President Obama, we are assured, is “apoplectic” and “furious” over the scandal at the General Services Administration. David Axelrod says so.
How does Axelrod know? The answer illustrates the collapse of governing at the Obama White House.
Axelrod does not work for the United States in any capacity. He is Obama’s campaign strategist. He does not work in Washington. He lives and works in Chicago, headquarters of the Obama campaign.
Yet he is the go-to guy when the administration has something to say, even on important taxpayer business like the GSA scandal. So there he was Sunday, on NBC’s “Meet the Press,” segueing between comments on government and the campaign.
He said “we” when he meant the White House, as though they are the same. Sadly, for most purposes, they are. This is not a case of a man wearing two hats. It is an illustration of how governing has taken a back seat to campaigning. Obama has put aside his day job and turned full time to the quest for four more years.
There is no budget, and no serious attempt by the White House to make one. The explosion of debts and deficits, growing strains on Medicare and Social Security, the expiration of tax cuts, warnings from Europe about the impact of debts on markets— all set aside until after the election. So, too, plans the president has on foreign policy, the Mideast, gay marriage, carbon taxes and regulations.
Incumbency is a powerful tool, and no president forsakes its advantage. Yet the impression of Obama’s first two years, that he never stopped campaigning, has morphed into the sense that he does nothing else. When it comes to the people’s business, there is no there there.
He has held twice as many fund-raisers as George W. Bush at this stage, most involving the ultimate perk — the use of Air Force One, with taxpayers picking up most of the cost.
His official trips outside Washington virtually all involve battleground states. He has been to Ohio 20 times, Florida 16 times, Pennsylvania 15 and Michigan 11, according to CBS News.
Obama’s bid to energize the youth vote is an excuse to visit other swing states. He flew yesterday to the University of North Carolina for his 11th visit to that state, then to the University of Colorado, for visit No. 7 there. Today, he is scheduled to address students in Iowa — his eighth visit there.
He’s making the rounds of another part of his base, the late-night comedy shows. He made his first comments since the dimensions of the Secret Service prostitution case became known on the Jimmy Fallon show yesterday. Yuk, yuk, ha ha.
Taxpayers are on the hook for this charade because the president is using the trip to push a bill to freeze interest rates on student loans. It’s the perfect two-fer, a campaign issue in swing states that passes for government action. All with a little fun on the side, of course.
With Axelrod surely behind the gambit, a cynic could argue that having one man wear two hats is efficient. But the White House doesn’t even have to make that fatuous claim because the press doesn’t question Axelrod’s dual role.
Previous presidents sent a top aide out to explain government business, but this White House seems hollowed out of serious adults. Obama’s latest chief of staff, former budget director Jack Lew, bungled the facts on Senate rules so badly in his first appearance that he went into hiding.
Obama could send out the vice president, though that could be really dicey. Joe Biden visited the Everglades Monday and ended up joking that his Secret Service staff might shoot a Florida official named Ronald Bergeron.
A recording and transcript, available on CNSNews.com, captures Biden’s bizarre ramble: “But you see this man right here, my Secret Service guy? He played in pro football, also was on that national championship team that Clemson had. He said if I go, he’ll shoot you, Ronnie, so I’m only kidding. That’s not true. He didn’t say he’d shoot Ronnie. He said he’d shoot the alligator if I went. I just think it’s incredible, and I still think you’re nuts, Ronnie.”
So that’s what the Obama presidency has come to: Axelrod or idiocy.
~~~~~~~ Just a reminder this columnist is a Democrat who voted for Obama, for those of you out their that think party loyalty trumps sanity.
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So much for teaching your kids a trade....or passing it down to the next generation.......
Is There Nothing That Obama Can't Do?.........
Taking the "family" ouf of "family farm".
The Department of Labor is poised to put the finishing touches on a rule that would apply child-labor laws to children working on family farms, prohibiting them from performing a list of jobs on their own families’ land.
Under the rules, children under 18 could no longer work “in the storing, marketing and transporting of farm product raw materials.”
The new regulations, first proposed August 31 by Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, would also revoke the government’s approval of safety training and certification taught by independent groups like 4-H and FFA, replacing them instead with a 90-hour federal government training course.
Seriously though, it is a very short step from these type regulations to lawn mowing, shoveling snow, or even newspaper routes, all of which I did from the time I was 9 years old through high school. I wonder if I can bring a law suit against my parents for child abuse.
People think by pointing these things out we are being hyperbolic, but I wonder how many of those same people ever thought that children and grandma's would be groped by government officials just 5 years ago? It's called incremental destruction of liberty and the progressives and those who support them are responsible for it, plain and simple.
Member Since: 26 augustus 2005 Posts: 1030 Comments: 11197
Obama follows in Truman’s (unconstitutional) footsteps.
