A DAILY INNOCULATION AGAINST POLITICAL AND CULTURAL BULLSHIT

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"Ethics? What the hell you talkin' 'bout?"
--- He was afraid that being ethical was communicable.

"Plus ça change, cher, n'est-ce pas?" - Mémé Aureole Petite

"America doesn't need a president, it needs a nut-house warden."
- Karl Jung, deceased

"I'm desperate, Johnny. There's nowhere left to turn."
--- Watching Obama abandon the middle class

"I wouldn't vote for Hillary because she was in Wall Street's pocket. How was I supposed to know Obama was in there, too?"
--- Albert G. Einstein, New York phrenologist

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Mr. Petite has been an adviser to both the Bush and Obama administrations (neither of which ever asked for his advice - and they certainly never took it, so don't blame Tweet) and is a Senior Fellow at (and is supported entirely by) the ETHICS AND THEORY INSTITUTE OF TERMINOLOGY (EATIT), a foundation underwritten by the parents of a United States Senator in return for Mr. Petite's silence on certain important matters. Which explains why he doesn't do TV.

Mr. Petite is a native of virtual New Orleans, and therefore a legal immigrant to his actual residence, so he has never had to do migrant farm work or landscaping. (He did do some shrimping in the virtual bayous on some of the days he played hookey from school.) The use of the word "onions" is metaphoric, or something. His sole contact with actual onions is in some of the better gumbos.

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Wednesday, July 08, 2009

House Finance Committee Members Took $62.9 Million From Industry Interests

House Finance Committee Members Took $62.9 Million From Industry Interests

I certainly have no objection to the health care industry talking to congresspeople and trying to get their vote - but this is a simple attempt to bribe, and probably a successful one.

Shouldn't there be a rule that congresspeople cannot accept contributions from anyone who has a particular interest in legislation they are considering?

Of course, I already have figured out the loophole. They don't make the contributions while the bill is pending. They make them way beforehand, because they know some bill is going to come before these people. In other words, they don't buy action on the bill. They buy the congresspeople.

Which returns me to my initial response to McCain-Feingold. You can't outlaw money in politics. There's a way around any restriction. What you have to do is change what the public will accept, and guarantee that players get voted out.

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