Forum: Opinion
Topic: Boo Hoo Boehner
started by: Expatriate

Posted by Expatriate on Jan. 08 2011,10:45 am
Someone who's made it as far as Boehner in politics obviously is thick skinned I'd guess the water works
are showmanship..but he is a Republican, emotional instability seems to a key leadership qualification...
what do you think??

Posted by Common Citizen on Jan. 08 2011,10:52 am
Lame...

This guy is one of the few that seems to have his $hi+ together and the only thing you can pick on him about is his urge to get teary eyed...

...next! yawn

Posted by Expatriate on Jan. 08 2011,11:21 am
I haven't even started on this phony teary eyed politician yet..he'll step on his own toes soon...
Posted by MADDOG on Jan. 08 2011,5:36 pm
I suppose he could botox a smile on his face like the last speaker.
Posted by nedkelly on Jan. 09 2011,8:28 am

(MADDOG @ Jan. 08 2011,5:36 pm)
QUOTE
I suppose he could botox a smile on his face like the last speaker.

If a woman cries she is considered weak. If a man cries he is in touch with his feelings...WTF..... only in America can we have such a double standard..... :frusty: ...ned
Posted by Common Citizen on Jan. 09 2011,3:40 pm

(Expatriate @ Jan. 08 2011,11:21 am)
QUOTE
I haven't even started on this phony teary eyed politician yet..he'll step on his own toes soon...

yeah,  He is relatively new to his position... and your liberal websites may not have everything organized for you yet.

We'll be waiting...

...unless you can give us your own opinion now before the liberal pundits come out with one.   :rofl:

Posted by grassman on Feb. 01 2011,4:57 pm
:rofl:
Posted by jimhanson on Feb. 01 2011,6:41 pm
Libbies don't like Boehner.  Let's bring back Gingrich! :sarcasm:  :rofl:

They think he's "too mean."  :rofl:

Or better yet, maybe they'd like THIS guy! :rofl:

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Posted by Stone-Magnon on Feb. 02 2011,4:52 am
Boehner cries because he wants other young people like he once was, to catch a break in the land of milk and honey to which he is so greatful.  

Only problem is, is that if you are some kid who was NOT like young Boehner you are SOL! That's chit out of luck!  :finger:

Posted by grassman on Feb. 02 2011,5:39 am
He's more like a Rodeo Clown.
Posted by Common Citizen on Feb. 02 2011,7:35 am
Libs can't find anything controversial on Boehner so they make fun of him because he gets emotional when he speaks about something he is passionate about.  Libs on this website try to paint him as a clown or emotionally unstable because why?  Because he wants to repeal an unconstitutional health care bill that was passed in the dark of the night?  Is it because he wants to take power away from the EPA because of their back door attempts at establishing a national energy tax?  Because he's not rolling over for the sneaky liberal agenda of this administration and the donk elites?

You guys are brilliant.   :rofl:

Posted by Stone-Magnon on Feb. 02 2011,8:09 am
Why do you keep saying Libs? Like it's an us against them type of thing all the time?

Ideologues on either side have no credibility.  No one agrees with every position of every party. NO ONE. Nuff said...

Posted by grassman on Feb. 02 2011,11:42 am
Let's all work together right?
Posted by Common Citizen on Feb. 02 2011,12:31 pm
You mean like when Obama locks the GOP out of the meetings the donks had while working on the health care reform bill?   :p
Posted by alcitizens on Feb. 02 2011,2:41 pm

(Common Citizen @ Feb. 02 2011,7:35 am)
QUOTE
Libs can't find anything controversial on Boehner so they make fun of him because he gets emotional when he speaks about something he is passionate about.

Republicans including Speaker Boehner are bought and paid for by Big Corporations including Big Health. He should cry knowing he's in the pocket of a Legalized Mafia..

Posted by Common Citizen on Feb. 02 2011,7:07 pm
^ Prove it.

:popcorn:

Posted by OEF_Soldier on Feb. 02 2011,8:34 pm

(alcitizens @ Feb. 02 2011,2:41 pm)
QUOTE
Republicans including Speaker Boehner are bought and paid for by Big Corporations including Big Health. He should cry knowing he's in the pocket of a Legalized Mafia..

