Grassroots in Nebraska

Working towards Constitutional, limited government

  • Home
  • About
    • About GiN
    • Principles
    • Operating Philosophy
    • Policies
  • Elections
    • Election 2016
    • Election 2014
    • Election 2012
    • Election 2010
    • Local Elections
    • Sample Ballots
  • Local
    • City of Lincoln
    • Lancaster County
  • State
    • Your Representatives
    • Governor
    • NE Unicameral
  • Federal
  • Contact
    • Subscribe
    • Tip Submissions
You are here: Home / Archives for federal debt

Time for Warren Buffett to Put Up (or not) and Then…Pipe Down

Originally published August 24, 2011, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated August 24, 2011. 2 Comments

Time for Warren Buffett to Put Up (or not) and Then…Pipe Down

  I keep hearing the phrase “out of bullets” from pundits who discuss what options might be available to the central planning crowd in dealing with the economy. It would be nice if these planners’ guns would be totally out of bullets. Unfortunately, as long as central planning ideology maintains its firm grip on politicians […]

Filed Under: Featured, In the News, Taxes Tagged With: berkshire hathaway, buffett nebraska, buffett op ed new york times, capital gains tax rates, central planning, centrally planned economies, eat the rich, federal debt, federal deficit, government spending, oracle of omaha, paying their fair share, progressive taxation, solutions to deficit, stop coddling the rich, suicidal politics, tax the rich, taxing the rich, u.s. tax structure, warren buffett, warren buffett nebraska, warren buffett taxation, warren buffett taxes

Nullification: Are States Sitting Ducks or Willing Accomplices?

Originally published March 24, 2011, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated May 26, 2013. 3 Comments

Nullification: Are States Sitting Ducks or Willing Accomplices?

This article is part of an ongoing series about the concept of nullification by states; the idea that individual states can declare a federal law or regulation unconstitutional, and therefore, refuse to implement it. See the bottom of this article for a complete list of series’ articles. This article explores the second reason why I […]

Filed Under: Governor, Health Care, Nebraska, Senators, State Sovereignty, Tenth Amendment, Unicameral Tagged With: 10th Amendment, antonin scalia, attorneys general lawsuits, balanced federalism, bureaucracy, bureaucrats, commerce clause, Constitution, dual federalism, dual sovereignty, effectiveness of nullification, federal aid to states, federal debt, federal deficit, federal funding, florida court, general welfare clause, governor, governors, gregory v ashcroft, growth of government, health care implementation, health care law, healthcare law, interposition, judge roger vinson, justice scalia, legislators, lopez v united states, myths about nullification, necessary and proper clause, northern district, nullification, nullification series, obamacare, printz v united states, state governments, state senators, state sovereignty, states, stopping obamacare, supreme court, supreme court rulings, supreme court state sovereignty, Tenth Amendment, the nullification debate, the states, unconstitutional, us constitution

Et tu, Senator Johanns? First Food Safety, Now Unemployment Extension?

Originally published December 5, 2010, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated December 5, 2010. 2 Comments

Et tu, Senator Johanns? First Food Safety, Now Unemployment Extension?

By Shelli Dawdy Earlier this week, the Senate passed a food safety bill that would grant sweeping new powers to the FDA, that would add $1.4 billion in costs to the federal budget, and that stands to hurt small farms. As we noted in our article on the subject, Nebraska Senator Mike Johanns voted for […]

Filed Under: Featured, Federal Tagged With: bush tax cuts, cost of government, economic downturn, economy, extention of unemployment benefits, federal budget, federal debt, federal deficit, food safety bill, government spending, how they voted food safety bill, inconsistent politicians, johanns food safety bill, johanns lincoln journal star story, johanns policy, johanns supports unemployment extension, johanns unemployment, johanns video, johanns voting record, keeping tax cuts, limited government, mike johanns, mike johanns video nebraska, november 2010 unemployment figures, sen. johanns, senator johanns, senator mike johanns, slow economy, unemployment benefits extend unemployment, unemployment compensation, unemployment rate, unemployment rate 9.8%, welfare programs

Don’t Count On A Republican Congress To Save The Day

Originally published August 14, 2010, By Shelli Dawdy. Updated December 5, 2011. 1 Comment

Don’t Count On A Republican Congress To Save The Day

Editor’s Note: This article is part of a series about the perils of a perpetual focus on the next election cycle, on Washington, D.C. politics, and a need for appraising the sober realities about state sovereignty and politics as usual. Following this article, there were, in order, three others published:  “GOP Congress Will Not Save […]

Filed Under: Activism, Featured, Federal Tagged With: 2010 elections, bailout, cause of healthcare costs, congressional leadership, control of congress, democrat controlled congress, democratic majority, election 2010, Facts are Stubborn Things, Featured, federal, federal debt, federal deficit, federal government, focus on federal government, free enterprise, gin, Grassroots in Nebraska, healthcare bill, healthcare law, healthcare reform, house of representatives, incumbent politicians, incumbent protection, Issues & Policies, limited government, medicaid, medicare, medicare in trouble, nebraska, partisan politics, party politics, political games, political gamesmanship, politics, Principles & Philosophy, repeal healthcare, republican congress, republican incompetence, republican leadership, republican party, shelli dawdy, solutions to problem of growing government, source of rising medical care costs, state sovereignty, stimulus bill, stimulus programs, stubborn facts, take back congress, tarp, Tenth Amendment, unemployment compensation, unsustainable debt, unsustainable deficit, unsustainable programs, us government, us house

Latest

Dream Small

Dream Small

In 2016, during a period of about a year when it seemed possible -- even likely … Read full article...

Nebraska 2018 Primary Election Sample Ballots

Nebraska 2018 Primary Election Sample Ballots

Back by popular dem