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Quail_Antwerp
Cold is on the Right, Hot is on The Left
Pam, you're supposed to pray about it and vote the way God tells you to.PamsPride said:Ok, so I am supposed to vote YES on Issue 2??
And, read about/listen to both sides.
Pam, you're supposed to pray about it and vote the way God tells you to.PamsPride said:Ok, so I am supposed to vote YES on Issue 2??
So the governor is appointing some of these people - and will that change every time the governorship changes? But it says there are no rules about term limits either. (I'm really tired, so I may be interpreting wrong)Though the amendment appears to create a board
representing a wide variety of interests, a closer look at the
actual language reveals that in reality this is not the case.
According to the amendment, the appointed board
consists of 13 members. The governors appointed director
of agriculture would join 10 other governor-appointed
members and two members chosen by the Speaker of
the House and the President of the Senateputting
an enormous amount of power in the hands of a dozen
political appointees and making this Board susceptible to
partisan abuse. 5 Additionally, there are no rules regarding
the length of the terms of the Board members, further
amplifying the undemocratic nature of the membership. 6
While the board would have limits on the number of
members allowed from any one political party, set at seven
members, it is unlikely that this limit would keep political
influence in check. In all likelihood a simple seven-person
majority would suffice to pass rules on the Board, which
means that a single political party could use the Board to
push its agenda.
I haven't lived there since I was a little girl, but that Option 2 sounds bad. The Governor gets to pick 11 out of 13 people. Plenty of potential to swing votes any way the Governor wants and he is a politician- not a farmer.Javamama said:Ugh, see that's what is so confusing. It's so hard to tell what info is coming from whom in all this. There are soo many conflicting info sites that pop up. (granted, I didn't look into that last site at all) I'm voting no. I'm not going to vote for something that isn't clear. If they can't do a better job writing these bills/amendments, spelling things out so regular people can understand it, then I don't trust it.
I would like to see specific language protecting the rights of little backyard farmers like most of us here.
Dragonlaurel, I agree, but the problem lies in the fact that PETA and HSUS have succeeded in passing their legislation in every state they have gone after.dragonlaurel said:I haven't lived there since I was a little girl, but that Option 2 sounds bad. The Governor gets to pick 11 out of 13 people. Plenty of potential to swing votes any way the Governor wants and he is a politician- not a farmer.Javamama said:Ugh, see that's what is so confusing. It's so hard to tell what info is coming from whom in all this. There are soo many conflicting info sites that pop up. (granted, I didn't look into that last site at all) I'm voting no. I'm not going to vote for something that isn't clear. If they can't do a better job writing these bills/amendments, spelling things out so regular people can understand it, then I don't trust it.
I would like to see specific language protecting the rights of little backyard farmers like most of us here.
They get the authority to pass other rules about farmers. No. There are enough rules about farming already. You don't need another group to pass more of them.
Let the farmers do their work and let the government stay out of the way- if they want to eat.
I think they need to vote no on it and vote no on any legislation the Peta group tries to push through there.