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News & Issues > MSNBC Host Condemns Congress, Calling Them
 

MSNBC Host Condemns Congress, Calling Them


Now that we have seen the disastrous effects of the debt ceiling "compromise", one has to wonder if Obama and the country would not have been better off to follow the advice of former President Bill Clinton in raising the debt ceiling under the provisions of the 14th Amendment.


He would have been following in the footsteps of one of our great Presidents, Teddy Roosevelt, if he had.   TR boldly and decisively acted where others had waited for Congress to debate 
each move.


He took the view that the President as a "steward of the people" should take whatever action necessary for the public good unless expressly forbidden by law or the Constitution." I did not usurp power," he wrote, "but I did greatly broaden the use of executive power."


Calling the actions of Congress "irresponsible, reckless and stupid," MSNBC host Dylan Ratigan went on a rant the likes of which I have never heard on the air in which he evoked Teddy Roosevelt's attitude that it was better to beg for forgiveness than to ask for permission.  


He stated that he wanted our President to go to the American people telling them that our Congress is bought and that he no longer was going to listen to them.


Here's just a little of the rant:


I would like him to go to the people of the United States of America and say, “People of the United States of America, your Congress is bought, your Congress is incapable of making legislation on healthcare, banking, trade, or taxes because if they do it, they will lose their political funding and they won’t do it. But I’m the President of the United States, and I won’t have a country that is run by a bought Congress. So I’m not going to work with a bought Congress and try to be Mr. Big Guy ... I’m going to abandon the bought Congress like Teddy Roosevelt did, and I’m going to go to the people of the United States get rid of the bought Congress." ... Until a President says that’s the problem and says he’s going to fix it, there is no policy that I can possibly see no matter how brilliant your idea may be or your idea or my idea or her idea or your idea at home, is that idea will not happen as long as there’s a capacity to basically fire a politician who disagrees with me by taking funding away from him. Is that a fair assessment?


Here's the link to watch the actual rant; believe me, it's worth it.  He has much more to say about what the President could do to solve this problem without a bought Congress, both Democrats and Republicans alike. 


https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/08/09/dylan-ratigan-rant-debt-negotiations_n_922855.html?


 



posted on Aug 10, 2011 5:25 PM ()

Comments:

I totally agree. I admire Ratigan and applaud his passion. Obama's goals, that I approve of, cannot be achieved with his approach so long as there are few, if any, Republicans and Tea Partiers, willing to step up and be legislators instead of self-serving a......s.
comment by tealstar on Aug 16, 2011 4:37 AM ()
I've extensively read TR. He was a bold and decisive president (and person). We certainly need someone like him in the oval office NOW!
comment by solitaire on Aug 12, 2011 4:35 AM ()
Yes, we do. Obama's controlled, intellectual approach is NOT what people relate to...and he seems afraid to be bold and direct.
reply by redimpala on Aug 12, 2011 10:39 AM ()
He is on thin edge right now and need to get out of this.
We cannot and will not have these damn Republic in office.
comment by fredo on Aug 11, 2011 12:47 PM ()
I agree. We HAVE to get rid of them...especially those extremist tea party rookies.
reply by redimpala on Aug 12, 2011 10:40 AM ()
The American political system has always been corrupted by the money-fed political parties. We should go non-partisan and junk the whole shebang.
comment by jondude on Aug 11, 2011 4:36 AM ()
That's what this entire rant by Ratigan is about...telling Congress to shove it, taking his reasons to the American public and acting in the country's best interest rather than in the best interests of those who have all our politicians in their back pockets.

reply by redimpala on Aug 11, 2011 10:13 AM ()
To me, Joan, the dysfunctional Congress is 90 percent of the problem, led by the GOP Taliban, which has no desire to compromise one iota to do what the majority of Americans want: a balanced approach with revenue and cuts. These people are ideologically obsessed, following unsound economics, and I wish President Obama would have vetoed their debt intransigence and gone right to the 14th amendment, after Boehner walked out on the $4 trillion debt negotiations. One latest poll Aug. 10 had Congress' approval rating at 18 percent, and Obama's at 47 percent. The people are behind him, and I think would support a more aggressive approach from him.
comment by marta on Aug 11, 2011 1:41 AM ()
I believe they would also...and you are correct. We have a bunch of terrorist fascists holding Obama and this country hostage.
reply by redimpala on Aug 11, 2011 10:10 AM ()
I want to rant also but why bother????
comment by greatmartin on Aug 10, 2011 6:50 PM ()
If not you, then who?
reply by redimpala on Aug 10, 2011 7:21 PM ()
As much as I admire and support Pres Obama whole-heartedly, I have a feeling that his advisers are not going to allow him to do things that might jeopardize re-election next year. If elections were two or three years away I bet he would have done what TR did and used the 14th amendment.
comment by aussiegirl on Aug 10, 2011 6:37 PM ()
In essence, then, what you're saying is that President Obama is equally bought. EVERY politician makes his moves and decisions based on how they will affect his re-election. Obama is NOT an exception.
reply by jerms on Aug 12, 2011 6:07 AM ()
No, he's trying to play it safe, but it is hurting him to do that also.
reply by redimpala on Aug 10, 2011 7:21 PM ()

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