My Comment: Shame on Republicans for
trying to subvert our federal government. With the debt ceiling raised
to only Dec. 3 it means that Republicans want to crash the federal
government, its economy and the economies of the entire world. Not
raising it further for spending Republicans under Trump created will
demolish global economies as well. We may never in the foreseeable
future recover.
Do they care about their own families? No. They care
about one thing -- power. They want it all. Republicans and Trump are
immoral swamp creatures. Return them to power at your and our extreme
peril. They are unethical, immoral and criminal beasts!
Professor Heather Cox Richardson thoughts below
Diminishing the Federal Government Oct 12, 2021
Heather Cox Richardson:
"Tonight
the House voted to raise the debt ceiling by $480 billion, which should
keep the country afloat until December 3. The vote was 219 to 206, with
all Republicans either voting no or refusing to vote.
Republican
representative Andy Biggs from Arizona moved to adjourn Congress rather
than take the vote at all. Representative Chip Roy (R-TX) said he would
not vote to raise the debt ceiling because government spending funds
“tyranny” over people’s lives. He complained about “a border that’s not
secure,” “Critical Race Theory being taught to our children,” and a
litany of other Republican talking points.
The
debt ceiling needs to be raised not to pay for future spending, but for
past spending, including the $7.8 trillion the Republicans put on the
national tab during the four years of the Trump presidency.
Permitting
the nation to default on its debts would crash the economy and destroy
our international standing, likely for the foreseeable future. But
Republicans are willing to do that if it means regaining power by
playing to their base.
With
Democrats in control of the national government, Republicans are
retreating to the states to launch their bid to take back national
power. Having cemented their control of Republican-dominated states with
new election laws that suppress Democratic voting or give control of
certifying elections to Republican boards, Republicans are much more
concerned about challenges from the right than they are about having to
moderate their stands.
This
has made them increasingly radical. Today, on the day that CNN reported
that official deaths from coronavirus have reached 715,000, Ohio
Republican representative Jim Jordan tweeted that Ohio should end all
vaccine mandates. That would include vaccines against diphtheria,
tetanus, whooping cough, polio, measles, mumps, and rubella, among other
diseases.
Texas
governor Greg Abbott went further. He signed an executive order
prohibiting “any entity” from enforcing a vaccine mandate in Texas. This
was not just a play to anti-vaxxers, but a declaration that his state
is supreme over the federal government. Last month, President Joe Biden
announced vaccine requirements for all federal workers and contractors,
and today, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA) in
the Department of Labor announced a vaccine or testing requirement for
any company with 100 or more employees.”
This
is not the first time Abbott has made such a demonstration. In June, he
and Arizona governor Doug Ducey sent a letter to the other 48 governors
asking them to send reinforcements to the southern border to do the job
the Biden administration was, they wrote, “unwilling or unable” to do.
Six
Republican governors answered their call with support that was more
symbolic than powerful. Florida governor Ron DeSantis sent 50 law
enforcement officers; Ohio governor Michael DeWine sent 185; Nebraska
governor Pete Ricketts sent 24. Iowa governor Kim Reynolds sent “up to
30” National Guard troops; Arkansas governor Asa Hutchinson sent 40; and
South Dakota governor Kristi Noem sent “up to 50,” allegedly funded by a
private donation. She boasted of this deployment at the annual meeting
of the Conservative Political Action Committee (CPAC) and on the Fox
News Channel.
Those
troops have been quietly brought home over the past few months, but
their deployment demonstrated the states’ willingness to flex their
muscles against the federal government and has forced the military into
the center of the enforcement of right-wing ideology.
And,
of course, the Texas anti-abortion law, S.B. 8, has offered a blueprint
for other states to take away their citizens’ constitutional rights by
turning over enforcement of the law to private individuals rather than
the state. All constitutional rights—including all civil rights—could be
overturned by vigilantes under this policy.
The
Republicans’ resorting to cementing their power in the states echoes
the path of southern Democrats in 1860. Aware they had lost control of
the national government, they turned to radicalizing their states, then
forced the states out of the Union quickly, before popular opposition
could mobilize against secession.
When radicals took to the states to cement their power in 1860, the federal government had little power to stop them.
But
in 1868, in the wake of the Civil War, Congress remedied that
deficiency with the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution. That
amendment increased the power of the federal government over the states
to protect civil rights. It declared, “No state shall make or enforce
any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of
the United States; nor shall any state deprive any person of life,
liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person
within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws.”
That
same amendment protected the sanctity of the national debt, declaring
that “The validity of the public debt of the United States, authorized
by law, including debts incurred for payment of pensions and bounties
for services in suppressing insurrection or rebellion, shall not be
questioned.”