meta_pixel
Tapesearch Logo
Log in
Congressional Dish

CD058: Space Travel, TSA, Wall Street, & Patents

Congressional Dish

Jennifer Briney

News, Congress, Government, Politics, Corporations

4.81.1K Ratings

🗓️ 21 December 2013

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

During the first week of December, the House of Representatives passed bills to extend an insurance program that provides taxpayer bailouts to private space exploration companies, made changes to TSA policies, tried (again) to deregulate Wall Street gamblers, and tried to shut down patent trolls. Executive Producer: Brandon K. Lewis Information Presented in this Episode Extends an existing government insurance program for private companies that launch vehicles into space through 2014. The program has three tiers: The private companies buy insurance from a private insurance company for the "maximum probably loss" that would occur if there were an accident; the insurance is capped at $500 million. The "maximum probable loss" is determined by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA); the Government Accountability Office says that . If the "maximum probably loss" is not actually the maximum loss, taxpayers will pay up to $2.8 billion (in 2013 dollars -this number increases with inflation) for damage caused by the private companies' accident. Any amount over the insurance payment plus the taxpayers' $2.8 billion must be paid by the private company who caused the accident. The insurance program extension has been requested by the private companies who stand to profit from launching vehicles into space. [caption id="attachment_1162" align="aligncenter" width="261"] Rep. Lamar Smith (TX), author of H.R. 3547[/caption] Rep. Lamar Smith (TX), author of H.R. 3547, has taken money for the 2014 election from companies requesting the insurance program. [caption id="attachment_1163" align="aligncenter" width="773"] Source: OpenSecrets.org on December 20, 2013[/caption] Passed the House of Representatives on December 2, 2013 [caption id="attachment_1165" align="aligncenter" width="641"] Source: Govtrack.us[/caption] Would divert approximately $500,000 per year in abandoned change from airports from TSA airport security, where it currently goes, to building areas of "rest and recuperation" for military families at airports. [caption id="attachment_1166" align="aligncenter" width="273"] Rep. Cedric Richmond (VA), December 3, 2013 Congressional Record[/caption] Passed the House of Representatives without a recorded vote on December 3, 2013. TSA must develop and publicly publish a plan for what security technology they plan to buy. Bill is necessary because the TSA is Former Department of Homeland Security officials, including Michael Chertoff, since leaving their government jobs. The plan must identify "opportunities for public-private partnerships". Private sector suggestions must be included in the plan. The Obama administration must report "subcontracting goals" and why they haven't been met (if applicable). Passed the House of Representatives unanimously on December 3, 2013. Was signed into law on December 9, 2013. It is illegal to "manufacture, import, sell, ship, deliver, possess, transfer, or receive a firearm not detectable by metal detectors." by Carrie Johnson, NPR, November 14, 2013. Real name: "Small Business Capital Access and Job Preservation Act" (hello, Orwell). Exempts private equity fund advisers from registering with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Passed largely along Party lines, getting almost unanimous Republican support. Unsurprisingly, the bill was supported by Democrat Jim Himes of Connecticut, [caption id="attachment_1169" align="aligncenter" width="647"] Rep. Jim Himes (CT), OpenSecrets.org as of 12/20/2013[/caption] Just a few weeks ago, the House passed H.R. 992, an even more offensive bill that would allow United States' government - the type of behavior that crashed the global economy. Requires more details when filing a lawsuit for patent infringement. Losers of lawsuits must pay expenses and fees of the winners, but the court can intervene. Limits discovery requests; they must be specific. Patent claims must be available on a searchable, public website. Limits lawsuits down the supply chain (for example, p and claiming they own the technology The bill passed on December 5, 2013 with 91 Representatives voting against it because they say the bill was rushed and not examined closely enough for unintended consequences. Representatives Quoted in This Episode (In Order of Appearance) Music & Other Audio in This Episode Intro and Exit Music: by (found on )

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

And the I am so damn tired of being lied to.

0:15.0

I am so damn tired of being lied to.

0:20.0

I don't think I can't deny it anymore.

0:30.0

You can't stick to your story if you think it flies

0:40.0

But I'm not going to buy it anymore.

0:45.0

Hey there, welcome to the 58th episode of Congressional Dish.

0:49.0

I'm your host Jennifer Briny.

0:50.0

And for those of you have never heard this show before I'm reading all the

0:53.2

bills that pass the House of Representatives and letting you know what's in them.

0:55.9

Now because of some personal things that I've been going through the last few weeks

0:59.3

which you regular listeners know all about I am a couple weeks behind. So this week we're going to

1:06.2

cover what happened in the first week of December. Now for those of you who are wondering

1:10.4

about the budget bill that was just passed it just passed the Senate

1:13.7

like a couple minutes ago so that will be covered before Congress comes back

1:19.6

into session here's my general plan but this could change because I don't really know what's happening.

1:26.0

But the idea is I'm going to cover the first week of December right now,

1:30.0

and then we'll cover the second week including the budget deal probably on January 4th.

1:35.4

I think I'm going to take off the week of Christmas because quite frankly I'm exhausted.

1:39.9

So I'm going to take off the week of Christmas.

1:41.3

I hope you will forgive me for that, but sometime over the next two weeks I

1:44.5

will find the time to read everything that happened that week create a show and I'll

1:48.2

release that on January 4th and then Congress is actually only taking a couple weeks off.

...

Please login to see the full transcript.

Disclaimer: The podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from Jennifer Briney, and are the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Tapesearch.

Generated transcripts are the property of Jennifer Briney and are distributed freely under the Fair Use doctrine. Transcripts generated by Tapesearch are not guaranteed to be accurate.

Copyright © Tapesearch 2025.