Michael Stokes Paulsen
April 30, 2012, Vol. 17, No. 31 Sixty years ago, on April 8, 1952, President Harry Truman directed his secretary of commerce, Charles Sawyer, to seize and take over operation of the nation’s steel companies, in order to give steelworkers a wage increase and avert a strike threatening steel production during the Korean War. Truman’s action led, in short order, to one of the most famous and important of all modern Supreme Court decisions—Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, the “steel seizure case.” The decision dominated the nation’s headlines in the spring of 1952, just as the Obamacare case has gripped the nation’s attention this spring. Indeed, the two cases have more than that in common.
Youngstown is the landmark case that invalidated Truman’s action. The Court held, in sweeping and categorical terms, that the president may not rule by decree, conscripting private industry to carry out his commands. The chief executive may only execute laws passed by Congress, according to their terms. He may not make up laws of his own and then enforce them.
In February, President Obama an-nounced his intention to order private insurance companies to provide contraception and abortion drug coverage free, as his way of “accommodating” religious institutions’ conscientious objections to being forced to provide their employees coverage of those items under Obamacare. Like Truman six decades ago, Obama has proposed in effect to seize a national industry and tell it what to do, without any warrant in enacted law. Like Truman’s steel seizure, Obama’s insurance seizure is flat unconstitutional—as unconstitutional as anything any president has attempted to do—and Obama does not even have Truman’s excuse of a national security crisis.
Rewind to the spring of 1952: An unpopular president, conducting an unpopular, stalemated war he was not trying to win, was confronted with a political problem in a presidential election year—a looming steelworkers’ strike that could shut down the nation’s steel production for months. The steel industry was under wartime price controls and could not meet labor’s demands without raising steel prices. The government’s Wage Stabilization Board recommended a wage increase for labor, but the Office of Price Stabilization denied the companies’ request for a price increase. Neither labor nor management budged. A strike was imminent.
Truman’s solution was to issue an executive order directing Secretary Sawyer to take over the nation’s steel mills. Steel officials kept their positions, but were ordered to implement policies prescribed by the secretary, notably the wage increase, to please a core political constituency of the Democratic party, organized labor, in an election year.
Steel production was important to the war effort. But Truman’s brazen seizure of private businesses to be run by government decree was wholly unauthorized by law. Indeed, Congress had considered and rejected the idea of such direct government intervention in labor disputes. What Congress had authorized instead, in the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947, was for the president to order a “cooling off” period of up to 80 days during which neither labor nor management could take action against the other. But steel unions were ready to strike if management did not accede to their demands and did not want to cool their heels. Truman did not want to alienate labor, so he took over management.
The owners of the steel mills promptly sued, and the case raced to the Supreme Court on an extraordinary fast track. The Court ruled, 6-3, that Truman’s actions were unconstitutional. The president is not a lawmaker and cannot rule by decree. Even in wartime—even in the name of emergency—the president cannot command private industry except to the extent authorized by specific legislation. (The three dissenters thought that wartime emergency, supported by a generous reading of other statutes passed by Congress, justified Truman’s action, at least as a temporary measure.) Youngstown is now regarded as a landmark decision on the limits of presidential power.
Fast forward 60 years to a near clone of Truman’s steel seizure: A different president, battling unpopularity and desperately desiring to please a political constituency in an election year, miscalculates badly. His cabinet secretary at first orders that religious charities, hospitals, ministries, and colleges (essentially all religious organizations except “houses of worship”) provide abortion pills, sterilization, and contraception to their employees or students in their health care plans, or pay a fine—regardless of whether the religious group objects to providing such services as a matter of religious faith. The secretary’s order produces a firestorm of fury as a grotesque, unconstitutional interference with religious liberty.
It is then that the president, Barack Obama, seizes on the Truman-like “solution” of simply ordering private companies—insurance companies this time—to provide contraception, sterilization, and abortion drugs, and to provide them free, to workers whose employers object to providing them. In essence, he proclaims a right to conscript private businesses to do his bidding, even when Congress has nowhere authorized such action.
To be sure, the idea that insurance companies will provide services free is mere pretense. And it does nothing to cure the violation of First Amendment religious freedom. By entering into contracts with insurance companies to provide health insurance for employees or students, religious employers trigger the required coverage of services they oppose as a matter of faith. And insurance companies will simply pass the costs right back to the objecting religious organizations in the form of higher premiums. It’s a shell game. For the employers, the only legal alternative is to pay heavy fines.
But while the Obama shuffle is a ruse and a violation of the First Amendment, it is also a flagrant violation of Youngstown. A president may not simply decree that private companies be run in conformity with the president’s preferred policies and politics. Just as Truman could not lawfully seize steel mills and order a wage hike, Obama cannot command insurance companies to provide a “free” benefit if Congress has not conferred such authority. Obama’s contemplated conscription—which he won’t turn into an executive order until after the election—is an obvious and outrageous abuse of presidential power.
