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Barney Frank gets an earful
Apparently, Barney Frank was on a plane when two female doctors
realized who he was and began haranguing him over Obamacare. There was apparently no intervention by flight crew so I assume it never got too nasty. However, this raises a question of "Does a congresscritter have the right to being left alone on a flight"? My answer is it depends on who is paying the bill for the flight. If ti is the taxpayer, then he is on the public's time and he has to sit and take it. If he pays for it out of his own money, different story. Now, I'd prefer to debate this rationally so let us simply pretend it is congressman X of unknown party. Assume he pays using public money. Do passengers have the right to discuss and tell him their views even if he does not want to hear them at that time? |
Barney Frank gets an earful
On 4/13/10 1:59 PM, Frogwatch wrote:
Apparently, Barney Frank was on a plane when two female doctors realized who he was and began haranguing him over Obamacare. There was apparently no intervention by flight crew so I assume it never got too nasty. However, this raises a question of "Does a congresscritter have the right to being left alone on a flight"? My answer is it depends on who is paying the bill for the flight. If ti is the taxpayer, then he is on the public's time and he has to sit and take it. If he pays for it out of his own money, different story. Now, I'd prefer to debate this rationally so let us simply pretend it is congressman X of unknown party. Assume he pays using public money. Do passengers have the right to discuss and tell him their views even if he does not want to hear them at that time? Man, I'd love to sit next to Congressman Frank on a long flight. He is by almost all accounts, the smartest guy in the House. But he hasn't been active in health care reform. As to your question, manners count. If the doctors and Frank were having an intelligent discussion, sure. If the doctors were behaving like teabaggers, no. -- http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym |
Barney Frank gets an earful
On Apr 13, 2:06*pm, hk wrote:
On 4/13/10 1:59 PM, Frogwatch wrote: Apparently, Barney Frank was on a plane when two female doctors realized who he was and began haranguing him over Obamacare. *There was apparently no intervention by flight crew so I assume it never got too nasty. However, this raises a question of "Does a congresscritter have the right to being left alone on a flight"? My answer is it depends on who is paying the bill for the flight. *If ti is the taxpayer, then he is on the public's time and he has to sit and take it. *If he pays for it out of his own money, different story.. Now, I'd prefer to debate this rationally so let us simply pretend it is congressman X of unknown party. *Assume he pays using public money. *Do passengers have the right to discuss and tell him their views even if he does not want to hear them at that time? Man, I'd love to sit next to Congressman Frank on a long flight. He is by almost all accounts, the smartest guy in the House. But he hasn't been active in health care reform. As to your question, manners count. If the doctors and Frank were having an intelligent discussion, sure. If the doctors were behaving like teabaggers, no. --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym HK: Is it your position that a public employee does not have to listen to public complaints while on public time? Please clarify. |
Barney Frank gets an earful
"hk" wrote in message
... On 4/13/10 1:59 PM, Frogwatch wrote: Apparently, Barney Frank was on a plane when two female doctors realized who he was and began haranguing him over Obamacare. There was apparently no intervention by flight crew so I assume it never got too nasty. However, this raises a question of "Does a congresscritter have the right to being left alone on a flight"? My answer is it depends on who is paying the bill for the flight. If ti is the taxpayer, then he is on the public's time and he has to sit and take it. If he pays for it out of his own money, different story. Now, I'd prefer to debate this rationally so let us simply pretend it is congressman X of unknown party. Assume he pays using public money. Do passengers have the right to discuss and tell him their views even if he does not want to hear them at that time? Man, I'd love to sit next to Congressman Frank on a long flight. He is by almost all accounts, the smartest guy in the House. But he hasn't been active in health care reform. As to your question, manners count. If the doctors and Frank were having an intelligent discussion, sure. If the doctors were behaving like teabaggers, no. -- http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym My guess is that the discussion was actually that.. a discussion. Doctors tend to be pretty smart, and since they were women, they were likely smarter, more polite, and better informed. Frank is definitely one of the smarter ones in DC. It would be an honor to talk to him. -- Nom=de=Plume |
Barney Frank gets an earful
On 4/13/10 2:12 PM, Frogwatch wrote:
