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  • US Court Ruling Against FCC Raises Stakes for “Broadband Reclassification” Threat

    04.06.10 07:35 AM

    In response to today’s US court ruling against FCC on “net neutrality,” Americans for Prosperity Vice President Phil Kerpen released the following statement:

    “Today’s decision dealt a blow to advocates for imposing a heavy Washington regulatory hand on the Internet. The FCC has no legal basis for imposing its dystopian regulatory vision under the net neutrality banner.

    “Unfortunately, the Obama administration and its FCC cohorts have been relentless in pursuing their agenda without respect to the democratic process or proper legal processes. The FCC broadband plan makes clear where they want to go to circumvent this court decision: reclassification of the Internet into an old-fashioned regulated utility.

    “Such an escalation in the Left’s ongoing efforts to control our communications system must be stopped.”

    </p>

    read more

    http://www.americansforprosperity.or…net-neutrality

  • FCC Net Neutrality Smackdown a Win for Free Market, Limited Government

    On 04.06.10 02:29 PM posted by Mike Brownfield

    <ahref="http://blog.heritage.org/wp-content/uploads/computer-typing.jpg"></p>In a huge win for the free market and limited government, a federal appeals court today put a halt to the Federal Communications Commission’s attempt to exert its authority over the Internet and its power play to regulate the companies who provide access to it.

    The decision, <ahref="http://pacer.cadc.uscourts.gov/common/opinions/201004/08-1291-1238302.pdf">issued by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia, centers around the FCC’s efforts to enact “net neutrality,” a policy that would prevent ISPs such as AT&T, Verizon and Comcast from managing the flow of traffic on the Internet by discriminating among content and applications that put a high load on their networks.

    The case at hand stemmed from a 2007 FCC complaint by non-profit organizations who alleged that Comcast violated the law when it interfered with its customers’ use of peer-to-peer file sharing networking programs, which drag down Internet speeds. Comcast defended its actions as necessary to manage scarce network capacity, while proponents of net neutrality advocate for the principle of <ahref="http://www.savetheinternet.com/faq">“free and open Internet.” Enter the FCC, which decided to <ahref="http://news.cnet.com/8301-13578_3-10004508-38.html?tag=mncol;txt">take action to regulate the Internet, much like it regulates other forms of telecommunications.

    <spanid="more-30695"></span>The problem is that the FCC simply doesn’t have that authority, as <ahref="http://pacer.cadc.uscourts.gov/common/opinions/201004/08-1291-1238302.pdf">the court recognized today.

    The FCC argued for an expansive interpretation of its authority by virtue of federal law, which says “The Commission may perform any and all acts, make such rules and regulations, and issue such orders, not inconsistent with this chapter, as may be necessary in the execution of its functions.”

    The court, though, didn’t buy it. It held:

    … [N]otwithstanding the “difficult regulatory problem of rapid technological change” posed by the communications industry, “the allowance of wide latitude in the exercise of delegated powers is not the equivalent of untrammeled freedom to regulate activities over which the statute fails to confer . . .Commission authority.”

    That’s good news for Internet users, but it’s also good news for America as a whole.

    As Heritage’s James Gattuso <ahref="http://blog.heritage.org/2009/09/21/will-and-can-the-fcc-regulate-the-internet/">wrote last year, the end result of a net neutrality policy would be “a slower and more congested Internet, and more frustration for users. Even worse, investment in expanding the Internet will be chilled, as FCC control of network management makes investment less inviting. The amounts at stake aren’t trivial, with tens of billions invested each year in Internet expansion.”

    And as for America? With each passing day, federal agencies promulgate more rules and regulations that amount to a pile of red tape that wind up costing Americans some $1.1 trillion per year, according to a <ahref="http://www.sba.gov/ADVO/research/rs264tot.pdf">2005 study by the Small Business Administration.

    As the United States struggles to regain its economic footing, the last thing we need is yet another agency to grab more power, create new regulations, and hamper the growth – and speed – of the Internet.

    http://blog.heritage.org/2010/04/06/…ed-government/

  • Is Head Start Helping Children Succeed and Does Anyone Care?

    On 04.06.10 01:00 PM posted by Rachel Sheffield

    <ahref="http://blog.heritage.org/wp-content/uploads/DeptEducation.jpg"></p>If you’ve heard the results of the recent <ahref="http://www.acf.hhs.gov/programs/opre/hs/impact_study/reports/impact_study/hs_impact_study_final.pdf">Head Start Impact Study, congratulations. You are one of the few Americans who, <ahref="http://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2010/04/07/28headstart.h29.html?tkn=WLSFibruVZf3jH%2BFxDgPjXL Cb%2BHpMKcN2fYw&cmp=clp-edweek">no thanks to national media sources, are aware that your taxpayer dollars have been funding a failing federal program for the last 45 years. The Heritage Foundation recently hosted an event titled: <ahref="http://www.heritage.org/Events/2010/03/Head-Start">Is Head Start Helping Children Succeed and Does Anyone Care?,to discuss the recently-released Impact Study that found no lasting impact for Head Start children after first grade.

    According to the study–which compared both three- and four-year-old Head Start students with a control group of their peers–preschoolers who participated in Head Start did not fare any better than children who did not participate. Of over 100 potential benefits measured–including cognitive, social, and health outcomes–Head Start children made gains on only about 2 percent of them. Ironically, the only significant academic outcome was negative: kids who started Head Start at age three–meaning they had spent the most time in the program–were reported to do worse in kindergarten math than control group children.<spanid="more-30689"></span>

    And, despite this poor performance, taxpayers have been on the hook for more than $167 billion since the program’s inception. What’s more, the administration just increased Head Start funding by $1 billion in its FY2011 budget.

