King Cong Is Mad!

madnessThe King of Congress (King Cong) said; “This isn’t some damn game!”

He’s liar! The Republicans are saying the President sent armed Park Rangers to stop old Veterans from entering the WW2 War Memorial. Why would he do that? Does he not care about looking bad in the press?

Never before in American History have our lawmakers made up such egregious lies in order to make the President of the United States look like a crazed devil. There are laws and rules on how to repeal a law. The Pubs know that won’t work on Obamacare, so they undermine our elected President and the United States of America.

These are traitors who take our Government hostage so they can do what they wanted to do if the Pubs had won the White House and Senate – in the last two Presidential elections – and that is to defund everything and destroy Big Government so their Church-State can rule over us in the name of King Jesus – who is a DEAD MAN!

Christian-X and the Pubs of Drunken King Cong wants our President to issue an executive order to open our government and pay our bills – so that the Gun Crazies of King Cong will start shooting. Several ministers preys they will! This drunk – who thinks he is King of America – needs to be arrested and thrown in a drunk tank for inciting a riot!

Jon Presco

President Obama has canceled plans to attend two upcoming summits in Asia, with the government shutdown entering its fourth day and the White House and lawmakers from both parties increasingly focused on the looming debt-ceiling deadline.

A day after Obama stepped us his rhetoric about the impasse, Republican lawmakers did the same, with House Speaker John A. Boehner (R-Ohio) emphatically telling reporters, “This isn’t some damn game!”

Obama’s canceled Asia trip shows how hard it is for him to pursue foreign policy when facing domestic problems.

“The American people don’t want their government shut down, and neither do I,” Boehner said, repeating his position that the Democratic-controlled Senate should negotiate changes in the Affordable Care Act as part of passing a funding bill. “All we want is to sit down and have a discussion.”

But Democrats, including Obama, insist that they will not discuss the health-care law as part of resolving the budget. With polls showing Republicans bearing a larger share of the blame for the shutdown, many in the party are trying to steer away from what they consider a dead-end debate on health-care in order to focus on a broader deal to reduce the nation’s debt.

“Express repeal occurs where express words are used in a statute to repeal an earlier statute. They are now usually included in a table in a schedule to the statute, for reasons of convenience.

In the United States, when a bill is passed by the House and Senate and signed by the president, or Congress overrides a presidential veto, the various provisions contained within the newly enacted law are rearranged according to their policy content and cataloged in the United States Code—a compilation of the general and permanent federal laws of the United States. To repeal any element of an enacted law, Congress must pass a new law containing repeal language and the codified statute’s location in the U.S. Code (including the title, chapter, part, section, paragraph and clause). In this way, Congress (and the president) must follow the same rules and procedures for passing any law. When statutes are repealed, their text is simply deleted from the Code and replaced by a note summarizing what used to be there. Once deleted, the repealed statute no longer has the force of law. All repeals of parts of the US Code are, therefore, express repeals.”

[Read the latest shutdown updates.]

Boehner has emphasized in meetings with small groups of rank-and-file lawmakers that he will not permit the country to default for the first time. Given that a bloc of hard-line conservatives is unlikely to vote to increase the limit under any circumstances, Boehner has told fellow Republicans that they must craft an agreement that can attract significant Democratic support.

“This needs to be a big bipartisan deal,” Rep. Tom Cole (R-Okla.), a close Boehner ally, said as he emerged from a luncheon meeting in the speaker’s office Thursday. “This is much more about the debt ceiling and a larger budget agreement than it is about Obamacare.”

House Majority Leader Eric I. Cantor (R-Va.) said Friday that the House will vote Saturday on a measure ensuring retroactive pay for all federal employees, the latest attempt by Congress to diffuse some of the outrage that has accompanied the first federal government shutdown in 17 years.

With hundreds of thousands of federal employees out of work, key programs at a standstill and trash overflowing waste receptacles on the Mall because there are no Park Service workers on duty to remove it, a series of polls showed that Americans are blaming both Democrats and Republicans for the impasse — but Republicans are being blamed more.

Surveys by CBS News and Fox News showed 44 and 42 percent of respondents, respectively, saying Republicans in Congress are at fault for the shutdown. Thirty-five percent of those polled by CBS blamed Obama and the Democrats in Congress, compared to 32 percent in the survey by Fox. During the government shutdown 17 years ago, nearly twice as many Americans blamed Republicans than blamed then-President Bill Clinton.

In the GOP-controlled House, meanwhile, the number of Republicans who have said they would join Democrats to support a funding bill that does not impact the health-care law has increased to 20.

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