Are you a hack or just stupid? This is BP's fault. BP has more money than our Federal Government. This is BP's industry, and who would know better how to deal with this type of accident than BP? Where is BP?
No, you're the hack if you believe that over 17 months into the Obama administration, Bush is still to Blame for poor agency oversight.
And Stupid is allowing massive funding to regulate industry, and then finding out that the SEC (finance industry), or Dept of Energy (oil industry) who is supposed to be enforcing the rules designed to prevent disaster have been witlessly allowing disaster to happen.
Dude you just dont get it do you?
Whos SEC was that?
it was bush and the republicans who ran that SEC.
He even politizied the DOJ for hells sake you fool.
They allowed the industry to GO UNFETTERED as if we had no laws.
It was your ideas that fucked us all.
Republicans got elected saying government can do nothing right and then tried to prove it after they were elected.
No sane person would hire someone for a job who says the job needs to be eliminated because its worthless.
YOU guys were wrong about everything and now want to pretend it was someone else doing it.
Federalism
First published Sun Jan 5, 2003; substantive revision Tue Mar 9, 2010
Federalism is the theory or advocacy of federal principles for dividing powers between member units and common institutions. Unlike in a unitary state, sovereignty in federal political orders is non-centralized, often constitutionally, between at least two levels so that units at each level have final authority and can be self governing in some issue area. Citizens thus have political obligations to, or have their rights secured by, two authorities. The division of power between the member unit and center may vary, typically the center has powers regarding defense and foreign policy, but member units may also have international roles. The decision-making bodies of member units may also participate in central decision-making bodies. Much recent philosophical attention is spurred by renewed political interest in federalism, coupled with empirical findings concerning the requisite and legitimate basis for stability and trust among citizens in federal political orders. Philosophical contributions have addressed the dilemmas and opportunities facing Canada, Australia, Europe, Russia, Iraq, Nepal and Nigeria, to mention just a few areas where federal arrangements are seen as interesting solutions to accommodate differences among populations divided by ethnic or cultural cleavages yet seeking a common, often democratic, political order.
1. Taxonomy
2. History of Federalism in Western Thought
3. Reasons for Federalism
◦3.1 Reasons for a federal order rather than separate states or secession
◦3.2 Reasons for preferring federal orders over a unitary state
4. Further Philosophical Issues
◦4.1 Issues of Constitutional and Institutional Design
◦4.2 Sources of Stability
◦4.3 Division of Power
◦4.4 Distributive Justice
◦4.5 Democratic Theory
◦4.6 Politics of Recognition
Bibliography
◦Historical
◦Contemporary
Other Internet Resources
Related Entries
Federalism (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)