    But almost as troubling as the results of the study is the poor manner in which it was executed. Panel participants–Drs. <ahref="http://www.brookings.edu/%7E/media/Files/experts/whitehurstg/whitehurstg_bio.pdf">Russ Whitehurst, the director of education policy research at the Brookings Institution, and <ahref="http://www.njfpc.org/html/pdf/frcfamilyreligioionzillpaper.pdf">Nicholas Zill, who actually worked as a lead analyst on the Head Start Impact Study–spoke about the poor handling of the study’s release. It took the government six years from the time the data was collected to get around to reporting the results. Said Dr. Whitehurst: “Delayed data are useless data. One reason we’ve gotten so little attention to the data is that the actions that should have been predicated on the results of the study have already been taken.”* Dr. Zill went even further to say: “I think the main reason why [the study is] being ignored is the results were negative. In fact, I think if the results were positive, even if they had been delayed years and years they would have been on the front page of the New York Times, The Washington Post, and many other media outlets.”

    But now is probably not the best time to talk about the failure of government preschool, considering Obama’s plans to expand federal funding for early childhood education and care, which currently stands at a whopping <ahref="http://www.njfpc.org/html/pdf/frcfamilyreligioionzillpaper.pdf">$25 billion per year.

    Head Start is a prime example of bureaucratic dysfunction and the resulting waste in taxpayer dollars. It is what the <ahref="http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/mar/30/wetzstein-is-head-start-a-sacred-cow/print/">Washington Times refers to as <ahref="http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2010/mar/30/wetzstein-is-head-start-a-sacred-cow/print/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaig n=Feed%3A+SpotlightOnPoverty%2FInTheNews+%28Spotli ght+on+Poverty+and+Opportunity%3A+In+The+News%29"> “a sacred cow.” It has become so politicized and entrenched, that even hard evidence of its failure holds no sway in policymaking. The Washington Times writes:

    …when it comes to delivering measurable, lasting outcomes, Head Start is more hype than help.

    “One would think the Obama administration and Congress would take a long, sober look at Head Start; These are damning findings for a program that has been ‘tweaked’ for 45 years at a cumulative cost of some $167 billion…

    Not surprisingly, the Heritage Foundation is apoplectic.

    The conservative think tank held a March 22 event called ‘Is Head Start Helping Children Succeed and Does Anyone Care?’ Nick Zill…answered that question with a presentation called ‘I Know Head Start Works. Don’t Confuse Me With The Facts’

    Does anyone care that Head Start is not helping children succeed? Apparently, the answer from Washington is “No”…but spoken quietly enough to make sure no one hears.

    http://blog.heritage.org/2010/04/06/…s-anyone-care/

  • Russia: New START Clearly Links Missile Reduction with Missile Defense

    On 04.06.10 12:00 PM posted by Conn Carroll

    </p>This Thursday President Barack Obama is scheduled to sign a follow on agreement to the Strategic Arms Reduction Treaty in Prague with Russian President Dmitri Medvedev. Since the day agreement on the new treaty was <ahref="http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/03/24/AR2010032401535.html">leaked by the Kremlin, the White House has been claiming that the treaty <ahref="http://blog.heritage.org/2010/03/29/what-exactly-is-the-deal-between-president-obama-and-the-kremlin/">“does not contain any constraints on testing, development or deployment of current or planned U.S. missile defense programs.” And from day one <ahref="http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/25/world/europe/25start.html?ref=todayspaper">the Russians have been saying the opposite.

    Today in Moscow, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov again made it clear that Russia does not share the same understanding of the treaty that the Obama administration does. Minister Lavrov <ahref="http://www.businessweek.com/news/2010-04-06/russia-may-exit-new-arms-deal-if-u-s-boosts-missile-defense.html">told reporters that Russia maintains the right to exit the agreement if “the U.S.’s build-up of its missile defense strategic potential in numbers and quality begins to considerably affect the efficiency of Russian strategic nuclear forces. … Linkage to missile defense is clearly spelled out in the accord and is legally binding.”<spanid="more-30672"></span>

    <ahref="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trust,_but_verify">“Trust but verify” was Ronald Reagan’s approach to relations with the Soviet Union. The Senate should keep that phrase in mind when working with the Obama administration while deciding whether or not they should ratify this agreement.

    http://blog.heritage.org/2010/04/06/…ssile-defense/

  • President Obama, Why Won’t You Defend Us?

    On 04.06.10 11:39 AM posted by Mike Brownfield

    <ahref="http://blog.heritage.org/wp-content/uploads/Obama_SOTU090225.jpg"></p>President Barack Obama today released five specific objectives regarding the United States’ future nuclear force, but the most important objective of all – defending the United States and its allies against strategic attack – was not among them. Now, it is up to Congress, the American people and America’s allies to ask the President a simple, pointed question: Why won’t you defend us?

    The release of the President’s Nuclear Posture Review (NPR) raises significant questions about the soundness of the Obama administration’s nuclear strategy. First and foremost, the President’s priorities for his nuclear strategy are contradictory. By having a smaller, less reliable, less credible nuclear force, the President’s strategy will increase the incentive for nuclear proliferators to produce weapons, and other states’ reliance on nuclear weapons will only grow. In short, the world will become a more dangerous place to live.

