Dems are hypocrites on Koch Bros

Ducbutter's Avatar
CJ7's Avatar
  • CJ7
  • 04-08-2014, 11:46 AM
But that shouldn't be any surprise.

http://www.powerlineblog.com/archive...ainst-them.php

http://www.politico.com/story/2014/0...ts-104787.html Originally Posted by Ducbutter

Those donations from Koch Industries Inc. Political Action Committee, or KochPAC, include nearly $200,000 to Democratic candidates and committees as recently as 2010 — including a $30,000 donation to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee

Read more: http://www.politico.com/story/2014/0...#ixzz2yJlX7An5


big fucking deal ... NEARLY $200K

the Koch Machine has spent $400 Million trying to stop Obama
Ducbutter's Avatar
big fucking deal ... NEARLY $200K

the Koch Machine has spent $400 Million trying to stop Obama[/QUOTE]


Typical.
Is it hypocritical or not? As if there aren't some monster contributors to Dem causes.
CJ7's Avatar
  • CJ7
  • 04-08-2014, 12:02 PM
big fucking deal ... NEARLY $200K

the Koch Machine has spent $400 Million trying to stop Obama Originally Posted by Ducbutter

Typical.
Is it hypocritical or not? As if there aren't some monster contributors to Dem causes.[/QUOTE]


no Duc its politics ... try and wrap your little brain around that concept ...

Big Oil gives to the Democratic Party too, they just give MORE to the Republican Party
big fucking deal ... NEARLY $200K

the Koch Machine has spent $400 Million trying to stop Obama Originally Posted by Ducbutter

Typical.
Is it hypocritical or not? As if there aren't some monster contributors to Dem causes.[/QUOTE]

It's a form letter thanking the PAC for a campaign donation. Is this really the best you can do?
CJ7's Avatar
  • CJ7
  • 04-08-2014, 12:16 PM
Duc expects a political group to turn down a donation in the name of hypocrisy .... apparently theres an endless supply of idiots on the right
Ducbutter's Avatar
Typical.
Is it hypocritical or not? As if there aren't some monster contributors to Dem causes. Originally Posted by CJ7

no Duc its politics ... try and wrap your little brain around that concept ...

Big Oil gives to the Democratic Party too, they just give MORE to the Republican Party[/QUOTE]

No. It's hypocrisy to squeal about the influence of the Kochs after taking their money.
JD Barleycorn's Avatar
Those donations from Koch Industries Inc. Political Action Committee, or KochPAC, include nearly $200,000 to Democratic candidates and committees as recently as 2010 — including a $30,000 donation to the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee

Read more: http://www.politico.com/story/2014/0...#ixzz2yJlX7An5


big fucking deal ... NEARLY $200K

the Koch Machine has spent $400 Million trying to stop Obama Originally Posted by CJ7
What is wrong, illegal, or unconstitutional about trying to stop Obama?

Remember this, 92% of all political donations by reporters goes to democrats. 89% of all political donations by people who work for TV, radio, or the print media goes to democrats.
George Soros gives none of his billions to the GOP. He spent $80 million trying to legalize marijuana in the US. He spent over $300 million on the democratic party in 2004 when he announced that "he owned the democratic party". This from a former Nazi collaborator, turncoat, and a man who thinks he likes playing God.
Ducbutter's Avatar
Typical.
Is it hypocritical or not? As if there aren't some monster contributors to Dem causes. Originally Posted by timpage
It's a form letter thanking the PAC for a campaign donation. Is this really the best you can do?[/QUOTE]

Come on Tim. You should recognize the hypocrisy. You an expert.
Ducbutter's Avatar
Duc expects a political group to turn down a donation in the name of hypocrisy .... apparently theres an endless supply of idiots on the right Originally Posted by CJ7
Again, typical. You got nothing so you start with the name calling. You're brilliant.
CJ7's Avatar
  • CJ7
  • 04-08-2014, 12:47 PM
Again, typical. You got nothing so you start with the name calling. You're brilliant. Originally Posted by Ducbutter



Goldman donated 177K to the Republicans and 42K to the Dems ... who the hell is the hypocrite now Duc?
lustylad's Avatar
Best analysis yet on this subject:

The Really Big Money? Not the Kochs

Harry Reid surely must have meant the unions when he complained about buying elections.


By Kimberley A. Strassel


Harry Reid is under a lot of job-retention stress these days, so Americans might forgive him the occasional word fumble. When he recently took to the Senate floor to berate the billionaire brothers Charles and David Koch for spending "unlimited money" to "rig the system" and "buy elections," the majority leader clearly meant to be condemning unions.

It's an extraordinary thing, in a political age obsessed with campaign money, that nobody scrutinizes the biggest, baddest, "darkest" spenders of all: organized labor. The IRS is muzzling nonprofits; Democrats are "outing" corporate donors; Jane Mayer is probably working on part 89 of her New Yorker series on the "covert" Kochs. Yet the unions glide blissfully, unmolestedly along. This lack of oversight has led to a union world that today acts with a level of campaign-finance impunity that no other political giver—conservative outfits, corporate donors, individuals, trade groups—could even fathom.

