Author: papundits

  • MY State Of The Union

    By Alan Caruba

    Each one of us has their own “state of the union” so far as the economy is concerned. Much of the workforce receives a paycheck, but many of those jobs have ceased to exist. Other jobs involve contract services. A reported 10% of the workforce is unemployed and the likelihood is that the actual percentage is much higher.

    Small business, one of the largest components of the economy, is hurting because consumers are cutting back on spending. It is no surprise either that the banking community, under direct attack by the President, is reluctant to stick its neck out. The result is an understandable reluctance to extend credit and loans, and a loss of investor confidence.

    On Wednesday, the President will give his first State of the Union (SOTU) speech, but if it looks and sounds familiar, it is because it will be the third time in the past year he has addressed a joint session of Congress. That has to be some kind of record, but he has set records for more than 400 speeches in the past year.

    When the President reads yet another speech written for him by other people, keep in mind that he has surrounded himself with a cabinet and advisors composed primarily of lawyers like himself. Most have no experience in private enterprise. They have not managed a business, nor met a payroll. Less than ten percent of them have experience in the business sector. And these are the people charged with solving the current financial crisis!

    I do not need to wait until Wednesday to hear President Obama’s State of the Union speech. I already know he cannot be trusted to respond honestly and candidly about any issue. Rep. Joe Wilson (R-SC) gained fame by calling out “You Lie!” in an earlier speech and he was right. He did, however, apologize for the breach of etiquette, but I am pretty sure other Republicans in the chamber will feel the same impulse.

    After fifty years of earning a good living as a public relations counselor and a provider of editorial skills, the market for my skills has contracted in response to the economy. That’s my SOTU. I am confident that, when the economy improves, there will be individuals, corporations, trade associations and others who will rev up their efforts to influence consumers and issues, but until then, while the President lives off the fat of the land, I am pretty much living off my “fat.”

    A recent issue of U.S News & World Report devoted an entire issue to my generation and those closely gaining on it. It concluded that many either do not want to retire, nor can afford to. I have a cousin, also in his 70s, who’s in his Wall Street office every day. According to the magazine, both of us have a good chance of making it to age 100!

    Many investments intended to provide a retirement nest egg have been reduced in value, interest on savings is miniscule, and the rising cost of living has left those in their seventies and older often unable to opt out of the work force if they are fortunate to be employed or considering re-employment if a job can be found. We make excellent workers because we come equipped with a good work ethic and attitudes.

    Meanwhile, a legion of Baby Boomers is beginning to join our ranks, lining up for their Social Security and other benefits.

    Tampering with Medicare this year, a huge distraction from the task of encouraging job growth, was possibly the dumbest thing the White House and Democrat Congress could have done. There will be a senior citizen payback at the ballot box in November.

    I have a younger member of my family who, like thousands of Americans these days, owns a home whose value is less than his mortgage. Like all homes, it is a money pit. And worse for him, it is in New Jersey, a state with the highest property and other taxes in the nation. At the height of the housing bubble, I sold the home in which I had lived for more than sixty years and moved to a luxury apartment complex. I miss my former home, but it didn’t come with a pool, a fitness center, and a charming concierge staff.

    Having been born during the Great Depression of the 1930s, I have now lived long enough to be in a new Depression. The irony is that both had their roots in government policies and, in both cases, were prolonged by government hostility to corporations, banks, and other generators of income and growth.

    The present administration is maniacally opposed to Wall Street. They oppose the engines of energy in America, oil, coal, and natural gas. They waste billions on so-called “renewable” energy or “biofuels”, all of which are incapable of producing sufficient energy for even a moderate-sized city or town. Biofuels just drive up the cost of crops like corn for no sensible reason.

    Those “shovel-ready” construction projects have not yet materialized while the nation’s infrastructure continues to be neglected. Not one single new nuclear plant or refinery has been built since the 1970s.

    Over the years, the auto industry has been destroyed by increasing congressional interference in the form of mileage mandates, by requirements for ethanol use, and, internally, by the auto unions that demanded and received huge medical and retirement plans that ate profits. Two of the largest American auto manufacturers are essentially owned by the taxpayers due to massive, multi-billion bailouts, and controlled by the unions that destroyed them.

    So my SOTU is to find a market for my editorial and other skills. I don’t give a rat’s patoot what the President will say Wednesday evening. He’s not the solution. He is the problem.

    Alan Caruba writes a daily post at Warning Signs. A business and science writer, he is the founder of The National Anxiety Center.

    Read more thought provoking articles at Warning Signs

    Posted in 111th Congress, America (USA), Barry Soetoro (aka Barack Hussein Obama), Blundering Bureaucrats, Conniving Politicians, Democrats, economy, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Political Prostitutes, Politics, Power Hungry, Propaganda, Public Opinion, Spine Donor Politicians Tagged: Alan Caruba, Banking Crisis, Obama State Of The Union Address, President Obama, Social Security, Tony, U.S. economy, Unemployment Concerns, Warning Signs

  • Hey, Let’s Talk About Islam!

    By Jim O’Neill

    If one goes by the Pentagon’s recent report on the Fort Hood terrorist attack, the Pentagon’s PC putzes wouldn’t recognize a Muslim terrorist if one jumped up and bit them on the butt. So in the interest of national security, I have collected some statements made by folks over the years, which might point the Pentagon in the right direction. One lives in hope – the poor dears are awfully slow on the uptake, though.

    “Ever since the religion of Islam appeared in the world, the espousers of it…have been as wolves and tigers to all other nations, rending and tearing all that fell into their merciless paws, and grinding them with their iron teeth; that numberless cities are raised from the foundation, and only their name remaining; that many countries, which were once as the garden of God, are now a desolate wilderness; and that so many once numerous and powerful nations are vanished from the earth! Such was, and is at this day, the rage, the fury, the revenge, of these destroyers of human kind.” – John Wesley (1703-1791), Methodist leader

    “Bolshevism combines the characteristics of the French Revolution with those of the rise of Islam…. Marx has taught that Communism is fatally predestined to come about; this produces a state of mind not unlike that of the early successors of Mahommet…. Among religions, Bolshevism is to be reckoned with Mohammedanism, rather than with Christianity and Buddhism. Christianity and Buddhism are primarily personal religions, with mystical doctrines and a love of contemplation. Mohammedanism and Bolshevism are practical, social, unspiritual, concerned to win the empire of this world.” – Bertrand Russell (1872-1970), Liberal icon

    “Adopting from the new Revelation of Jesus, the faith and hope of immortal life, and of future retribution, he [Mohammed] humbled it to the dust by adapting all the rewards and sanctions of his religion to the gratification of the sexual passion. He poisoned the sources of human felicity at the fountain, by degrading the condition of the female sex, and the allowance of polygamy; and he declared undistinguishing and exterminating war, as a part of his religion, against all the rest of mankind. THE ESSENCE OF HIS DOCTRINE WAS VIOLENCE AND LUST. – TO EXALT THE BRUTAL OVER THE SPIRITUAL PART OF HUMAN NATURE…. Between these two religions, thus contrasted in their characters, a war of twelve hundred years has already raged. The war is yet flagrant … While the merciless and dissolute dogmas of the false prophet shall furnish motives to human action, there can never be peace upon earth, and good will towards men.” [The words in caps are as originally printed]. – John Quincy Adams (1767-1848), 6th President of the United States

    “How dreadful are the curses which Mohammedanism lays on its votaries! Besides the fanatical frenzy, which is as dangerous in a man as hydrophobia [rabies] in a dog, there is this fearful fatalistic apathy. …The fact that in Mohammedan law [sharia] every woman must belong to some man as his absolute property, either as a child, a wife, or a concubine, must delay the final extinction of slavery until the faith of Islam has ceased to be a great power among men. Individual Moslems may show splendid qualities — but the influence of the religion paralyses the social development of those who follow it. No stronger retrograde force exists in the world.” – Winston Churchill (1874-1965), British Prime Minister

    “Only in the Roman Empire and in Spain under Arab domination has culture been a potent factor. Under the Arab, the standard attained was wholly admirable; to [Islamic] Spain flocked the greatest scientists, thinkers, astronomers, and mathematicians of the world, and side by side there flourished a spirit of sweet human tolerance and a sense of purist chivalry. Then with the advent of Christianity, came the barbarians. Had Charles Martel not been victorious at Poitiers – already you see the world had already fallen into the hands of the Jews, so gutless a thing Christianity!” – Adolph Hitler (1889-1945), Leader of the left-wing National Socialist German Workers Party (NAZI)

    “Today [1950], the hatred of the Moslem countries against the West is becoming hatred against Christianity itself. Although the statesmen have not yet taken it into account, there is still grave danger that the temporal power of Islam may return and, with it, the menace that it may shake off a West which has ceased to be Christian, and affirm itself as a great anti-Christian world power.” – Fulton J. Sheen (1895-1979), Renowned Catholic Bishop

    “Islam makes it incumbent on all adult males, provided they are not disabled and incapacitated, to prepare themselves for the conquest of [other] countries so that the writ of Islam is obeyed in every country in the world. But those who study Islamic Holy War will understand why Islam wants to conquer the whole world…. Those who know nothing of Islam pretend that Islam counsels against war. Those [who say this] are witless. Islam says, kill all the unbelievers just as they would kill you all! …Whatever good there is, exists thanks to the sword, and in the shadow of the sword! People cannot be made obedient, except with the sword! The sword is the key to Paradise, which can be opened only for Holy Warriors! …Does all that mean that Islam is a religion that prevents men from waging war? I spit upon those foolish souls who make such a claim.” – Ayatollah Khomeini (1902-1989), Iran’s Supreme Leader from 1979 to 1989 – the highest ranking political and religious authority of the nation.

    “[Islam] is essentially an obstructive, intolerant system…It has consecrated despotism; it has consecrated polygamy; it has consecrated slavery. It has declared war against every other creed; it has claimed to be at least dominant in every land…When it ceases to have an enemy to contend against, it sinks into sluggish stupidity and into a barbarism far viler It must have an enemy; if cut off…from conflict with the infidel, it finds its substitute in sectarian hatred of brother Moslems…” – Edward Augustus Freeman (1823-1892), British historian

    “Qur’an…an accursed book…So long as there is this book there will be no peace in the world.” – William Gladstone (1809-1898), Prime Minister of Great Britain 1868 -1894

    “In the mid 1970s, the KGB ordered my service, the DIE – along with other East European sister services – to scour the country for trusted party activists belonging to various Islamic ethnic groups, train them in disinformation and terrorist operations, and infiltrate them into the countries of our “sphere of influence.” Their task was to export a rabid…hatred for American Zionism by manipulating the ancestral abhorrence for Jews felt by the people in that part of the world. Before I left Romania for good, in 1978, my DIE had dispatched around 500 such undercover agents to Islamic countries. According to a rough estimate received from Moscow, by 1978 the whole Soviet-bloc intelligence community had sent some 4,000 such agents of influence into the Islamic world.” – Gen. Ion Pacepa, Former head of the DIE – the Romanian equivalent of Communist Russia’s KGB

    “Am I calling for a war between Christianity and Islam? Certainly not. What I am calling for is a general recognition that we are already in a war. …What we are fighting today is not precisely a “war on terror.” Terror is a tactic, not an opponent. To wage a “war on terror” is like waging a “war on bombs”: it focuses on a tool of the enemy rather than the enemy itself. A refusal to identify the enemy is extremely dangerous….” – Robert Spencer, author of The Politically Incorrect Guide to Islam (And The Crusades)

    “Arise. O sons of Arabia, fight for your sacred rights. Kill the Jews wherever you find them. Their spilled blood pleases Allah, our history, and religion.” – From a radio broadcast by Amin el-husseini, the Grand Mufti of Jerusalem.

    After instigating a pro-Nazi putsch in Baghdad in 1941, he left for Germany, where he spent the remainder of WWII broadcasting propaganda to the Middle East.

    “Will not perhaps the temporal power of Islam return and with it the menace of an armed Mohammedan world, which will shake off the domination of Europeans – still nominally Christian – and reappear as the prime enemy of our civilization? The future always comes as a surprise, but political wisdom consists in attempting at least some partial judgment of what that surprise may be. And for my part I cannot but believe that a main unexpected thing of the future is the return of Islam.” – Hilaire Belloc (1870-1953), author/historian

    “We should fully understand our religion. Fighting is a part of our religion and our Sharia [Islamic legal code]. Those who love God and his Prophet and this religion cannot deny that. Whoever denies even a minor tenet of our religion commits the gravest sin in Islam.” – Osama bin Laden, radical Muslim

    “”I view Islam not as a religion, but as a dangerous, totalitarian ideology – equal to communism and fascism. Aren’t I allowed to say so?” – Geert Wilders, Dutch politician

    Mr. Wilders is currently on trial in the Netherlands for “incitement to hatred and discrimination.” I guess you have your answer, Geert. So much for free speech – welcome to Eurabia.

    “Christianity was saved in Europe solely because the peoples of Europe fought. If the peoples of Europe in the seventh and eighth centuries, and on up to, and including, the seventeenth century, had not possessed a military equality with, and gradually a growing superiority over, the Mohammedans who invaded Europe, Europe would at this moment be Mohammedan and the Christian religion would be exterminated.

    Wherever the Mohammedans have had complete sway, wherever the Christians have been unable to resist them by the sword, Christianity has ultimately disappeared. From the hammer of Charles Martel to the sword of Sobieski, Christianity owed its safety in Europe to the fact that it was able to show that it could, and would, fight as well as the Mohammedan aggressor.”

    The civilization of Europe, America, and Australia, exists today at all, only because of the victories of civilized man over the enemies of civilization – because of victories through the centuries from Charles Martel, in the eighth century, and those of John Sobieski, in the seventeenth century.  …There are such “social values” today in Europe, America and Australia only because during those thousand years, the Christians of Europe possessed the warlike power to do what the Christians of Asia and Africa had failed to do – that is, to beat back the Moslem invader.” – Teddy Roosevelt (1858 -1919) 26th President of the United States

    “Islam isn’t in America to be equal to any other faith, but to become dominant. The Qu’ran should be the highest authority in America, and Islam the only accepted religion on earth.” – Omar Ahmed, CAIR (Council for American Islamic Relations) Founding Chairman

    “Ladies and gentlemen, we have to recognize that Islam is not a religion. It is a worldwide political movement bent on domination of the world. And it is meant to subjugate all people under Islamic law. In the Quran, it says it very clearly. There are two spheres. One is the Dar al-Harb, which is the realm of war. The other is Dar al-Islam, which is that part that’s under submission to Islam. There is no middle ground. You’re either at war, or you’re under submission.” Pat Robertson, Minister and host of “The 700 Club”

    I hope these quotes help to clear things up for the Pentagon. If I didn’t know any better, I’d think that they were more concerned with some PC bulls–t, than with their honor, oaths, or country. The United States already has semi-dhimmi status – note the lack of free speech when it comes to Islam. I strongly urge the Pentagon to get on the ball, and stop playing with themselves.

    Laus Deo.