    Contrary to President Obama’s assertions, maintaining a strong nuclear deterrent and combating proliferation and nuclear terrorism are not incompatible goals. In fact, the previous administration made significant strides in countering proliferation, including establishing the Proliferation Security Initiative, which was designed to stop the trafficking of weapons of mass destruction.

    <spanid="more-30683"></span>What’s more, existing U.S. declaratory policy, which as written under President Carter and reaffirmed by other Presidents, (including President Clinton after the Cold War ended), has served the United States well. As it stood, the policy was a simple, clear cut and forceful declaration of the U.S. policy on the use of nuclear weapons for self defense. Conversely, the declaratory policy stated in President Obama’s NPR is something only a lawyer could love and lays out a series of muddled conditions under which the United States would use nuclear weapons. That only serves to send confused signals to both allies and adversaries.

    There’s another problem with President Obama’s new nuclear strategy. As written, the NPR raises legitimate concerns that the President has not met requirements under U.S. law (sec 1251 of the 2009 Defense Authorization Act) to adequately address the modernization of U.S. nuclear weapons and infrastructure before entering into a new arms control agreement. In addition, the NPR wrongly argues that the United States should ratify the Comprehensive Test Ban Treaty (CTBT). This treaty would prevent the United States from developing the nuclear forces necessary to deal with today’s threats and saddle the United States with an increasingly obsolete nuclear arsenal designed for the Cold War era.

    So what’s the alternative? The right U.S. defense strategy would emphasize a modernized, credible nuclear force; comprehensive missile defense; and robust conventional forces, as well as vigorous efforts to prevent proliferation, illicit trafficking in nuclear technology and materials; and combating terrorism. That would provide for a more robust and effective deterrence for the post-Cold War World. In other words, it would do what nuclear weapons should – defend the United States and its allies.

    http://blog.heritage.org/2010/04/06/…you-defend-us/

  • Obama: Still a ways to go in Central and Eastern Europe

    On 04.06.10 11:00 AM posted by Sally McNamara

    </p>If President Obama thinks that signing his prized arms control treaty with Russia on Czech soil will repair the damage he’s done to relations with Central and Eastern Europe, he’s wrong. Cutting a deal with the Russian bear in Prague is hardly the way to tell your allies that it’s not all about Russia.

    Although cheering crowds greeted Obama a year ago when he told adoring Czechs of his vision for a world without nuclear weapons, Europe now is much more cautiously embracing the President’s risky and naïve agenda. The new U.S.-Russian START Treaty – reducing deployable nuclear warhead by a third – has come at a very steep price for the U.S.<spanid="more-30663"></span> It sacrificed the <atitle="http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2009/09/President-Obama-Must-Not-Surrender-to-Russia-on-Missile-Defense" href="http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2009/09/President-Obama-Must-Not-Surrender-to-Russia-on-Missile-Defense">Third Site missile defense deployments in Poland and the Czech Republic, and the President now looks set to announce that America’s existing nuclear arsenal will not be sufficiently modernized. In a humiliating slap-down, Moscow announced this morning that it will summarily withdraw from START if it deems future U.S. missile defense plans unpalatable. Romania, Bulgaria and other European nations in line to work with America on missile defense should be expecting the same treatment that Warsaw and Prague got when on the 70th anniversary of the Soviet’s invasion of Poland, President Obama ripped up the Third Site agreement.

    Obama has been <atitle="http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2009/05/President-Obama-Must-Not-Concede-to-Russian-Demands-over-NATO" href="http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2009/05/President-Obama-Must-Not-Concede-to-Russian-Demands-over-NATO">outplayed and outfoxed by Putin and Medvedev. But this isn’t just a game of politics; as the leader of the free world, President Obama has America’s security in his hands, as well as the future of the <atitle="http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2010/03/President-Obama-Must-Not-Remove-Nuclear-Weapons-from-Europe" href="http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2010/03/President-Obama-Must-Not-Remove-Nuclear-Weapons-from-Europe">Atlantic Alliance. Engagement with Europe’s great powers has had mixed blessings for the Czechs in the past. They will keenly remember the ‘engagement strategies’ of 1938 and 1968 which saw German and Soviet tanks respectively roll into their proud nation.

    Negotiations are often a good thing, but as President Reagan advised: always negotiate from a position of strength. Iran, North Korea and other malign actors will continue to seek and increase their nuclear arsenal regardless of President Obama’s ‘vision’. The letter that 21 Central and Eastern European leaders sent to Obama last July, advising him against unilateral concessions to Russia, should remind Obama that he still has a long way to go if he wants a genuinely strategic relationship with his European allies which ensures transatlantic safety and security.

    http://blog.heritage.org/2010/04/06/…astern-europe/

  • The Long War of Repealing Obamacare

    On 04.06.10 10:00 AM posted by James Capretta

    In the depressing aftermath of Congress’s passage of the Democratic health-care legislation, there has been an understandable temptation among conservatives to think that all their effort over the last year to derail what was coming down the tracks may have been for naught. After all, the bill did pass. The president and his allies got their signing ceremony and their victory lap, as well as a barrage of premature but predictable pronouncements from the national media that we are now witnessing a historic moment of irreversible liberal progress.

    And there’s no use sugarcoating what has happened. It’s a debacle from every possible vantage point. The Democrats have created another massive entitlement program while expanding federal power and reach in a manner not seen since the heyday of Franklin D. Roosevelt. If allowed to stand, the new health-care law will tether America’s middle class to the federal government in ways that will fundamentally alter — and not for the better — the relationship between citizens and the state. The result will be worse health care, distorted politics, less medical innovation and economic vitality, and depleted wealth.

