Larry, you didn't wait for me to finish...I started this post in school today...
To rebut your second points (not the article), I was not commenting on the historical precedence of filibustering nominees. I was commenting on the statement that "Democratic senators stand in the way of every nominee the President sends over." That is just an out and out exaggeration and I daresay a lie...like I said 95% confirmation rate of President Bush's judicial nominees. This 95% confirmation rate crushes Bill Clinton's 81% confirmation rate...the GOP decided to leave nominees in committee rather than have them come to the full Senate chamber. I "get" the historical precedence concept, but so what? There's a first time for everything.
As for the Bolton confirmation, I'm not saying that the Constitution requires Colin Powell's support. I don't think that you were thinking when you went off on me about this one. The Constitution requires the "advice and consent of the Senate." One line. The Senate works through a committee system and a full chamber. In order for legislation to pass the Senate, a bill must pass through a committee and pass on the floor; nominations are the same thing. If Republicans can bottle up nominations in committee, then they can be defeated in committee as well.
And nowhere am I saying that there needs to be unanimous consent. Once again, you are way overboard here, sir. Sometimes I wonder if you are serious/balanced when you go off the deep end like this. I am saying that he needs a majority of the votes. There are nine Republicans and eight Democrats on the Foreign Relations committee; eight Democrats oppose, three Republicans do now and a fourth may...that's 11 or 12 senators who oppose this man's nomination. There are allegations about his handeling of subordinates and his actions with foreign leaders in the past are highly questionable. So, why is it so bad to hold back on this? Especially when Republicans, including the chairman of the committee, are helping?
Now back to my point regarding the Senate and its make-up. Democrats don't do well in smaller states anymore, but these states have disproporionate power in the Senate (where representation is equal). Because of that, Republicans enjoy a natural advantage in the Senate, which is more representative of political dynamics rather than a concrete "mandate." We need to take that into consideration whenever we discuss these matters.
Now, Larry, I am not saying that the minority needs to be bowed to, but I am not going to suggest, as you, that the majority's complete will needs to be met fully. There is a thing called dissent and opposition in this nation. The opposition, whether it is Democratic or Republican, should not lay down and just say go ahead do it. Our system is not meant for that (this isn't a parliamentary form of government), and I don't think that going nuclear is going to help our nation. The minority must have a say in government, and getting rid of the filibuster will keep that from happening.
In any event, if Republicans do go "nuclear," I hope that Democrats reinstate the right to filibuster when they take back power in the Senate.