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Author Topic: Okla Legislature 2nd Worse in Nation  (Read 260616 times)
heironymouspasparagus
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« Reply #435 on: November 05, 2018, 07:44:40 pm »

It is fair to say that things in Oklahoma had been falling apart. A plunge in oil prices caught up with years of tax-slashing and the results were ugly: cash-strapped school districts going to four-day weeks, prisons dangerously overcrowding and rural hospitals shutting down. The two-term Republican governor, Mary Fallin, shows up in poll after poll with approval numbers well below freezing, reliably among the least-popular governors in the country. As in Louisiana and Kansas, the fallout of fiscal austerity had spread quickly to politics.

“You got elected because you weren’t Obama,” said Anthony Sykes, a conservative state senator, speaking of some of his hard-line colleagues. “But the Obama well went dry. And you’ve got to produce some results now.”


https://www.nytimes.com/2018/11/02/us/oklahoma-midterm-elections.html




And they won't.   They don't know how to make cutting everything work to build something up.  Nobody does.

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"So he brandished a gun, never shot anyone or anything right?"  --TeeDub, 17 Feb 2018.

I don’t share my thoughts because I think it will change the minds of people who think differently.  I share my thoughts to show the people who already think like me that they are not alone.
patric
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« Reply #436 on: December 02, 2018, 03:24:45 pm »

OKLAHOMA CITY — State Sen. Joseph Silk has introduced a bill in the Oklahoma Legislature that would criminalize abortion by including it in the state’s definition of felony homicide.

Allie Shinn, deputy director of the ACLU of Oklahoma, called Silk’s measure an extreme affront to reproductive rights.
“He seems more interested in scoring cheap political points at the expense of Oklahomans than he is promoting the well-being of his district.”

It says any federal laws, regulations, executive orders or court decisions that deprive an unborn child the right to life are void.

“The goal is to say we are a sovereign state and choose to abolish abortion,” Silk said.

https://www.tulsaworld.com/news/capitol_report/sen-silk-files-bill-to-make-abortion-illegal-classifying-it/article_83a6c39b-05e2-5a93-985a-8340acb8efff.html


But federal law keeping medical marijuana illegal is just fine...
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"Tulsa will lay off police and firemen before we will cut back on unnecessarily wasteful streetlights."  -- March 18, 2009 TulsaNow Forum
swake
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« Reply #437 on: December 02, 2018, 03:48:14 pm »

OKLAHOMA CITY — State Sen. Joseph Silk has introduced a bill in the Oklahoma Legislature that would criminalize abortion by including it in the state’s definition of felony homicide.

Allie Shinn, deputy director of the ACLU of Oklahoma, called Silk’s measure an extreme affront to reproductive rights.
“He seems more interested in scoring cheap political points at the expense of Oklahomans than he is promoting the well-being of his district.”

It says any federal laws, regulations, executive orders or court decisions that deprive an unborn child the right to life are void.

“The goal is to say we are a sovereign state and choose to abolish abortion,” Silk said.

https://www.tulsaworld.com/news/capitol_report/sen-silk-files-bill-to-make-abortion-illegal-classifying-it/article_83a6c39b-05e2-5a93-985a-8340acb8efff.html


But federal law keeping medical marijuana illegal is just fine...

Just wow.
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dbacksfan 2.0
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« Reply #438 on: December 02, 2018, 10:21:18 pm »

OKLAHOMA CITY — State Sen. Joseph Silk has introduced a bill in the Oklahoma Legislature that would criminalize abortion by including it in the state’s definition of felony homicide.

Allie Shinn, deputy director of the ACLU of Oklahoma, called Silk’s measure an extreme affront to reproductive rights.
“He seems more interested in scoring cheap political points at the expense of Oklahomans than he is promoting the well-being of his district.”

It says any federal laws, regulations, executive orders or court decisions that deprive an unborn child the right to life are void.

“The goal is to say we are a sovereign state and choose to abolish abortion,” Silk said.

https://www.tulsaworld.com/news/capitol_report/sen-silk-files-bill-to-make-abortion-illegal-classifying-it/article_83a6c39b-05e2-5a93-985a-8340acb8efff.html


But federal law keeping medical marijuana illegal is just fine...

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patric
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« Reply #439 on: December 03, 2018, 12:21:11 am »

Just wow.

There should be some meaningful form of censure for politicians who thumb their nose at taxpayers by deliberately pushing bogus bills they know violate the constitution, just to score some points with their base.

“He didn’t come to Washington to disrupt. He came to improve. That’s who he was.”

That phrase was used yesterday to describe the passing of President Bush; The look on this guys face makes me doubt he will ever be remembered with the same reverence:


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"Tulsa will lay off police and firemen before we will cut back on unnecessarily wasteful streetlights."  -- March 18, 2009 TulsaNow Forum
heironymouspasparagus
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« Reply #440 on: December 03, 2018, 12:01:17 pm »

There should be some meaningful form of censure for politicians who thumb their nose at taxpayers by deliberately pushing bogus bills they know violate the constitution, just to score some points with their base.