    FamilySecurityMatters.org Contributing Editor Jim O’Neill served in the U.S. Navy from 1970-1974 in both UDT-21 (Underwater Demolition Team) and SEAL Team Two. A member of MENSA, he worked as a commercial diver in the waters off Scotland, India, and the United States. In 1998 while attending the University of South Florida as a journalism student, O’Neill won “First Place” in the “Carol Burnett/University of Hawaii AEJMC Research in Journalism Ethics Award.” The annual contest was set up by Carol Burnett with the money she won from successfully suing the National Enquirer for libel. He also writes for Canada Free Press.

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    Posted in Fanatics, Fear-mongering, History, Islam, Propaganda, Public Opinion Tagged: FSM (Family Security Matters), Islamic Religion, Islamism, Tony

  • Obama Shuts Up The Singing Terrorist

    By Andrew Bolt

    Feel safer in the air, now that Barack Obama is leading the war on Islamist terrorists?

    President Barack Obama is under fire over claims that the Christmas Day underwear bomber was “singing like a canary” until he was treated as an ordinary criminal and advised of his right to silence.

    The chance to secure crucial information about al-Qaeda operations in Yemen was lost because the Obama administration decided to charge and prosecute Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab as an ordinary criminal, critics say…

    The lawyer for the 23-year-old Nigerian entered a formal not guilty plea on Friday to charges that he tried to blow up a Detroit-bound airliner on December 25 – even though he reportedly admitted earlier that he was trained and supplied with the explosives sewn into his underwear by al-Qaeda in the Arab state.

    “He was singing like a canary, then we charged him in civilian proceedings, he got a lawyer and shut up,” Slade Gorton, a member of the 9/11 Commission that investigated the Sept 2001 terror attacks on the US, told The Sunday Telegraph.

    Andrew Bolt is a journalist and columnist writing for The Herald Sun in Melbourne Victoria Australia.

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    Posted in 111th Congress, al Qaeda, America (USA), Barry Soetoro (aka Barack Hussein Obama), Blundering Bureaucrats, Conniving Politicians, Fanatics, Islam, Laws, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Political Prostitutes, Politics, Spine Donor Politicians Tagged: Airline Security, Andrew Bolt, Islamic Terrorists, President Obama, Tony

  • The New York Times: Desperate, Blatant Lies

    By Alan Caruba

    Once, very long ago, I used to be “a stringer” for The New York Times. My articles would appear in the New Jersey section and an occasional short book review would make it into the legendary newspaper.

    My Father read the The Times more faithfully than an ayatollah reads the Koran or a Hasidim reads the Torah. Little did he know that, during the early years of Stalin’s regime, a Times reporter named Walter Duranty deliberately failed to report the deaths of millions of people in the Ukraine because Soviet communism demanded they obey or die.

    Starting in the 1980s, The Times has led the greatest fraud of the modern era, the global warming hoax. It went through a succession of reporters who turned out articles that all asserted various claims attributed to a dramatic increase in the Earth’s temperature that was not happening. At one point, it published a story that the North Pole was melting.

    The leading advocate of the global warming fraud has been Al Gore, a former Vice President who has enriched himself selling bogus “carbon credits” and investing in “renewable energy” businesses. His so-called documentary, “An Inconvenient Truth”, was filled with so many inaccuracies that a British court ruled it could not be shown in its schools without informing students of them in advance.

    We know now, thanks to the “Climategate” revelations, that a handful of scientists, working at the behest of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change deliberately distorted or invented climate data to further the fraudulent claims.

    They were associated with the Climate Research Unit of the University of East Anglia in Great Britain, the Pennsylvania State Earth System Science Center, as well as U.S. government agencies such as NASA’s Goddard Institute for Space Studies. Most are currently being investigated for alleged abuses of the positions they held and questionable actions in which they engaged.

    The release of emails detailing their conspiratorial efforts to advance their false data and suppress any that represented a contrary point of view destroyed what little credibility there was for the recent UN Conference on Climate Change held in Copenhagen. It collapsed like a circus tent.

    So why, on Sunday, January 24, did The New York Times publish an editorial titled “The Case for a Climate Bill” in an effort to support the insupportable, the Senate’s Cap-and-Trade legislation?

    The bill is superficially intended to put limits on greenhouse gas emissions, primarily carbon dioxide, that are alleged to be “causing” global warming. It is, in reality, a massive tax on the use of energy, harmful in countless ways to the nation’s economy and a burden on all producers and consumers.

    Cap-and-Trade has no basis in science because carbon dioxide plays no role whatever in climate change and because the Earth has been in a cooling cycle since 1998; a cycle that legitimate climate scientists predict will last another decade or two.

    It takes an enormous amount of gall to support this legislation claiming “The long-term trend in greenhouse gas emissions is up (the decade ending in 2009 was the warmest on record.)” No, a decade in the 1930s was the warmest. The last decade saw a constant decrease in temperature, leading to the record-breaking blizzards, expanding glaciers, and other indications that the Earth is cooling.

    “Finally there’s the question of credibility: Mr. Obama said in Copenhagen that the United States would meet at least the House’s 17 percent target” of reduced CO2 emissions said The Times.

    President Obama has virtually no credibility left and had to flee the Copenhagen conference in order to avoid being snowed in there and unable to land in Washington, D.C. which was also expecting a snowstorm!

    This blind and desperate refusal to face the facts, let alone to report them, will ultimately destroy the famed “newspaper of record” and, if that happens, I will not mourn its passing.

    Alan Caruba writes a daily post at Warning Signs. A business and science writer, he is the founder of The National Anxiety Center.

    Read more thought provoking articles at Warning Signs

    Posted in 111th Congress, America (USA), Blundering Bureaucrats, Climate Alarmists, Climate Change, Conniving Politicians, Democrats, Environment, Environmental activists, Fanatics, Fear-mongering, Fraud/Waste, Global Warming, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Political Prostitutes, Politics, Power Hungry, Propaganda, Spine Donor Politicians Tagged: Al Gore, Alan Caruba, Carbon Cap And Trade Tax, Carbon Dioxide (CO2) Emissions, Carbon Dioxide Greenhouse Gas, Climate Change Fraud, Climate Change Religion, Climategate, Global Warming Alarmists, Global Warming Hype, Tony, Warning Signs

  • Report Card for the Obama Administration

    CEI Grades the Performance of Cabinet and Agency Heads

    By CEI Staff

    Washington, D.C., January 20, 2010—One year ago today, Barack Obama took the oath of office as President of the United States. Since then, he and his appointees have had the opportunity to begin implementing their policy agenda, with notable results throughout the federal government’s departments and agencies. The analysts of the Competitive Enterprise Institute have assessed the administration’s first-year performance and assigned grades accordingly.

    D- White House (overall) ― Barack Obama, President

    Obama Sneer

    Grader: Fred L. Smith, Jr., President

    Americans rallied behind President Obama’s message of hope and change, giving this administration a wonderful opportunity to reframe the debate about an array of issues in America—entitlements, environmental policy, health care, and the roles of the federal and state governments. Americans, not wedded to either the Democrats or the Republicans, were ready for a reappraisal, a rebalancing of the powers of the people and the politicians. He blew it. Despite being elected by moderates and independents, this administration adopted the most statist agenda and created the most bloated bureaucracy in America’s history. By championing further politicization of an already overly politicized America, there have been rapid drops in Obama’s credibility and popularity.   …  

    Americans are dropping out of his Long March toward Socialism. Obama could have adopted a “Nixon in China” policy, working with Republicans, Independents, and Democrats to rebalance private and political frontiers, encouraging greater private involvement in education, allowing private property a role in the environmental field, taking on the non-sustainable entitlement programs already threatening the survival of Europe, reducing the regulatory and tax burdens on entrepreneurial creativity, and moving away from the neo-conservative “nation building” crusade of his predecessor.  Unfortunately, he has not. He could have been—and, if he reshapes his course quickly enough, might still become—a great president. But, in this first year of his presidency, he has disappointed. The performance of the White House to date merits only a D-.

    D+ Department of Agriculture ― Tom Vilsack, Secretary

    Grader: Frances B. Smith, Adjunct Fellow

    In a February 24, 2009, address to Congress, President Obama promised the American people that his administration would be taking a hard look at farm support. “In this budget,” he said, “we will . . . end direct payments of large agribusinesses that don’t need them.” However, reality wasn’t consistent with that rhetoric, as the U.S. Department of Agriculture estimates that direct government payments would total $12.5 billion in 2009, a 2-percent increase over 2008. Agricultural policy in the Obama administration has also continued and expanded massive agricultural subsidies, with new “green” subsidies for ethanol production. In addition, the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 gave USDA nearly $28 billion in funding, which together with guaranteed loan programs represents nearly $52 billion in new program funding.  The Obama administration has also refused to touch special interest programs that benefit wealthy farmers at the expense of consumers—for example, the USDA decided not to increase import quotas for sugar, which restrict the amount of sugar available for sugar users and consumers. And, despite World Trade Organization rulings against U.S. cotton subsidies, no U.S. action has been taken to change that program.

    D Consumer Product Safety Commission ― Inez Moore Tenenbaum, Chairman

    Grader: Angela Logomasini, Director of Risk and Environmental Policy

    The CPSC gets a D for its management of perhaps the most significant item on the Consumer Product Safety Commission agenda for 2009: the implementation of the Consumer Product Safety Improvement Act of 2008 (CPSIA).  It regulates lead and certain chemicals in toys.  Never mind the fact that the trace levels are too low to pose a health risk, this draconian law is putting small businesses out of commission and forcing charities to toss old books, toys, and other items. Small businesses and others have been fighting this unreasonable and impractical law since its inception.  But CPSC has made things even more difficult than necessary by refusing to apply any flexibility built into the law.

    Commissioner Ann Northup, one of the few voices of reason at CPSC, noted recently in the Wall Street Journal:  “For the past several months, American businesses have been caught in the middle of a classic standoff between the federal commissioners in the majority, who argue that the statute ties their hands, and members of Congress, who claim they wrote flexibility into the law and blame the commission for any harsh consequences. Although the commission steadfastly refused to reach out to Congress to seek clarifications to the law, Congress has now reached out to us—asking the agency last week for a list of recommendations to amend the statute.  Thankfully the commission responded, in part, by agreeing to extend the stay on testing and certification for lead content. This window gives Congress time to consider such common-sense changes…” The commission gets a few points for having at least extended one compliance deadline to allow time for reform, but it could have taken more opportunities to apply some reason to the application of the law.

    F Department of Energy ― Steven Chu, Secretary

    Grader: Iain Murray, Vice President for Strategy

    The mission of the Department of Energy has historically been one of ensuring that America has the power to meet its economic needs. Unfortunately, under Secretary Steven Chu, a Nobel-prize winning physicist, the Department has apparently decided that America’s economy is too big and needs to be scaled back. It has taken a decision to frown upon traditional sources of energy, generated from fossil fuels, and discouraged their further development. Alternative sources of energy, which cannot possibly meet America’s needs in the short-to-medium term, are instead encouraged with massive taxpayer-funded subsidies. Some noises have been made about nuclear energy, but it remains the red-headed stepchild of energy policy. The result will likely be a continuing degradation of America’s energy infrastructure which will almost certainly result in its failure to meet economic needs should the nation begin to climb out of the current recession, with the likelihood of a stalled recovery. For its failure to appreciate exactly what it is supposed to be there for, the Obama administration’s Department of Energy gets a resounding F.

    F Environmental Protection Agency – Lisa P. Jackson, Administrator

    Grader: Myron Ebell, Director of Energy and Global Warming Policy

    EPA flunked on April 16, 2009, when EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson found that greenhouse gas emissions endanger public health and welfare, and therefore must be regulated under the Clean Air Act. This endangerment finding came after an advance notice of proposed rulemaking begun during the Bush administration in July 2008 that resulted in numerous substantive expert comments that show clearly that the finding is unwarranted scientifically, that the Clean Air Act is entirely unsuitable for regulating greenhouse gas emissions, and that using it to do so would create a regulatory nightmare and do enormous economic damage. Administrator Jackson admitted that the Clean Air Act was not designed to regulate greenhouse gas emissions, but went ahead and made the finding anyway.

    In addition, EPA has moved aggressively to stop coal production in Appalachia by intervening in mine-permitting decisions by the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The EPA has even demanded that the Corps revoke permits for new mines that have already been granted. The grounds upon which the EPA is attempting to stop coal mining are utterly ridiculous.

    D Federal Communications Commission – Julius Genachowski, Chairman

    Grader: Ryan Radia, Associate Director of Technology Studies

    Radio and television stations, Internet service providers, and even wireless phone companies are all regulated by the United States Federal Communications Commission (FCC). This agency is tasked with governing the nation’s airwaves and making available communications services to the residents of the United States.

    Technological evolution has spurred fundamental changes in the way we communicate over the last couple of decades. Consumers nowadays enjoy more information and entertainment sources than ever before, and the notion of scarcity in communications has yielded to a world of abundance. Consequently, the FCC’s proper role has grown smaller and smaller.

    Like most modern bureaucracies, however, the FCC has maneuvered in recent years to interject itself in market processes in order to preserve the agency’s relevance in the face of a rapidly changing communications landscape. Most recently, the FCC has proposed imposing net neutrality rules that would limit how Internet providers can manage their networks in the name of protecting consumers. But these rules threaten to constrain tomorrow’s innovative business arrangements—arrangements which today’s shortsighted regulators simply cannot foresee.

    The FCC also made headlines in the fall of 2009 when it launched an investigation into wireless industry practices. AT&T, the nation’s second largest wireless carrier, and Apple, the maker of the iPhone, were at the center of the controversy. Naturally, the FCC claimed its actions were aimed at protecting consumers. In fact, the looming scepter of regulatory intervention in the wireless market—a market which is highly innovative and competitive, according to objective measures—causes firms to retreat, stifling innovation and making consumers worse off.

    On the other hand, the FCC has publicly acknowledged the need for expanding the pool of spectrum available to the marketplace. Spectrum is the lifeblood of mobile communications, but government controls giant swaths of this resource. The FCC has streamlined the process of deploying wireless services, which has helped ensure that wireless carriers are able to meet escalating demand for mobile data service. But the Commission still has a long ways to go if it’s to enable American enterprise to realize the full potential of the spectrum.

    F Federal Trade Commission – Jon Leibowitz, Chairman

    Grader: Michelle Minton, Policy Analyst

    The purpose of the Federal Trade Commission is, ostensibly, to protect consumers and encourage competition in the marketplace. However, over the last year the FTC and the Obama administration have initiated or endorsed actions that display an increasingly interventionist intent and that would resoundingly impede competition and threaten the liberty of individual consumers. Congress initiated plans to repeal portions of the McCarran-Ferguson act, ending the long-standing antitrust exemption for health insurers. This proposal, endorsed by President Obama, would do nothing to reduce the costs of health insurance and would more than likely result in increased costs and market consolidation. The “collusion” practiced by health insurers actually allows them (especially small insurance companies) to share information and rate-setting standards for more accurate premium calculations. Setting accurate risk-based rates is fundamental to an insurer’s ability to charge adequate rates that are neither too little or too much. States already have the power to regulate antitrust in the insurance industry so the result of repealing the antitrust exemption would most likely be insurance companies erring on the side of caution by reducing market cooperation, a reduction in premium rate accuracy and thus an increase in the costs of writing insurance.