On Apr 13, 2:06 pm, wrote: On 4/13/10 1:59 PM, Frogwatch wrote: Apparently, Barney Frank was on a plane when two female doctors realized who he was and began haranguing him over Obamacare. There was apparently no intervention by flight crew so I assume it never got too nasty. However, this raises a question of "Does a congresscritter have the right to being left alone on a flight"? My answer is it depends on who is paying the bill for the flight. If ti is the taxpayer, then he is on the public's time and he has to sit and take it. If he pays for it out of his own money, different story. Now, I'd prefer to debate this rationally so let us simply pretend it is congressman X of unknown party. Assume he pays using public money. Do passengers have the right to discuss and tell him their views even if he does not want to hear them at that time? Man, I'd love to sit next to Congressman Frank on a long flight. He is by almost all accounts, the smartest guy in the House. But he hasn't been active in health care reform. As to your question, manners count. If the doctors and Frank were having an intelligent discussion, sure. If the doctors were behaving like teabaggers, no. --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym HK: Is it your position that a public employee does not have to listen to public complaints while on public time? Please clarify. Depends. Your boy Bush didn't listen, did he? :?) -- http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym |
Barney Frank gets an earful
On Apr 13, 2:17*pm, hk wrote:
On 4/13/10 2:12 PM, Frogwatch wrote: On Apr 13, 2:06 pm, *wrote: On 4/13/10 1:59 PM, Frogwatch wrote: Apparently, Barney Frank was on a plane when two female doctors realized who he was and began haranguing him over Obamacare. *There was apparently no intervention by flight crew so I assume it never got too nasty. However, this raises a question of "Does a congresscritter have the right to being left alone on a flight"? My answer is it depends on who is paying the bill for the flight. *If ti is the taxpayer, then he is on the public's time and he has to sit and take it. *If he pays for it out of his own money, different story. Now, I'd prefer to debate this rationally so let us simply pretend it is congressman X of unknown party. *Assume he pays using public money. *Do passengers have the right to discuss and tell him their views even if he does not want to hear them at that time? Man, I'd love to sit next to Congressman Frank on a long flight. He is by almost all accounts, the smartest guy in the House. But he hasn't been active in health care reform. As to your question, manners count. If the doctors and Frank were having an intelligent discussion, sure. If the doctors were behaving like teabaggers, no. --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym HK: *Is it your position that a public employee does not have to listen to public complaints while on public time? *Please clarify. Depends. Your boy Bush didn't listen, did he? * :?) --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym Nom-de-fraud, female impersonator has nothing of significance to say. Obviously, lefties are simply incapable of a simple discussion. |
Barney Frank gets an earful
"Frogwatch" wrote in message
... On Apr 13, 2:17 pm, hk wrote: On 4/13/10 2:12 PM, Frogwatch wrote: On Apr 13, 2:06 pm, wrote: On 4/13/10 1:59 PM, Frogwatch wrote: Apparently, Barney Frank was on a plane when two female doctors realized who he was and began haranguing him over Obamacare. There was apparently no intervention by flight crew so I assume it never got too nasty. However, this raises a question of "Does a congresscritter have the right to being left alone on a flight"? My answer is it depends on who is paying the bill for the flight. If ti is the taxpayer, then he is on the public's time and he has to sit and take it. If he pays for it out of his own money, different story. Now, I'd prefer to debate this rationally so let us simply pretend it is congressman X of unknown party. Assume he pays using public money. Do passengers have the right to discuss and tell him their views even if he does not want to hear them at that time? Man, I'd love to sit next to Congressman Frank on a long flight. He is by almost all accounts, the smartest guy in the House. But he hasn't been active in health care reform. As to your question, manners count. If the doctors and Frank were having an intelligent discussion, sure. If the doctors were behaving like teabaggers, no. --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym HK: Is it your position that a public employee does not have to listen to public complaints while on public time? Please clarify. Depends. Your boy Bush didn't listen, did he? :?) --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym Nom-de-fraud, female impersonator has nothing of significance to say. Obviously, lefties are simply incapable of a simple discussion. Yeah, I'm also not an attorney, and you forgot to mention that I weigh a spritely 500 lbs. Are you claiming that Frank didn't listen to the doctors? If so, please cite. -- Nom=de=Plume |
Barney Frank gets an earful
On Apr 13, 1:01*pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote:
