Friday, February 26, 2010

Morning Must Reads from DCExaminer

New York Times -- After the Summit

The Times’ editorial page neatly sums up what the president’s scolding session on health care was all about: checking the “bipartisan outreach” box on the pre-flight checklist for a legislative gambit that would be the most partisan path to such a major change to domestic policy since perhaps the years of radical Republicanism following the Civil War.
Remember that Social Security drew 16 Republican votes in the Senate and only 32 nays in the House (16 from each party). Medicare and Medicaid were created with 70 votes in the Senate and 308 votes in the House.
Blue Dogs are praying that the president (or Rahm Emanuel) really does have a “Plan B” and that he is staging the current preparations for a kamikaze mission in an effort to placate the Left and will, in the end, opt for another build out on the existing welfare state rather than trying to erect a whole new structure.
But the Times seems absolutely giddy that the summit was a flop, believing it demonstrated that Republicans are of no use and ought to be disregarded. They’re ready to start the countdown to the launch of the health care ICBMs.
There are plenty of happy Republicans, too. They were worried that Obama might offer something so juicy (maybe real malpractice reform) that they would look like jerks for refusing to compromise.
Now that Obama has taken it this far, would the Times and the rest of his political base let him turn back?
After all, they still think the House would pass the Senate bill. At best, it seems that Obama will have no choice but to waste weeks and additional political capital trying to ram his proposal through before he can take up a compromise plan – which would mean more weeks lost and more controversy over an issue that voters have had it with.
“Here is a basic fact: If the House Democrats voted tomorrow to approve the Senate bill, health care reform would become the law of the land.
The president and Speaker Nancy Pelosi should push the House to accept the fundamentally sound Senate bill. If they still cannot garner enough votes from their own caucus, they should alter the Senate bill slightly with parallel legislation that could be passed with budget reconciliation.”

Dana Milbank -- Professor Obama schools lawmakers on health-care reform
Spot on.
Milbank gets where Obama was coming from – the position of an annoyed teacher of a remedial class.
You could see in the president’s face as the session went on that he was frustrated by the failure of Republicans to grasp his arguments and eventually bored by their unwillingness to praise his name. Aside from making for boring television, it made for more evidence of Obama’s tendency to like dialogue with those who seek his favor but an inability to engage with those who don’t really care what he thinks about them.
“The 40 lawmakers and administration officials, seated in squeaky chairs around the square, were to speak only when called on. After each talked, Obama would determine whether the speaker's point was a ‘legitimate argument.’
While each of them had to call him ‘Mr. President,’ Obama, often waving an index finger, made sure to refer to each of them by their first name: ‘Thank you, Lamar. . . . We're going to have Nancy and Harry. . . . John, are you going to make the presentation yourself?’
If somebody went on too long, Obama cautioned the lawmaker to be ‘more disciplined.’ When Rep. Dave Camp (R-Mich.) spoke about Medicare cuts, Obama cut him off. ‘I don't mean to interrupt,’ he said, but ‘if every speaker, at least on one side, is going through every provision and saying what they don't like, it's going to be hard for us to see if we can arrive at some agreements.’”

New York Times -- Plan to Seek Use of U.S. Contracts as a Wage Lever
What if the federal government didn’t just give preference to union contractors but put all non-union contractors at a disadvantage?
The president is considering entering an executive order that would mean any company that had been subject to a labor complaint (i.e. every non-union company) would lose points against a more competitor with a more salubrious attitude about wages and work rules (i.e. unionized shops).
The government spends $500 billion with contractors every year.
Writer Steven Greenhouse, developing a story broken by The Daily Caller, seems surprised that people who mow lawns on federal contracts would not make more than $22,000 a year. That won’t even pay for parking in the Upper West Side.
Unions say it will lift wages nationally and actually save money because better-paid workers will be more productive. Maybe, or maybe it will make things more expensive and make government work even more poorly.
“The officials briefed on the plan said it was being developed by officials in the Office of Management and Budget, the White House Office of Legal Counsel, the Treasury, Justice and Labor Departments and the vice president’s Middle Class Task Force.
Even as business groups press the administration for more details, they are denouncing the plan, tentatively named the High Road Procurement Policy.”

Wall Street Journal -- Push to Oversimplify at Climate Panel
Looking to overcome a crisis of confidence the U.N. climate shop is trying for a semi-mea culpa. The departure of climate boss Yvo de Boer, the exposure of cooked climate data, the exclusion of dissenting voices, the revealing of conflicts of interest among leaders and the failure of the Copenhagen summit has left the Holy See of Global Warming.
Even Al Gore allows that some of the data pointing to the dangers of ManBearPig is a bit confusing. It’s still worth spending trillions on, mind you, but he may have overstated things just a teensy bit in the name of a good cause. It was fake certitude with a purpose.
Writers Jeffrey Ball and Keith Johnson take a fascinating look at the Warmists’ walk of shame after using phony facts to convert scare tactics into legislation and treaties.
“Richard Alley, a geoscientist who helped write the IPCC's latest report, issued in 2007, described a trip that summer to Greenland's ice sheet with senators who urged him to be as specific as possible about the potential for sea-level rise. The point many of them made, he said: Give more explicit advice—because, if the sea rises, ‘the levee has to be built some height.’”

