Linkie no workie. Originally Posted by Iaintliein
must've accidentally hit an enter key and split the link
hate that when that happens.
http://bungalowbillscw.blogspot.com/2011/12/list-of-senators-who-voted-for-s1867.html
damn that didn't work.
Linkie no workie. Originally Posted by Iaintliein
The problem is that the bill allows the government to hold an American citizen, in the United States, without bond or trial, based on the suspicion of terrorist activities. AYFKM? In America? If this bill is signed, we can kiss whatever was left of freedom goodbye, and reminisce about how this used to be a free country. At least until the military comes and places us in camps. Originally Posted by CuteOldGuy
93-7? I'm disappointed.But that's on the final vote on the bill, which is the Pentagon funding bill. The entire bill is probably 500 - 700 pages long. There is essentially two provisions of one or two pages each that are problematic from a civil liberties standpoint. There were several votes on substitutes on the offending provisions. Those are the votes that you need to find that will show you how the Senators broke down on the issue in question.
makes me wonder if they actually read the bill which runs 600+ pages. I don't think they would've voted for it if that section 1031 was included if they understood what that meant.. Originally Posted by dilbert firestorm
But that's on the final vote on the bill, which is the Pentagon funding bill. The entire bill is probably 500 - 700 pages long. There is essentially two provisions of one or two pages each that are problematic from a civil liberties standpoint. There were several votes on substitutes on the offending provisions. Those are the votes that you need to find that will show you how the Senators broke down on the issue in question.Very good point TTH and one most folks have a hard time understanding.
It's very hard to vote against the entire bill as you will then be tagged as "voting against or men and women in uniform". Or "he voted to fund our soldiers in Afghanistan." That kind of bullshit TV ad, which by the way is devastatingly effective as we saw when John Kerry said "I voted against it before I voted for it," in an almost identical situation as this. Kerry voted against a offensive portion of a bill on amendment, but then voted for the entire bill that he felt was overall necessary but had the smaller bad provision in it. Originally Posted by TexTushHog