Better yet prove your precious Democrats are not also bought and paid for by their own corporations and lobbyists.
Posted by Expatriate on Feb. 03 2011,10:53 am
The Problem with being Corporate owned and I do agree the Republican Party is totally Corporate Sponsored is that Corporates are now Multinationals and have little allegiance to America or it's citizens, the Democratic Party is somewhat Union Sponsored and has some allegiance to the American Worker unfortunately unions only represent something like 6 or 7% Reagan and the Republican's have successfully dismantled the Unions and worker's rights, the Bush Free Trade lies have killed the unions but will eventually take out America itself. The true enemy of America is the Republican Party owned by the Multinationals..
The only thing you can still buy that's made in America is a Congressman...

Posted by OEF_Soldier on Feb. 03 2011,7:04 pm

(Expatriate @ Feb. 03 2011,10:53 am)
QUOTE
the Democratic Party is somewhat Union Sponsored and has some ( make that ZERO) allegiance to the American Worker unfortunately unions only represent something like 6 or 7% Reagan and the Republican's have successfully dismantled the Unions and worker's rights, the Bush Free Trade lies have killed the unions but will eventually take out America itself. The true enemy of America is the Republican Party owned by the Multinationals.. :rofl:
The only thing you can still buy that's made in America is a Congressman...

QUOTE
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is signed into law by President Bill Clinton. Clinton said he hoped the agreement would encourage other nations to work toward a broader world-trade pact.

Please explain how it is that President Bush is guilty of free trade lies when your own precious Democratic President Clinton is the one who signed NAFTA?

The Democratic party is as much in the pocket of the Unions as the Republican party is Corporate owned. Both parties are guilty of forgetting who they are supposed to represent and that is an issue both parties share equally.

Posted by Grinning_Dragon on Feb. 03 2011,7:31 pm
Frack the unions.
Posted by Liberal on Feb. 03 2011,7:32 pm
QUOTE

Bush's administration, along with the Progressive Conservative Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, spearheaded the negotiations of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA), which would eliminate the majority of tariffs on products traded among the United States, Canada, and Mexico, to encourage trade amongst the countries.[59] The treaty also restricts patents, copyrights, and trademarks, and outlines the removal of investment restrictions among the three countries.[59]

The agreement came under heavy scrutiny amongst mainly Democrats, who charged that NAFTA resulted in a loss of US jobs.[11] NAFTA also contained no provisions for labor rights;[60] according to the Bush administration, the trade agreement would generate economic resources necessary to enable Mexico's government to overcome problems of funding and enforcement of its labor laws.[60] Bush needed a renewal of negotiating authority to move forward with the NAFTA trade talks. Such authority would enable the president to negotiate a trade accord that would be submitted to Congress for a vote, thereby avoiding a situation in which the president would be required to renegotiate with trading partners those parts of an agreement that Congress wished to change.[60] While initial signing was possible during his term, negotiations made slow, but steady, progress. President Clinton would go on to make the passage of NAFTA a priority for his administration, despite its conservative and Republican roots — with the addition of two side agreements — to achieve its passage in 1993.[61]

The treaty has since been defended as well as criticized further. The American economy has grown 54 percent since the adoption of NAFTA in 1993, with 25 million new jobs created; this was seen by some as evidence of NAFTA being beneficial to the US.[62] With talk in early 2008 regarding a possible American withdrawal from the treaty, Carlos M. Gutierrez, current United States Secretary of Commerce, writes, "Quitting NAFTA would send economic shock waves throughout the world, and the damage would start here at home."[62] But John J. Sweeney of The Boston Globe argues that "the US trade deficit with Canada and Mexico ballooned to 12 times its pre-NAFTA size, reaching $111 billion in 2004."[63]

< http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_H._W._Bush#NAFTA >

Posted by OEF_Soldier on Feb. 03 2011,7:47 pm
QUOTE
Bush's administration, along with the Progressive Conservative Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney, spearheaded the negotiations of the North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA)

Big difference between negotiations and
QUOTE
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is signed into law by President Bill Clinton. Clinton said he hoped the agreement would encourage other nations to work toward a broader world-trade pact.


What follows only goes even further to prove that Republicans AND Democrats could care less about the general population of this country.
QUOTE
The agreement came under heavy scrutiny amongst mainly Democrats, who charged that NAFTA resulted in a loss of US jobs.[11] NAFTA also contained no provisions for labor rights

The Democrats were all ablaze when it was a Republican in the Oval Office and involved in NEGOTIATIONS to establish NAFTA and yet they allowed there own Party President sign it into law.