New York Post -- House Ethics panel slams Charlie for Caribbean junkets
Charlie Rangel never had any cause for alarm once his fate was in the hands of the House ethics committee.
Rangel, who’s been under fire for a host of shady dealings, is getting a rebuke for trips he and other Congressional Black Caucus members took to St. Maarten, Antigua and Barbuda. It’s great news for Rangel who can now say he was investigated and punished. Rangel is publicly denouncing the findings, but since this means that his other transgressions will likely float away like a palm leaf on the Gulf Stream, he must be thrilled.
Writer Geoff Earle looks at the battle:
“Rangel remains under investigation by the Ethics Committee, which is conducting a wide-ranging probe into whether he failed to pay taxes on rental income from his Dominican villa, as The Post reported; whether he failed to disclose hundreds of thousands of dollars in assets and income, also reported by The Post; and fund-raising he did for a CUNY center named for him.”

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Monday, March 09, 2009

"Why don't you mind your God damned business?"



Would any Democrats and/or liberals PLEASE tell me why you let your party support this crook? I would really like to know why there isn't an outcry in the Democratic party to oust this thief.

h/t Reihl World View

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Wednesday, September 24, 2008

Top Idiots of the Week Awards

Not to be confused with the 3rd Annual Mibloggie Awards. Before I get into this, I have to tell you the milblog conference was a hugh success and everyone was very series about it. ;) Thanks to Matt at Blackfive for throwing one hell of a party at the Penthouse Club last Friday night. Yep, thats right THE PENTHOUSE CLUB!!!!!!!
I have some links here to the evidence, er I mean the photos of the event.
I made it through my Certified Welding Inspector class and took the exam on Saturday. All is well, for now. I'll let you know when my grades come in.
Now on to the Idiots of the Week Awards:
TOP IDIOTS OF THE WEEK AWARDS:

1. The top idiot of the week award goes, hands down, to Dem VP contender Joe Biden, who stated with a straight face that being patriotic means paying higher taxes. No doubt, some will fall for this bunk, which further explains the need for an expanded IDIOT'S list. So many idiots, so little time.

2. Narrowly losing out for first place has to be Washington Redskin's tight end, Chris Cooley, who 'accidentally' posted a photo of his genitals on the Internet. Cooley apologized, saying he was studying, in the nude, and accidentally included his genitalia in a photo of what were supposed to be notes. Right.. He as much as said it ain't no big deal.

3. A would-be robber picked the wrong bar to rob. It turned out Pooh's Corner Bar in Virginia is a cop's bar. This idiot ended up with a shot in the butt. Sometimes, life is fair.
4. Rep. Charlie Rangel, who, after being caught cheating on his taxes, penned an open letter to New Yorkers saying he is the target of a GOP "guerilla war." This, after he managed to keep his leadership post on our nation's tax-writing committee even after evidence of his tax fraud came to light.5. A German teenager engraved a swastika into her hip and then blamed it on right-wing militants. She is currently facing trial.

6. Billionaire George Soros has made this week's list. His hedge fund lost at least $120 million bucks for his investors on the funds' Lehman Brothers holdings. Welcome, George. Hope to see you back here real soon.

7. Our 'social justice' award has to go to the group of protesters who gathered outside John McCain's Crystal City condo, demanding McCain give them his condo. Too much koolaid for those kids. What do you want to bet they're all Obama supporters?

8. Last, but not least, we must acknowledge those zany Democrat leaders who, as the world teetered on the brink of financial ruin last week, suggested issuing gas stamps to help Americans cope with high gas prices.

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Wednesday, August 20, 2008

Democrats and Veterans

From GOPUSA by Scott Swett

Scott Swett is the primary author of a new book on the 2004 presidential campaign, To Set The Record Straight: How Swift Boat Veterans, POWs and the New Media Defeated John Kerry. He is also the primary webmaster of SwiftVets.com and WinterSoldier.com.


The Democrats recently announced the theme for the day that Sen. Barack Obama's running mate will speak at the Democratic National Convention in Denver -- "national security and honoring veterans." This may well provide a hint about who the vice-presidential selection will be, as it seems unlikely that such a theme would be used to frame a nominee who, like Sen. Obama, has no military experience.
Before speculating about the most likely candidate, let's take a few moments to review ways in which the Democratic Party has gone about "honoring" the US military in the past.