“He didn’t come to Washington to disrupt. He came to improve. That’s who he was.”

That phrase was used yesterday to describe the passing of President Bush; The look on this guys face makes me doubt he will ever be remembered with the same reverence:






This is a guy who voted against education in the state.  Against wind energy to the benefit of big oil.  Far southeast corner of the state - bunch of those right wing extremists I have mentioned in other post.   
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"So he brandished a gun, never shot anyone or anything right?"  --TeeDub, 17 Feb 2018.

I don’t share my thoughts because I think it will change the minds of people who think differently.  I share my thoughts to show the people who already think like me that they are not alone.
patric
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« Reply #441 on: December 22, 2018, 06:06:40 pm »


Well done.

http://www.thetulsavoice.com/December-B-2018/The-2018-Bad-Penny-Awards/
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"Tulsa will lay off police and firemen before we will cut back on unnecessarily wasteful streetlights."  -- March 18, 2009 TulsaNow Forum
patric
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« Reply #442 on: January 11, 2019, 10:38:31 am »

Wayne Greene: If you're poor in Tulsa, don't get sick
https://www.tulsaworld.com/homepagelatest/wayne-greene-if-you-re-poor-in-tulsa-don-t/article_51f910ff-4518-5d2f-ae3c-d89fbbe917b8.html

The recently released Gallup-Tulsa Citivoice Index includes compelling data that should lead the state to reconsider Medicaid expansion.

The survey is a fascinating look at how well Tulsans are doing in their day-to-day lives. It gauges everything from how we feel the Police Department treats us to whether we would recommend that a friend live here. Some 22,500 surveys were sent out, and the Gallup people parsed up the results along racial, geographic and income lines.

Here’s a number that jumped off the page at me: 36 percent of the people of Tulsa have experienced a time in the past year when they didn’t have enough money to pay for health care or medicine for themselves or a member of their family.

Among people who earn less than $27,000 a year, the number was 61 percent.

If you’re poor in Tulsa, watch out.

It’s a crisis invisible to a lot of the comfortably insured middle class people of Tulsa. We go about our lives secure in the knowledge that if we get sick or injured, we’ll have the resources to be made whole. We pull out the insurance card at the doctor’s office, handle the copay and, from there, concentrate on getting well.

It’s a different story for the uninsured. They get sick and either seek the help of charities, pray that their problem goes away, or, if it’s bad enough, head to the emergency room — the only place that can’t turn them away.

The result is higher insurance costs for employers and individuals, higher hospital costs for everyone and emergency rooms clogged with people who should have been treated in doctor’s offices.

State policy has knowingly created an underclass of people — mostly employed in low-wage jobs — who can’t afford to get sick. They don’t earn enough for “Obamacare” subsidies and they don’t qualify for Medicaid, which Oklahoma essentially reserves for children, pregnant women, the aged and the disabled.

Thus, more than a third of your neighbors had to make the wrong medical choice last year because they just couldn’t afford to do anything else.

Oklahoma’s policy of denying coverage to the poor magnifies eventual health crises and costs.

People with high cholesterol never have it checked by a doctor. Obese people never got their blood sugar tested.

Manageable conditions aren’t managed.

And so, poor, sick Tulsans eventually roll into the emergency room on gurneys, incapacitated by strokes, heart attacks or diabetic crises.

It makes Oklahoma sicker, poorer and less productive.

Oklahomans pay the same “Obamacare” taxes as the people in Arkansas. But in Arkansas, which accepted Medicaid expansion, the residents have a safety net that ensures health care coverage. The federal government is paying for 90 percent of the cost of that program, and the resulting infusion of money caused the state economy to grow enough to finance a sales tax cut.

In Arkansas, federal money helps pay for residential mental health and substance abuse programs. In Oklahoma, it’s all on the state’s dime.

In Arkansas, federal money is there for sick prison inmates. In Oklahoma, state taxpayers pick up those costs.

All of that because our legislators have been too stubborn to accept the “Obamacare” money.

And so, more than a third of your neighbors have to wonder if that persistent cough is just a cold or the first sign of a horrible scenario.

Here’s the terrifying truth of being uninsured in Oklahoma: A broken bone can turn your poverty into a crisis with no possible recovery, a virus can wreck your family’s future.

American values of working hard, dreaming big and saving for the future are meaningless if a traffic accident can leave you disabled and destitute.


https://www.cityoftulsa.org/Citivoice
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"Tulsa will lay off police and firemen before we will cut back on unnecessarily wasteful streetlights."  -- March 18, 2009 TulsaNow Forum
patric
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« Reply #443 on: February 10, 2019, 11:21:47 am »

When we copy a law from another state, shouldnt we follow through when that states' law is thrown out?

