January 21, 2008
In the Washington Post, Matt Welch and Nick Gillespie smack Congress around for its meddling in the steroids debate.
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I make it a point to not read the Washington Post. Am I going bonkers, or was there an abortion article up here earlier that has since gone by the wayside?
...was there an abortion article up here earlier that has
since gone by the wayside?
I seen it!
Damn, WaPo. I wonder if their readers will be able to process any part of that article?
I think you're wrong, but congrats for getting into the
Post.
And kudos to the Post for giving that space to your point of
view.
Gillespie and Welch destroy their credibility in an otherwise fine article by openly endorsing antitrust.
Yeah, that's it. Joe Public is reads this, and thinks "I agree with everything they have to say abour drugs and sports, but DAMN, how could anyone support anti-trust laws? What a couple of kooks!"
"this is a promise not a threat"
Which means it's a threat. Invertebrates all.
No-knock thread-pull, perhaps?
Or, just something to make me think I was losing my mind?
The best part of the steroid hearings is that they expose how
little our lawmakers actually know about the topics that they
grandstand, moralize, and try to legislate on. Their strongest
argument in this case are nostalgic emotional appeals, and they
can't even get those right. The science is already stacked against
them.
If only more writers would call them on it instead of gushing about
the strong stances that Waxman, Davis, Shays, et al. are taking, it
might give the public pause when considering the other areas that
these uniform fools wag their fingers about. Well, probably not,
but I'd like to read some takedowns anyway.
Tierney and other elected officials have argued that
baseball's exemption from federal antitrust legislation gives
Congress the right to meddle in the game's affairs. That exemption,
based on a 1922 court decision that ridiculously found that pro
baseball did not constitute interstate commerce, has caused
more harm than good by allowing owners to collude against players
and prospective competitor leagues and by allowing cartel
arrangements and restraints on trade unimaginable in other
industries. While it should be repealed, it hardly gives
Congress a warrant to micromanage MLB the way George Steinbrenner
has his New York Yankees.
Empasis added. This is an endorsement or support for anti trust?
RTA.
Nice work, gentlemen. I particularly liked the decription of
Congressmen as being among the most out-of-touch members of
American society.
You could have added "aside from those forcibly institutionalized
for their own protection."
I make it a point to not read the Washington
Post.
That's mighty close-minded of you.
*insert standard disclaimer # whatever here*
Can we just smack Congress around for meddling? We don't really need to specify what for, do we?
Relax, guys. If Congress spends enough time screwing around with this crap, then they can't pass laws to screw up important things. Though I would like that Iraq timetable that Nancy Pelosi said the Democratic Congress would implement to get passed sometime soon. Just saying.
House passes spending bill with Iraq deadline
POSTED: 8:49 p.m. EDT, March 23, 2007
Story Highlights• NEW: President Bush says House has "abdicated its
responsibility" on Iraq
• House passes war spending bill by 218-212 vote; Bush repeats veto
promise
• Legislation includes 2008 deadline for withdrawal of U.S. troops
from Iraq
• Two House Republicans vote for bill; 14 Democrats vote against
it
Adjust font size:
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- President Bush slammed Democrats on Friday
after the House narrowly approved a supplemental war spending bill
that includes an August 31, 2008, deadline for combat troops to
leave Iraq.
First link when googling "Congress bill Iraq deadlines."
Is is physically painful to be that stupid, economist, or is it
sort of a numb feeling?
Here's the link.
http://www.cnn.com/2007/POLITICS/03/23/iraq.funding/index.html
Please, fuck with me a little more. It keeps turning out so well
for you. Cute little joke you left up on the Malaria thread. Ho ho
ho.
while i thought it was a good piece, it will be like a fart in
the wind over the whole 'steroids' boogyman. I've been polling
people around the country on this for he last 2-3 years, and the
feeling that there's "cheating" going on is nearly universal - and
few people have the mindset of "limited government". They think
there's a problem, and if MLB hasnt done their job, then thats when
the government steps in. You cant debate people about the details
of the issue because its a nearly religious issue for them. Arguing
that the gov should stay out falls on deaf ears since the common
thought is, "well they should but if they dont this will never be
addressed" Actually arguing that it's not really a problem make
people think you're a crackhead. The worst are retirees... i got a
bunch of retirees in Boca Raton talking about it and man they were
like insane over the thing. I never realized the issue resonated
that strongly with seniors.
I think it's part of this kind of "when i was a kid, we played
fair" mentality that they might have. Maybe these politicians saw
this stuff popping in polls with them old folks who vote, and they
thought, "easy money!"
Uh, joe, I do believe the Senate rejected the timetable. Hence "Congress" never passed it.
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