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telcoman
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I don't know how Newsmax found me as I usually disagree with almost everything they publish.

For once I can agree. :yesnod

I heard morning Joe live this morning and thought I would share. No Howard Stern live on Fridays any longer. :mad:


Breaking from Newsmax.com
Trumka: Walker Made ‘Moment Into a Movement’
AFL-CIO President Richard Trumka says Gov. Scott Walker “upset over 80 years of history” in Wisconsin, and he and other lawmakers seeking to limit workers’ rights will suffer electoral consequences.
“What Scott Walker did was take away the ability of teachers to bargain for smaller classrooms, for firefighters to bargain for better safety, for nurses to bargain for better healthcare,” Trumka said Friday on MSNBC’s “Morning Joe.” “He upset over 80 years of history and collective bargaining in that state and, quite frankly, they did it in the middle of the night, which was a true affront to democracy and our rights.”
Editor's Notes:
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Host Joe Scarborough asked Trumka what fallout can be expected from enactment of the Wisconsin law curbing public unions.
“Here’s the fallout Joe – it’s not just union members: It’s non-union members, it’s small businessmen, it’s independents, it’s conservative Republicans,” the national union leader said. “They’re all saying this guy went too far, and so they are recoiling against him.
“He dropped like a rock in the polls, he went from 62 percent to 40 percent, and there’s recalls going on for a number of those senators – and in the first weekend, they got 25 percent of the signatures necessary for recall,” Trumka said. “So there’s an energy going on – he converted a moment into a movement.”
Scarborough asked how the AFL-CIO and Republicans can get together so the union umbrella is not seen as an extension of the Democratic Party in the next election.
“I’d love that – I’d love to have candidates that support working people,” Trumka said. “We support a number of Republicans: You know my personal history, what I’ve done, and candidates I’ve supported in the past – from both sides of the aisle.
“What we’re finding is, Republican candidates becoming more, and more, and more extreme, and they don’t support working people,' he said. “I mean, how could we go to our members and say: ‘Oh, by the way, support Scott Walker and [Ohio Gov.] John Kasich, they’d be good for working people,' when they’re trying to destroy our ability – and workers’ ability – to bargain for a middle-class way of life.
“This isn’t just Gov. Walker – this is a pretty concerted effort,” Trumka continued. “You got Kasich in Ohio … you got people all over the country that are going after students’ rights. You had a [state] senator in New Hampshire – a Republican senator, by the way – who said students shouldn’t be able to vote because they’re too liberal.
“Look, he [Walker] asked for concessions from those workers – they gave him those concessions – but that’s not what this was about,” he said. “It was about him paying back the people who spent over $1 billion – people like the Koch brothers. And, we’re seeing that in area after area.”
© Newsmax. All rights reserved.

So I'd be interested to hear the other opinions on what occurred in Wisconsin.

I thought I heard driving home that a court issued a stay?

Should college students who vote democratic lose their right to vote? :bs:

Telcoman


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srellim234
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Students who reside in the town or on campus and register should be allowed to vote if they list that town as their residence for income tax and college residency purposes. Those who claim their residence elsewhere should only be allowed to cast absentee ballots in the jurisdiction they came from.

Interestingly, a disturbing side argument related to this came to mind. Once they start taking away the voting rights of those student citizens, how long will it be before they take away the absentee voting rights of servicemen? After all, using the senator's logic, once servicemen are deployed they don't live there and would not be capable of making informed decisions.

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telcoman
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srellim234 wrote:Students who reside in the town or on campus and register should be allowed to vote if they list that town as their residence for income tax and college residency purposes. Those who claim their residence elsewhere should only be allowed to cast absentee ballots in the jurisdiction they came from.

Interestingly, a disturbing side argument related to this came to mind. Once they start taking away the voting rights of those student citizens, how long will it be before they take away the absentee voting rights of servicemen? After all, using the senator's logic, once servicemen are deployed they don't live there and would not be capable of making informed decisions.
I get an absentee ballot every year. I hate standing in lines.

The woman in front of me at 4 AM this morning at Dunkin Donuts was ordering for four people with coffees, donuts, etc. Took like 5 minutes for her order to get assembled.
During all that time one would think she would have money ready to pay!
Nope as she started going thru a huge bag filled with #hit :mad:

Back to voting!
Much easier to vote and drop it in the mail.

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srellim234
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No argument here about absentee or voting by mail. This issue just looks like the NH Republican legislators are looking for ways to disenfranchise certain groups of voters. Once they get their foot in the door they'll be looking for other groups to take the vote away from. They need to be stopped.

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srellim234
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Only this way they're trying to make it a law.


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