In November of 2000, during the statewide vote recount in Florida, Al Gore and the Democrats sent lawyers to every voting district in the state, armed with detailed instructions on how to disqualify military absentee ballots. Peggy Noonan reported that "...Democrats on the ground, and their operators from the Democratic National Committee and the state organization and the Gore campaign, deliberately and systematically scrutinized for challenge every military absentee ballot, and knocked out as many as they could on whatever technicality they could find or even invent."

Early in 2004, evidence emerged that a small group of Army prison guards had humiliated and abused captive insurgents at Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. The abuses were discovered by the Army itself, and those responsible were duly tried, convicted and sentenced. Nevertheless, leftists eager to discredit the US military seized upon these trivial events as though they constituted the most important story of the war. Sen. Edward Kennedy rose in the Senate to charge that "Saddam's torture chambers reopened under new management -- US management." By June, the New York Times had featured Abu Ghraib stories on its front page more than 50 times, including a string of 28 days in a row. The purpose was evident -- to undermine support for the military and its mission by persuading the public that American troops were brutal abusers.

Leftist filmmaker Michael Moore was a welcome guest at the 2004 Democratic National Convention, where he sat in former President Jimmy Carter's box seat. Yet Moore had openly embraced those who ambushed and killed US troops, saying that "the Iraqis who have risen up against the occupation are not 'insurgents' or 'terrorists' or 'the enemy.' They are the revolution, the Minutemen, and their numbers will grow -- and they will win." Ohio Democratic Representative Marcy Kaptur echoed this view, suggesting that "...Osama bin Laden and these non-nation-state fighters with religious purpose are very similar to those kinds of atypical revolutionaries that helped to cast off the British crown." This is a particularly novel way to support our troops -- by comparing their enemies to the patriots who fought for American independence.

In 2005, Illinois Senator Dick Durbin compared the treatment of terrorist suspects held at Guantanamo, Cuba to the crimes committed "by Nazis, Soviets in their gulags, or some mad regime -- Pol Pot or others -- that had no concern for human beings." In fact, no prisoners had died at Guantanamo, whereas some fifteen to thirty million Soviets expired in the gulags, six million Jews were killed in Nazi concentration camps, and two million Cambodians were murdered by Pol Pot's communist Khmer Rouge. A Pentagon spokesman noted that all members of Congress were welcome to inspect the Guantanamo facilities -- something Sen. Durbin had never done. Public outrage eventually prompted Durbin to offer a qualified apology "...if anything I said cast a negative light on our fine men and women in the military."

In 2006, Democratic Congressman John Murtha falsely claimed that US Marines who had battled in Haditha, Iraq had "killed innocent civilians in cold blood." Marine Corps officials pointed out that Murtha had not yet been briefed on the event at the time he made his atrocity allegations. Charges against nearly all participants in the Haditha engagement have since been dismissed. The Marine staff sergeant who led the squad recently filed a federal defamation lawsuit against Murtha that has yet to come to trial.

Later the same year, New York Democrat Charles Rangel explained why young Americans join the military -- they aren't capable of doing anything else. Congressman Rangel said, incorrectly, that most members of the military "come from very, very high areas of unemployment" and denied that they "want to fight." Rangel further displayed his deep respect for US troops by adding that if a young man "...has an option of having a decent career or joining the army to fight in Iraq, you can bet your life that he would not be in Iraq."

Sen. Tom Harkin recently suggested that Sen. John McCain's military background is a liability rather than an asset. "Everything is looked at from his life experiences, from always having been in the military," said Harkin, "and I think that can be pretty dangerous."

Presidential nominee Obama also took a few moments last year to honor the US military for its ongoing campaign in Afghanistan, by suggesting that it consisted primarily of "air-raiding villages and killing civilians...."

Who then is the Democrat best qualified to continue this tradition as Barack Obama's running mate? The choice is obvious: former nominee John Kerry. Kerry started his political career in 1971 by falsely accusing American troops of committing genocide in Vietnam. He accused his own Navy comrades of war crimes.

His Vietnam Veterans Against the War created the dysfunctional caricature of Vietnam veterans that Hollywood and the media embraced for three decades.
Perhaps more than anyone else, John Kerry is responsible for the way our Vietnam veterans were treated -- with contempt and pity, rather than respect.

After his unsuccessful attempt to market himself as a war hero in 2004, Kerry soon reverted to form, claiming that US troops were "going into homes of Iraqis in the dead of night, terrorizing kids and children..." Kerry's own effort to compete in the 2008 cycle was derailed by his revealing suggestion to a college audience that "if you study hard and you do your homework... you can do well. If you don't, you get stuck in Iraq."
So fire up the sound system. Launch the balloons. And let the honoring of America's veterans begin.

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