"Frogwatch" wrote in message ... On Apr 13, 2:17 pm, hk wrote: On 4/13/10 2:12 PM, Frogwatch wrote: On Apr 13, 2:06 pm, wrote: On 4/13/10 1:59 PM, Frogwatch wrote: Apparently, Barney Frank was on a plane when two female doctors realized who he was and began haranguing him over Obamacare. There was apparently no intervention by flight crew so I assume it never got too nasty. However, this raises a question of "Does a congresscritter have the right to being left alone on a flight"? My answer is it depends on who is paying the bill for the flight. If ti is the taxpayer, then he is on the public's time and he has to sit and take it. If he pays for it out of his own money, different story. Now, I'd prefer to debate this rationally so let us simply pretend it is congressman X of unknown party. Assume he pays using public money. Do passengers have the right to discuss and tell him their views even if he does not want to hear them at that time? Man, I'd love to sit next to Congressman Frank on a long flight. He is by almost all accounts, the smartest guy in the House. But he hasn't been active in health care reform. As to your question, manners count. If the doctors and Frank were having an intelligent discussion, sure. If the doctors were behaving like teabaggers, no. --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym HK: Is it your position that a public employee does not have to listen to public complaints while on public time? Please clarify. Depends. Your boy Bush didn't listen, did he? :?) --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym Nom-de-fraud, female impersonator has nothing of significance to say. Obviously, lefties are simply incapable of a simple discussion. Yeah, I'm also not an attorney, and you forgot to mention that I weigh a spritely 500 lbs. Are you claiming that Frank didn't listen to the doctors? If so, please cite. -- Nom=de=Plume Female impersonator attorney who cannot reead, sure nom. |
Barney Frank gets an earful
"Frogwatch" wrote in message
... On Apr 13, 1:01 pm, "nom=de=plume" wrote: "Frogwatch" wrote in message ... On Apr 13, 2:17 pm, hk wrote: On 4/13/10 2:12 PM, Frogwatch wrote: On Apr 13, 2:06 pm, wrote: On 4/13/10 1:59 PM, Frogwatch wrote: Apparently, Barney Frank was on a plane when two female doctors realized who he was and began haranguing him over Obamacare. There was apparently no intervention by flight crew so I assume it never got too nasty. However, this raises a question of "Does a congresscritter have the right to being left alone on a flight"? My answer is it depends on who is paying the bill for the flight. If ti is the taxpayer, then he is on the public's time and he has to sit and take it. If he pays for it out of his own money, different story. Now, I'd prefer to debate this rationally so let us simply pretend it is congressman X of unknown party. Assume he pays using public money. Do passengers have the right to discuss and tell him their views even if he does not want to hear them at that time? Man, I'd love to sit next to Congressman Frank on a long flight. He is by almost all accounts, the smartest guy in the House. But he hasn't been active in health care reform. As to your question, manners count. If the doctors and Frank were having an intelligent discussion, sure. If the doctors were behaving like teabaggers, no. --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym HK: Is it your position that a public employee does not have to listen to public complaints while on public time? Please clarify. Depends. Your boy Bush didn't listen, did he? :?) --http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym Nom-de-fraud, female impersonator has nothing of significance to say. Obviously, lefties are simply incapable of a simple discussion. Yeah, I'm also not an attorney, and you forgot to mention that I weigh a spritely 500 lbs. Are you claiming that Frank didn't listen to the doctors? If so, please cite. -- Nom=de=Plume Female impersonator attorney who cannot reead, sure nom. Whatever you say Bozo the Frog. -- Nom=de=Plume |
Barney Frank gets an earful
On Tue, 13 Apr 2010 11:12:13 -0700, "nom=de=plume"
wrote: "hk" wrote in message ... On 4/13/10 1:59 PM, Frogwatch wrote: Apparently, Barney Frank was on a plane when two female doctors realized who he was and began haranguing him over Obamacare. There was apparently no intervention by flight crew so I assume it never got too nasty. However, this raises a question of "Does a congresscritter have the right to being left alone on a flight"? My answer is it depends on who is paying the bill for the flight. If ti is the taxpayer, then he is on the public's time and he has to sit and take it. If he pays for it out of his own money, different story. Now, I'd prefer to debate this rationally so let us simply pretend it is congressman X of unknown party. Assume he pays using public money. Do passengers have the right to discuss and tell him their views even if he does not want to hear them at that time? Man, I'd love to sit next to Congressman Frank on a long flight. He is by almost all accounts, the smartest guy in the House. But he hasn't been active in health care reform. As to your question, manners count. If the doctors and Frank were having an intelligent discussion, sure. If the doctors were behaving like teabaggers, no. -- http://tinyurl.com/ykxp2ym My guess is that the discussion was actually that.. a discussion. Doctors tend to be pretty smart, and since they were women, they were likely smarter, more polite, and better informed. Frank is definitely one of the smarter ones in DC. It would be an honor to talk to him. If they were doctors, then it's likely they were disappointed that the bill didn't go far enough. In Frogwatch's world, that's a score for the bozos. |
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