oralloy
 
  -1  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 03:52 pm
@Real Music,
Politico wrote:
House Dems to introduce gun backgrounds checks bill on Tuesday
Tie it to concealed carry reciprocity (or to the SHARE Act) and maybe we can work something out.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 04:00 pm
Steph Is Not Having This Nonsense 🌹
‏

@RantsByDesign
Jan 2
More
This is a straight-up hit piece. Last I heard, Sanders & his ppl were meeting to address these issues & the authors of this crap say Bernie's "perceived failure to address this issue has damaged his progressive bona fides".


_______________________________________________

His 2018 campaign had the strongest protection from sex harassment that could be in place. The author of the hit piece had to know that.
maporsche
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 04:11 pm
@edgarblythe,
Wasn’t the issue, if there was one, from his 2016 campaign? Not 2018?
0 Replies
 
livinglava
 
  -1  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 04:13 pm
@oralloy,
oralloy wrote:

livinglava wrote:
What part of my analogy did you not understand? I thought it was crystal clear.
I understood it. It just does not apply to this situation. Rape victims are not the cause of rape. Environmentalists are the reason why we will have to keep burning coal.

Environmentalists are trying to protect resources against rape by greedy industrialism.

Some industrialism may be necessary for survival. Most isn't. When you ignore environmental reasons to reduce industrial waste, that is basically the same as rape.

The only reason it's really different from rape is because there's never a reason it is necessary to have sex, whereas there are some people who can't stay alive without certain energy-uses. The vast majority of energy use is not a need, however, but a want. So the reality is that a lot more conservation and energy-use reduction is possible but dismissed because of indifference.
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  0  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 07:26 pm
Robert Reich on the new house majority

they will do little to change the growing imbalance of wealth and power in this country unless they are pushed to do so. Do not ever underestimate the influence of Wall Street Democrats, corporate Democrats, and the Democrats’ biggest funders. I know. I’ve been there.

This is where you come in. Millions of us worked hard to create a “blue wave” and put Democrats in control of the House. But our work is not over by any stretch. Nothing good happens in Washington unless good people outside Washington are organized and mobilized to make it happen.

We must support Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats when they need our support to do the right things. We also need to push them when they need pushing. And we must fight them when they begin to cave.

So keep vigilant and active. Stay involved in the grassroots organizations that spearheaded the Democrat’s victory in November – groups like Indivisible.org, MoveOn.org, aflcio.org, blacklivesmatter.org, swingleft.org, face2face-action.org, commoncause.org, friendsoftheearth.org, greenpeace.org, ourrevolution.org, publiccitizen.org, and workingfamilies.org, to name only a few. And if you’re not yet activist members, join them.

The fight has only just begun.
coldjoint
 
  -1  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 08:01 pm
@edgarblythe,
Quote:
MoveOn.org, aflcio.org, blacklivesmatter.org,

Grassroots? Laughing Laughing Laughing
RABEL222
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 08:06 pm
@coldjoint,
Most Russian citizens have been brainwashed to be against unions. Glad to see your consistent.
coldjoint
 
  -1  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 08:12 pm
@RABEL222,
Quote:
Most Russian citizens have been brainwashed to be against unions. Glad to see your consistent.

I was in a union and have a nice pension. Stop talking out of your ass, you are embarrassing yourself. And what did my post have to do with unions?
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 08:21 pm
Allowing unions to die was one of the greatest mistakes our politicians ever made. Men fought and died to establish the right. By and large they were successful building our nation for the working people.
coldjoint
 
  -1  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 08:27 pm
@edgarblythe,
Quote:
Allowing unions to die

When did the teachers union die, I must have missed it.
0 Replies
 
livinglava
 
  0  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 08:37 pm
@edgarblythe,
edgarblythe wrote:

Allowing unions to die was one of the greatest mistakes our politicians ever made. Men fought and died to establish the right. By and large they were successful building our nation for the working people.

Unionism is the flip side of corporatism. Both are collectivistic approaches to economic management that subjugate individuals to social pressures.