    <spanid="more-30640"></span>Still, conservative opposition was not a waste of time or effort. On a matter of such import, the fight had to be waged, no matter the odds. Moreover, conservatives did win the battle for the hearts and minds of the electorate. Most voters think the Democratic plan will drive costs up and reduce the quality of American medicine. Conservative arguments clearly contributed to the shaping of public opinion, and with public opinion running against them, the administration and its allies were forced to make crucial concessions that may yet prove decisive in what will almost certainly be a very long war over the future of American health care.

    For starters, there is no public option in the new law, at least not of the kind that single-payer enthusiasts had advocated. Most Democrats wanted to create an option for working-age Americans built on the Medicare model, which is to say built on government-determined payment rates for services. By employing price controls, a Medicare-like public option would have been able to charge artificially low premiums, thus undercutting private competitors.

    Conservatives, however, were successful in portraying the public option as a slippery slope to enrollment of the entire population in a government-run insurance program. And despite the superficial appeal of price caps, most voters were able to see past the rhetoric to the harms federal micromanagement would bring: queues, restrictions on access, and government-enforced rationing of care. This concern was more than enough to turn independent voters solidly against the idea (by 3-to-1 in one summer 2009 poll), which in turn precipitated a rift among Democrats that single-payer advocates were never able to overcome.

    Democrats were also forced to give ground on costs, hard as that may be to believe in light of the massive price tag of the final bill. It would have been much worse if not for the spontaneous revolt that occurred at last summer’s town-hall meetings. It was at those sessions that citizens gave voice to what was, and is, the widely held view that President Obama is recklessly spending away America’s economic future. On the heels of the bailouts and the so-called stimulus plan, the announcement by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) that an early version of the House health-care reform bill would cost at least $1.2 trillion over a decade was enough to get thousands of Americans out of their homes to demand, in person, that their elected representatives put a halt to the proceedings.

    To be sure, the president and his allies never had any intention of actually changing course and trimming their big-government ambitions. But they couldn’t entirely ignore what had played out in August without losing momentum for their initiative. So, in an unusual address to a joint session of Congress last September, the president made this commitment: He would ensure that the health-reform legislation would cost “only” $900 billion over a decade.

    Predictably, that promise was broken. The final bill costs well over $1 trillion when all spending is counted. But to even stay within shouting distance of it, the Democrats in Congress had to employ all manner of gimmicks and sleight of hand to hide the true cost of their program, including delaying the implementation of its major spending provisions until 2014. That helped them shave some $50 to $100 billion from the CBO’s cost projection through 2019.

    It also gave Republicans a very substantial opening to exploit. The president is already daring his adversaries to try to take away the “rights” and benefits that he says the new legislation has bestowed on the American people. To which Republicans should reply as often as necessary: What benefits? What rights? Little of real value has come immediately into effect, and most of the plan’s provisions won’t be implemented for more than three years. In the interim, there will be two federal election cycles, which, given the intensity of the opposition and the partisan manner by which the bill was enacted, are all but certain to become referenda on Obamacare. The self-congratulatory speeches the president has been giving in the aftermath of congressional passage of the bill are not the last words in this struggle, by a long shot. Those are reserved for the voters. They will decide the fate of the Democratic health-care reform plan with the votes they cast this November and again in 2012.

    To that end, it is imperative that Republicans make repeal of Obamacare the centerpiece of their effort to pick up a sizeable number of House and Senate seats in this year’s elections, and possibly regain control of one or both of the chambers of Congress. Even if the politics were not favorable, the issue is so important, and the stakes so high for the country, that the party of limited government would have no choice but to continue the fight. Happily for Republicans, though, it is evident that an undiluted call for full repeal, coupled with a genuine and aggressive reform plan, is a political winner.

    The public remains just as polarized now as it was before passage. A clear plurality still opposes the government-heavy program Congress assembled, and the public is even unhappier about how the Democrats forced their plan upon the country in spite of unambiguous signals that the electorate did not want it. The only response that is fitting for such a brazen act of political arrogance is a sharp rebuke at the ballot box. Republican candidates should give voice to voter outrage by promising to undo — in its entirety, and as swiftly as possible — what should not have passed in the first place.

    Of course, so long as President Obama sits in the Oval Office, repeal is almost certainly beyond reach. Even the most optimistic assumptions about Republican gains would leave them well short of the votes necessary to override a veto. But the voters do not expect miracles here. If Republicans regain full or partial control of Congress, they can stand for repeal even as they open up many new fronts in the struggle to ultimately undo Obamacare.

    For instance, beginning as early as 2011, well before new coverage is extended to anyone, millions of seniors will see large cuts in their Medicare benefits as deep reductions in Medicare Advantage payment rates force insurers to scale back their coverage or drop current offerings altogether. These cuts are supposed to help pay for the expensive new entitlement that the Democrats have promised. Republicans should channel the inevitable displeasure among seniors into legislation to restore the Medicare funds at the expense of a further delay in the health-care bill’s implementation timeline. If successful, they would likely push the start date back another two years.

    Full repeal will almost certainly need to wait until after the 2012 presidential election. In that campaign, the Republican candidate will have the opportunity to offer the country an alternative vision. That vision should include the promise of repeal, the case for which will have been bolstered by the tax increases, premium hikes, and Medicare cuts that will have kicked in by then. But the Republican candidate must couple the call for repeal with a concrete framework for what would be put in its place.