    Additionally, the FTC filed an antitrust suit against Intel, the leading manufacturer of microprocessors, alleging that the company violated federal laws by engaging in exclusionary business practices. In reality, Intel has been able to achieve its success due to constant innovation as a result of a vibrant and competitive market. The application of antitrust laws will only retard what is an otherwise dynamic market. There is no evidence that Intel’s market success has harmed consumers in any way. Lastly, and most disturbingly, the FTC issued new rules which went into effect December 1, 2009, that would make the average blogger liable for civil penalties for false claims about products or failure to disclose material connections between the reviewer and the marketer of a product or service. This raises serious concerns about the scope of the FTC’s powers and its ability and willingness to hamper individuals’ freedom of speech. For this and the previously mentioned offenses the FTC receives an unequivocal F.

    C- Food and Drug Administration – Dr. Margaret Hamburg, Commissioner

    Grader: Gregory Conko, Senior Fellow

    The Obama administration’s Food and Drug Administration had a sub-par performance in 2009.  The agency’s Center for Drug Evaluation and Research approved just 24 new drugs and biotech medicines last year—roughly on par with its performance in the final year of the Bush administration, but well below recent highs of 53 in 1996 and 39 in 1997.  In other areas, the FDA’s new leadership has taken a “get tough” attitude with manufacturers that will do nothing to improve safety, but could deprive consumers of useful products and information.  For example, in April, the agency informed drug manufacturers that their use of “sponsored link” ads on search engines such as Google and Yahoo! were unlawful because the 70-character links did not present the same encyclopedic risk information required of conventional print advertisements—even though the links directed users to a page containing the full risk disclosure.

    In May, the FDA issued a warning letter to General Mills that labels on boxes of Cheerios indicating that consumers could lower their cholesterol by eating the whole grain cereal turned the product from a food into a medical drug.  And, in July, Principle Deputy Commissioner Joshua Sharfstein recommended imposing strict limits on the use of certain antibiotics in livestock production.  The appointment of so-called consumer advocates such as Sharfstein and Assistant Commissioner for Policy Peter Lurie suggest one reason why the new FDA leadership has been taking a needlessly antagonistic regulatory approach.  Similarly, the appointment of Ralph Tyler, an attorney with no food and drug law experience, to serve as FDA chief counsel, bodes poorly for consumers and manufacturers alike.

    F Immigration and Customs Enforcement – John T. Morton, Assistant Secretary
    U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services Alejandro Mayorkas, Director

    Grader: Alex Nowrasteh, Policy Analyst

    Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and United States Citizenship and Immigration Services (USCIS) receive an F for enforcing America’s self-destructive immigration policies. ICE and USCIS have the impossible task of separating immigrants from economic opportunity, and have failed spectacularly. The cost per apprehension of illegal immigrant on the border is up by 1,041 percent since 1992, and the number of illegal immigrants only seems to dip in response to recessions. When our immigration laws are confronted with the economic realities of mass immigration, ICE and USCIS end up with egg on their faces and taxpayers with a hole in their pockets.

    F Department of Interior – Ken Salazar, Secretary

    Grader: R.J. Smith, Senior Environmental Scholar

    Unfortunately, Interior Secretary Ken Salazar and the host of environmentalists who have filled key slots appear determined to continue to expand the amount of federal land ownership through the acquisition (and regulation) of private lands—supporting the creation of ever more National Parks, National Monuments, National Wildlife Refuges, National Heritage Areas, National Trails, and Wild and Scenic Rivers. With the poor record of stewardship on so many of the federal lands, one would hope for some demonstrated ability to care for what they already have, in place of endless acquisition as a seeming end in itself.

    And while DOI is reducing private land ownership, it is also locking up millions of additional acres of existing federal lands in Wilderness Areas, which can never be used and most of which have never even been inventoried for their potential contributions to national survival.  Additionally the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service is in the process of listing more and more species of plants and animals as threatened or endangered regardless of the facts as well as designating ever-larger critical habitats for listed species. DOI is supporting efforts of environmentalists to not only close areas of known fossil fuel deposits to exploration and development, but is also opposing the creation of alternative wind and solar energy farms because they might impact endangered species and their habitat—or harm “viewsheds” —thus making doubly sure that America has neither non-renewable nor renewable energy supplies for the future. Such policies harm the land, the resources, the wildlife and the American people. How could one do worse?

    F Department of Justice – Eric Holder, Attorney General

    Grader: Hans Bader, Senior Attorney

    The Justice Department is deeply politicized, putting partisanship before its legal responsibilities and the Constitution. It has failed to enforce federal voting rights laws like UOCAVA that protect the right of military service members to vote, resulting in many of them receiving absentee ballots to late to vote in close congressional races, like the special election for New York’s 20th congressional district.  The obvious result of this is to put critics of the administration, who are disproportionately backed by military voters, at a disadvantage in every election.  It dropped a voter-intimidation case after career justice department had already won the case and obtained a default judgment, shielding from punishment an Obama poll watcher and Philadelphia democratic official who used a nightstick and racial epithets to intimidate voters, and who belonged to the anti-Semitic, racist New Black Panther Party.  It then thumbed its nose at the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, by refusing to comply with a subpoena issued by the Commission in its investigation of the administration’s actions.  It overturned a legal opinion by David Baron, a liberal Justice Department attorney hired under the Obama administration, when he had the temerity to point out the inconvenient truth that giving D.C. a congressman, as Obama advocates, would violate the Constitution.

    The Justice Department has expanded the use of Miranda Warnings in Afghanistan —even though they are not constitutionally required and impede investigators.  Yet it argues in court briefs that detainees subjected to torture have no redress under the U.S. Constitution.  It is eroding civil liberties by re-prosecuting in federal court teenagers acquitted of a hate crime in state court, even though testimony in the state case supported the jury’s not-guilty verdict by pointing to a different culprit.  It failed to take steps to cut off funds to ACORN, a political ally of the President, despite ACORN’s being caught on video promoting mortgage fraud and other criminal activity, and the existence for years of federal statutes debarring contractors who engage in fraud.

    D Department of Labor – Hilda L. Solis, Secretary

    Grader: Ivan Osorio, Editorial Director

    Secretary of Labor Hilda Solis gets a low grade for shifting the focus of the Department of Labor to run once again as if it were the Department of Organized Labor. Since taking office, she has worked with union bosses to promote organized labor’s agenda, including undermining efforts to improve union financial disclosure. However, one mitigating factor is the fact that the department’s searchable database for union LM-2 reports remains online (the database was made available online by Solis’s predecessor, Elaine Chao).

    C- Office of Management and Budget – Peter Orszag, Director

    Grader: Ryan Young, Journalism Fellow

    Spending and deficits are far higher than under President George W. Bush, himself a big spender. But Obama can’t be given all the blame. The bailout and stimulus spending programs that caused much of the fresh red ink got their start under Bush. In a potentially positive regulatory development, the number of pages in the Federal Register decreased from 79,435 in 2008 to 69,676 in 2009. Of course, the contents of those pages matters more than how many of them there are. And on that front, the new administration is business as usual.

    F Public Company Accounting Oversight Board – Daniel L. Goelzer, Acting Chairman

    Grader: John Berlau, Director of the Center for Investors and Entrepreneurs

    The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board, created by Sarbanes-Oxley to implement its rules, gets an F. It has done nothing to simplify the rules that Republicans and Democrats have called overly burdensome to small public companies. And this year when bonuses in the private sector were under so much scrutiny, the PCAOB raised the salary of its chairman to almost $700,000 a year.

    However, it is important to note that Obama cannot be held accountable for any of the PCAOB’s actions, since the PCAOB’s unconstitutional structure prevents the President from exercising any control through either the appointment or removal process. Despite our disagreement with the Obama administration, in a pending Supreme Court case, CEI has argued for his and future administrations to have the necessary constitutional controls over this agency so that they can be held politically accountable for its actions, good or bad.

    D Securities and Exchange Commission – Mary L. Schapiro, Chairman

    Grader: John Berlau, Director of the Center for Investors and Entrepreneurs

    The reason the SEC does not get an F is because its Chairman Mary Schapiro, appointed by President Obama last year at the beginning of his administration, has made going after major investor fraud a key priority. She has brought on law enforcement experts and shifted enforcement resources from trivial headline-grabbing investigations such as the alleged backdating of stock options, which caused little harm to shareholders’ bottom lines, into seeking out Madoff-like Ponzi schemes. Contrary to press accounts, the SEC was not inactive during the Bush administration, but focused on the wrong enforcement priorities. It threw the book at Martha Stewart for trivial charges, but ignored warnings about Bernie Madoff and other fraudsters (as the agency had also done with regard to Madoff, to be fair, under the Clinton administration).

    However other actions of the Obama-Schapiro SEC have greatly undermined shareholder well-being. Schapiro brought back the widespread use of corporate penalties to punish shareholder fraud. But penalties on the corporation, rather than individual bad actors in the company, have the effect of punishing the very shareholders the fraud was committed against. The money to pay the penalties is taken from the corporate treasury, which ultimately belongs to the ordinary shareholders of the company. Thus, shareholders end up being penalized twice for the fraud: once when the corporate executives misuse a company’s money and again when the corporate penalty further reduces the assets that belong to all shareholders.

    Schapiro also gets this bad grade for, over the objection of the two Republican commissioners, overriding 150 years of state corporate law to mandate that companies list shareholder nominees on the same ballot with their own. These proposed “proxy access” rules would let special interests with agendas and shares of stocks, such as union pension funds and environmental groups, use the director nomination process as a wedge against management to promote political agenda items that are contrary to the interests of ordinary shareholders.

    And Schapiro failed shareholders and entrepreneurs when she refused to extend an exemption from the Sarbanes-Oxley “internal control” auditing mandates to the very smallest public companies. At a time when President Obama and Republicans are worries about small business growth and the ability to create jobs, this will severely limit these companies ability to grow. And Sarbanes-Oxley, despite costing the economy more than $1 trillion according to University of Minnesota economist Ivy Zhang, did little for shareholders in preventing fraud in the subprime crisis. This action may be mitigated by bipartisan actions in Congress to create a permanent exemption for these smaller companies. This measure was inserted into the financial regulation bill that passed the House in December, with the Obama administration’s limited support. But it still needs to clear the Senate. Schapiro should heed this bipartisan action and continue to extend this exemption so vital for entrepreneurs and shareholders from this law that was rushed through after Enron and signed by President Bush in 2002.

    F Department of Transportation – Ray LaHood, Secretary

    Grader: Sam Kazman, General Counsel

    For proposing, in conjunction with EPA, to raise vehicle fuel economy standards to even greater levels, despite the overwhelming evidence that such standards kill people by causing cars to be made smaller and lighter. Downsizing may squeeze more mpgs out of a car, but it also reduces crashworthiness. When passenger car standards were at 27.5 mpg several years ago, the National Academy of Sciences estimated that they contributed to about 2,000 traffic deaths per year.  As those standards are pushed up by DOT and EPA, that death toll will only climb, with nary a peep out of the agency whose alleged job is to promote traffic safety.

    D Department of Treasury – Timothy F. Geithner, Secretary

    Grader: Wayne Crews, Vice President for Policy

    In a libertarian world of civil rather than political society, the Treasury Department would pay the modest bills of a constitutionally limited government.  It’s true that Congress holds the purse strings; but during an economic and financial crisis rooted in already-gargantuan government that – despite the news reports – has regulated money, credit and interest rates many decades, a sane Treasury’s vision for leadership and recovery would rule out seducing Congress with yet more elaborate and larger purses (with elastic seams besides). This Treasury Department has compounded the “NASCAR” bailouts, helps inflate a silly “green energy” bubble, and stands at the podium cheerleading the idea of regulating the private-sector salaries among other priestly interventions in one formerly free endeavor after another. But creating ficticious economies through political means is nothing new; we’re experiencing the fruits of this key governmental function now. I want to give Treasury an “F” for standing by as the 2009 deficit topped an incomprehensible $1.6 trillion last year amid this self-serving orgy, a political spending phenomenon unrelated to the requirements of economic recovery.

    However, Treasury gets only a “D” because it inherited from President Bush what was already the largest government on Planet Earth ($3 trillion) a behemoth it had few complaints about financing. We can argue it ‘till the whiskey’s gone, but there’s no question that under President Obama, Treasury has been instrumental in extending and “customizing” a Stimulus to Nowhere already making a beeline for the cliff’s edge, and things could have been otherwise. Federal interventions are so extensive that civil, voluntary society as opposed to administered society may never quite recover in this particular geographical area of the world during any of our lifetimes.

    Since it insists upon doing more than keeping the books, to get an “A,” the U.S. Treasury Department must take a leadership role in removing obstacles to corporate and small business innovation like tax and capital gain liberalization, and help expand economic deregulation on a massive scale.  Apart from paying the government’s own light bill, Treasury’s leadership is only valuable when it prioritizes wise and honest alternatives to spending yet more stimulus money that it doesn’t have. It can take a lead role in expanding ideas like privatization, liberalizing America’s network industries like electricity and telecommunications (it will surprise few that the latter is being newly regulated rather than deregulated), simplifying taxes, explaining why a VAT is disastrous, and much more. The U.S. federal government buys us far too much misery with the $4 trillion it now spends annually; I almost wish it were more Machiavellian rather than just crazy. Freedom and liberty cost less than this, America.

    is a non-profit, non-partisan public interest group that studies the intersection of regulation, risk, and markets.


    Posted in 111th Congress, 2008 Elections, Barry Soetoro (aka Barack Hussein Obama), Demo-gogues, Democrats, Liberals, Marxists, News and Views, Politicians for the Destruction of America Tagged: CEI (Competitive Enterprise Institute), Ed

  • Mencken, Islam, And Political Correctness

    By Edward Cline

    Two months after the John Scopes “monkey” trial of July 1925, H.L. Mencken, writing for the Baltimore Evening Sun, took to task two prominent publications, the New York World and the New Republic, for castigating Clarence Darrow, chief defense counsel of Scopes, over his conduct during the trial. The World was infuriated by Darrow’s brutal cross-examination of William Jennings Bryan, the state’s star counsel against Scopes, an experience which humiliated Bryan and is thought to have contributed to his death later that same month. The New Republic objected to Darrow having made the issue of evolution vs. the Bible a national, rather than merely a local one, even though the trial was broadcast on radio.

    What drew Mencken’s ire was the World’s position that one’s religious beliefs, should be respected and not subjected to criticism or satire.

    Once more…I find myself unable to follow the best Liberal thought. What the World’s contention amounts to, at bottom, is simply the doctrine that a man engaged in combat with superstition should be very polite to superstition. This, I fear, is nonsense. The way to deal with superstition is not to be polite to it, but to tackle it with all arms, and so rout it, cripple it, and make it forever infamous and ridiculous. Is it, perchance, cherished by persons who should know better? Then their folly should be brought out into the light of day, and exhibited there in all its hideousness until they flee from it, hiding their heads in shame….True enough, even a superstitious man has certain inalienable rights. He has a right to harbor and indulge his imbecilities as long as he pleases, provided only he does not try to inflict them upon other men by force….*

    Mencken, an agnostic – “Myself completely neutral in theology, and long ago resigned to damnation” – practiced what he preached. No religion was safe from his biting wit and unbridled contempt. He was an uncompromising enemy of blind belief in assertions, especially religious ones, that contradicted evidence and reason. When they showed their heads, he picked them off with all the skill of Alvin York picking off German soldiers during World War I. Mencken was an intellectual marksman.

