Come on guys you remember that right?
October 10, 2002:
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
Mr. DAYTON. I ask for unanimous consent that I have 30 seconds more to finish my remarks.
Mr. McCAIN. I object.




McSameOL FU wrote:John Who?

OL FU wrote:John Who?

houndawg wrote:OL FU wrote:John Who?
John McDrooling In His Porridge.![]()
I'm completely astonished that republicans would even show their faces in public, let alone speak out loud, after their Eight Years of Miserable Failure and Abject Incompetence under the Worst President Ever..

I'm completely astonished that democrats would even show their faces in public, let alone speak out loud after their 10 months of miserable failure and abject incompentence following the worst president ever with an even worse president.houndawg wrote:OL FU wrote:John Who?
John McDrooling In His Porridge.![]()
I'm completely astonished that republicans would even show their faces in public, let alone speak out loud, after their Eight Years of Miserable Failure and Abject Incompetence under the Worst President Ever..




If you knew anything about parliamentary procedure, you would see how this is not the same thing. Objections from the floor are commonplace, and are in order. What is not kosher is the presiding officer denying an extension to comments without an objection from the floor. In the absence of that (in the case of Senator Lieberman) the presiding officer, Senator Smalley, lodged his own objection from the bench, which was out of order.UNHWildCats wrote:Everyone remembers a few days ago when Lieberloser was denied an extra minute of speaking time and John McCain went into a rant about how that was wrong and that in all his time he had never seen a member of the Senate denied an extra minute to finish remarks?
Come on guys you remember that right?
October 10, 2002:
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
Mr. DAYTON. I ask for unanimous consent that I have 30 seconds more to finish my remarks.
Mr. McCAIN. I object.
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look dipshit. In 2002 McCain as the Sen from Arizona objected. Last week Franken said "In my capacity as Senator from Minnesotta I object." He wasnt denying him as the presiding officer.CID1990 wrote:If you knew anything about parliamentary procedure, you would see how this is not the same thing. Objections from the floor are commonplace, and are in order. What is not kosher is the presiding officer denying an extension to comments without an objection from the floor. In the absence of that (in the case of Senator Lieberman) the presiding officer, Senator Smalley, lodged his own objection from the bench, which was out of order.UNHWildCats wrote:Everyone remembers a few days ago when Lieberloser was denied an extra minute of speaking time and John McCain went into a rant about how that was wrong and that in all his time he had never seen a member of the Senate denied an extra minute to finish remarks?
Come on guys you remember that right?
October 10, 2002:
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator's time has expired.
Mr. DAYTON. I ask for unanimous consent that I have 30 seconds more to finish my remarks.
Mr. McCAIN. I object.
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This is what happens with supermajorities. You'd be whining and pissing out of your jizzslot if the tables were reversed. Blah blah blah stifling dissent blah blah blah Nazi Republicans blah blah WHIIIIINE.

All we are doing here is excusing one sides bad behavior by pointing to the other sides bad behavior. All it does is ensure additional bad behavior by both sides. What I want to know is when will the bad behavior end? I don't care who started it. I want to know who is going to end it. That side will be my heroes.UNHWildCats wrote:look dipshit. In 2002 McCain as the Sen from Arizona objected. Last week Franken said "In my capacity as Senator from Minnesotta I object." He wasnt denying him as the presiding officer.CID1990 wrote:
If you knew anything about parliamentary procedure, you would see how this is not the same thing. Objections from the floor are commonplace, and are in order. What is not kosher is the presiding officer denying an extension to comments without an objection from the floor. In the absence of that (in the case of Senator Lieberman) the presiding officer, Senator Smalley, lodged his own objection from the bench, which was out of order.
This is what happens with supermajorities. You'd be whining and pissing out of your jizzslot if the tables were reversed. Blah blah blah stifling dissent blah blah blah Nazi Republicans blah blah WHIIIIINE.

You obviously don't have the capacity to understand what I am saying, so I will put it in simpler terms.UNHWildCats wrote:look dipshit. In 2002 McCain as the Sen from Arizona objected. Last week Franken said "In my capacity as Senator from Minnesotta I object." He wasnt denying him as the presiding officer.CID1990 wrote:
If you knew anything about parliamentary procedure, you would see how this is not the same thing. Objections from the floor are commonplace, and are in order. What is not kosher is the presiding officer denying an extension to comments without an objection from the floor. In the absence of that (in the case of Senator Lieberman) the presiding officer, Senator Smalley, lodged his own objection from the bench, which was out of order.
This is what happens with supermajorities. You'd be whining and pissing out of your jizzslot if the tables were reversed. Blah blah blah stifling dissent blah blah blah Nazi Republicans blah blah WHIIIIINE.

I think it's more like a complete inability to feel shame.OL FU wrote:houndawg wrote:
John McDrooling In His Porridge.![]()
I'm completely astonished that republicans would even show their faces in public, let alone speak out loud, after their Eight Years of Miserable Failure and Abject Incompetence under the Worst President Ever..
Normally I would agree, but I think the new administration is beginning to make them realize that the more things change the more things stay the same

A requirement to be a politicianhoundawg wrote:I think it's more like a complete inability to feel shame.OL FU wrote:
Normally I would agree, but I think the new administration is beginning to make them realize that the more things change the more things stay the same

OL FU wrote:A requirement to be a politicianhoundawg wrote:
I think it's more like a complete inability to feel shame.

houndawg wrote:OL FU wrote:
A requirement to be a politician
Lack of shame is a very dangerous trait, kind of sociopathic.
Bring back public stocks on the courthouse lawn and rotten vegetables.

houndawg wrote:OL FU wrote:John Who?
John McDrooling In His Porridge.![]()
I'm completely astonished that republicans would even show their faces in public, let alone speak out loud, after their Eight Years of Miserable Failure and Abject Incompetence under the Worst President Ever..

Funny you should say so. Maybe half the repukes and one in ten of the jackasses have any shame at all.houndawg wrote:OL FU wrote:
A requirement to be a politician
Lack of shame is a very dangerous trait, kind of sociopathic.
Bring back public stocks on the courthouse lawn and rotten vegetables.

native wrote:Funny you should say so. Maybe half the repukes and one in ten of the jackasses have any shame at all.houndawg wrote:
Lack of shame is a very dangerous trait, kind of sociopathic.
Bring back public stocks on the courthouse lawn and rotten vegetables.

I don't know. The Democrats show a lot more industry than the Republicans when it comes to campaigning. It is all directed at the Jerry Springer crowd, but industrious all the same.houndawg wrote:native wrote:
Funny you should say so. Maybe half the repukes and one in ten of the jackasses have any shame at all.
problem is that the republicans do damage all out of proportion to their actual numbers, because while the Democrats are stupid and lazy, the Republican's posess the dangerous combo of a dumb-brute stupidity and industriousness.