Recently, the professor-president lectured the Supreme Court that it would be “judicial activism” to hold any part of his health care program unconstitutional. As Youngstown demonstrates, however, the Court sometimes must exercise the duty to strike down actions of Congress or the president that exceed their constitutional powers. By Obama’s definition, Youngstown was judicial activism because it limited presidential power to seize an industry. But as Youngstown made clear, when political leaders make up powers not in the Constitution, it is the Court’s constitutional duty to rein them in.
Member Since: 26 augustus 2005 Posts: 1030 Comments: 11197
Straight out of the communist handbook. Little by little, rule by rule, the very fabric of this country is being destroyed. I've been following the farm issue for quite some time. Yes, the rules prohibiting farm children from working on family farms will literally destroy those small farms - those that are left, anyway. Crushing regulations and federal milk orders for pricing milk at the farm have already pushed out most family dairy farms. When small farms drop out, food production is taken over by corporate farms. Of course, it's much easier for the government to control, and even take over, a smaller number of large farms. Those darned small farmers defend themselves with nasty things like guns and pitchforks and sometimes even - gasp! - Bibles!
Member Since: 22 oktober 2005 Posts: 0 Comments: 1569
Oh my goodness, I guess I was abused as a child also since I grew up on a family farm...
I did a little picking of cotton before everyone had machines to do it.
and EVERY SUMMER as soon as school was out even when I was in high school, we had to go to the fields and "chop cotton".. aka, hoe out the weeds without chopping down all the cotton.. or soybeans...wheat did not require "choppin"..
And it was HOT, near 100 Degrees in those days in the mid south, .. And this was before Man Made Global Warming; as a matter of fact just a few years later we were told another ice age is coming because of acid rain.
my cousins and I would wear our "PE Suits" (ladies remember those aweful ugly pieces of athletic wear for young ladies?) and get so sunburned... Opps, guess that was child abuse also..but our parents sent us out there with sleeves on... We did not have sunscreen back then...
And we had to work in the family vegetable gardens, that was our major source of food for freezing and canning...
we had to feed the animals and collect eggs from the hen house..
And goodness all the OSHA Safety rules were broken on our farm, us "country kids" played all over that dangerous equipment, Combines made great Pirate Ships when not in the fields being used... and old lumber piles sometimes with rusty nails still in place could be used to build forts.. watch out for the snakes...
It is a miracle I lived to survive my childhood and teen years.
Man, where were all the rules and regulations when I was growing up????
just kidding; I wish my kids had the opportunity to do these things growing up.
Member Since: 29 augustus 2005 Posts: 287 Comments: 40512
Not a minute too soon, the Department of Homeland Security has announced that it is creating “environmental justice” units that will be empowered to oversee regulations in conjunction with local governments throughout the country. The framework for the Environmental Justice Working Group includes eleven federal government agencies, including the TSA, the Secret Service and FEMA. Go big or go home, right?
VISION STATEMENT
“Environmental justice” describes the commitment of the Federal Government, through its policies, programs, and activities, to avoid placing disproportionately high and adverse effects on the human health and environment of minority or low-income populations. As described in the 2010 Quadrennial Homeland Security Review (QHSR), our Nation’s vision of homeland security is a homeland safe and secure, resilient against terrorism and other hazards, and where American interests and aspirations and the American way of life can thrive. In seeking to fulfill this vision, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) aspires to avoid burdening minority and low-income populations with a disproportionate share of any adverse human health or environmental risks associated with our efforts to secure the Nation. DHS joins with other departments and agencies to appropriately include environmental justice practices in our larger mission efforts involving federal law enforcement and emergency response activities.
A proposal from the Obama administration to prevent children from doing farm chores has drawn plenty of criticism from rural-district members of Congress. But now it’s attracting barbs from farm kids themselves.
The Department of Labor is poised to put the finishing touches on a rule that would apply child-labor laws to children working on family farms, prohibiting them from performing a list of jobs on their own families’ land.
Under the rules, children under 18 could no longer work “in the storing, marketing and transporting of farm product raw materials.”
“Prohibited places of employment,” a Department press release read, “would include country grain elevators, grain bins, silos, feed lots, stockyards, livestock exchanges and livestock auctions.”
The new regulations, first proposed August 31 by Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, would also revoke the government’s approval of safety training and certification taught by independent groups like 4-H and FFA, replacing them instead with a 90-hour federal government training course.
I like that. Listen up Dunderhead.AKA (Restraint Spathy!) Someones advocate! Family farms often are adjacent to eachother and the learning experience that the youth are provided while working AT HOME and on a neighboring farm are not going to be learned at some Gov 90 hr brain mushing session! For Gods sake I was taught how to operate(SAFELY) our family riding Lawnmower and REAR tine Rototiller when I was in 6th grade>.