QUOTE
The pact, which took effect on January 1, 1994, created the world's largest free-trade zone.

Sorry but you cannot pin NAFTA's becoming law on a Republican President. This one is all Clinton's.

Posted by Grinning_Dragon on Feb. 03 2011,7:51 pm
I agree shafta was an all clinton move.

But, bush tried to expand it by pressing the continued north American union BS that would be devastating to the United States, why anyone in this country would like to create something so stupid like the EU is beyond me.  What is it with these POS globalists :dunno:    

I as hell AM NOT A citizen of the world, I am ONLY A CITIZEN of the United States of America.

Oh, btw,  :finger: unions.

Posted by Liberal on Feb. 03 2011,10:38 pm
QUOTE

Following diplomatic negotiations dating back to 1986 among the three nations, the leaders met in San Antonio, Texas, on December 17, 1992, to sign NAFTA. U.S. President George H. W. Bush, Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and Mexican President Carlos Salinas, each responsible for spearheading and promoting the agreement, ceremonially signed it. The agreement then needed to be ratified by each nation's legislative or parliamentary branch.

Before the negotiations were finalized, Bill Clinton came into office in the U.S. and Kim Campbell in Canada, and before the agreement became law, Jean Chrétien had taken office in Canada.

< http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/North_American_Free_Trade_Agreement >


There are none so blind...

Posted by Expatriate on Feb. 04 2011,9:30 am
@ WarBeagle, If you quote another poster it should be just that without alteration, please remove your ridiculous icon from my post!
Posted by OEF_Soldier on Feb. 04 2011,10:47 am
QUOTE
Before the negotiations were finalized, Bill Clinton came into office in the U.S. and Kim Campbell in Canada, and before the agreement became law, Jean Chrétien had taken office in Canada.

OK so Bush ceremonially signed it this proves what?
Still does not excuse the fact that Clinton signed it into LAW. Not Bush, Clinton and the Democrats that had so many issues with it prior to Clinton taking office signed it and ratified it into law. If you take a poll of the general population here in America and ask them which President signed NAFTA into law I'd be willing to bet that better than 80% would answer Clinton.

The point is that Clinton and the Democratic congress made it into law.

Expatty I'm not the first to alter another's post through a quote nor will I be the last. I have done nothing in my alteration that is offensive so I'll leave it as is.

Posted by Liberal on Feb. 04 2011,10:58 am
QUOTE

Sorry but you cannot pin NAFTA's becoming law on a Republican President. This one is all Clinton's. :dunce:


QUOTE

President George H. W. Bush, Canadian Prime Minister Brian Mulroney and Mexican President Carlos Salinas, each responsible for spearheading and promoting the agreement, ceremonially signed it.

Posted by OEF_Soldier on Feb. 04 2011,11:15 am
QUOTE
The agreement came under heavy scrutiny amongst mainly Democrats, who charged that NAFTA resulted in a loss of US jobs.[11] NAFTA also contained no provisions for labor rights


QUOTE
The North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) is signed into law by President Bill Clinton.

Posted by OEF_Soldier on Feb. 04 2011,11:16 am

(Expatriate @ Feb. 04 2011,9:30 am)
QUOTE
@ WarBeagle, If you quote another poster it should be just that without alteration, please remove your ridiculous icon from my post! :rofl:

Posted by Common Citizen on Mar. 06 2015,12:41 pm

(Common Citizen @ Jan. 08 2011,10:52 am)
QUOTE
Lame...

This guy is one of the few that seems to have his $hi+ together and the only thing you can pick on him about is his urge to get teary eyed...

...next! yawn

Boy was I wrong.  :oops:

Washington has ruined another guy that I had such high hopes for.  On the other hand the liberals probably love the guy now. :rofl:

QUOTE
Tea Party Republicans contemplating a bid to oust Rep. John Boehner (R-Ohio) shouldn't count on Democrats to help them unseat the Speaker.

And without their support, there is no chance to topple Boehner in this Congress.

A number of right-wing Republicans, long wary of Boehner's commitment to GOP efforts attacking President Obama's policy priorities, have openly considered a coup in an attempt to transfer the gavel into more conservative hands.

But Democrats from across an ideological spectrum say they'd rather see Boehner remain atop the House than replace him with a more conservative Speaker who would almost certainly be less willing to reach across the aisle in search of compromise. Replacing him with a Tea Party Speaker, they say, would only bring the legislative process — already limping along — to a screeching halt.


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