Posted by XLFD on December 22, 2013
While people were getting ready for the Christmas holiday and debating whether Duck Dynasty's Phil Robertson's words in the Louisiana wilderness were worth being suspended from a TV network for, an insidious bill worked its way through the US Congress in preparation to be signed into law most assuredly by the President.
So whether you were wondering how to roast the duck this Christmas, or whether you toasted or roasted the Duck Dynasty patriarch, or dealing with Scrooge McDucks, you more than likely missed this installment which was effectively ignored by the mainstream media.
The National Defense Allocation Act passed the Senate in an 84-15 vote late Thursday night and clears the Pentagon to spend $607 billion, including $527 billion in base funding and $80 billion for America’s global operations. It had already passed the House.
The bill contains many provisions such as requiring an independent investigation into reports of religious discrimination against troops sharing their faith and one insisting on Improved assistance for widows of troops killed in combat.
But it has two sections that it's 2013 counterpart also had, provisions that were scrapped due to their unpopularity expressed by several representatives and senators and the public at large. This time, it went under the radar of many because of the media focusing on other things and ignoring the warnings of such stalwarts of liberty like Ted Cruz and Rand Paul.
The National Defense Allocation Act passed the Senate in an 84-15 vote late Thursday night and clears the Pentagon to spend $607 billion, including $527 billion in base funding and $80 billion for America’s global operations. It had already passed the House.
The bill contains many provisions such as requiring an independent investigation into reports of religious discrimination against troops sharing their faith and one insisting on Improved assistance for widows of troops killed in combat.
But it has two sections that it's 2013 counterpart also had, provisions that were scrapped due to their unpopularity expressed by several representatives and senators and the public at large. This time, it went under the radar of many because of the media focusing on other things and ignoring the warnings of such stalwarts of liberty like Ted Cruz and Rand Paul.