What is wrong with having a free market of independent individuals? Obviously there are forces in management and at the investor level that prefer subjugation to voluntary cooperation, but why not deal with those instead of collectivizing to fight them at their own game?
0 Replies
 
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 08:44 pm
Here's What A Federal Shutdown Means For The IRS And Taxpayers
https://www.forbes.com/sites/kellyphillipserb/2018/01/19/as-feds-prepare-for-shutdown-heres-what-it-means-for-irs-and-taxpayers/#6d00fca5394c

On Thursday, House Republicans approved a bill to keep the lights on until mid-February but a similar bill in the Senate failed to garner enough votes. While Republicans control the Senate, they only have 51 votes, but 60 votes are needed to pass an appropriations bill, which means they would have needed support from Democrats. It turns out they needed more than that: Five Republican Senators voted no and one abstained (it's worth noting that House Majority Leader McConnell (R-KY) cast a no vote as a procedural matter in order to raise the matter for reconsideration). You can see how your Senator voted here.

Without a deal, the government officially ran out of money for the fiscal year and shut down at midnight. Of course, shutdown is a loaded word since not every facet of government shuts down. For example, the IRS will maintain some functions, and those are outlined in their contingency plan. Specifically, the agency notes that "If the IRS is confronted by a lapse in appropriations during the 2018 Tax Filing Season (January 1 – April 30, 2018) the IRS will need to continue return processing activities to the extent necessary to protect Government property, which includes tax revenue, and maintain the integrity of the federal tax collection process, along with certain other activities authorized under the Anti-Deficiency Act."


The Anti-Deficiency Act (text here) is a series of laws dating back more than 100 years. The Act is codified at Title 31 (Money and Finance) and is intended to stop federal agencies from spending federal dollars that aren't authorized, as well barring them from accepting voluntary services (meaning that employees can't work for free during a shutdown). The penalties for violating the Act are pretty severe, which is why federal agencies provide a written contingency plan.

During a shutdown, agencies are allowed to perform activities that are supported by funding that doesn't expire at the end of the fiscal year, as well as other activities that are either expressly permitted under the law or are deemed necessary. Sometimes those activities cross over. For example, Social Security payments are funded outside of an annual appropriation, so those employees will continue to work, as well as those IRS employees who support them (even though IRS funding is not outside of annual appropriation).

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The law also allows for "activities necessary to safeguard human life or protect government property." You might not think of your tax return as a matter of life or death but the government begs to differ: The IRS may process tax returns to ensure the protection of those returns that contain remittances (in other words, they can make sure that the government gets its money).

Here's a partial list of functions that directly impact taxpayers and would typically be put on hold if the government shuts down:

No tax refunds issued
No processing of non-disaster relief transcripts
No processing of forms 1040X, amended returns
No non-automated collections
No audit or examinations (some exceptions apply)

No whistleblower office activity
Here's a partial list of functions that directly impact taxpayers which will typically continue if the government shuts down:

Processing of returns with payments
E-filing
Mailing tax forms
Appeals (statutory deadlines will not be changed)
Call centers (only during filing season)
Civil and criminal tax cases
Certain communications to taxpayers
Active criminal investigations
IRS.gov
To facilitate those activities, the IRS anticipates that 35,076 employees, or 43.5% of the total employee population, would be retained during a shutdown. So who stays on the job?

Top of the list is Acting IRS Commissioner David J. Kautter. The Commissioner is a presidential appointee who is not subject to furlough (furlough is another way of saying not going to work). The Commissioner’s salary is paid no matter how many hours he works, so he cannot be placed in a non-duty, non-pay status. A handful of Deputy Commissioners and Chiefs of Staff would also remain on staff or on call as needed.

Also on the "excepted employees" list are some Appeals staff and lawyers to ensure that statutory deadlines are met. Missing deadlines affects IRS as much as it does taxpayers, and the IRS is assuming that Tax Court, as well as federal and district courts will remain open. If courts do close, or if Appeals determines that staff and attorneys aren't needed, then they would be furloughed. The same general rules apply to the Office of Chief Counsel.

Dozens of employees would stay on with the Taxpayer Advocate Service in some capacity. Specifically, Nina Olson (the National Taxpayer Advocate) will go to work, while 78 advocates will remain "on call" as needed during the shutdown.

A significant number of Criminal Investigation (CI) employees - more than 2,800 - are slated to report to work. This makes sense: If the bad guys don't take a break, neither should those in pursuit of them. Currently, CI is working nearly 3,800 active criminal investigations with an additional 4,800 investigations in the adjudication phase (pre-indictment, indictment, trial and post-trial) in 93 judicial districts. That means that right now, nearly 9,000 investigations are in process on some level: special agents are actively gathering evidence, conducting interviews, testifying in court proceedings, executing search warrants and conducting arrests. CI will operate at close to "normal" levels since federal courts, federal prosecutors and federal law enforcement partners are operating with business as usual.