    Two things about the Scopes trial are noteworthy. First, Mencken wrote that Scopes should have been charged with teaching evolution in defiance of Tennessee’s ban. He argued that since Scopes (actually a high school gym teacher filling in for another teacher) was an employee of the public school, he should have obeyed the ban and the school‘s directives. The second thing is that the trial was intended to be a deliberate test of the state’s constitutional authority to impose such a ban, orchestrated by a businessman, George W. Rappleyea, as a means of boosting the fortunes of Dayton, where Scopes lived and taught. Scopes agreed with Rappleyea to discuss evolution in his classroom and to persuade students to report him to the authorities, and even volunteer as witnesses against him.

    The state, Bryan, and other religionists took the bait.

    Darrow, at the trial (working on behalf of the American Civil Liberties Union), changed his strategy from one of defending Scopes’ and any other teacher’s right to teach evolution as a form of freedom of speech – the irony was that evolution was explained in the state-mandated textbook used by Scopes – to one of casting doubt on the veracity of the Bible. Bryan, a Presbyterian Fundamentalist, insisted that the Bible should be accepted as the literal truth, recorded verbatim by its saintly scribes as the word of God himself, regardless of evidence and reason.

    Mencken covered the trial for the Evening Sun. Although Scopes was found guilty of teaching evolution (and was fined $100, which penalty was overturned by the state’s supreme court), Mencken applauded the airing of the conflict between science and religion. If any men deserved respect, he wrote, it should be the men of science who had expanded man’s knowledge of the universe and contributed to everyone’s well-being, and not the beliefs of those who reject the evidence of their senses in favor of the unprovable. He reserved a poignant disgust with men of science who upheld any brand of religion, and wasted no politeness on them.

    What is there in religion that completely flabbergasts the wits of those who believe in it? I see no logical necessary for that flabbergasting. Religion, after all, is nothing but an hypothesis framed to account for what is evidentially unaccounted for. In other fields, such hypotheses are common, and yet they do no apparent damage to those who incline to them. But in the religious field they quickly rush the believer to the intellectual Bad Lands. He not only becomes anaesthetic to objective fact; he becomes a violent enemy of objective fact. It annoys and irritates him. He sweeps it away as something somehow evil.**

    Mencken might have been less confounded by the appeal of religion, especially among prominent men of the mind, had he examined more closely the role of religion as a morality and not exclusively as a transparent hash of absurdities, whether in the Bible or in practice. To my knowledge, he never took that approach. So he remained an intellectual marksman, never becoming a general able to direct the battle against superstition, mysticism, and other brands of anti-intellectualism. He never solved the paradox of the power of belief to anaesthetize that part of the minds of otherwise rational men, the part which requires a morality by which to conduct one’s life, and render it reason-proof against all logic and evidence. (That task remained to be achieved by one of his admirers, Ayn Rand.)

    That being said, Mencken would have found the whole phenomenon of modern political correctness intolerable, inexhaustibly amusing, perhaps even perilous. He was vehemently opposed to any suggestion that he be told what to think and what to write. Doubtless he would have excoriated those who claim that Islam should be respected and that Muslims be exempted from criticism or mockery of their creed, and lambasted the politically-correct as well as Islam and its practitioners. As he was able to, in his own time, cite chapter and verse of the Bible, he would have mastered the Koran and Hadith in order to expound on their irrational and heinous character.

    As propinquity would have it, Muslims just the other day offered an example of what he would have burned holes his typewriter ribbon exposing as unnecessarily sacrosanct, “sacerdotal,” and a candidate for ribald and deserved offensiveness. The National Association of Muslim Police in Britain (NAMP) has lodged a complaint against the government for “stigmatizing” Islam and Muslims in its anti-terrorist program, one which, on one hand, “reaches out” to Muslim communities, but on the other uses it to ferret out real and potential terrorists. The London Daily Telegraph reported:

    There have been growing concerns about the radicalization of Muslims in Britain. The failed Detroit bombing on Christmas Day was carried out by an al-Quaeda-inspired extremist who had studied in London.

    Mencken might have asked: How can one “radicalize” a Muslim when he is already “radicalized” by his creed? The creed requires a follower to swallow the Koran and Hadith whole, or not at all, in which case he would become an apostate and subjected to some nasty thuggery, a la the Ku Klux Klan (Mencken was particularly hostile to the Klan and its religious mantra). There is no pick and choose, or mix and match, no half-doses of belief in Islam, as there is Christendom, as the numerous varieties of faiths and sects in it attest.

    And, what is an extremist but a Fundamentalist of the Bryan kind? It is a believer who is consistent and carries out the tenets of his faith, just as hundreds of his ilk swarmed to Dayton in hopes of seeing Scopes roasted on the spit of righteousness and served up to God with the apple of Eve stuffed in his mouth. What could be a moderate Muslim, but someone who imbibes but a quarter measure of Islam, then, like a once-a-week Christian, gets on with the practical matters of living, leaving moral approval of his conduct to mullahs, priests, imams bishops, and other prestidigitators?

    The Daily Telegraph quoted from NAMP’s “memorandum:”

    “The strategies of Prevent [the program’s name] were historically focused on so-called Islamist extremism. This has subjected the biggest black and ethnic minority community, and second biggest faith group, in an unprecedented manner, stigmatizing them in the process. Never before has a community been mapped in [such] a manner…It is frustrating to see this in a country that is a real pillar and example of freedom of expression and choice.”

    Mencken would point out that, first, this is a hilarious instance of political ventriloquism. Having a knowledge of British-Muslim tensions, he would ask how these policemen could adhere to their creed’s diktats, proscriptions, and belligerencies against non-believers, and at the same time uphold “freedom of expression and choice.” He would connect that with how non-Muslim Britons can be charged with “hate speech” if they so much as insinuate in print any criticism of Islam, Muslim behavior and mores, and the dervish-like pirouettes of Sharia law.

    How, he would ask, can they reconcile freedom of expression – which no one seems to dare take advantage of – with the campaign by various Muslim groups to smother it and leave non-believers with no choice but to comply and say nothing lest a howl of indignation be heard from the “persecuted” minority? He would recall seeing signs, on the occasion of the Mohammad cartoon demonstrations that read, “To hell with freedom of speech” and other placards which brandished similarly offensive and hateful imprecations that damned what the NAMP complaint cited as commendable “British values.” How is it that this band of Muslim brothers is so sensitive to the “insensitive” remarks of non-believers, yet is insensitive to the extinction of those “British values?”

    He would then point out that the NAMP objection includes the implication that to “stigmatize” Islam and Muslims is to also to single out Muslims by race. This is a low tactic calculated to guarantee silence, and to leave the authorities sputtering denials and preemptive apologies.

    Finally, Mencken would point out the glaringly obvious oversight – if oversight it was – that the overwhelming majority of terrorist attacks over the last 20 or so years were carried out by, well, Muslims, and that these manqués were obeying the nihilistic imperatives of the Koran, urged on with the advice and blessings of their parish sheiks and imams, and enabled by training and funds provided by sinister Middle Eastern regimes and organizations of a distinctly Islamic character. How is it, he would ask, that so many mosques, where the dullard faithful perform their degrading obeisances in the direction of a rock, also serve as dens of iniquity and crèches of crime? What means this “stigmatizing” recrudescence?

    Mencken might have included a disquisition on the purported purity of Islam: “Islam is a creed not so pure as is alleged, certainly not as comparatively pure as the Christian and Hebrew varieties. It is a hodgepodge of the doctrines and practices of the Christian and Jew, as well as those of pre-Meccan pagan faiths of which little is known. Its essential content and color were borrowed liberally but surreptitiously from virtually every permanent and ephemeral species of animism in the region of its origin, and knocked together into the Koran and Hadith by Mohammad and his successors by sword and terror – somewhat in the way the Bible came down to us after centuries of casuist strife and Pecksniffian quibbling.”

    Let Mencken, however, end this commentary in his own words, which could have been written about politically-correct speech and the attempted diminution of freedom of speech today by secular leftists, religious rightists, and Islamists. His subject was the desire of Christian Fundamentalists of his day to suppress all criticism of religion.

    The common doctrine that religious ideas have a sacrosanct character and are not to be discussed freely and realistically, even when they take the form of schemes to oppress and intimidate those who reject them — in this doctrine I can see nothing save a hollow bombast. Whenever it is entertained human progress is immensely retarded. Nor is there any appreciable gain for religion itself. It becomes the common enemy of all enlightened men, and soon or late, watching their chance, they rise against it and try to destroy it utterly. History is full of examples — and there is not a single compensatory example, at least in civilization, of a theocracy that has endured….To swathe religion in immunities, either by law or by custom, is simply to prepare the way for its corruption and destruction.***

    *H.L. Mencken, “Aftermath,” in H.L. Mencken on Religion (Amherst, New York: Prometheus Books, 2002), pp. 215-216.
    ** Ibid., “Fides ante Intellectum,” pp. 230-231.
    *** Ibid., “On Religion and Politics,” p. 251.

    Family Security Matters Contributing Editor Edward Cline is the author of a number of novels, and his essays, books reviews, and other nonfiction have appeared in a number of high-profile periodicals.

    Read more excellent articles from

    Posted in America (USA), Islam, Liberals, Liberty, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Muslim, Politically Correct, Public Opinion Tagged: Clarence Darrow, Freedom Of Speech, FSM (Edward Cline), H.L. Mencken, Islam, Muslim Tensions, Political Correctness (PC), Religious Faith, Scopes Trial, Tony

  • How A Green Group Became An IPCC Source

    By Andrew Bolt

    The IPCC lifted its false claim that the Himalayan glaciers would melt by 2035 almost word for word from a WWF report. Why would a scientific body have accepted, without checking, the claims of a deep green group that depends on green scares for donations?

    In fact, Donna Lamframbois shows that the IPCC cited WWF propaganda an astonishing number of times in producing its Nobel Prize-winning 2007 report:

    For example, a WWF report is cited twice on this page as the only supporting proof of IPCC statements about coastal developments in Latin America. A WWF report is referenced twice by the IPCC’s Working Group II in it concluding statements. There, the IPCC depends on the WWF to define what the global average per capita “ecological footprint” is compared to the ecological footprint of central and Eastern Europe.

    Elsewhere, when discussing ”mudflows and avalanches” linked to melting glaciers, the oh-so-scientifically-circumspect IPCC relies on two sources to make its point – an apparently still unpublished paper delivered to a conference five years earlier (Bhadra, 2002) and a WWF document…

    When the IPCC advises world leaders that “climate change is very likely to produce significant impacts on selected marine fish and shellfish (Baker, 2005)” it doesn’t call attention to the fact that the sole authority on which this statement rests is a WWF workshop project report

    The IPCC turns out to be one more institution captured by activists – a danger a House of Lords committee investigating the economics of climate change tried to warn about more than four years ago when it critiqued the politicisation of the IPCC processes:

    Indeed, it strikes us as opening the way for climate science and economics to be determined, at least in part, by political requirements rather than by the evidence. Sound science cannot emerge from an unsound process… We are concerned that there may be political interference in the nomination of scientists whose credentials should rest solely with their scientific qualifications for the tasks involved… Similarly, scientists should be appointed because of their scientific credentials, and not because they take one or other view in the climate debate… At the moment, it seems to us that the emissions scenarios are influenced by political considerations …

    Andrew Bolt is a journalist and columnist writing for The Herald Sun in Melbourne Victoria Australia.

    Read more excellent articles from Andrew Bolt’s Blog

    Posted in Blundering Bureaucrats, Climate Alarmists, Climate Change, Environment, Environmental activists, Fanatics, Fear-mongering, Fraud/Waste, Global Warming, Great Britain, India, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Politics, Power Hungry, Propaganda, U.K. Tagged: Andrew Bolt, Climate Change Fraud, Climate Change Religion, Climategate, Global Warming Alarmists, Global Warming Hype, Himalayan Glaciers, Tony, UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC), World Wildlife Fund (WWF)

  • Terminal Velocity

    Satire by  Shawn Goodwin

    After the September 11th terrorist attacks, the American transportation system activated a multitude of new security measures to ensure that similar attacks would never happen again. For the most part, these new implementations have been successful, since there has not been a successful airline attack in nine years. Of course, there have been morons like “shoe bomber” Richard Reid and “Fruit of the Loom bomber” Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab, both of whom tried to blow up airliners in flight.

    Reid was a passenger on American Airlines Flight 63 from Paris to Miami when he tried to ignite his shoe; a shoe that was chock full of explosives. For some reason, Austin Powers comes to mind: “Who lights a shoe? Honestly!” This yutz even had a fuse sticking out the rear of his footwear, yet no one in Paris thought it prudent to stop him and ask, “Pardon my French, but can you explain the stick of dynamite in your Timberlands?” The only way Reid could have been less obvious is if he was carrying an open keg past the screener with gunpowder trailing from it! If you are one of those people who are uncomfortable showing their torn socks and bunions to some TSA lackey, you can thank Richard Reid.

    Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab was probably a Richard Reid fanboy during his teenage years. Abdulmu-what’s-his-name was traveling on Northwest Airlines Flight 253 from Amsterdam to Detroit on Christmas Day when he attempted to detonate a bomb hidden in his pants. It was not the first case of noxious gases coming from an undergarment, but it was almost the most destructive. Well, it was the second-most destructive case, after the Roseanne Barr burrito incident of 1989, but that’s neither here nor there. When Abdulmutallab was subdued, the authorities realized that there was a bomb in his pants – and he was not glad to see them.

    Thankfully, their attempts at shenanigans have been few and far between, but the incidents have put the Transportation Security Administration’s collective Bermuda shorts in a bunch. They are tightening their grip on the nation’s terminals, especially after last weekend’s fiasco:

    A busy terminal at John F. Kennedy International Airport was evacuated after a man opened a restricted door and set off an alarm, authorities said, making it the second known security breach at a New York-area airport this month.

    The breach delayed dozens of flights and caused headaches for hundreds of travelers who had to exit the terminal and wait for hours as police swept through the building. The passengers at JFK were then shepherded through additional screening.

    The smart money would have been placed on someone breaching that man’s skull after causing such a long delay, since airport terminals are about as entertaining as a root canal. Fortunately, cooler heads prevailed. This most recent breach ramped up security at the nation’s airports, and a new set of bells and whistles has been triggered. For example, starting this weekend all doors to restricted areas will be electrified to keep unauthorized personnel away. There is no provision to keep authorized personnel safe from the 50,000 volts as of yet, but the TSA claims they have top men working on it now. When questioned further about the identities of these officials, the TSA spokesperson repeated, “Top. Men.”

    Similar precautions are being undertaken at the airport lounges, although they are curious to say the least. Bartenders have been encouraged to practically force feed alcohol to their customers. The theory is that if the passengers are too drunk to stand, they would also be too drunk to hijack an airliner. Some establishments are distributing alcohol in “doggie bags,” unaware that certain liquors – brandy comes to mind – are highly flammable. Perhaps the Black Box Bar should hire some “top men” as well.