    The starting point must be a commitment to build a functioning marketplace in the health sector. That’s the only way to simultaneously address the cost and improve the quality of American medicine. Today we endure misallocated resources and expensive and inefficient care principally because of misguided governmental policy. In particular, open-ended subsidization of health insurance — through the tax code, Medicare, and Medicaid — has largely undermined the incentives for productivity improvement or cost-conscious consumption. The result is cost growth that far outpaces the nation’s general rise in income.

    An effective reform program would begin to address the cost problem by making changes throughout federal health-care law. But the trick is to do so in a way that allows for gradual change and decentralized decision-making. Republicans must not make the same mistake as the Democrats and embark on a one-size-fits-all federal reform plan that creates more disruption than the public can tolerate or absorb.

    The basic framework should be a federal partnership with the states. The federal government would take steps to address problems in the Medicare program and the tax treatment of health insurance, as well as provide the base funding needed for state-by-state initiatives. Individuals buying insurance outside of employment would get a tax credit. In Medicare, beneficiaries would be given more choices, including the option of taking their entitlement in the form of catastrophic insurance and a deposit into a Health Savings Account. They would also be asked to make modest co-payments for any services they receive outside the normal network they have selected for their care, even if they have Medigap coverage (which means they now pay nothing at the point of service, regardless of where they get it).

    The federal government could offer grants to help fund state reform programs consistent with a move toward a functioning national marketplace. States would have wide discretion to make design decisions based on local needs and political cultures, but to qualify for federal funding, states would have to follow the basic guidelines of a market-based reform plan.

    A key change at the state level would be new protections for people with preexisting medical conditions. People who have stayed continuously insured could buy individual insurance without any condition exclusion and with some limits on the size of the premium they could be charged for the health risk they pose. This change would require robust funding and reform of state high-risk pools, which would be a primary aim of the new federal grant program.

    In addition, states would facilitate portable insurance for small-business workers, much as the state of Utah has done, and federal tax credits would serve as a primary source of funding for many of today’s working uninsured to buy health insurance. States would also be required to open up their insurance markets to out-of-state customers in order to foster more competition and choice, and to implement sensible medical-malpractice reform in order to root out unnecessary costs from “defensive” care. In addition, states could choose to gradually move their non-disabled Medicaid population into the same marketplace through which tax-credit recipients buy their insurance coverage.

    This reform approach would involve new federal costs, of course, but they would be a mere fraction of the cost of Obamacare. In comparison with the just-passed legislation, the Republican alternative would be both a spending cut and a tax cut. The costs associated with the tax credit could be covered by placing an upper limit on the size of tax-preferred premiums allowable in job-based plans. This limit would replace the “Cadillac tax” on insurers in Obamacare. The impact of the two methods would be similar, but a premium limit would be more transparent, in that employees would be paying directly for expensive coverage. This system would be more effective in getting consumers to use health-care resources efficiently.

    The costs associated with high-risk pools could be covered by redirecting some of the funding that Medicaid now pays to hospitals that see a disproportionate share of low-income and uninsured patients. Devoting these funds instead to the expansion of private insurance coverage should be possible without reducing access to care, since hospitals that lose subsidy payments from Medicaid would gain many insured patients, whose private coverage would pay more generous rates. The tax credits and high-risk-pool funding could be made contingent on securing the offsetting savings, thus ensuring that there would be no increase in the federal budget deficit.

    Some Republicans and conservatives may wish to turn the page and move on from health care. Unfortunately, they don’t really have that option. Health care is the key issue in all the big and consequential political fights of the day — over the budget, taxes, regulation, and the role and competency of centralized government. If the Right abandons this fight now, all of its other battles will be much harder to win. And there’s no political reason to not continue the fight. The public does not want a government-heavy program that will drive costs higher and undermine the quality of American medicine. What it wants is a sensible reform that brings gradual change, treats people fairly, opens promising avenues to cover the uninsured, and poses no risk to the economy. If Republicans deliver such a plan, they can win this war yet.

    Cross-posted from <ahref="http://nrd.nationalreview.com/">National Review.

    http://blog.heritage.org/2010/04/06/…ing-obamacare/

  • It’s Time to Terminate California’s Cap and Trade System

    On 04.06.10 09:06 AM posted by Nick Loris

    California legislators passed a statewide cap and trade bill in 2006 that is set to begin in 2012, but a growing opposition is<ahref="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052702304620304575165843688369042.html?m od=WSJ_hpp_MIDDLENexttoWhatsNewsThird"> seeking to include a ballot measure that would postpone a carbon cap until the state’s economy recovers:

    “The ballot measure would bar the state from implementing the law until its jobless rate stabilized at or below 5.5% for a year, which supporters say would signal the return of a strong economy. The state’s jobless rate topped 5.5% in October 2007 and now stands at 12.5%.

    Supporters and opponents of the law disagree about its potential economic effects. The California Air Resources Board, the state clean-air agency administering the law, says the cap would help the economy. It would raise the price of a unit of energy, but reduce Californians’ total energy bills through greater efficiency, the board says, freeing up money that would lead to more jobs.

    But the board has scaled back its optimism. In a 2008 study, it projected the measure would produce a net gain of more than 100,000 California jobs. Economists widely criticized that study as too rosy. A second economic assessment, released by the board in March, projects a net gain of about 10,000 jobs. A June 2009 study by a group of California small businesses, however, predicted the law could raise the average California household’s annual housing, transportation, energy and food costs by about $3,900, or 15%.”