Just under a dozen employees will be needed to keep the IRS.gov website up and running. During the shutdown, taxpayers should still be able to access a number of online services, including filing tax returns and paying tax online. In fiscal year 2017, IRS.gov served over 1.8 million page views, helping drive more than 121 million form downloads and over 77.5 million payments.

More than 3,000 IT-related workers will stay in place to ensure that taxpayer data is protected and that computer systems function appropriately.

Finally, more than 10,000 Customer Service Representatives will remain in place to handle phones and paper service issues. It's important to note that this is slated to happen only if a shutdown happens during filing season (during the 2013 government shutdown, customer service operations, including the call centers, stopped).

It's worth noting that while this is the contingency plan, it's not set in stone. In 2013, changes were made at the last minute, including shuttering the TAS offices. I'll update as events warrant.

The 2018 filing season is slated to open on January 29, shutdown or not. The IRS expects to process more than 155 million individual tax returns in 2018.

(Author's note: Edited to reflect the Senate vote on January 19, 2018.)
edgarblythe
 
  0  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 08:53 pm
@edgarblythe,
Shocked Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad Crying or Very sad Drunk
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 09:54 pm
@edgarblythe,
Let Trump and is gang keep the government shut down for years. They're a bunch of idiots running our government, and dangerous to our democracy. They have no common sense of the damage they are doing to thousands of families across this country. It's too stupid to contemplate. We don't need that kind of "governance" in the USA. Tyrants belong in Russia and China.
edgarblythe
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 09:56 pm
@cicerone imposter,
But I sort of needed my IRS refund this year. Extra medical expenses.
edgarblythe
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 10:31 pm
Huffpost, another mainstream rag, did a hit piece on Bernie. Prior to this, I thought they were kind of honest, but they edited the interview in the video to skip the part of his explanation where he explained how he addressed the situation and put the strongest of safeguards against that sort of harassment into his 2018 campaign.
cicerone imposter
 
  1  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 10:35 pm
@edgarblythe,
Sad to hear about HuffPost. They were my go-to media for left-leaning politics, and now I have none. My last source is Politifact. Nothing like getting "balanced" news.
maporsche
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 10:53 pm
@cicerone imposter,
I wouldn’t believe everything Edgar says about anything.

He distorts everything through some fucked up lenses and just because he says something it should be taken with a HUGE grain of salt.

Read HuffPost and form your own opinions. Don’t follow Edgar’s suggestion. He’s going to be getting all his news from Young Turks videos soon enough.
maporsche
 
  2  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 10:57 pm
@edgarblythe,
edgarblythe wrote:

But I sort of needed my IRS refund this year. Extra medical expenses.


Sorry Edgar that you’ll be in a tight spot if this happens. Gotta say though, it kinda makes me chuckle.

Too bad we have Trump in office and not say, someone closer to you ideologically, who was also on the ballot in November. Maybe someone who believes in a functioning government and agrees with you on something like 80% of the issues.

People like you voted for fucked up government (throw the bums out!!!)...well, it’s time to get what you wished for.

You know what happens when you fire all the good/serviceable garbage men, **** piles up.
0 Replies
 
Real Music
 
  3  
Reply Fri 4 Jan, 2019 11:32 pm
@maporsche,
Quote:
I wouldn’t believe everything Edgar says about anything.

He distorts everything through some fucked up lenses and just because he says something it should be taken with a HUGE grain of salt.

Read HuffPost and form your own opinions. Don’t follow Edgar’s suggestion. He’s going to be getting all his news from Young Turks videos soon enough.

I am not saying that his post is either true or false. Maybe it's true. Maybe it's false. Maybe it's taken out of context. I generally want to know the full context of what is being said. Without a link to click on, there is no way for me to know. I generally don't accept what someone has posted as being factual, unless I can read the article myself or see the video for myself. If the OP doesn't provide a link for me to click on and view myself, I generally won't accept the post to be entirely factual and accurate. That is why when I reference an article or a video, I will almost always provide a link for others to view for themselves. That way others can shape their own opinion of whatever I am referencing. If there is no link provided to click on, whatever the OP is referencing won't mean squat. Anything I can't click on and view for myself, I generally will not take seriously.
0 Replies
 
 

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