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Originally posted by thisguyrighthere
If anything those without any food in the pantry should be suspect.
Originally posted by LightSpeedDriver
ETA I know nothing about how it all works in the US but who proposes these bills or whatever they are called? Is it a single person, a single political party or..something else?edit on 1/12/11 by LightSpeedDriver because: ETA
Ideas for bills come from many sources: constituents, the President, lobbyists, or congressional staff. Any Senator or Representative may introduce a bill. After a bill has been written or "drafted," the member introduces it by formally presenting it to the House or Senate clerk when Congress is in session. In the House, the bill is placed in the "hopper" at the desk of the Clerk; the sponsor of the bill may or may not make a special statement about the bill when it is introduced. In the Senate, the bill may be presented to the Clerk, or the Senator may make a formal statement from the Senate floor to introduce it.
Once a bill is introduced, it is given a number: H.R. _________ (for the House of Representatives) if introduced in the House and S. _________ (for the Senate) if introduced in the Senate. Bill numbers start with H.R. 1 and S. 1 at the beginning of each new Congress and continue in numerical order until the Congress ends two years later.
While a bill is the form used for most legislation, the House and the Senate can also originate resolutions. These are used for special purposes like budget resolutions or constitutional amendments. They are also numbered: for example, S. Con. Res. _________ (for Senate Concurrent Resolution) and H. J. Res. _________ (for House of Representatives Joint Resolution).
Originally posted by thisguyrighthere
If anything those without any food in the pantry should be suspect.
Originally posted by thisguyrighthere
What I dont get is how they can rationalize this behavior as threatening.
If you're planning on committing some violent act what good will having food stores be? You cant keep it at home because that's the first place anybody will look for you if you happen to survive the act so what's the point?
You need a weeks worth of food before blowing yourself up? Before turning a shopping mall into a shooting gallery? Before crashing a plane? Before what?
If anything those without any food in the pantry should be suspect.
Consider the following things when putting together your emergency food supplies:
Store at least a three-day supply of non-perishable food.
Store a two week supply of water and food. During a pandemic, if you cannot get to a store, or if stores are out of supplies, it will be important for you to have extra supplies on hand. This can be useful in other types of emergencies, such as power outages and disasters.
Originally posted by charles1952
You know, of course, that habeus corpus has not been suspended, and that to the best of my knowledge this is the sixth thread in two or three days on this subject.
Where are the words habeus corpus even mentioned in the bill, let alone that it's suspended? This bill is being wildly misinterpreted for no other reason that I can see short of fear-mongering
Originally posted by Evansr
With a vote of 60 to 38 the senate voted for the indefinite suspension of Habeus Corpus, I believe that now means America is a police state.
60 senators betrayed you (it was 61, but Sen. Menendez changed his vote). They voted against an amendment to the Defense Authorization act, the indefinite suspension of Habeus Corpus. We are now officially a police state.
reply to post by LightSpeedDriver
ETA I know nothing about how it all works in the US but who proposes these bills or whatever they are called? Is it a single person, a single political party or..something else?