    In many cases, it is not just the passengers who are being thoroughly screened, but also the baggage. The TSA is not only putting baggage through x-ray machines now, but also implementing a three-step plan for loading approval. First, the baggage is opened and every item inside is removed and examined; lingerie and underwear especially, although that is not written anywhere on the interdepartmental memo. Second, lasers are used to inspect the luggage for contraband and leakage issues. Finally, the bags are repacked and submitted to the ultimate test. They are placed into a cage with the gorilla from the American Tourister commercial, and stomped into dust. Sure, it will damage some of the passengers’ valuables, but security is the real priority here.

    Now, while these new tactics may be seen as extreme by normal standards, the alternative is watching another knucklehead do the Macarena past a security checkpoint, sounding an alarm, and shutting down a busy terminal for 53 days. No one wants to eat Sbarro pizza once, let alone once every day for two months!

    FamilySecurityMatters.org’s official satirist, Shawn Goodwin, is a blogger and police detective from Philly.

    Read more excellent articles from

    Posted in 111th Congress, America (USA), Blundering Bureaucrats, Fanatics, Humor, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Politics, Satire Tagged: Airline Security, Airport Security, Department of Homeland Security (DHS), FSM (Shawn Goodwin), Political Humor, Political Satire, Tony

  • Breaking: ‘UN Wrongly Linked Global Warming To Natural Disasters’

    By Noel Sheppard

    Just days after the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change admitted it used junk science to predict Himalayan glaciers would vanish by 2035, its claim that global warming is linked to increased natural disasters has also been found to be wrongly concluded.

    The British Times Online reported moments ago:

    THE United Nations climate science panel faces new controversy for wrongly linking global warming to an increase in the number and severity of natural disasters such as hurricanes and floods.

    It based the claims on an unpublished report that had not been subjected to routine scientific scrutiny — and ignored warnings from scientific advisers that the evidence supporting the link too weak. The report’s own authors later withdrew the claim because they felt the evidence was not strong enough.

    The article continued:

    The new controversy also goes back to the IPCC’s 2007 report in which a separate section warned that the world had “suffered rapidly rising costs due to extreme weather-related events since the 1970s”.

    It suggested a part of this increase was due to global warming and cited the unpublished report, saying: “One study has found that while the dominant signal remains that of the significant increases in the values of exposure at risk, once losses are normalised for exposure, there still remains an underlying rising trend.”

    The Sunday Times has since found that the scientific paper on which the IPCC based its claim had not been peer reviewed, nor published, at the time the climate body issued its report.

    When the paper was eventually published, in 2008, it had a new caveat. It said: “We find insufficient evidence to claim a statistical relationship between global temperature increase and catastrophe losses.”

    Despite this change the IPCC did not issue a clarification ahead of the Copenhagen climate summit last month. It has also emerged that at least two scientific reviewers who checked drafts of the IPCC report urged greater caution in proposing a link between climate change and disaster impacts — but were ignored.

    With Wednesday’s announcement by the IPCC “that a paragraph in the 938-page Working Group II contribution to the underlying assessment refers to poorly substantiated estimates of rate of recession and date for the disappearance of Himalayan glaciers,” the credibility of this organization at the heart of global warming hysteria is brought into further question.

    But will American media report this new revelation?

    After all, as NewsBusters reported Saturday, television news outlets other than Fox competely ignored Wednesday’s announcement by the IPCC, as did many print publications.

    Will this new revelation of IPCC incompetence garner more attention?

    Stay tuned.

    Noel Sheppard is the Associate Editor of NewsBusters

    Read more Great Articles at

    Posted in America (USA), Blundering Bureaucrats, Climate Alarmists, Climate Change, Conniving Politicians, Environment, Environmental activists, Europe, Fear-mongering, Fraud/Waste, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Media, Media Mind Manipulators, MSM (Main Stream Media) Liberal, Political Prostitutes, Politics, Power Hungry, Propaganda, Pseudo-Journalism, Spine Donor Politicians, U.K., U.N. – United Nations (United Nitwits) Tagged: Climate Change Fraud, Climate Change Religion, Climategate, Global Warming Data, Global Warming Hype, NewsBusters, Tony, UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)

  • The Bill Comes Due For Socialism In America

    By Alan Caruba

    “The problem with socialism is that you eventually run out of other people’s money.” — Margaret Thatcher, former British Prime Minister

    It began as a beautiful cruise to a land of “hope and change”, but it has become a nightmare in which the ship of state is being deliberately steered toward a whirlpool of debt from which, if Obama is successful, the nation cannot escape.

    One of the primary reasons the U.S. economy has grown over the years has been the confidence in its innovation and productivity. It has generated investment from around the world from those who wanted to profit from our success story. There was a time when U.S. securities were the safest in the world, but that is no longer the case.

    On December 24, 2009, the U.S. Senate voted to raise the ceiling of the government debt to $12.4 trillion, described by an Associated Press reporter as “a massive increase over the current limit and a political problem that President Barack Obama has promised to address next year.”

    On January 20, 2010, barely a month later, Senate Democrats “proposed allowing the federal government to borrow an additional $1.9 trillion to pay bills, a record increase that would permit the national debt to reach $14.3 trillion.”

    This is the reason, by virtue of the Massachusetts special election; the United States has dodged the bullet of a “reformed” healthcare system which would have slashed a half trillion dollars from Medicare coffers while adding millions more people to its rolls.

    It would have turned the health insurance industry into a public utility. They would have ceased to be private enterprises of competing companies. It would have driven physicians out of practice. It would have bankrupted the nation and reduced a widely acknowledged excellent health system to that of a third world nation.

    The proposed “Cap-and-Trade” bill, a huge tax on all energy use—the lifeblood of any economy, must be defeated. This will come most likely from a lack of votes as Senate Democrats are finally scared enough of the electorate to act with some degree of rationality.

    In a recent commentary, Jerome R. Corsi, the author of “America for Sale: Fighting the New World Order, Surviving the Global Depression, and Preserving USA Sovereignty”, wrote “With the recession and the huge stimulus package added to the beginning of the baby boomers retiring, United States debt is already at 50 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) by 2019, according to the Congressional Budget Office estimates of the Obama administration plans as they currently stand.”

    In other words, the U.S. government is committed through various “entitlement” programs like Social Security, Medicare and Medicaid, along with other expenditures, to spend more than it takes in via taxes. The other major expense is for defense. These three factors represent half of the annual U.S. budget.

    The situation is so grave that, on January 18, The Washington Times editorialized that “Obama is killing the economy.”

    The bill has finally come due for decades of socialism that began in the 1930s.

    “The 2009 budget deficit tripled over 2008. The deficit as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) went from 3.1 percent in 2008 to 9.9 percent in 2009. The deficit for the first month of fiscal year 2010 was $176 billion, which was greater than the $161 billion deficit for the entire 2007 fiscal year.”

    At present rates, the public debt of the United States will reach 85 percent of GDP by 2018, just eight years from now, and 100 percent by 2022. It would be 200 percent by 2038 unless some brakes on spending are not applied before the ship of state gets sucked down beneath an ocean of debt.

    What does President Obama propose? He wants to apply an unconstitutional special tax on banks! And not all banks, but just those banks on “Wall Street” whom he blames for the current recession.

    His most recent proposal to regulate the banking system drove down the Dow Jones Average signaling further fears of his intention to micro-manage the economy. It is a recipe for disaster and shares of the big Wall Street banks in particular fell. He is deliberately attacking the great engine of the nation’s economy.

    Wall Street is not the problem. The government is the problem.

    Obama made no mention of the real culprits for the housing market meltdown, the reckless spending of Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and the Community Reinvestment Act that underwrote a program that put $12 trillion of mortgage loans, half of all such loans, in the hands of the federal government!

    As John Berlau of the Competitive Enterprise Institute points out, “President Obama’s proposal (would) bring back 1930s-like separation of commercial and investment banks, dubbed Glass-Steagall II or Glass-Steagall 2.0, (and) would do little to prevent the problem of financial institutions being too big to fail. What it would do is hurt economic recovery, reduce types of financing available to businesses big and small, and give European and Asian financial services firm a huge competitive advantage over their U.S. counterparts.”

    The billions still unspent in the so-called “Stimulus” bill should be returned to the Treasury. Plans to expand Medicare and Medicaid need to be scrapped. Taxes on greenhouse gas emissions, mostly carbon dioxide, must be avoided if for no other reason that CO2 has nothing to do with a non-existent global warming.

    The capacity of the United States to recover calls for an end or at least a cap on the mindless spending of taxpayer millions on the pet projects and crony deals of Representatives and Senators.

    It calls for an end to the restrictions on the exploration for and extraction of the nation’s vast coal, oil and natural gas reserves, including in ANWR and aggressively in the offshore continental shelf.

    It calls for an end to huge multi-million dollar subsidies for “renewable energy” schemes such as solar and wind power.

    It calls for an end to the ethanol mandates that dilute the mileage of every gallon of gasoline and actually increase CO2 emissions!

    It calls for an end to congressional mandates on the auto industry that have, in part, driven two of its largest manufacturers, General Motors and Chrysler, into bankruptcy. The U.S. must divest its ownership in both companies.

    It calls for reining in the rogue government agency, the Environment Protection Agency that is attempting to unilaterally impose control of CO2 emissions and has long engaged in practices that impede economic growth for business, industry, and the nation’s agricultural sector.

    There are many reasonable and rational steps that can and should be taken, but it seems clear that the President, with the support of a Democrat controlled Congress, has no intention of taking any of these steps and, indeed, is intent on bankrupting the U.S. government and its people.

    Alan Caruba writes a daily post at Warning Signs. A business and science writer, he is the founder of The National Anxiety Center.

    Read more thought provoking articles at Warning Signs

    Posted in 111th Congress, America (USA), Barry Soetoro (aka Barack Hussein Obama), Blundering Bureaucrats, Conniving Politicians, Democrats, economy, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Political Prostitutes, Politics, Power Hungry, Propaganda, Spine Donor Politicians Tagged: Alan Caruba, Bank Tax, Carbon Cap And Trade Tax, Creeping Socialism, Health Care Reform Bill, Obama Economic Policies, Renewable Energy Subsidies, Tony, U.S. National Debt, U.S. Socialism, Wall Street Bailout, Warning Signs

  • Another Climategate Inquiry

    By Andrew Bolt

    The scandal will not die. Britain’s Parliament will now investigate Climategate:

    The Science and Technology Committee today announces an inquiry into the unauthorised publication of data, emails and documents relating to the work of the Climatic Research Unit (CRU) at the University of East Anglia (UEA). The Committee has agreed to examine and invite written submissions on three questions:

    What are the implications of the disclosures for the integrity of scientific research?
    —Are the terms of reference and scope of the Independent Review announced on 3 December 2009 by UEA adequate (see below)?

    —How independent are the other two international data sets?

    The Committee intends to hold an oral evidence session in March 2010.

    If only our own (Australian) Parliament were as interested in investigating the implications of this astonishing scandal. After all, it’s on the basis of these scientists’ assertions that our parties are contempating spending billions of dollars and changing the way we live.

    Andrew Bolt is a journalist and columnist writing for The Herald Sun in Melbourne Victoria Australia.

    Read more excellent articles from Andrew Bolt’s Blog

    Posted in Australia, Blundering Bureaucrats, Climate Alarmists, Climate Change, Conniving Politicians, Environment, Environmental activists, Fanatics, Fear-mongering, Fraud/Waste, Global Warming, Great Britain, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Politics, Power Hungry, Propaganda, U.K. Tagged: Andrew Bolt, Climate Change Fraud, Climate Change Religion, Climategate, Global Warming Data, Global Warming Hype, Tony, UK Climatic Research Institute (CRU), University of East Anglia

  • Referendum for a PA Constitution Convention

    By

    Another compelling editorial: Reviving Reform, Bucks County Courier Times, Jan. 19.

    In truth…what to say when they say this:

    Opponents of a referendum on a Constitution convention raise a few common concerns. Here they are with some replies.

    We don’t need and shouldn’t have a convention.
    You’re entitled to your opinion, and I’m entitled to mine. We both should get to vote on it, not just you. Put the question on the ballot so both of us can vote.

    Slow down. A Constitution convention is too drastic.
    Having just celebrated Martin Luther King Day, it seems right to quote him: “This is no time to engage in the luxury of cooling off or to take the tranquilizing drug of gradualism. Now is the time to make real the promises of democracy.” King was speaking of civil rights regardless of race in his “I have a dream” speech, but it applies as well to the right of all citizens to have a government that eagerly repairs corruption, not one that hopes people will forget about it or settle for half measures.   …  

    The “runaway” convention.
    Some fear that a convention will not stop at repairing the government but will subvert the Declaration of Rights with respect to guns, sexual minorities, abortion, the environment, voting and other rights.

    It can’t happen unless the legislature authorizes it and the people approve it in the referendum that would take place this November.

    Legally, the PA Supreme Court has ruled when voters approve a referendum, they also approve any limits placed on the convention by the legislature. So if the legislature excludes those issues from a convention, and people approve the referendum, the convention cannot legally consider those issues. If the convention were to make recommendations about them, those recommendations would never be placed before voters for ratification after the convention.

    Politically, neither lawmakers nor integrity advocates want a convention to debate hot-button issues. In March 2007, the Senate State Government Committee held a public hearing on whether to have a Constitution convention. All of the lawmakers and all of the integrity advocates who testified agreed with exempting the Declaration of Rights in order to focus the convention on the way the government works.

    Elections are the equivalent of Constitution conventions.
    Conventions are places to debate what our government does and how, and after a convention citizens get to vote on whether to alter their government. Elections only allow citizens to choose between candidates. They don’t give citizens a chance to make decisions about how their government works.

    But in 2008, nearly half of the House districts had no competition; 94 out of 203 House seats were uncontested. That means 5.9 million citizens (44%) didn’t even get a choice of candidates much less the chance to affect the structure and functions of government.

    A convention could cost $20 million, and that’s a lot of money.
    That’s a lot of money, but it’s also:

    • less than a tenth of one percent of the state budget.
    • less than what has been spent so far to prosecute those who have been accused of, or convicted for, essentially rigging elections at taxpayer expense.
    • about 10% of the $200 million surplus lawmakers are hoarding in leadership accounts while so many legitimate needs go unmet.
    • half paid for if Gov. Ed Rendell kills the $10 million WAM for a minor league hockey rink in Allentown. Click here for that story.

    A Constitution convention easily could save far more than it would cost.

    “A convention would be a political freak show…[of]…the very people you’d want to be protected from…tea partiers, Moveon.org types, pajama-clad bloggers…crazies from the left and right.”
    This completely misses the point that the government belongs to all of us. So the goal should be clear and agreeable to all: a delegation that accurately represents the citizenry. If we achieve that goal, and there are proven ways to do it, we won’t have to worry about a convention dominated by anyone but the vast majority of our people who are, on the whole, sober and sensible, not irrational.

    The 1967 convention missed the goal. Out of 163 delegates, only 11 were women, 5 were African-American, and 1 was Latino. Nearly half, 44%, were lawyers, and 10% were in the insurance and real estate professions. There is no reason to believe that using the same 1967 system for choosing delegates will achieve the goal.