When it came time to get my drivers license and later work at garden centers my skills were one of the reasons I was hired and one of the reasons my drivers ed teacher wasnt popping tranquilizers when I was behind the wheel.
Get your Brain casing out of the Government savior manure machine!
This law prohibits learning. This law denies experience. This law denies our youth opportunity. This law this is a beginning to an end of what built this country and what FEEDS THE WORLD!
As said above: Whats next or encompassed within this law. (As we have painfully seen, the laws are being used way beyond their intention) Lawnmowers? Snowblowers? Snowshovels? Onion weaving and potato storage?Ask Sky) Carting baskets of veges to the food shelters? Driving the family tractor and cart to the local market? And not to mention pulling the rug out from under 4H organizations? ARE you "fraking" kidding me?
In fact Where is Sky on this. I think she would be outraged. I will go ask her. I would like her input.
Member Since: 8 juni 2008 Posts: 65 Comments: 10532
Dude!? 12. TheDevilsAdvocate Read the legislation! Whats the end result? Does it literally have to say x and y for you to look forward to the end result? Really?
Member Since: 8 juni 2008 Posts: 65 Comments: 10532
15. spathy Learned to drive a mower, then a tractor, then a truck by the time I was 12.
I worked for my dad and later for an auto mechanic. I went to high school with a lot of guys (and girls) that worked in the Caladium harvest and sometimes in the citrus groves and were really grateful for the jobs. At that time, this was an agricultural town and those were really the only jobs available.
Even though most went on to other occupations in other cities, they learned a strong work ethic. That is what made America great.
I wasn't in 4H or FFA, but they are valuable programs that a lot of kids learn a lot from and get a lot of enjoyment from. Hate to see them change.
Member Since: 2 september 2008 Posts: 80 Comments: 26412
BTW Lat. Before I forget. RE 3 That was very powerful. If I wasnt nearly teared out I would have cried a river at the state of things pointed out in that vid. Fortunately/unfortunately I am all too aware of the information within the vid. Numb to and motivated by are my only words to describe my feelings while watching. Thanks for posting a good reminder.
Member Since: 8 juni 2008 Posts: 65 Comments: 10532
"The new regulations, first proposed August 31 by Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, would also revoke the government’s approval of safety training and certification taught by independent groups like 4-H and FFA, replacing them instead with a 90-hour federal government training course."
This is starting to sound like something they would do to benefit Mexican migrant labor. They are never members of FFA or 4-H so why don't we just outlaw everything that doesn't include everybody, eh???
Member Since: 11 september 2008 Posts: 9 Comments: 8357
On second thought. I wont go there. I admire Sky,I know she peruses this blog. If you are reading this Sky please give us your opinion. The media has seemed to limit the access to information on this bill. So from what you can read what do you think Sky?
Member Since: 8 juni 2008 Posts: 65 Comments: 10532
Shep,Rob or anyone,Do you have a bill # or a link to the actual proposals? I heard about this several weeks ago but I cant seem to find the exact number of proposed legislation. I just hate commenting on it without the exact legalese proposal at hand.
Member Since: 8 juni 2008 Posts: 65 Comments: 10532
If we had any illegal immigrants at school, I wasn't aware, but FFA was probably one of the most inclusive organizations I know of.
I remember one girl that was from a Mexican family and another that was Native American, a couple that I had classes with that were African American...all proudly wearing their blue corduroy jacket with the little gold patches. Others were either from poor or middle class farm families.
Perhaps I lived in a unique town, but we mostly got along and folks were treated fairly and judged by how they acted, not by their color, religion, economic class, etc.
We were not rich by any means, but my father was an executive so maybe we were a little better off than most, not as well off as others, but none of that seemed to matter in my school.
I grew up with friends of all shapes and colors, from a variety of backgrounds. We all managed to get along. We were all proud of who we were and of each other.
Now I see Washington driving a wedge between people. Inciting class and racial warfare. Twisting the meaning of separation of church and state.
It goes against everything I've ever thought about inclusiveness and the great melting pot.
Okay, I'm rambling...just some thoughts for what it's worth. Thanks for stirring some (good) old memories.
Member Since: 2 september 2008 Posts: 80 Comments: 26412
As far as I can tell this was the original proposal then it was amended from this: FMCSA requests public comment on: (1) Previously published regulatory guidance on the distinction between interstate and intrastate commerce in deciding whether operations of commercial motor vehicles within the boundaries of a single State are subject to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs); (2) the factors the States are using in deciding whether farm vehicle drivers transporting agricultural commodities, farm supplies and equipment as part of a crop share agreement are subject to the commercial driver's license regulations; and (3) proposed guidance to determine whether off-road farm equipment or implements of husbandry operated on public roads for limited distances are considered commercial motor vehicles. The guidance would be used to help ensure uniform application of the safety regulations by enforcement personnel, motor carriers and commercial motor vehicle drivers.
