everybody, otherwise Republicans should just walk away from it and do it right when the new blood is seated in January.

  • izoneguy

    For being do stupid!!!

    House May Block Food Safety Bill Over Senate Error

    http://www.rollcall.com/news/-201012-1.html

    A food safety bill that has burned up precious days of the Senate?s lame-duck session appears headed back to the chamber because Democrats violated a constitutional provision requiring that tax provisions originate in the House.

    By pre-empting the House?s tax-writing authority, Senate Democrats appear to have touched off a power struggle with members of their own party in the House. The Senate passed the bill Tuesday, sending it to the House, but House Democrats are expected to use a procedure known as ?blue slipping? to block the bill, according to House and Senate GOP aides.

    The debacle could prove to be a major embarrassment for Senate Democrats, who sought Tuesday to make the relatively unknown bill a major political issue by sending out numerous news releases trumpeting its passage.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
  • runner12

    Now all we need to do is light up the phones to the House and tell them to kill this terrible bill.

  • http://www.heavyhorsesfarm.com heavyhorses

    Not quiet proof but from the National Sustainable Agriculture Coalition:

    “The final Senate bill includes six amendments that were worked on by NSAC and that each became part of the Manager?s amendment that the Senate has now approved. Those include the amendments championed by:

    [clip]

    * Senators Jon Tester (D-MT) and Kay Hagan (D-NC) to give very small farms and food processing facilities as well as direct-market farms who sell locally the option of complying with state regulation or with modified, scale-appropriate federal regulation.

    Debate over the Tester-Hagan amendment consumed much of the final two weeks of action on the bill. An accord between consumer groups who had originally opposed the amendment and sustainable agriculture groups who supported it helped clear the way to a bipartisan deal to incorporate the brokered provision into the Manager?s amendment and thus into the final bill.

    Despite a fierce attack from produce and meat industry trade associations opposing passage of the bill with the Tester-Hagan language included, the Senate passed two cloture motions as well as final passage of the bill with just one-quarter of the Senate voting no.

    After the Manager?s Amendment was approved last night, the Senate voted down four other amendments, including two amendments related to the health care bill, a proposed 3-year moratorium on congressional earmarking, and a substitute food safety bill introduced by Senator Coburn (R-OK).”

    Link:
    http://sustainableagriculture.net/blog/senate-passes-food-safety-bill/

  • http://www.heavyhorsesfarm.com heavyhorses

    The persistent rumor I heard was that big ag actually lobbied to get this bill going. They have more concern about competition from the small producer, local food movement then they care to speak publicly about.

    I don’t like to see the added regulations. I wish there was another way. But seeing the way pigs/chickens/cows are raised has caused me to reconsider.

    No one should be allowed to raise food the way old man DeCoster was – and he had the potential to sicken/kill many, many people, most of whom would have been children.

    But the bigger concern for me is the imported food. I just checked my son’s apple juice – Minute Maid brand. It says, “Contains juice from Argentina, Austria, Chile, China, Germany and Turkey”

    We know that almost none of our imported foods are inspected. I personally want to see foreign growers and importers adhere to the same standards we have here.

    Like most gov’t regulation, this too will be inefficient and too expensive. But I hope they eventually include provisions (in the House bill) for the big producers to pay for the new regulations. And I hope the track-back provisions expose the real culprits so they can be dealt with effectively.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    that they get NO PASS. We can’t count on Dem incompetence to save America.

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine

    senators they can count on.

  • Menlo

    Some brands of apple juice such as Tree Top use all USA-grown apples (as advertised on the label), BUT they add vitamin C (ascorbic acid), and 95 percent of the world’s supply comes from China. Similarly over 90 percent of many if not most vitamins (such as riboflavin, iron, and thiamine) are made in China.

    As experience has shown, and as I pointed out earlier, there are some potentially deadly “ancient Chinese secrets” floating around in the things they make. Even the top chemists can’t figure out what some of their stuff is!

  • http://www.heavyhorsesfarm.com heavyhorses

    Chambliss was a supporter when BigAg was pushing it. But when the Tester Amendment was incorporated he turned against it, urged to do so by the same BigAg lobbyists.

    I found it ironic that anyone, especially Republican Senators, would only support more regulation if it effected every last person, regardless of the potential for harm.

    I have a copy of the letter sent to the senate leadership where the national Ag organizations complain about exempting small producers from the otherwise “strong safety net” this bill produces.

    At least we know who some Senators are looking out for!

  • http://www.examiner.com/x-1597-Charlotte-Law--Politics-Examiner Mike gamecock DeVine
  • texasgalt

    Somebody teach you? :-)

    The Searchers should be part of freshman orientation for Congress.

    Waiting on the food police . . .