    We need to be 100% certain that a convention will be worth it and won’t go astray.
    If that attitude had prevailed in 1776, we wouldn’t have a Constitution to argue about.

    The founders had faith in the people, and there’s something wrong with a government that doesn’t.

    Good News to Finish

    We learned of another state senator who refuses per diems. She is Sen. Lisa Baker, R-Luzerne. Anyone else?

    Why wait ’til May or November?
    Vote for Integrity now and help DR get off to a great start in 2010.

    Thanks!

    P.O. Box 618, Carlisle, PA 17013

    Posted in Harrisburg PA, PA Constitution, PA Government, PA Judicial Branch, PA Legislative Branch, Pennsylvania Tagged: Al, Democracy Rising PA

  • Pro-Life Marchers in DC

    2010 March for Life Washington DC

    Crowd estimated at approx. 300,000. Guessing from the folks I made eye contact with that’s 300,000 smiles and 300,000 warm, loving hearts. Not bad for a cold, rainy day in January.

    FoxNews5 – The ruling established the nationwide right to abortion 37 years ago. Organizers with March for Life say they will hold a rally at the National Mall on Friday and march down Constitution Avenue to the Supreme Court and U.S. Capitol.

    The group says abortion opponents are marching “on behalf of the innocent preborn boys and girls” and demanding Roe v. Wade be overturned.

    WASHINGTON – JANUARY 22: A pro-life supporter participates in a protest in front of the U.S. Supreme Court building January 22, 2010 in Washington, DC. Activists from across the nation gathered to commemorate the 37th anniversary of the Roe v. Wade Supreme Court decision, which decriminalized abortion in all fifty states.(Photo by Mark Wilson/Getty Images

    Posted in abortion, Crimes Against Children, News and Views, Supreme Court of the U.S. (SCOTUS), Video Tagged: Al, Pro-Life

  • NRTWC January Newsletter

    From Doug Stafford

    The defeat of Big Labor-backed Martha Coakley in Massachusetts’ special election doesn’t mean the union bosses are ready to give up on their radical agenda.  That’s why your National Right to Work Committee will remain vigilant in the battle against more expansions of union special privileges.

    The latest issue of the National Right to Work Committee’s monthly newsletter — now available to download on the Committee’s website — highlights how quickly and effectively the Committee and its grassroots members can respond to the latest union boss threats.

    Just before the U.S. House of Representatives adjourned last month, Nancy Pelosi and other Big Labor allies secretly plotted to sneak — into the defense appropriations bill no less — a federal mandate imposing union monopoly control on police and firefighters across America.

    But when the National Right to Work Committee learned about Pelosi’s plans, Committee staff acted quickly to mobilize concerned Americans like you, shoring up significant opposition on Capitol Hill.

    Capitol Hill offices were also flooded with phone calls from National Right to Work Committee members who were informed of Pelosi’s plans by the Committee’s phone bank operation and e-mail program.

    Read the full story in this month’s newsletter.  Other articles include:

    » Right to Work Key For Economic Recovery
    » A Faster Track to Union-Boss Monopoly?
    » ‘Get the “Card-Check” Bill Passed — or Else’
    » Iowa Right to Work Law Again Under Fire

    Download the complete issue on the Committee’s website .

    The Committee relies on the voluntary support of individual Americans who believe in our cause and wish to advance our programs.

    To make a donation in whatever amount, please click here .

    Read more at NRTWC

    The National Right to Work Committee is a nonprofit, nonpartisan, single-purpose citizens’ organization dedicated to combating compulsory unionism through an aggressive program designed to mobilize public opposition to compulsory unionism and, at the same time, enlist public support for Right to Work legislation.  The Committee’s mailing address is 8001 Braddock Road, Springfield, Virginia 22160.  The Committee can be contacted toll-free at 1-800-325-7892.  Its web address is http://nrtwc.org/

    Posted in 111th Congress, Conniving Politicians, Demo-gogues, Democrats, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Liberals, Marxists, Political Prostitutes, Politicians for the Destruction of America Tagged: Al, NRTWC (National Right to Work Committee)

  • NewsBusted Video 22 January

    See more videos at the NewsBusted video channel

    See and Read more Quality Material at

    Posted in America (USA), Humor, Satire, Video Tagged: NewsBusted, NewsBusters, Political Humor, Political Satire, Tony

  • The Democrat Apocalypse

    By William Warren

    See more Cartoons by William Warren, and Great Articles at

    Posted in 111th Congress, 2010 Elections, America (USA), Barry Soetoro (aka Barack Hussein Obama), Cartoons, Conniving Politicians, Democrats, Humor, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Political Prostitutes, Politics, Power Hungry, Propaganda, Public Opinion, Satire, Spine Donor Politicians Tagged: 2010 Elections, NetRight Nation Blog, Political Cartoons, Political Humor, Political Satire, President Obama, Tony, William Warren

  • Observing The Obvious

    By Alan Caruba

    For the past two years, it has been obvious to a lot of conservatives and independents that we have a President whose elevator doesn’t go to the top floor. This is a seriously flawed person.

    Anyone in law enforcement will tell you that there are few people, including serial killers, who “look” like criminals and a danger to society. This is not to say that profiling isn’t a helpful tool, but that there is no Hollywood generic “bad guy” image in real life. About the only people that deliberately try to assume that image are professional wrestlers who play the villains in the ring.

    Homicide detectives will tell you that, time and again, the murderers they capture, interrogate, and who end up confessing often break down in tears and some even ask if they can see their momma before being taken off to jail. Only occasionally do they encounter a seriously bad person who insanely kills to satisfy some demonic itch.

    Now, I am NOT saying the President of the United States is criminally insane, but I am saying that he is so seriously immersed in a communist ideology that everything he says and does is intended to get him just that much closer to destroying the nation.

    He has been assisted in this goal by Nancy “crazy eyes” Pelosi, a San Francisco liberal who has demanded and received a 757 jet airliner with which to travel back and forth from her home every week. He has been assisted by Sen. Harry Reid who lacks even the most minimal support in his home state of Nevada and appears to be devoid of any moral compass.

    It is clear to most reasonable people that Obama and the Democrat Congress has been driving up the debt of the nation to unconscionable levels and, while the thought of an America forced to default on his financial obligations seems unthinkable, it is not. The Democrats are proposing a $1.9 trillion increase in the debt limit, having raised the debt ceiling to $12.4 trillion the day before Christmas 2009.

    In his bestselling book, “The Obama Nation: Leftist Politics and the Cult of Personality”, Jerome R. Corsi, PhD thoroughly documented what could be known about Barack Obama, noting the influence of Frank Marshall Davis as his “Communist mentor.” Davis was a widely known communist in the 1950s as a newspaper journalist and poet. He had invoked his Fifth Amendment rights when called before a congressional committee. “A year earlier, in 1955, the Commission on Subversive Activities organized by the government of the territory of Hawaii identified Davis as a member of the Communist Party USA.”

    Davis was a friend of Obama’s grandparents. Davis had assured Obama that his white grandmother was right to be scared of black people. “She understands that black people have a reason to hate,” Davis told him and Obama recalled that it “he was right to reject his grandparents” because all white people were inherently racists. Obama wrote that he knew “for the first time that I was totally alone.”

    His father, a Kenyan, had divorced his mother and abandoned him. His Indonesian step-father would later divorce his mother and she, in turn, would abandon him to the care of his white grandparents who, despite sacrificing to send him to a private school nonetheless regarded Davis, a black, Communist radical, as a close family friend.

    Obama would write that he chose his friends at Occidental, a college he attended, from among “The more politically active black students. The foreign students. The Chicanos. The Marxist professors and the structured feminists and punk-rock performers.”

    I am not a psychologist, but I am a student of history and virtually every dictator has written openly of the obsessions that drove them to seek power. “Mein Kampf” by Hitler comes to mind and Mao’s “Little Red Book” comes to mind.

    Liberals have always embraced these people and one sees it today in the way many prominent actors and others have made their way to Castro’s Cuba or Venezuela’s Hugo Chavez, to bask in the light of these horrid people. Former President Jimmy Carter has embraced terrorists such as Hamas and has displayed an obvious anti-Semitism. Many US communists were appalled to discover that Stalin was a mass murderer in the wake of Nikita Krushchev’s revelations about the man.

    We need to pay attention, not just to the politics of our nation’s leaders, but to their pathologies as well. After being forced to resign, those closest to former President Richard Nixon revealed that he was subject to a paranoia that may have served him well in dealing with America’s enemies, but which ultimately led to the Watergate scandal.

    Now it is the turn for Democrats who were so enamored of Obama to begin to observe the obvious. It is the turn of the mainstream media to raise the warnings that have been so obvious to those who have written and spoken of Obama’s serious flaws of personality and policy.

    The nation faces three more years of Obama’s term in office and they will represent the most serious threat the nation has ever faced in its long history.

    Alan Caruba writes a daily post at Warning Signs. A business and science writer, he is the founder of The National Anxiety Center.

    Read more thought provoking articles at Warning Signs

    Posted in 111th Congress, America (USA), Barry Soetoro (aka Barack Hussein Obama), Conniving Politicians, Democrats, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Liberals, Lily-Livered Liberals, Limp-Wrist Liberals, Political Prostitutes, Politics, Power Hungry, Propaganda, Spine Donor Politicians Tagged: Alan Caruba, Leftist Policies, Liberal Thinking, Obama Administration, Obama Policies, President Obama, Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.), Tony, U.S. National Debt, Warning Signs

  • Climate Has Rudd Tongue-Tied

    By Andrew Bolt

    Last year (Australian Prime Minister) Kevin Rudd claimed global warming was the “great moral challenge of our generation”

    But the climate sure has changed since Climategate and the farcical failure in Copenhagen. This year global warming is the scam that Rudd barely dares to mention:


    Kevin Rudd has made Australia Day policy speeches around the nation on each of the past five days, with two to come. We’ve heard about productivity, fiscal responsibility, infrastructure, jobs and disadvantage. Today he speaks about health; tomorrow (unless there is a change) he’s due to talk about cities.

    Anything odd about this list? You’ve got it. Climate change and the need for an emissions trading scheme haven’t been the focus of any speech so far.

    Remember how Malcolm Turnbull last year warned his (Conservative) Liberal Party to pass Rudd’s emissions trading scheme or face a double dissolution election on the issue that would wipe them out? Just months later, climate change is in fact so smelly that Rudd would like it to disappear as an election issue completely. So fast has this faith imploded.

    Tim Blair recalls the days when Kevin Rudd hailed the IPCC as a serious, sober arbiter of global warming truth. Let’s see if he dares repeat those claims this year, after the IPCC crashed in the Himalayas.

    TonyfromOz adds …..

    For a little more background on this United Nations IPCC ‘misstatement’ on the Himalayan glaciers, take this link. The information in particular question here is on page 2 at that link, so be aware that there actually are 2 pages. What is particularly astounding is the fact that even though now proved so patently incorrect, they pursue the original agenda, without even blinking, scoffing it away as if it is just a minor glitch. This original premise, now patently false, made up part of the ‘body of work’ that won the IPCC and Al Gore their Nobel Prizes.

    Andrew Bolt is a journalist and columnist writing for The Herald Sun in Melbourne Victoria Australia.

    Read more excellent articles from Andrew Bolt’s Blog

    Posted in Australia, Climate Alarmists, Climate Change, Conniving Politicians, Environment, Environmental activists, Fear-mongering, Global Warming, Politics, Power Hungry, Propaganda, Public Opinion, Spine Donor Politicians Tagged: Andrew Bolt, Australian Prime Minister Kevin Rudd, Climate Change Hypocrisy, Climate Change Religion, Global Warming Alarmists, Global Warming Hype, Tony, UN Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC)

  • Its The Peoples Seat! + More

    Hope floats in Boston Harbor

    Digest

    The Foundation

    “It is to me a new and consolatory proof that wherever the people are well-informed they can be trusted with their own government; that whenever things get so far wrong as to attract their notice, they may be relied on to set them to rights.” –Thomas Jefferson

    Government & Politics

    ‘The People’s Seat’

    “Here’s my assessment of not just the mood in Massachusetts, but the mood around the country: The same thing that swept Scott Brown into office swept me into office.” So said Barack Obama when asked about Tuesday’s special election to fill the Senate seat held for 46 years by the late Ted Kennedy.

    Naturally, to Obama, everything is about him; though, in a sense, Brown’s shocking victory was about Obama — but not in the way he thinks. In fact, we’re hoping the president campaigns for more Democrats come fall. Voters have responded to his presence on behalf of fellow Democrats with resounding rejections in the Virginia and New Jersey gubernatorial races, and now in deepest-blue Massachusetts.  

    Then again, Obama says, it’s Bush’s fault. “People are angry and they’re frustrated,” he explained, “not just because of what’s happened in the last year or two years, but what’s happened over the last eight years.”

    So Scott Brown became the first Republican senator elected in Massachusetts since 1972 because voters are still angry with George W. Bush?

    In reality, Brown won for several reasons. First, he was a first-rate candidate. His regular-guy persona resonated with voters and he communicated the right message — that we need less government, not more. He ran explicitly against ObamaCare, saying, “I can stop it.” In his victory speech, he said, “People do not want the trillion dollar health care plan that is being forced on the American people, and this bill is not being debated openly and fairly. It will raise taxes, it will hurt Medicare, it will destroy jobs and run our nation deeper into debt.”

    Best of all, in a debate with Democrat opponent Martha Coakley, Brown answered a challenge from moderator David Gergen about taking Ted Kennedy’s seat only to derail health care: “Well, with all due respect, it’s not the Kennedy seat, and it’s not the Democrats’ seat, it’s the people’s seat.”

    That’s when the sea change in the polls began.

    Second, Martha Coakley was a lousy candidate. Briefly, for example (and there are many), in a state with a large percentage of Catholic voters, Coakley offered the advice that if you object to abortion and are a devout Catholic, then “you probably shouldn’t work in the emergency room.” She derided Red Sox hero Curt Schilling as a “Yankee fan” and scoffed at greeting people in the cold at Fenway Park, which is precisely what hungry candidates do in sports-crazy Boston. In addition, a member of her staff was caught on video knocking a conservative reporter to the ground. In short, her arrogance and inanity are out of touch.

    Finally, health care became an albatross for Coakley, and the Leftmedia didn’t help, continuing to refer to the seat as “Kennedy’s seat” in order to play up that debate. Kennedy spent a lifetime fighting for socialized health care, and, when he died, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV) and House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) even suggested naming the health care bill after him. The irony is that the senator from Massachusetts was supposed to steer socialized medicine to passage; now it looks like the senator from Massachusetts could be the one to sink it. As PBS’s Judy Woodruff sobbed, it would be “a tragedy of Greek proportions if Ted Kennedy’s successor … is the one who was responsible for the death of health care.”

    Mary Jo Kopechne could not be reached for comment.