Mr. Reid was quite agitated on the Senate floor about "unlimited money," by which he must have been referring to the $4.4 billion that unions had spent on politics from 2005 to 2011 alone, according to this newspaper. The Center for Responsive Politics' list of top all-time donors from 1989 to 2014 ranks Koch Industries No. 59. Above Koch were 18 unions, which collectively spent $620,873,623 more than Koch Industries ($18 million). Even factoring in undisclosed personal donations by the Koch brothers, they are a rounding error in union spending.

Mr. Reid was similarly heated over the tie-up between outside groups and politicians, by which he surely meant the unions who today openly operate as an arm of the Democratic Party. The press may despise the Kochs, but even it isn't stupid enough to claim they are owned by the GOP. Most outside conservatives groups, including the Koch-supported Americans for Prosperity, back candidates and positions that challenge the Republican line. And in any event, every conservative 501(c)(4) is so terrified of the hay the media and regulators would make over even a hint of coordination with the GOP, they keep a scrupulous distance.

Unions, as 501(c)(5) organizations, are technically held to the same standards against coordination with political parties. Yet no Democrat or union official today even troubles to maintain that fiction. Hundreds upon hundreds of the delegates to the 2012 Democratic convention were union members. They were in the same room as party officials, plotting campaign strategies. The question therefore is how much of that $4.4 billion in union spending was at the disposal of the Democratic Party—potentially in violation of a bajillion campaign-finance rules?

As for Mr. Reid's complaint that some "rig the system to benefit themselves," that was undoubtedly a reference to the overt, transactional nature of union money. Nobody doubts the Kochs and many corporations support candidates who they hope will push for free-market principles. Though imagine the political outcry if David or Charles Koch openly conditioned dollars for a politician on policies to benefit Koch Industries?

In the past months alone, unions demanded an exemption to a tax under ObamaCare; the administration gave it. They demanded an end to plans to "fast track" trade deals; Mr. Reid killed it. They wanted more money for union job training; President Obama put it in his budget. Everybody understands—the press matter-of-fact reports it—that these policy giveaways are to ensure unions open their coffers to help Mr. Reid keep the Senate in November. The quid pro quo is even more explicit and self-serving at the state level, where public-sector unions elect politicians who promise to pay them more. If the CEO of Exxon tried this, the Justice Department would come knocking. The unions do it daily.

Democrats hope to make a campaign theme out of conservative "dark" money, something else Mr. Reid knows about. In addition to other spending, unions have been aggressively funneling money into their own "dark" groups. One of these is the heavyweight 501(c)(4) Patriot Majority USA. Patriot Majority doesn't disclose its donors, though a Huffington Post investigation found it had been "fueled" in 2012 by $2.3 million in union donations. Amusingly, Patriot Majority used its undisclosed money on a campaign to expose the Koch brothers' "front" groups. Oh, and Patriot Majority is run by Craig Varoga, a former aide and close ally of . . . Harry Reid.

The unions have had a special interest in funding attacks on conservative groups, since it has led to the IRS's regulatory muzzling of 501(c)(4) speech. Under the new rule, conservative 501(c)(4)s are restricted in candidate support; unions can do what they want. Conservative groups are stymied in get-out-the-vote campaigns; unions can continue theirs. Conservative outfits must count up volunteer hours; not unions.

So now, in addition to a system in which organized labor spends "unlimited money" to "rig the system to benefit themselves" and "buy elections," (to quote Mr. Reid), Mr. Obama's IRS has made sure to shut up anyone who might compete with unions or complain about them.

Supporters of campaign-finance rules never want to acknowledge that their maze of regulations serve primarily as a tool for savvy politicians to manipulate and silence opponents. For proof, they need only listen to Mr. Reid—who is pretty savvy, and who didn't misspeak after all.
What is wrong, illegal, or unconstitutional about trying to stop Obama?

Remember this, 92% of all political donations by reporters goes to democrats. 89% of all political donations by people who work for TV, radio, or the print media goes to democrats.
George Soros gives none of his billions to the GOP. He spent $80 million trying to legalize marijuana in the US. He spent over $300 million on the democratic party in 2004 when he announced that "he owned the democratic party". This from a former Nazi collaborator, turncoat, and a man who thinks he likes playing God. Originally Posted by JD Barleycorn
Wrong, yes.

Illegal or unconstitutional, no.

But, as usual, you miss the point Admiral.

The Cock brothers PAC decided to send Schumer some money. He took it. If he changed his position after he received the money in regard to the Cock brothers influence peddling schemes that are designed to completely deregulate the oil industry and every other business that the Cock brothers make their billions in....then yes, that would be hypocritical. Since that hasn't happened, it's not.

You get it now DickButter?
Ducbutter's Avatar
Goldman donated 177K to the Republicans and 42K to the Dems ... who the hell is the hypocrite now Duc? Originally Posted by CJ7
Nobody from the Repub. party is standing in the well of the senate decrying Goldman's influence.
Brilliant.
Ducbutter's Avatar
Wrong, yes.

Illegal or unconstitutional, no.

But, as usual, you miss the point Admiral.

The Cock brothers PAC decided to send Schumer some money. He took it. If he changed his position after he received the money in regard to the Cock brothers influence peddling schemes that are designed to completely deregulate the oil industry and every other business that the Cock brothers make their billions in....then yes, that would be hypocritical. Since that hasn't happened, it's not.

You get it now DickButter? Originally Posted by timpage
I get that you're wrong again.