    <spanid="more-30669"></span>

    The increased recognition that cap and trade reduces economic activity is encouraging but the ballot measure does not go far enough. Delaying implementation of cap and trade will only delay the economic consequences of higher energy prices. The pill may be easier to swallow but that doesn’t make it good policy. The fact that cap and trade only makes sense if the state is not in a recession is indicative that the policy is an economy killer.

    Heritage <ahref="http://www.heritage.org/Research/Reports/2009/08/Impact-of-the-Waxman-Markey-Climate-Change-Legislation-on-California">analysis of the federal cap and trade bill passed in the House of Representatives found that beginning in 2012, job losses will be 192,773 higher than without a cap-and-trade bill in place. And the number of jobs lost will only go up, increasing to 285,335 by 2035. And the environmental benefit? Climatologist Chip Knappenberger <ahref="http://masterresource.org/?p=2355">projected that Waxman-Markey would moderate temperatures by only hundredths of a degree in 2050 and no more than two-tenths of a degree Celsius at the end of the century. If California tries to cap CO2 emissions by itself, the economic costs will come with even smaller environmental benefits – too small to even measure.

    Contrary to the claims of an economic boost from green investment and green job creation and “postage stamp” costs, cap and trade does the complete opposite by increasing energy prices-thereby causing a considerable reduction in economic growth, household incomes, and employment. A more prudent ballot measure would be to remove California’s cap and trade plan completely.

    http://blog.heritage.org/2010/04/06/…-trade-system/

  • On Thursday We’ll See the Future of iPhone… Ads? [Unconfirmed]

    So, what’re you most excited to see at the iPhone OS 4 event in just two days? Multitasking? A brand new interface? Um, how about—the next generation of iPhone ads? More »







  • Net neutrality ruling strikes blow for freedom

    Right about now the White House is probably thinking about packing the courts. Just as the Roosevelt-era Supreme Court voided a key New Deal effort to regulate commerce in 1935, a U.S. appeals court just put the kibosh on a Federal Communications Commission effort to regulate the Internet. This far and no farther, the court said to further federal intervention in the American economy.

    The appeals court kneecapped FCC intent to impose net neutrality as part of its grand broadband plan. Such rules would seek to prevent phone and cable companies from potentially charging providers that supply huge amounts of bandwidth-gobbling traffic. This regulatory debate has been turned into an unusual David (scrappy web firms) vs. Goliath (entrenched telecoms) morality metaphor. Despite being three times larger by market capitalization, Google, for example, still has far more “cool” cachet than Comcast, which challenged the FCC. The Davids are also Friends of Obama, giving massively to his presidential campaign.

    But what it all really comes down to is who will pick up the tab for future network upgrades to handle applications such as high-definition video. In a net neutral world where prices were fixed at, essentially, zero, the telecom operators would pay — before passing costs along to consumers, of course. On the other hand, maybe operators want to charge content providers tolls for putting their traffic into express lanes. Or perhaps another business model is just around the bend. Under net neutrality, the current system would be locked into place.

    Government should have high hurdles to clear before setting prices. In the end, net neutrality seems little more than rent-seeking by content providers who wish to use government to distort market forces in their favor. It’s akin to a computer maker successfully lobbying for price controls on shippers like FedEx when transporting goods from China. When it bought new planes, the shipper would have to eat the cost or pass it downstream.

    The Internet tussle is unlikely finished. The FCC might ask for the decision to be reconsidered or seek review by the U.S. Supreme Court. The Obama administration could also turn to Congress to clarify the regulator’s authority. A more radical option, one advocated by consumer groups, would be for the FCC to legally reclassify broadband. Such a move would give the agency broad power to regulate the Internet like it was the old-fashioned landline telephone service. That sort of command-and-control apporach hardly seems a policy suited for the 21st century.

  • Turbodiesel Ford Mustang? Could happen in Europe someday… but would you want it here?

    Filed under: , , , , ,

    2011 Ford Mustang V6 – Click above for high-res image gallery

    For model year 2011, Ford has put three new engines into its Mustang that give the pony car both more power and better fuel efficiency than ever before. Nonetheless, even with a V6 that is rated at 31 miles per gallon on the highway along with 305 horsepower, it would still be hard for Ford to sell the Mustang in Europe. While Ford has occasionally offered the Mustang overseas, it has never been a big seller.

    Now that the automaker is living by the “One Ford” philosophy where it sells the same cars globally, it apparently wants to have One Mustang as well. During last week’s edition of Autoline After Hours, Mustang chief engineer Dave Pericak discussed what it would take to offer the Mustang in Europe where diesel engines are the dominant motivators. Ford builds the 3.0-liter turbodiesel V6 that goes into European Jaguars like the XF and XJ. In its latest incarnation, the V6 diesel produces 270 horsepower and a massive 443 pound-feet of torque. In the XF, this engine is rated at 34.6 mpg (U.S.) combined on the EU test cycle. Similar results could be expected from the lighter Mustang along with decent performance. If such a model ever happens, it is likely still a couple of years off – and it’s unlikely that a diesel Mustang would ever come to America. That said, would you ever want to see it sold here? Drop us a line in ‘Comments.’

    Photos by Drew Phillips / Copyright (C)2010 Weblogs, Inc.

