I really shouldn't bring this back up, I have a policy of not responding to threads more than a few hours old without a good reason. But the way you insist on going on wrong about the world and being insufferable about it is a pretty good reason.
Aqizzar, are you really going to stand by that Republicans will sooner filibuster a reasonable defense budget rather than let a single bill pass?
Yes, that is exactly what I'm going to stand by.
Because that's exactly what they did last year, when they tried to filibuster a defense spending bill, openly admitting it had nothing to do with the bill itself but was simply intended to stall up the Senate and delay a vote on the healthcare bill. Luckily, that time a few Republicans actually came to their senses and voted for cloture, but of course, once you inject anything having to do with gays into the mix, all the breaks are off the party machine to make sure nobody breaks ranks.
Dear me, how ever will Democrats get anything done if they can't get four people to agree with them.
If you're not going to believe the explanation I already gave you, I'm not going to type it out again. And before you start whining that a provision to remove DADT should be passed separately, because it was passed as part of the defense appropriation bill in 1993, it can only be changed by being part of another defense appropriation bill. That's how this shit works.
Its also noteworthy the current gridlock is constitutionally working as intended.
Wrong. In several ways even. There is no filibuster in the constitution. What the constitution does is provide for the Senate to write its own rules on debating,
which have changed a few times over its history. Currently, the rules allow for any member to hold a bill open for debate as long as they want, barring a 60% cloture vote; those rules could be changed, provided for a requisite filibuster-breaking vote, at any time, which I'd say renders it something a little less sacrosanct than anything called "constitutional". Unfortunately, we've moved passed the days of actually forcing a senator to stand at the podium for two days reading a phone book, and now all the Republicans have to do is say they intend to filibuster, and everyone throws up their hands and goes home.
Just as intended, right?
For that matter, I find it hilarious how often you carp about the sanctity of "majority opinion", including your imagined understanding of public opinion on DADT, while in the same breath insisting a legislative minority have a constitutional duty to clog up any bills they don't like.