Medical Marijuana card holders in Oklahoma are automatically considered DUI.  Lets fix that.



Motorists who have used marijuana in the past cannot be charged with driving under the influence on that basis alone, even if some traces of the drug are detected in their blood, the state's top court ruled Tuesday.

Arizona Supreme Court justices disagreed with the Maricopa County Attorney Office, which argued before the court in November, that drivers whose blood tests reveal the presence of an inactive marijuana metabolite known as Carboxy-THC can be prosecuted for driving while impaired.

The court was unconvinced the mere presence of the metabolite, which can remain in the bloodstream for 30 days, is valid evidence of impairment.

The court wrote that marijuana users break the law if they drive while "impaired to the slightest degree" and if they are discovered with metabolites in their system that are known to impair. But, wrote Justice Robert Brutinel, drivers cannot be convicted "based merely on the presence of a non-impairing metabolite that may reflect the prior usage of marijuana."

The opinion affects motorists who use marijuana illegally, as well as the estimated 40,000 people who participate in the state's medical-marijuana program. Those cardholders are legally allowed to ingest pot to treat ailments ranging form chronic pain to glaucoma, and many of those cardholders have argued that traces of metabolites do not prove impairment.

Maricopa County Attorney Bill Montgomery said in a statement that the court had engaged in "interpretive jujitsu." The court should have asked the state Legislature to clarify whether it contemplated impairment based on the presence of a non-impairing metabolite, Montgomery wrote.

"By acting as it has, our State Supreme Court contributes to citizen cynicism particularly when it involves the whys and wherefores of drafting and passing legislation," he wrote. "Why should citizens work through our republican form of government and petition their duly elected legislators for statutory change when they can take a shot at only having to persuade just three Justices?"

The ruling stems from the case of Hrach Shilgevorkyan, who was pulled over for speeding and making unsafe lane changes. The driver admitted to smoking "some weed" the night before and volunteered to take a blood test, which revealed the presence of Carboxy-THC.

He was charged with driving with an illegal drug or metabolite in his body. A judge threw out the charges.

The Arizona Supreme Court concluded in Tuesday's ruling that interpreting the law so that any byproduct of cannabis proves impairment "leads to absurd results."

"Most notably, this interpretation would create criminal liability regardless of how long the metabolite remains in the driver's system or whether it has any impairing effect," the Supreme Court's ruling said. "For example, at oral argument the State acknowledged that, under its reading of the statute, if a metabolite could be detected five years after ingesting a proscribed drug, a driver who tested positive for trace elements of a non-impairing substance could be prosecuted."

Additionally, the court wrote, "this interpretation would criminalize otherwise legal conduct."



http://archive.azcentral.com/ic/pdf/arizona-court-marijuana-ruling.pdf
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"Tulsa will lay off police and firemen before we will cut back on unnecessarily wasteful streetlights."  -- March 18, 2009 TulsaNow Forum
patric
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« Reply #444 on: February 13, 2019, 10:20:05 pm »


Bill would make it harder to sue officers for excessive force

House Bill 2328, authored by Rep. Kevin McDugle, R-Broken Arrow, and Josh West, R-Grove, would amend Oklahoma’s current statute defining excessive force and removes a portion that holds peace officers subject to state law “to the same degree as any other citizen.”


https://www.readfrontier.org/stories/bill-would-make-it-harder-to-sue-officers-for-excessive-force/
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"Tulsa will lay off police and firemen before we will cut back on unnecessarily wasteful streetlights."  -- March 18, 2009 TulsaNow Forum
patric
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« Reply #445 on: February 13, 2019, 10:29:42 pm »

Tulsa World editorial: District attorney right about prosecutor fees being wrong
https://www.tulsaworld.com/opinion/editorials/tulsa-world-editorial-district-attorney-right-about-prosecutor-fees-being/article_b4b5f4af-ce6d-5c42-93f6-afae83a0f321.html

Lawmakers shifted money away from the judicial branch and replaced that revenue with fees and fines. It has created massive debt for defendants, who often end up back in jail for nonpayment.

It has turned jails into debtors’ prisons. Our jails need to hold dangerous criminals or defendants, not those having trouble paying off an old court filing. The goal of the court system is to dispense justice, not create collections accounts.

“I think it’s immoral to require a district attorney to be a fee collector to keep my doors open,” Kunzweiler said. “The fact that I have to collect a fee from somebody I’m prosecuting and putting on probation, I shouldn’t have to be put in that spot. My job should be public safety and applying facts to law.”



Prosecutors should also view stealing from those too poor to afford lawyers through the act of asset forfeiture, as being just as immoral.