    [Source: Autoline After Hours]

    Turbodiesel Ford Mustang? Could happen in Europe someday… but would you want it here? originally appeared on Autoblog on Tue, 06 Apr 2010 19:28:00 EST. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

    Read | Permalink | Email this | Comments

  • Basically, The Federal Reserve Is Still Paranoid About 1937 Redux

    great depression

    The best thoughts on the Fed minutes come from BTIG’s Mike O’Rourke, who makes two superb points, and ultimately concludes that the Fed board (Mr. Hoenixg excepted) is still in dove mode.

    The March FOMC minutes released today provide interesting insight into the thought process of the FOMC.  In short, the tone of the minutes was one of a Fed that is very cognizant of the danger of a 1937 type scenario in which support is removed too early.  The minutes recited the case made by the doves, who are currently dominating policy.  “A few members also noted that at the current juncture, the risks of an early start to policy tightening exceeded those associated with a later start, because the Committee could be flexible in adjusting the magnitude and pace of tightening in response to evolving economic circumstances; in contrast, its capacity for providing further stimulus through conventional monetary policy easing continued to be constrained by the effective lower bound on the federal funds rate.”  In essence, the FOMC stated that since it came as close as it could to running out of ammunition during the Great Recession, the Fed better not risk curtailing economic momentum as it begins to build up.  The Fed would rather be behind the curve than ahead of it.  The language is very reminiscent of the attitude taken during the 2002-2004 time frame.

    And bear in mind there was a minor language change the pundits initially interpreted as hawkish, but which O’Rourke is reading as dovish:

    Although the “exceptionally and extended” language was not literally dropped by the Fed, it was figuratively dropped when the FOMC redefined it, declaring that a calendar time frame did not apply.  “A number of members noted that the Committee’s expectation for policy was explicitly contingent on the evolution of the economy rather than on the passage of any fixed amount of calendar time.”  

    And that means…

    This reinforces the belief that the Fed does not want to pull any potential policy tightening levers until the very last possible moment, even one as benign as jawboning.  Redefining the language indicates that the FOMC plans to keep it longer (if they were planning to drop it, redefining it would only cause confusion).  Setting up to drop the language at the next meeting would have not have been inconsistent with market expectations for the earliest potential tightening near year end.  There would be little harm in changing the language at the next meeting, except reinforcing expectations that the FOMC sees the potential for rate hikes in late 2010.  One might interpret this as an indication that at this time, the FOMC does not want to reinforce the belief of those who anticipate tightening later this year.  Overall, these minutes give the impression of a Fed that is notably more dovish than both our and the market’s expectations.

    This is probably how the market read the report, as the minutes turned a down day into an up one (basically, the Dow excepted).

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  • The Meanest Town in America: Fake Prom Staged for Lesbian Student?

    Itawamba Agricultural High School students turn their backs on civil rights–and civility

    [UPDATE: Photos from the prom and more now on La Figa.]

    Constance McMillen’s prom was this weekend, and the town of Fulton, Mississippi is getting a reputation as the meanest place in America.

    Last month, a federal judge in Mississippi ruled that Constance McMillen’s rights were violated when she was not allowed to wear a tuxedo and bring her girlfriend to the Itawamba Agricultural High School prom. Judge Davidson would hold a trial on the matter later and stopped short of requiring the school board to reinstate the prom, as parents had already formulated their plan to hold a private prom.

    There was a private prom all right. On Wednesday, the school’s attorney announced that “the prom” was to be held at the Fulton Country Club on Friday. Constance, her date, and seven other kids showed up.

    Because the “real prom” was held in a secret location outside of the county, reports nmisscommentator.

    How rude, cruel and vile.

  • Google Removing All Games from South Korea Android Marketplace [Google]

    There were rumblings last month that South Korea was going to block Android Marketplace because some games hadn’t been reviewed by the Korean Game Rating Board. Oh, yeah, Korea? Well, Google’s gonna just go ahead and exclude all games preemptively. More »







  • The iPad Watch: 04.06.2010


    iPads

    »  Forget Kindle, here’s why iPad is the Google killer. [Mele’s Musings]

    »  Ten reasons why the iPad is good for enterprise users. [eWeek]

    »  The kinds of apps users are downloading. [Bits]

    »  There’s still no official Facebook app and the unofficial one has been pulled from the App Store. [Inside Facebook]

    »  Google’s Tim Bray on the problem with the iPad. [Tim Bray]


  • A different breed of planet?









    L. Cook / Gemini Obs. / NASA / ESA / STScI

    An artist’s conception shows the binary system 2M J044144, with a primary brown
    dwarf surrounded by a disk as well as a planet-sized companion.




    If a gas giant forms like a star, but ends up small enough to be a planet, what do you call it? Astronomers are scratching their heads over a planet classification puzzle that is way bigger than Pluto.

    …(read more)

  • Why Copyright Criminals Filmmakers Won’t Get Sued? Because They’d Win

    Last year we had a post, based on a post by Peter Friedman, suggesting a big reason why Girl Talk hadn’t been sued for creating entirely sample-based music was because there was a good chance that Girl Talk/Gregg Gillis would win that lawsuit, and establish a clear fair use right in sampling. Now, with the more recent discussion about the legality of the documentary Copyright Criminals, Friedman is making the same point again: suggesting that the filmmakers won’t get sued, because they would likely win, and redraw the boundaries of the law on music sampling and fair use:


    But if McLeod is willing to fight a lawsuit — and I think he is — the recording industry won’t sue him. The existing precedents requiring licensing of every single recorded sample would be overturned, and the record industry would [have] lost the appearance created by these precedents, an appearance that makes the vast, vast majority of samplers pay license fees for their samples. It’s better business for the industry to let the occasional brave and creative soul feel as if he’s getting away with something than to have the industry’s precious — and ill-founded — legal precedents put at genuine risk.