Rob I cant help but reply. It seems dangerous when Federal Regulation and Supreme court decisions that have stated that the States are requested/required to help uphold Federal Immigration law are now being challenged by the Feds(in Court mind you)when the states try to comply..The Feds are the ones that are disobeying the laws they are sworn to uphold,( You know the ones they drafted and passed legitimately.) Yet The states that want to uphold the laws passed by Congress and are required under Federal law To do so are the ones being called radical.The ones being sued by the Feds for upholding Federal law and Supreme Court decisions are Radical ????.(just had to repeat that) Yet the sanctuary states and towns that are disregarding Federal law are not being questioned or brought into court.
Again... The world is upside down I tell ya. Ok folks I gotta call it an evening. I will look for any comment tomorrow if I have time before or after work.
Member Since: 8 juni 2008 Posts: 65 Comments: 10532
A friend of mine in Kansas specifically requested clarification about the "family farm" provision in the proposed legislation. He was told that his children would be allowed to work on his farm - but not on their neighbor's farm, their uncle's farm, and so on. (ADD: I've sent him an email, asking if he'll share the documents and correspondence he received.)
When I lived in rural south Texas, harvesting and planting were done by families working together. Everyone would bring in the maize from one farm, for example, and then they would go on to the next. ADD: And when I say everyone, I mean everyone - even the kids. Good gosh - even I learned how to drive an auger wagon!
They were specifically told that that kind of operation would be against federal law if this is passed.
I have just HAD it with this government. Whatever they intend, they are ripping at the fabric of our society, and they need to be stopped.
Member Since: 4 oktober 2004 Posts: 196 Comments: 14842
"27. shoreacres 10:08 PM EDT on April 25, 2012 +0 A friend of mine in Kansas specifically requested clarification about the "family farm" provision in the proposed legislation. He was told that his children would be allowed to work on his farm - but not on their neighbor's farm, their uncle's farm, and so on."
Bingo!! It's about protecting a labor pool.
He'll have to hire migrants. Legal or not.
Member Since: 11 september 2008 Posts: 9 Comments: 8357
Not necessarily. He always can quit farming. You know - like my physician telling me to find another doctor because he's no longer accepting medicare patients, or a friend choosing to close his business rather than deal with the regulatory environment.
And now, if you'll excuse me, I'm off to work. Some of us are stupid enough to still think that's a good thing to do.
Member Since: 4 oktober 2004 Posts: 196 Comments: 14842
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But still, when you are always promising half the population a lot of free stuff or forgiving their debits, etc..they will vote for him.
Good morning...
Is There Nothing That Obama Can't Do?.........
Taking the "family" ouf of "family farm".
The Department of Labor is poised to put the finishing touches on a rule that would apply child-labor laws to children working on family farms, prohibiting them from performing a list of jobs on their own families’ land.
Under the rules, children under 18 could no longer work “in the storing, marketing and transporting of farm product raw materials.”
The new regulations, first proposed August 31 by Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, would also revoke the government’s approval of safety training and certification taught by independent groups like 4-H and FFA, replacing them instead with a 90-hour federal government training course.
Link
"make it impossible for farmers to farm"....check
If I wanted America to fail:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embed ded&v=CZ-4gnNz0vc
Does that apply to "organic" farming? :)
Seriously though, it is a very short step from these type regulations to lawn mowing, shoveling snow, or even newspaper routes, all of which I did from the time I was 9 years old through high school. I wonder if I can bring a law suit against my parents for child abuse.
People think by pointing these things out we are being hyperbolic, but I wonder how many of those same people ever thought that children and grandma's would be groped by government officials just 5 years ago? It's called incremental destruction of liberty and the progressives and those who support them are responsible for it, plain and simple.
No Rule by Decree
Obama follows in Truman’s (unconstitutional) footsteps.
Michael Stokes Paulsen
April 30, 2012, Vol. 17, No. 31
Sixty years ago, on April 8, 1952, President Harry Truman directed his secretary of commerce, Charles Sawyer, to seize and take over operation of the nation’s steel companies, in order to give steelworkers a wage increase and avert a strike threatening steel production during the Korean War. Truman’s action led, in short order, to one of the most famous and important of all modern Supreme Court decisions—Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer, the “steel seizure case.” The decision dominated the nation’s headlines in the spring of 1952, just as the Obamacare case has gripped the nation’s attention this spring. Indeed, the two cases have more than that in common.
Youngstown is the landmark case that invalidated Truman’s action. The Court held, in sweeping and categorical terms, that the president may not rule by decree, conscripting private industry to carry out his commands. The chief executive may only execute laws passed by Congress, according to their terms. He may not make up laws of his own and then enforce them.