    Americans who want to see the current health care bills die owe a debt of gratitude to Republican Mitt Romney. As Massachusetts governor, he signed universal health care into law in 2006 (as a state legislator, we should note, Brown voted for it). The law is similar to the one being debated in Washington in that Massachusetts residents are required to buy health insurance. The program is currently 20 percent more expensive than projected, and premiums are rising at least 7 percent per year. The reason Bay State voters don’t want to pay for socialized medicine is that they’re already paying for it. They believe that Washington’s bill is redundant, and they have serious questions about the affordability and sustainability of their own state’s health care plan. That’s federalism at its best.

    Nancy Pelosi doesn’t think so, however. “Massachusetts has health care and so the rest of the country would like to have that too,” she defiantly lectured. “So we don’t [think] a state that already has health care should determine whether the rest of the country should.”

    Brown’s win Tuesday may well end up being a victory for liberty. Many Democrats (finally) appear cautious about proceeding on health care. Even Pelosi admits she doesn’t have the votes to pass the Senate version in the House. Some, including Obama, are talking about a much smaller bill.

    We won’t hold our breath, but those metaphorical crates of tea floating in Boston harbor this week may just be a promising sign.

    Quote of the Week

    “Martha Coakley’s resounding defeat in the Massachusetts Senate race is hardly the sort of anniversary gift President Barack Obama could have predicted. Yet there it was, wrapped in a bow and plopped on his doorstep like a flaming bag of dog poo to mark the end of his first year in office.” –Nick Gillespie and Matt Welch of Reason magazine

    That Sinking Feeling

    From the ‘Non Compos Mentis’ File

    Sen. John Kerry, in a fundraising appeal for Martha Coakley, continued Democrat ridicule of the Tea Party sentiment bubbling up in Massachusetts. He warned that Scott Brown’s “allies in the right wing dream of holding a ‘tea party’ in Kennedy country.”

    Uh, John, the original Tea Party was in Boston.

    Meanwhile, Bill Clinton took the opposite tack, though at least he acknowledged the first Tea Party. “The Revolutionary War was first won here,” Clinton told a Boston crowd. “It started with the Boston Tea Party, and the right-wing Republicans have appropriated that on the premise the Tea Party was against government. What they were against was abuse of power.”

    Try parsing that one in a way that favors Democrats.

    This Week’s ‘Alpha Jackass’ Award

    “That I do think is a mistake of mine — I think the assumption was if I just focus on policy, if I just focus on this provision or that law or if we’re making a good rational decision here, then people will get it.” –Barack Obama on his proposed health care takeover

    Got that, folks? Even when he’s admitting a “mistake of mine,” he’s throwing the blame onto others. His failures are your fault because you just don’t get it. That’s called pathological narcissism.

    New & Notable Legislation

    Senate Democrats want to raise the federal government’s debt ceiling by $1.9 trillion to a mind-boggling total of $14.3 trillion. The current debt limit was just established by an increase of $290 billion snuck in at the end of December 2009, but will be reached by mid-February. If the ceiling is not raised again, then the government will default on payments to millions of Social Security recipients, defense contractors and other beneficiaries of government disbursements. Just 10 years ago, an increase of this size would have covered government spending for an entire year. Now, they’re sweating just getting through February.

    The proposal is coupled with a new PAYGO proposal that would offset increased spending with tax hikes and cuts in other areas of the budget. Previous attempts at PAYGO fell by the wayside in recent years, as both Republicans and Democrats have given up on even the appearance of fiscal responsibility — which is all PAYGO is.

    Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad (D-ND) and Evan Bayh (D-IN) have indicated they will not support PAYGO or a debt increase unless they are accompanied by a bipartisan commission that would create fiscal reform measures. House Democrats, led by Nancy Pelosi, are against the idea of a commission because it would take power away from their own budget committee leaders. The Obama administration attempted to bridge this logjam by announcing the creation of a similar commission at the executive level that would include Democrats and Republicans appointed by both Congress and the president. Any commission created by Obama, however, wouldn’t release any recommendations until after the November elections. How convenient. The dodge around fiscal responsibility continues.

    The Senate Health, Education, Labor, and Pensions (HELP) Committee is considering the Student Aid and Fiscal Responsibility Act, which, in essence, would allow the Obama administration to nationalize the student loan industry. Currently, federally subsidized loans through the Federal Family Education Loan (FFEL) program make up approximately 80 percent of the industry. The government subsidizes or profits from a set interest rate and also guarantees loans for both student and lender. The bill under consideration would drop private lenders entirely and turn student lending over to the government. The proposal originated in Obama’s 2010 budget, and according to the Congressional Budget Office, it would save the government $87 billion over 10 years. Forget the Constitution — not that the status quo holds to it — Obama’s solution to every problem is nationalization.

    Essential Liberty Project — Conference Presentation

    This coming Feb. 4-6, the Constitutional Coalition is presenting their Educational Policy Conference 21, “Lessons Children and Others Must Hear.” The Thursday through Saturday event in St. Louis, Missouri, will feature Fox News host Glenn Beck, radio talk-show host Michael Medved, several stalwart conservative senators and representatives, and many principled authorities, including a presentation by our own Essential Liberty Project Executive Director, Jim Cuffia. Visit www.ConstitutionalCoalition.org for conference and registration details.

    Hope ‘n’ Change: Obama Pens Haiti Story

    The disaster in Haiti is a perfect example of Americans doing their best to help others in need, and it has once again brought out the finest qualities of the American character. Unfortunately, politics is at play. For example, Newsweek magazine, which years ago gave up its mission as an objective news source to become a propaganda organ of the Left, premiered its reporting on the crisis with a cover story by Barack Obama. His unremarkable piece offered the liberal rag an opportunity to boost its plummeting circulation. The latest Obama issue of the magazine hit the newsstands days before his first year as president comes to a close — a year in which he has experienced an unprecedented drop in popularity and support.

    To add further political twist to a natural disaster, Narcissist in Chief Obama asked Americans to donate for Haitian relief through the White House Web site, not directly to Red Cross. How this is beneficial, we don’t know, but maybe he wants to first take the government’s typical 30-70 percent cut.

    The House unanimously passed a bill that will allow cash contributions to Haitian relief made through March 1 to count against 2009 taxes. Americans didn’t need this incentive, though. In the week since the earthquake, we committed over $275 million to relief efforts, with a third of that amount coming from American companies. The $83 million that those evil corporations have contributed in just seven days has received little recognition by the media, however.

    Meanwhile, America’s attempts to help the wounded and keep order in the fragile nation have come under fire by the French, joined by Cuba and Venezuela. Alain Joyandet, the French minister in charge of humanitarian relief, called upon the UN to curb America’s military role in Haiti, claiming that our military personnel resembled an occupying force, and he asked the UN to “clarify” our role. Of course, to the French, every foreign army is an occupying force.

    Halls of Justice: SCOTUS Overturns Part of McCain-Feingold

    The Supreme Court of the United States overturned two precedents and struck down limits on corporate political spending in a 5-4 ruling this week, with the usual suspects in dissent. The Court found that at least part of the 2002 Bipartisan Campaign Reform Act, known as McCain-Feingold, violates the First Amendment by prohibiting corporations from funding political ads leading up to an election.

    As The Wall Street Journal reports, “The case before the court, Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, originated in a 2008 feature-length movie critical of then-presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. Citizens United, a conservative advocacy group, wanted to promote the film, but the election commission called it an ‘electioneering communication’ subject to McCain-Feingold restrictions.” In 2003, the Supreme Court upheld the law.

    Justice Anthony Kennedy wrote for the majority in a 57-page opinion, “The government may regulate corporate political speech through disclaimer and disclosure requirements, but it may not suppress that speech altogether.”

    Additionally, of requiring that money be funneled through political action committees — those now-hated 527s — Kennedy wrote, “When government seeks to use its full power, including the criminal law, to command where a person may get his or her information or what distrusted source he or she may not hear, it uses censorship to control thought. This is unlawful.”

    Barack Obama called the decision a victory for Wall Street, Big Oil and other special interests hated by the Left, and he promised to work with Congress on a “forceful response.” That’s nothing but hypocrisy coming from the first major-party presidential candidate to reject public funds, opting instead to run solely on money from special interests.

    The BIG Joke

    “When you think about the First Amendment … you think it’s highly overrated.” –White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel, joking (or so he says) at the May 9, 2009, White House Correspondents Association Dinner

    From the Left: Edwards Admits Paternity After Affair

    Former Democrat presidential candidate and North Carolina Sen. John Edwards admitted this week to fathering a child with Rielle Hunter, a former campaign groupie, in an affair that he says ended in 2006. His campaign has been under investigation for illegal use of funds in connection with the affair. Edwards, a former trial lawyer who became John Kerry’s running mate in 2004, initially confessed to the affair in August 2008, after the National Enquirer beat the Leftmedia to the story while they were busy slamming John McCain’s choice of a running mate. Until now, however, Edwards had avoided acknowledging paternity, while another staffer took the fall. Edwards’ wife, who has been battling breast cancer for years, was “relieved” that the truth is out, but family friends say the couple has now separated.

    National Security

    Department of Military Correctness: Hood-winked

    The Pentagon just released its report on the Ft. Hood massacre, and having reviewed it, we have some questions: Has anyone been fired yet? If not, why not? And what’s wrong with naming Major Nidal Malik Hasan, the terrorist who killed 14 people, including an unborn child, in the report? Or what’s wrong with mentioning “radical Islam” — the fuel fanning Hasan’s fire — and perhaps a discussion of its role in why this attack happened?

    We can’t understand how the deaths of the innocent could be so spackled over by 86 pages of politically correct twaddle that identified neither the terrorist nor the root cause of his action. While the report indicates that commanders must be provided suitable tools and guidance to differentiate between appropriate religious practices and those leading to “violence or self-radicalization,” it offers little, if anything, to accomplish that task.

    With this in mind, we suggest a starting point for commanders, supervisors and pretty much everyone else on the planet to help navigate these complex religious nuances. If someone under your command not only acts wacky but also professes a profound hatred for America — the same America he or she, upon entering the military, swore an oath to support and defend — rip up that person’s security clearance. “Nutjob” and “hate-my-country” are excellent reasons to deny someone access to national secrets and secure sites. Next, relieve the individual of duty and bring administrative action toward a discharge. Serving in the military is a privilege, not a right. Moreover, that privilege is not extended to those with an acknowledged hatred of their country, whatever their religious preference. Finally, have the courage to do the right thing, which is almost always diametrically opposed to the politically correct thing, for you too have sworn an oath to “support and defend.”

    Notwithstanding the red herring, armchair-quarterbacking communication between domestic law enforcement and military agencies, the real issue in this case isn’t intelligence or intelligence sharing. It’s naming the evil and doing something about it. Hasan’s activities and mindset were known well before he became an active threat. These indicators were ignored for the sake of political correctness, so Hasan was passed like a bad penny from one assignment to another. However, the failure of any of Hasan’s supervisors or commanders in his chain of command to stand up and act on information they had — or at least should have had — is not just “a failure of the system.” It’s personal and professional cowardice on the part of each individual in Hasan’s supervisory and command chains.

    TSA Nominee Withdraws

    Barack Obama’s nominee to head the Transportation Security Administration, Erroll Southers, withdrew from the process Wednesday. Southers cited political opposition, saying, “I am not a politician. I’m a counterterrorism expert. They took an apolitical person and politicized my career.”

    Despite his virginal claim, Southers is the one who warned that the real terrorists are the Left’s stereotypical view of right-wingers. “Most of the domestic groups that we pay attention to here are white supremacist groups. They’re anti-government, in most cases anti-abortion, they are usually survivalist type in nature, identity oriented,” he explained in 2008. “Those groups are groups that claim to be extremely anti-government and Christian identity oriented.”

    His qualifications were in doubt, as well. Twenty years ago, Southers, then an FBI agent, improperly used law enforcement databases to access information about his then-estranged wife’s new boyfriend. He then lied to Congress about this blatant abuse of power.

    The White House complained about Republican “obstruction,” but nominating anyone for the post didn’t seem to concern Obama until more than eight months into his term. The agency failed miserably on Christmas Day (and, notably, Department of Homeland Security Chief Janet Napolitano’s report to Congress, like the Ft. Hood report, avoided mention of terrorism or Islam) but TSA has managed to keep an 8-year-old boy on the “no fly” list.

    ACOG Kerfuffle

    ABC News has discovered that there are sinister “secret codes” stamped on many of our military’s rifle sights. The shocking revelation has the Leftmedia searching for answers. To them, these secret codes are offensive and must be removed.

    The codes in question are Scripture verses stamped on sights made by Trijicon, which is based in Wixom, Michigan. According to ABC News, “The biblical references appear in the same type font and size as the model numbers on the company’s Advanced Combat Optical Guides, called the ACOG.” References such as 2COR4:6 and JN8:12 point to Bible passages on light (the sights use available light to illuminate the reticle). The company says the inscriptions have been there for nearly three decades without complaint, and their Web site explains, “We believe that America is great when its people are good. This goodness has been based on Biblical standards throughout our history, and we will strive to follow those morals.”

    Predictably, ABC and others screamed “separation of church and state!” Michael “Mikey” Weinstein of the Military Religious Freedom Foundation declared that “it violates the Constitution.” But we would remind leftists yet again that there is no mention of the term “separation of church and state” in the U.S. Constitution. Furthermore, we are unaware of any contract prohibition against serial numbers containing biblical references.

    Certainly, this tempest in a teapot was yet another distraction we don’t need. Unfortunately, Trijicon came to the same conclusion, announcing Thursday that they would remove the references from future sights ordered by the military, as well as provide modification kits for current ones.

    Business & Economy

    Regulatory Commissars: Obama Goes After Banks

    Last week, we reported the White House’s scheme to impose a so-called “financial crisis responsibility fee” (read: tax) which, according to the Treasury Department, “would require the largest and most highly leveraged Wall Street firms to pay back taxpayers for the extraordinary assistance provided so that the TARP program does not add to the deficit.” (This proposal ignores the fact that nearly all the banks targeted by this tax have already repaid their bailout money.) Now Wall Street is fighting back, exploring a potential challenge to the tax on the grounds that its bank-specific, industry-specific bull’s-eye makes it unconstitutional. The market responded with its worst two-day decline since August.

    In classic “ignore the issue, attack the source” fashion, Barack Obama warned, “Instead of sending a phalanx of lobbyists to fight this proposal or employing an army of lawyers and accountants to help evade the fee, I suggest you might want to consider simply meeting your responsibilities.” And the president might want to quit exceeding his.

    Furthermore, as The Wall Street Journal reports, “responsibility” hardly seems the right term. “[T]he White House wants to tax more capital away from profit-making banks to offset the intentional losses that the politicians have ordered up at Fan and Fred. The bank tax revenue will flow directly into the Treasury to be spent on whatever immediate cause Congress favors. Come the next ’systemic risk’ bailout, taxpayers will still be on the hook.”

    Also this week, the administration proposed adding insult to injury with further regulations on the industry with the goal of limiting the size and activities of the largest banks. The regulations would not allow commercial banks to own, invest in or advise hedge funds or private equity firms. Also, an existing cap would be strengthened so that banks would be prohibited from controlling more than 10 percent of not only the nation’s insured deposits, but non-insured deposits and other assets, as well.

    In other words, as The Journal so aptly explains, “Welcome to one more installment in Washington’s year-long crusade to revive private business by assailing and soaking it.”