    Of course, there’s a separate argument, that has been made by Copycense, that race actually plays a role in this. The musicians who have been sued over sampling tend to be black. Gillis is not:


    Gillis hasn’t been arrested or sued because his socioeconomic status fits what the mainstream wants to see when it talks about this issue. Gillis’ bio reads well for mainstream public relations purposes — he is white, middle-class, and educated — and his basic story (fell in love with music and sampling while studying science at a renown institution of higher learning) is All-American. For establishment folks like Congressman Mike Doyle (D-PA), who represents the district in which Gillis resides and has testified before Congress on Gillis’ behalf, Gillis’ story presents a squeaky clean image of American innovation — and decidedly not sepia-toned humans toiling against misery in dark, sweaty, basements or ghetto community rooms where sampling and hip hop culture were born out of the need to get by with less.

    On that note, while the movie Copyright Criminals features a mix of artists of different races, many are black. However, the main fillmmakers behind the film, Benjamin Franzen and Kembrew McLeod, are both white. I have no idea how much of a role this actually plays in the decisions about who to sue over sampling, in music, but if race really does play into it, that would be a shame.

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  • Transform a wall into a window with Reveal

    A window frame and stirring branches projected by Adam Frank's REVEAL

    Just the other day we brought you the story of SUNLIGHT, an art project featuring a giant solar-powered projection of the sun. It was designed and is being installed by Brooklyn artist Adam Frank. Upon looking over Mr Frank’s website we found an interesting little projector-type thingy-ma-jig that you can set up right in your own home. It’s called REVEAL, and it simulates the sun-cast shadows of a window frame and swaying tree branches on your inside walls. Just the thing for that dingy basement office…

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  • Netflix Reviewed: The iPad’s First “Killer App?”

    I’ve used the free Netflix iPad software daily since Saturday’s iPad launch, and I can honestly say I’ve watched more content in the past three days than I did in the prior three weeks. My Netflix account ($8.99/month) gives me access to the more than 12,000 titles in its Instant Streaming library — and essentially turns my iPad into my own private movie house.

    Set-up is simple and straightforward in the Netflix for iPad software. You simply install the app, open it and sign in with a Netflix account. In under a minute, I was able to log in and view the content library. With one tap of the play button, I was enjoying a movie 10 seconds later. Bear in mind — Netflix only allows six devices for playback authorization. If the iPad is a seventh device for you, you can de-authorize another device on the Netflix web site.

    Playback is silky smooth over Wi-Fi as long as you have a fast Internet connection to your wireless router. My 20 Mbps FiOS pipe is probably overkill, so I also tested Netflix over 3G. No, I don’t have a 3G model of the iPad — those aren’t due out until later this month — but I do have a MiFi device with Verizon Wireless. It connects to Verizon’s EVDO mobile broadband network and shares the connection with my iPad over Wi-Fi, so it’s not a bad simulation. Video quality was still good, but not quite the same caliber. Just as it does with other devices, Netflix adapts the video quality to match your bandwidth throughput. The experience reminds me of the variable bitrate demonstrations I viewed after reading Liz’s GigaOM Pro report (sub req’d) on adaptive bitrate technology. A lower video bitrate shows occasional artifacts or other quality degradation, but I found it to be minimal.

    Occasionally while on 3G the Netflix video simply stopped — but that’s likely more of a connectivity issue than anything else, so iPad 3G owners, take note. Each time this happened, I simply hit the Play button again. I had planned to warn iPad 3G owners about their bandwidth consumption since video streaming can gobble up bits and bytes quite quickly. However, subscribers to AT&T’s $29.99 3G service for iPad aren’t capped at 5 GB as I originally thought. GearLog confirmed with the carrier that the plan is unlimited, so no worries unless you opt for the $14.99/250 MB plan. I wouldn’t recommend the lesser plan if you expect to watch Netflix — enjoying one video leads to another, which leads to another, and so on until your 250 MB tank is empty.

    Like other media, Netflix video content is viewable in either portrait or landscape on the iPad; simply rotate the device to change the view. Like most other video, you’ll see black bars above and below the content because the iPad display isn’t a 16:9 widescreen ratio. Just as with iTunes content, you can zoom the picture with one tap. Zooming removes the bars as content fills the display, but the left and right edges of the picture are cut off.

    There aren’t many playback controls to get in the way of the viewing experience. A simple panel allows for a 30-second instant rewind, playing or pausing, skipping to the end of a movie and adjusting the volume. For fast video scrubbing or movement, simply drag a finger along the progress bar atop the screen. Easy and effective. One minor complaint: Tapping the right-most button brings up the Netflix library while video continues to play. I see no easy way to return to the video without re-selecting it in the library.

    The simplicity and overall quality of the Netflix application combined with the iPad’s connectivity and display make for an outstanding team. Some are mulling the use cases for Apple’s latest creation, but as far as I’m concerned, it’s excellent for content consumption. Netflix streaming with the device only emphasizes that point. The experience is at least as good as that of streaming video on a notebook computer, perhaps more so because there are no distractions on the device. Holding the iPad while watching video can be a drag, though. That’s not reflective of the software, but you may want a dock or stand-up case for your device.

    For those with a Netflix subscription, I’d say this just might be the “killer app” for you and your iPad. And if you don’t use Netflix now, the iPad app could change your mind.