In February, President Obama an-nounced his intention to order private insurance companies to provide contraception and abortion drug coverage free, as his way of “accommodating” religious institutions’ conscientious objections to being forced to provide their employees coverage of those items under Obamacare. Like Truman six decades ago, Obama has proposed in effect to seize a national industry and tell it what to do, without any warrant in enacted law. Like Truman’s steel seizure, Obama’s insurance seizure is flat unconstitutional—as unconstitutional as anything any president has attempted to do—and Obama does not even have Truman’s excuse of a national security crisis.
Rewind to the spring of 1952: An unpopular president, conducting an unpopular, stalemated war he was not trying to win, was confronted with a political problem in a presidential election year—a looming steelworkers’ strike that could shut down the nation’s steel production for months. The steel industry was under wartime price controls and could not meet labor’s demands without raising steel prices. The government’s Wage Stabilization Board recommended a wage increase for labor, but the Office of Price Stabilization denied the companies’ request for a price increase. Neither labor nor management budged. A strike was imminent.
Truman’s solution was to issue an executive order directing Secretary Sawyer to take over the nation’s steel mills. Steel officials kept their positions, but were ordered to implement policies prescribed by the secretary, notably the wage increase, to please a core political constituency of the Democratic party, organized labor, in an election year.
Steel production was important to the war effort. But Truman’s brazen seizure of private businesses to be run by government decree was wholly unauthorized by law. Indeed, Congress had considered and rejected the idea of such direct government intervention in labor disputes. What Congress had authorized instead, in the Taft-Hartley Act of 1947, was for the president to order a “cooling off” period of up to 80 days during which neither labor nor management could take action against the other. But steel unions were ready to strike if management did not accede to their demands and did not want to cool their heels. Truman did not want to alienate labor, so he took over management.
The owners of the steel mills promptly sued, and the case raced to the Supreme Court on an extraordinary fast track. The Court ruled, 6-3, that Truman’s actions were unconstitutional. The president is not a lawmaker and cannot rule by decree. Even in wartime—even in the name of emergency—the president cannot command private industry except to the extent authorized by specific legislation. (The three dissenters thought that wartime emergency, supported by a generous reading of other statutes passed by Congress, justified Truman’s action, at least as a temporary measure.) Youngstown is now regarded as a landmark decision on the limits of presidential power.
Fast forward 60 years to a near clone of Truman’s steel seizure: A different president, battling unpopularity and desperately desiring to please a political constituency in an election year, miscalculates badly. His cabinet secretary at first orders that religious charities, hospitals, ministries, and colleges (essentially all religious organizations except “houses of worship”) provide abortion pills, sterilization, and contraception to their employees or students in their health care plans, or pay a fine—regardless of whether the religious group objects to providing such services as a matter of religious faith. The secretary’s order produces a firestorm of fury as a grotesque, unconstitutional interference with religious liberty.
It is then that the president, Barack Obama, seizes on the Truman-like “solution” of simply ordering private companies—insurance companies this time—to provide contraception, sterilization, and abortion drugs, and to provide them free, to workers whose employers object to providing them. In essence, he proclaims a right to conscript private businesses to do his bidding, even when Congress has nowhere authorized such action.
To be sure, the idea that insurance companies will provide services free is mere pretense. And it does nothing to cure the violation of First Amendment religious freedom. By entering into contracts with insurance companies to provide health insurance for employees or students, religious employers trigger the required coverage of services they oppose as a matter of faith. And insurance companies will simply pass the costs right back to the objecting religious organizations in the form of higher premiums. It’s a shell game. For the employers, the only legal alternative is to pay heavy fines.
But while the Obama shuffle is a ruse and a violation of the First Amendment, it is also a flagrant violation of Youngstown. A president may not simply decree that private companies be run in conformity with the president’s preferred policies and politics. Just as Truman could not lawfully seize steel mills and order a wage hike, Obama cannot command insurance companies to provide a “free” benefit if Congress has not conferred such authority. Obama’s contemplated conscription—which he won’t turn into an executive order until after the election—is an obvious and outrageous abuse of presidential power.
Recently, the professor-president lectured the Supreme Court that it would be “judicial activism” to hold any part of his health care program unconstitutional. As Youngstown demonstrates, however, the Court sometimes must exercise the duty to strike down actions of Congress or the president that exceed their constitutional powers. By Obama’s definition, Youngstown was judicial activism because it limited presidential power to seize an industry. But as Youngstown made clear, when political leaders make up powers not in the Constitution, it is the Court’s constitutional duty to rein them in.