Though the overall amount of collections from forfeited cash and property decreased in 2018, most district attorneys’ offices across the state actually saw an increase in forfeiture funds, an analysis by The Frontier found.

The Tulsa County District Attorney’s Office more than doubled the amount of cash and property it seized during Fiscal Year 2018, going from a little more than $519,000 the previous year to nearly $1.2 million the following year.


One new stream of revenue for district attorneys’ offices is the Uninsured Vehicle Enforcement Diversion Program, which uses automated license plate readers to check whether a vehicle is insured. The fees collected under the program go to district attorney’s offices, though there have been some issues with drivers who do have insurance being caught up in the program.


https://www.readfrontier.org/stories/most-prosecutors-saw-increase-last-year-in-forfeited-cash-and-property-though-total-statewide-seizures-decreased/
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"Tulsa will lay off police and firemen before we will cut back on unnecessarily wasteful streetlights."  -- March 18, 2009 TulsaNow Forum
heironymouspasparagus
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« Reply #446 on: February 15, 2019, 09:28:38 pm »

The 2nd worst group in the nation - literally have had the following offer;

If you spend $1, I (party 2) will give you $9.   Or in this case, they are passing up $900 Million.  Saying no, we don't want almost a billion dollars, because we have to come up with $100 million... to expand Medicare and actually help the tens of thousands in this state who have lost health care and insurance during the Failin' regime.   


Rapidly on track to be first worst in the nation.

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"So he brandished a gun, never shot anyone or anything right?"  --TeeDub, 17 Feb 2018.

I don’t share my thoughts because I think it will change the minds of people who think differently.  I share my thoughts to show the people who already think like me that they are not alone.
patric
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« Reply #447 on: February 19, 2019, 11:22:16 am »

The 2nd worst group in the nation - literally have had the following offer;

If you spend $1, I (party 2) will give you $9.   Or in this case, they are passing up $900 Million.  Saying no, we don't want almost a billion dollars, because we have to come up with $100 million... to expand Medicare and actually help the tens of thousands in this state who have lost health care and insurance during the Failin' regime.   

Rapidly on track to be first worst in the nation.



Oklahoma's uninsured rate is the second-highest in U.S.

https://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2019/02/19/695687400/white-house-plan-to-stop-hiv-faces-a-tough-road-in-oklahoma
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dbacksfan 2.0
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« Reply #448 on: February 19, 2019, 01:11:14 pm »



https://www.baptistmessenger.com/where-does-oklahoma-rank-in-bible-friendly-places/


One thing Tulsa and OKC are not at the bottom of the list of

Quote
New survey ranks most-to-least Bible minded American cities
Oft referred to as the buckle of the Bible belt, Oklahoma’s two major cities upheld that image according to a recent Barna Group study about how much God’s Word is read by their residents.

The state’s capital city ranked No. 15 on the list, and Tulsa came in at No. 34 among the top 96 “Bible-minded” cities in the United States.

Guess we must be a bunch of unwashed heathens out here

Quote
Least Bible-Minded Cities

The least Bible-oriented markets include a mix of regions, but tend to be from the New England area. Easily the lowest Bible-minded scores came from Providence, R.I. (9 percent) and Albany, N.Y. (10 percent). To put this in perspective, the most Bible-minded markets are five times more likely to have residents who qualify as Bible-minded than is true in these two Northeastern cities.

Though these two cities are the most extreme, none of the cities in the bottom 10 break 20 percent, where even one in five people could be considered Bible-minded. The New England area is home to most of the markets in the bottom 10 Bible-minded cities, including Burlington, Vt. (16 percent), Portland, Maine (16 percent), Hartford, Conn. (16 percent), Boston, Mass. (16 percent), Buffalo, N.Y. (18 percent) and New York, N.Y. (18 percent).

The remaining markets in the bottom 10 are primarily in the West and include San Francisco, Calif. (16 percent), Phoenix, Ariz. (17 percent), and Las Vegas, Nev. (18 percent). Cedar Rapids, Iowa (18 percent) being something of an outlier.

Wow, we're lower than Las Vegas, who'd thunk that?



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heironymouspasparagus
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« Reply #449 on: February 19, 2019, 05:08:16 pm »


One thing Tulsa and OKC are not at the bottom of the list of

Guess we must be a bunch of unwashed heathens out here

Wow, we're lower than Las Vegas, who'd thunk that?



Southern Baptist.  Not to be confused with Baptists.   They are the ones who broke away from Baptists because of the opposition to slavery by Baptists.  Back in the 1840's-1850's.

They have their own interpretation of what "Bible minded" is.





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"So he brandished a gun, never shot anyone or anything right?"  --TeeDub, 17 Feb 2018.

I don’t share my thoughts because I think it will change the minds of people who think differently.  I share my thoughts to show the people who already think like me that they are not alone.
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