    On Cross-Examination

    “I don’t see any reason why [banks] should be paying a special tax. … I don’t see the rationale for it. … Look at the damage Fannie and Freddie caused, and they were run by the Congress. Should they have a special tax on congressmen because they let this thing happen to Freddie and Fannie? I don’t think so.” –billionaire investor and philanthropist Warren Buffet

    Actually, that might solve a lot of our problems…

    Nanny Statism and Consumer ‘Protection’

    Among the many bad ideas for the liberal Democrats’ nanny state utopia was the proposed Consumer Financial Protection Agency bureaucracy. As a condition for Sen. Chris Dodd’s dying initiative to revamp financial-sector regulations, the future former senator has broached abandoning his push for a new stand-alone agency during negotiations to secure a bipartisan deal on the legislation — so long as Republicans agree to create an intrusive consumer-protection division within another federal bureaucracy. Some deal.

    Although the Obama administration and congressional Democrats continue to champion a stand-alone agency, they have been unable to explain a clear need, mission or discernible expertise yet another new federal bureaucracy would bring to the table. Further muddying the waters, this new agency could subject financial institutions to onerous new regulations that conflict with regulations issued by current regulators, not to mention the realities of the financial industry.

    Instead of creating ill-defined federal agencies, Congress should focus its energies on straightening out the regulators who failed to do their jobs and unleashed a horrible recession upon the nation. Of course, an even more effective mechanism to bottle the genie would be to retire inept congressmen who played a meaningful role in creating this calamity. After killing reforms when reform could have avoided the recession, and securing sweetheart mortgage deals for himself, Dodd’s retirement is a good start. Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA), the House version of Dodd whose district just voted for Scott Brown, should follow suit.

    Culture & Policy

    Climate Change This Week: Another UN Scandal

    It wouldn’t meet the research standards of a basic college science class, yet it was enough for the UN’s Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) to rely on for claiming that Himalayan glaciers will melt away by 2035. Well, as Investor’s Business Daily put it, “The scientists who said that Himalayan glaciers will be gone by 2035 have admitted the claim has as much credibility as sightings of the mythical Yeti. It’s their fraudulent claims that are melting away.”

    Actually, the alarm of imminent meltdown in the Nobel Peace Prize-winning report published by the IPCC in 2007 came from a 1999 article in the popular non-peer reviewed journal New Scientist — an article which itself was based on a phone interview with scientist Syed Hasnain, who has since described his views as “speculation.” UN Report lead author Murari Lal was quick to shift blame, however. “We relied rather heavily on grey [not peer-reviewed] literature,” he said. “The error, if any, lies with Dr. Hasnain’s assertion and not with the IPCC authors.”

    Hasnain countered, “The magic number of 2035 has not [been] mentioned in any research papers written by me, as no peer-reviewed journal will accept speculative figures,” and, he added, “It is not proper for IPCC to include references from popular magazines or newspapers.”

    A Nobel Prize based on a fraud… Has that ever happened before?

    Of course, propagating speculative “science” to prop up global warming alarmism is nothing new to the IPCC, whose founding principles assume “the scientific basis of risk of human-induced climate change.” Perhaps it’s fitting that the panel’s chairman is not a climatologist at all but an economist and engineer. After all, engineering the facts seems to be a favorite IPCC pastime.

    Faith and Family: Roe v. Wade Turns 37

    Today marks the 37th anniversary of the most tragic Supreme Court decision in American history, Roe v. Wade. The primary issue, of course, remains the right to life affirmed in our Declaration of Independence.

    About half of the people in the United States say they are pro-life and the other half say they are pro-”choice.” How is this affiliation determined? For the most part, if you consider a fetus nothing but a blob of tissue within a woman’s body, you become pro-choice. If you believe that a fetus is a human being and that life begins at conception, you are pro-life. Who is right?

    It has always been evident to us, scientifically and morally, that life begins at conception. But for the last word on the matter, we consult our Creator’s guidebook. The Psalmist wrote, “For You formed my inward parts; you wove me in my mother’s womb.” And then he noted, “Your eyes have seen my unformed substance; and in Your book were written all the days that were ordained for me, when as yet there was not one of them.” Imago Dei!

    Tragically, nearly 50 million lives have been sacrificed on the alter of “choice” since 1973, and now, the most pro-abortion White House and Congress in history are in control of Washington, trying to pass a “health care” bill that funds abortions. May God grant us mercy.

    Judicial Benchmarks: Federal Power and Predators

    The Supreme Court is currently considering whether the federal government has the right to “civilly commit” sex offenders after they have served out their federal sentence. Specifically, U.S. v. Comstock concerns the validity of the 2006 Adam Walsh Child Protection Act, so named after the young boy whose 1981 murder by a pedophile led to a victims’ rights movement.

    As appealing as this law might look at first blush, we must remember that the issue here is not whether sex offenders should be locked up indefinitely, but whether the federal government has the right to usurp a power traditionally left to the states.

    Graydon Comstock was sentenced to three years in prison after being convicted of purchasing child pornography. After he had completed his sentence, the feds certified Comstock as a danger to the public and sought to extend his incarceration. The Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed, landing the case squarely in front of the Supremes, where Solicitor General Elena Kagan argued that the federal government, which is responsible for the criminal justice system, should be allowed to commit Comstock under the “Necessary and Proper” clause of the Constitution.

    This argument is a thinly veiled attempt to expand federal power. Twenty states have enacted civil commitment statutes for sex offenders, and the feds are seeking to remove that choice from the others. As Justice Antonin Scalia pointed out, the Framers intended the Necessary and Proper Clause to be used in conjunction with powers already bestowed upon the federal government, not take those reserved for the states. “The federal criminal proceeding is terminated,” Scalia stated. “The individual is released. You could say it’s necessary for the good of society, but that’s not what the federal government is charged with. There is no constitutional power on the part of the federal government to protect society from sexual predators.”

    Frontiers of Junk Science: Cape Wind May Yet Fly

    As the first year of the Obama administration concludes, the list of its unfinished (and urgent) business continues to grow. One of these items is the fate of Cape Wind — an offshore wind energy initiative — which has been in dispute for 10 years. The tips of the 130 proposed wind turbines will, if completed, reach 440 feet above the waters more than 15 miles off Nantucket.

    The opposition to the project recently lost one of its biggest (and certainly most famous) members when Sen. Ted Kennedy, whose family compound on Hyannis Port looks out on the proposed site, died last summer. Kennedy was among a group of politicians and Native American groups, who contend that the project would ruin their view of Nantucket Sound and disturb Indian burial grounds. Coincidentally, the project site is close to Kennedy’s Hyannis Port and would marginally obstruct their million-dollar view — but only on a clear, calm day.

    Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar has promised to reach a decision on the project by April, stating that renewable energy is a “top priority” of the Obama administration. The president has yet to come down on either side of the issue; perhaps he was torn between his promises to environmental groups and the significant support Kennedy had thrown behind him during his campaign.

    And Last…

    Can’t get enough of Barack Obama? Longing for more than just the wall-to-wall Leftmedia coverage of the Patron Saint of Big Government? Then there’s a new iPhone app for you: “The White House.” According to the White House blog, “The White House App delivers dynamic content from WhiteHouse.gov to the palm of your hand.” Yes, now you can watch thrilling press briefings and riveting speeches like the State of the Union right on your phone or iPod touch. As columnist Michelle Malkin writes, “It’s a revolution in open government! Watch the president yakking LIVE, right on your phone. He’s mobile! He’s streaming! Carry him around in your purse or pocket! iObama can now be with you 24/7.” Unfortunately, though, there is one topic you won’t be able to watch Mr. Transparency and his trusty congressional sidekicks tackle, and that’s health care. Apparently, there just isn’t good enough visibility for the video cameras in those smoke-filled cloakrooms.

    Read more great articles at

    Bush

    Posted in 2010 Elections, Barry Soetoro (aka Barack Hussein Obama), Conniving Politicians, Demo-gogues, Democrats, Dhimmicrats, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Liberals, Marxists, News and Views, President George W. Bush, Republicans, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid Tagged: Annie, Leftmedia, Massachusetts, ObamaCare Catastrophe, The Patriot Post, US Senator Scott Brown (R-MA)

  • The Mass. v. EPA Regulatory Cascade: If EPA Does Not Poach Legislative Power, What Will It Cost?

    By Marlo Lewis

    TonyfromOz prefaces …..

    Read this very carefully, and the first thing that comes to mind is that you have to seriously wonder if these people actually sit down and think about what they are doing, before blindly rushing in and introducing Regulatory Measures and legislation that will generate so many Administrative nightmares, that not only will ordinary people be tied up with paper work, but it must surely bog down Government departments at all levels with what must amount to extra millions of manhours of work, just working through the submitted paperwork. The lure of the money on tap with all of this blinds those who introduce this, mainly because it’s not them who have to do all the work. Ordinary people will be tied up doing that work, because, believe me, this will be one area where those ’supposed’ Government created ‘green jobs’ will not eventuate. People will be directed to do the extra work, and those Departments will expect them to do it with no extra time allowed for the process.

    Today, Reps. Lamar Smith (R-TX), Sam Graves (R-MO), Trent Franks (R-AZ), and Lynn Westmoreland (R-GA) sent a letter to Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs (OIRA) Administrator Cass Sunstein sharply critical of EPA’s December 7, 2009 finding that “air pollution” from carbon dioxide (CO2) and other greenhouse gases (GHGs) endangers public health and welfare.

    “On the basis of EPA’s endangerment finding,” the legislators warn, “virtually every economic activity undertaken in America stands to come under the thumb of federal regulation.” They explain: “These actions begin with EPA’s and the Department of Transportation’s proposed new light vehicle emission standards, continue through greenhouse gas (GHG) preconstruction and operating permit requirements for stationary sources and extend as far as the mind can contemplate.” They continue: “In these ways, EPA threatens to burden our economy with vastly expanded regulation not contemplated by Congress when it passed the Clean Air Act.”

    Yes, indeed. As I discuss here and here, EPA’s endangerment finding starts a regulatory cascade that could (1) subject tens of thousands of previously unregulated small businesses to Clean Air Act (CAA) Prevention of Significant Deterioration (PSD) pre-construction permitting regulations, (2) subject millions of small businesses to CAA Title V operating permit requirements, and (3) compel EPA to establish national ambient air quality standards (NAAQS) that would effectively require the United States to de-industrialize. The Supreme Court pushed EPA to make the endangerment finding in its April 2007 Massachusetts v. EPA decision.

    The four Members of Congress ask OIRA chief Sunstein to make EPA convene a Small Business Advocacy Review Panel to develop and evaluate regulatory alternatives to mimimize the endangerment finding’s impacts on small business. Until and unless EPA does this, the lawmakers say, the endangerment finding should be “withdrawn.”

    The representatives acknowledge that EPA’s proposed October 2009 Tailoring Rule “seeks to delay for a handful of years the imposition of requirements on sources emitting less than 25,000 tons of carbon dioxide per year.” However, this fix is by design temporary, and it is legally dubious, since EPA would be flouting clear statutory language. Under the CAA, entities must obtain a PSD permit in order to construct or modify a facility with a potential to emit 250 tons per year of a CAA-regulated air pollutant, and a Title V permit in order to operate a facility with a potential to emit 100 tons per year.

    EPA estimates that if these provisions are enforced as written, the number of entities applying for PSD permits would jump from 280 to 41,000 per year, and the number applying for Title V permits would jump from 14,700 to 6.1 million per year. The flood of permit applications would overwhelm agency administrative resources, the permitting programs would implode under their own weight, construction activity would grind to a halt, and millions of firms would find themselves in legal limbo — all in the midst of the worst economic downturn since the Great Depression.

    It will be interesting to see how Sunstein responds to the lawmakers’ letter. Will he stick up for small business and honor the spirit of the Regulatory Flexibility Act (RFA), or will he bless EPA’s evasive legal semantics?

    Under the RFA, agencies are to convene a small business review panel unless the agency head certifies that the proposed regulation will not have a “significant impact upon a substantial number of small entities.”  In a recent year, each PSD permit on average cost $125,120 and 866 burden hours for sources to obtain (just the paperwork and administrative costs, exclusive of any associated technology investments). The going rate for Title V administrative fees is $43.75 per ton, implying a virtual carbon tax (exclusive of administrative expenses) of $4,375 for a small business emitting 100 tons of CO2 per year. The Tailoring Rule estimates (p. 55338) that if small sources of CO2 must comply with the law as written, rather than as doctored by EPA, they will incur an expense of more than $38 billion just for Title V compliance over the next six years.  A significant economic impact by any standard.

    Note also that the $38 billion figure refers just to the direct expenses small firms would incur to comply with Title V. It does not include the reduced output and job losses due to the diversion of resources to regulatory compliance. Nor does it include the loss of investment in firms that, due to their sheer number, face years of delay and uncertainty in obtaining permits to build or operate their facilities.

    The endangerment finding is what tees up all these costs and consequences, so you’d think it would be a no brainer that it has ”significant impact upon a substantial number of small entities.”

    EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson.

    Well, EPA says otherwise. In the Endangerment Finding (p. 66545), Administrator Lisa Jackson certifies that EPA’s findings “do not in-and-of-themselves” impose new requirements on small entities. Hence, there’s no need for an RFA review panel. Similarly, EPA’s GHG motor vehicle standards proposal (p. 49628) certifies that it would not have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities, since the standards would apply to automakers, very few of which are small businesses.

    By making new cars more costly, however, the rule could adversely affect thousands of auto dealers, most of whom are small businesses. EPA says not a word about that potential impact. More importantly, the GHG motor vehicle standards are what directly trigger the PSD and Title V requirements.

    EPA says the Tailoring Rule (p. 55349) won’t have a significant impact on a substantial number of small entities, because it “will relieve the regulatory burden associated the PSD and Title V operating programs for new and modified major sources that emit GHGs, including small businesses.” But how can the Tailoring Rule relieve burden unless there is a burden to be relieved? The PSD and Title V burden is a direct consequence of the endangerment finding and GHG motor vehicle emissions rule. But EPA claims those actions have no significant impact on small business.

    Isn’t legal hair-splitting grand? Of course, the findings “in-and-0f-themselves” regulate nothing — but they compel the adoption of GHG motor vehicle standards under CAA Secs. 202, which then automatically trigger pre-construction permitting requirements under Secs. 160-160 and operating permit requirements under Secs. 501-507.

    The endangerment finding also sets the stage for regulation of GHG emissions from motor fuels under CAA Sec. 211, non-road engines and vehicles under Sec. 231, the establishment of GHG new source performance standards (NSPS) under Sec. 111, and the establishment of economy-wide NAAQS regulation of GHGs under Secs. 107-110.  ”Yes, Your Honor, I pulled the trigger, but I am innocent; the bullet killed the man!”

    Small business clearly needs an advocate in the room and at the table whenever EPA deliberates about any regulatory action pertaining to greenhouse gases and CO2. Congress enacted the RFA to protect small business from regulatory excess. Right now it’s not working. Cass Sunstein has an opportunity to ensure that small businesses have a say in regulatory decisions affecting their very survival. He should seize it.

    Marlo Lewis, Jr. is a Senior Fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, where he writes on global warming, energy policy, and other public policy issues.

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