Straight out of the communist handbook. Little by little, rule by rule, the very fabric of this country is being destroyed. I've been following the farm issue for quite some time. Yes, the rules prohibiting farm children from working on family farms will literally destroy those small farms - those that are left, anyway. Crushing regulations and federal milk orders for pricing milk at the farm have already pushed out most family dairy farms. When small farms drop out, food production is taken over by corporate farms. Of course, it's much easier for the government to control, and even take over, a smaller number of large farms. Those darned small farmers defend themselves with nasty things like guns and pitchforks and sometimes even - gasp! - Bibles!
I did a little picking of cotton before everyone had machines to do it.
and EVERY SUMMER as soon as school was out even when I was in high school,
we had to go to the fields and "chop cotton".. aka, hoe out the weeds without chopping down all the cotton..
or soybeans...wheat did not require "choppin"..
And it was HOT, near 100 Degrees in those days in the mid south, ..
And this was before Man Made Global Warming; as a matter of fact just a few years later
we were told another ice age is coming because of acid rain.
my cousins and I would wear our "PE Suits" (ladies remember those aweful ugly pieces of athletic wear for young ladies?)
and get so sunburned...
Opps, guess that was child abuse also..but our parents sent us out there with sleeves on...
We did not have sunscreen back then...
And we had to work in the family vegetable gardens, that was our major source of food for freezing and canning...
we had to feed the animals and collect eggs from the hen house..
And goodness all the OSHA Safety rules were broken on our farm, us "country kids" played all over that dangerous equipment, Combines made great Pirate Ships when not in the fields being used... and old lumber piles sometimes with rusty nails still in place could be used to build forts.. watch out for the snakes...
It is a miracle I lived to survive my childhood and teen years.
Man, where were all the rules and regulations when I was growing up????
just kidding; I wish my kids had the opportunity to do these things growing up.
VISION STATEMENT
“Environmental justice” describes the commitment of the Federal Government, through its policies, programs, and activities, to avoid placing disproportionately high and adverse effects on the human health and environment of minority or low-income populations. As described in the 2010 Quadrennial Homeland Security Review (QHSR), our Nation’s vision of homeland security is a homeland safe and secure, resilient against terrorism and other hazards, and where American interests and aspirations and the American way of life can thrive. In seeking to fulfill this vision, the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) aspires to avoid burdening minority and low-income populations with a disproportionate share of any adverse human health or environmental risks associated with our efforts to secure the Nation. DHS joins with other departments and agencies to appropriately include environmental justice practices in our larger mission efforts involving federal law enforcement and emergency response activities.
Link
UK Slides Back Into Recession in First Double Dip Since 1970s
http://www.cnbc.com/id/47169446
A proposal from the Obama administration to prevent children from doing farm chores has drawn plenty of criticism from rural-district members of Congress. But now it’s attracting barbs from farm kids themselves.
The Department of Labor is poised to put the finishing touches on a rule that would apply child-labor laws to children working on family farms, prohibiting them from performing a list of jobs on their own families’ land.
Under the rules, children under 18 could no longer work “in the storing, marketing and transporting of farm product raw materials.”
“Prohibited places of employment,” a Department press release read, “would include country grain elevators, grain bins, silos, feed lots, stockyards, livestock exchanges and livestock auctions.”
The new regulations, first proposed August 31 by Labor Secretary Hilda Solis, would also revoke the government’s approval of safety training and certification taught by independent groups like 4-H and FFA, replacing them instead with a 90-hour federal government training course.
Link
... _ _ _ ...
Nice vid Rob :)
Listen up Dunderhead.AKA (Restraint Spathy!) Someones advocate!
Family farms often are adjacent to eachother and the learning experience that the youth are provided while working AT HOME and on a neighboring farm are not going to be learned at some Gov 90 hr brain mushing session! For Gods sake I was taught how to operate(SAFELY) our family riding Lawnmower and REAR tine Rototiller when I was in 6th grade>.
When it came time to get my drivers license and later work at garden centers my skills were one of the reasons I was hired and one of the reasons my drivers ed teacher wasnt popping tranquilizers when I was behind the wheel.
Get your Brain casing out of the Government savior manure machine!
This law prohibits learning.
This law denies experience.
This law denies our youth opportunity.
This law this is a beginning to an end of what built this country and what FEEDS THE WORLD!
As said above:
Whats next or encompassed within this law.
(As we have painfully seen, the laws are being used way beyond their intention)
Lawnmowers? Snowblowers? Snowshovels? Onion weaving and potato storage?Ask Sky) Carting baskets of veges to the food shelters? Driving the family tractor and cart to the local market?
And not to mention pulling the rug out from under 4H organizations?
ARE you "fraking" kidding me?
In fact Where is Sky on this. I think she would be outraged. I will go ask her. I would like her input.
12. TheDevilsAdvocate
Read the legislation!
Whats the end result?
Does it literally have to say x and y for you to look forward to the end result?
Really?
Hey dunderhead, maybe you should follow the link before you see panties"
ROFLMAO
OK...Now get over here and clean the Rum and Coke of my monitor.
