Cos............. The sky isn't falling, you really need to stop listening to that right-wing radio, it will rot your brain & make hair grow on your palms...lol
Listen to your classic rock, oldies, old school R & B, some blues-that right-wing radio shit will only make you depressed.......
the country is being regged to death. Look at it from a purely federalist p.o.v -where are the limitations on the fed'l gov't?
There aren't any!!
It just gets more and more intrusive, and it's purviews are like a kudzu vine -strangling any semblance of
co-sovereignty.
http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2015/dec/30/obama-sets-record-for-new-rules-in-2015/
Obama sets record for new rules in 2015
President Obama’s team, carrying out his orders to work around Congress, pushed his expansive government agenda on environmental, labor and Wall Street policy.
With one day to go, the administration added 81,611 pages to the Federal Register, according to the Competitive Enterprise Institute’s count of the official record-keeping digest of federal agencies’ rule-making. It’s the highest total on record and the third time Mr. Obama has crossed the 80,000-page level during his presidency, the institute’s Clyde Wayne Crews calculated.
he Senate in November passed a measure to overturn the Waters of the U.S. rule, which extends the regulatory power of the EPA and the Army Corps of Engineers to millions of acres of land where the government says runoff could affect major waterways.
The House has yet to take up that measure, but the courts stepped in, with a federal appeals court blocking the policy nationwide in an August ruling.
The majority in the 2-1 ruling by the 6th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said the government never bothered to propose the distance from a major water source land would need to be to escape federal monitoring.
That was one of several big losses for the administration’s regulatory agenda this year. The biggest, however, was on immigration, where Mr. Obama’s deportation amnesty, announced through “guidance” memos issued by Homeland Security in November 2014, was struck down just two days before it was to go into effect in February.
The judge in that case said Mr. Obama broke the law by short-circuiting the usual public notice-and-comment requirements required when the administration changes major policies.
A federal appeals court agreed and went even further, saying that granting work permits and future stays of deportation to millions of illegal immigrants also violates the Immigration and Nationality Act itself.
Mr. Crews said the immigration actions are part of a trend in which the executive branch is increasingly using guidance and memos — or what he calls “regulatory dark matter” — to avoid even the low requirements of notice and comment for policy changes.
The
Government Accountability Office, which is Congress‘ chief watchdog, said in a 2012 report that when it came to major rules — those with far-reaching economic impact — the government short-circuited the process nearly 70 percent of the time.