:))
Learned to drive a mower, then a tractor, then a truck by the time I was 12.
I worked for my dad and later for an auto mechanic. I went to high school with a lot of guys (and girls) that worked in the Caladium harvest and sometimes in the citrus groves and were really grateful for the jobs. At that time, this was an agricultural town and those were really the only jobs available.
Even though most went on to other occupations in other cities, they learned a strong work ethic. That is what made America great.
I wasn't in 4H or FFA, but they are valuable programs that a lot of kids learn a lot from and get a lot of enjoyment from.
Hate to see them change.
Before I forget.
RE 3
That was very powerful.
If I wasnt nearly teared out I would have cried a river at the state of things pointed out in that vid.
Fortunately/unfortunately I am all too aware of the information within the vid.
Numb to and motivated by are my only words to describe my feelings while watching.
Thanks for posting a good reminder.
18. RobDaHood
Ok Rob now I am tearing up.
Thanks for sharing.
This is starting to sound like something they would do to benefit Mexican migrant labor.
They are never members of FFA or 4-H so why don't we just outlaw everything that doesn't include everybody, eh???
I heard about this several weeks ago but I cant seem to find the exact number of proposed legislation.
I just hate commenting on it without the exact legalese proposal at hand.
I remember one girl that was from a Mexican family and another that was Native American, a couple that I had classes with that were African American...all proudly wearing their blue corduroy jacket with the little gold patches. Others were either from poor or middle class farm families.
Perhaps I lived in a unique town, but we mostly got along and folks were treated fairly and judged by how they acted, not by their color, religion, economic class, etc.
We were not rich by any means, but my father was an executive so maybe we were a little better off than most, not as well off as others, but none of that seemed to matter in my school.
I grew up with friends of all shapes and colors, from a variety of backgrounds. We all managed to get along. We were all proud of who we were and of each other.
Now I see Washington driving a wedge between people. Inciting class and racial warfare. Twisting the meaning of separation of church and state.
It goes against everything I've ever thought about inclusiveness and the great melting pot.
Okay, I'm rambling...just some thoughts for what it's worth.
Thanks for stirring some (good) old memories.
FMCSA requests public comment on: (1) Previously published regulatory guidance on the distinction between interstate and intrastate commerce in deciding whether operations of commercial motor vehicles within the boundaries of a single State are subject to the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Regulations (FMCSRs); (2) the factors the States are using in deciding whether farm vehicle drivers transporting agricultural commodities, farm supplies and equipment as part of a crop share agreement are subject to the commercial driver's license regulations; and (3) proposed guidance to determine whether off-road farm equipment or implements of husbandry operated on public roads for limited distances are considered commercial motor vehicles. The guidance would be used to help ensure uniform application of the safety regulations by enforcement personnel, motor carriers and commercial motor vehicle drivers.
Link
It seems dangerous when Federal Regulation and Supreme court decisions that have stated that the States are requested/required to help uphold Federal Immigration law are now being challenged by the Feds(in Court mind you)when the states try to comply..The Feds are the ones that are disobeying the laws they are sworn to uphold,( You know the ones they drafted and passed legitimately.)
Yet The states that want to uphold the laws passed by Congress and are required under Federal law To do so are the ones being called radical.The ones being sued by the Feds for upholding Federal law and Supreme Court decisions are Radical ????.(just had to repeat that) Yet the sanctuary states and towns that are disregarding Federal law are not being questioned or brought into court.
Again...
The world is upside down I tell ya.
Ok folks I gotta call it an evening.
I will look for any comment tomorrow if I have time before or after work.
(ADD: I've sent him an email, asking if he'll share the documents and correspondence he received.)
When I lived in rural south Texas, harvesting and planting were done by families working together. Everyone would bring in the maize from one farm, for example, and then they would go on to the next. ADD: And when I say everyone, I mean everyone - even the kids. Good gosh - even I learned how to drive an auger wagon!
They were specifically told that that kind of operation would be against federal law if this is passed.
I have just HAD it with this government. Whatever they intend, they are ripping at the fabric of our society, and they need to be stopped.
Our way of life is currently in the balance.
I hope many are finally recognizing that part.
And now for something completely different.
He has some very good points :)
Wake up America!
A friend of mine in Kansas specifically requested clarification about the "family farm" provision in the proposed legislation. He was told that his children would be allowed to work on his farm - but not on their neighbor's farm, their uncle's farm, and so on."
Bingo!!
It's about protecting a labor pool.
He'll have to hire migrants. Legal or not.
Not necessarily. He always can quit farming. You know - like my physician telling me to find another doctor because he's no longer accepting medicare patients, or a friend choosing to close his business rather than deal with the regulatory environment.
And now, if you'll excuse me, I'm off to work. Some of us are stupid enough to still think that's a good thing to do.
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