Thursday, July 2, 2015
Wednesday, July 1, 2015
June 2015 temperature anomaly for Grand Rapids, MI: 1.7 degrees F below normal
The total cumulative anomaly for 2015 rises to 19.7 degrees F below normal through June, from 18 degrees below normal through May.
Tuesday, June 30, 2015
Obama lives in his own world, but Chris Christie lives in the long-dead NE liberal Republican world of compromise
Here:
“If Washington and Jefferson and Adams had believed compromise is a dirty word, we’d still be under the crown of England,” he said, promising to work with Democrats who had good ideas to fix America.
Last time I checked, Jefferson and Adams supported the General, George Washington, whom they appointed to SHOOT at the crown's representatives in America, the Redcoats, not to compromise with them.
Labels:
Barack Obama,
Breitbart,
Chris Christie,
England,
George Washington,
Redcoats
You can blame The Greatest Generation for same sex marriage
From Joel Miller, here:
'The values changed all the way back in the forties and fifties. In that sense, the gay marriage battle was already over when Eisenhower was in the White House. How so?
'[Historian Alan] Petigny describes what he calls the Permissive Turn, a liberalization of values that happened following World War II. Some of it came down to a “renunciation of renunciation.” The war had demanded a great deal of austerity and self-sacrifice. But with Germany and Japan subdued, it was time to live it up. Americans plowed their prosperity into material self-gratification. But there was more.
'At the same time, the culture witnessed a shift in the way we viewed human nature. We swapped the traditional American view, grounded in a certain pessimism inherited from the Protestant understanding of original sin, for the newly refurbished and Americanized psychotherapy. ... Religion, morality, even reality were now questions of self-fulfillment—making truth subjective and traditional truth claims irrelevant and meaningless.'
Monday, June 29, 2015
President signs Trade Promotion Authority (Fast Track) knocked off the news by Supreme Court decisions
The Senate passed TPA last Wednesday, on the 24th, 60-38, but the next day ObamaCare was upheld by the Supremes and the following day Same Sex Marriage, both of which sensational developments obliterated the trade story from the news cycle. The trade vote story from last Wednesday is here. The roll call vote is here. Once again just five Republicans in the Senate voted against the job-destroying measure: Collins, Cruz, Paul, Sessions and Shelby. The same five who voted against bringing the measure to the floor.
The signing story from today is here.
They do what they want to do. We have no say in the matter. But if we vote for any of the principals, we are complicit in the deed.
The country is shell-shocked by it all, walking about in a daze, the part of it that cares anyway.
Obama has had a huge week, winning everything consequential, with Republican help in the Congress and the Court, meaning Speaker Boehner, Majority Leader McConnell and Reagan appointee Justice Kennedy.
The only thing Obama lost and the people won was the Supremes' rebuke of the EPA on coal. Your electric bill will go up later rather than sooner.
The last days of this administration are dark indeed.
Trump: NBC stands behind lyin' Brian Williams, but not behind me
From the story here:
After NBCUniversal severed its relationships with Donald Trump on Monday, the billionaire businessman and presidential candidate responded by invoking suspended NBC anchorman Brian Williams and threatening to meet NBC in court. ...
"If NBC is so weak and so foolish to not understand the serious illegal immigration problem in the United States, coupled with the horrendous and unfair trade deals we are making with Mexico, then their contract violating closure of Miss Universe/Miss USA will be determined in court. Furthermore, they will stand behind lying Brian Williams, but won't stand behind people that tell it like it is, as unpleasant as that may be."
Labels:
billionaires,
Brian Williams,
CNN,
Donald Trump 2015,
illegal aliens
ObamaCare is a problem created by Congress: Congress should have fixed it, not the Supremes
Deb Saunders, here:
'As a conservative, I think it serves the country best if elected officials, not judges, repair what's wrong in Obamacare. Former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, a 2016 GOP presidential hopeful, hit the right note when he said he did not agree with the ruling. "It was never up to the Supreme Court to save us from Obamacare," he said in a statement issued Thursday.
'Because the Democratic Congress wrote a heavy-handed provision that the Obama White House determined it was best to ignore, the Supreme Court got handed a live grenade. With all the Democratic justices on board, Roberts jumped on the grenade -- leading with a bogus argument.'
Saturday, June 27, 2015
Obstruction of justice: Hillary Clinton caught lying about turning over "all" emails to State Department
From The New York Times report, here:
The State Department said on Thursday that 15 emails sent or received by Hillary Rodham Clinton were missing from records that she has turned over, raising new questions about whether she deleted work-related emails from the private account she used exclusively while in office. ... State Department officials then crosschecked the emails from Mr. Blumenthal with the ones Mrs. Clinton had handed over and discovered that she had not provided nine of them and portions of six others. Nick Merrill, a spokesman for Mrs. Clinton, who is running for president, said that she had given the State Department “over 55,000 pages of materials,” including “all emails in her possession from Mr. Blumenthal.”
Friday, June 26, 2015
Thursday, June 25, 2015
Senate Republicans reach peak stupidity, receive praise from liberals Bob Dole and Trent Lott
Run for the barf bag. Americans elected Republicans to stop Obama, but instead they are helping him, and liberal Republicans Bob Dole and Trent Lott are tickled pink that Mitch McConnell is making it happen.
Here.
Trump understands that JOBS are Americans' main concern
So says John Crudele, here:
'I think Donald Trump — if he can stop himself from saying crazy things about his wealth, immigration and such — will be a very important factor in the 2016 election. Why? Because he understands that the main concern in this country today is the economy — which is another way of saying “jobs.” That was the chief thing on people’s minds in 2012 and during the last congressional election in 2014. It still is today and will be throughout the primaries and right up to the 2016 election. “I will be the greatest job president God ever created,” Trump said last week. People are worried about immigration because the newcomers will take the scant jobs available. China is bothersome because its manufacturing might is sapping jobs from the US. One group in this country doesn’t like another group because we are all fighting for the same jobs. Jobs, jobs, jobs!'
Wednesday, June 24, 2015
Ann Coulter: No greater army ever took the field than the Confederate Army
Ann Coulter, here:
"The Confederate flag we're talking about never flew over an official Confederate building. It was a battle flag. It is to honor Robert E. Lee. And anyone who knows the first thing about military history, knows that there is no greater army that ever took the field than the Confederate Army."
Tuesday, June 23, 2015
Just 5 Senate Republicans voted against advancing TPA to a vote, which succeeded 60-37
Collins of Maine
Cruz of Texas
Paul of Kentucky
Sessions of Alabama
Shelby of Alabama
Corker of Tennessee and Lee of Utah didn't bother to vote.
Make no mistake: 47 Republicans made this happen, with the cooperation of 13 Democrats.
Did Americans elect Republicans to help Obama, or stop him? If it were to help him, wouldn't it have been easier to elect Democrats?
The Roll Call is here.
Neanderthal US General Stephen Wilson should know about raising rhetoric, compares Vladimir Putin to Adolph Hitler
You should be very afraid when a man with his finger on the nuclear trigger like General Wilson exposes himself as a demonizing thinker. The man is at the top of US Global Air Strike Command but has the intellectual subtlety of an anvil.
Here:
Lieutenant General Stephen Wilson, commander of US Global Air Strike Command, said: “I don’t think we’ve ever seen so much power put in one person in Russia, and some of the things happening there are troubling and concerning for everybody.” He added: “[They’ve] annexed a country, changing international borders, raising rhetoric unlike we’ve heard since the cold war times, and so lots of people are trying to figure out what is the strategic intent of Russia. Some of the actions by Russia recently we haven’t seen since the 1930s, when whole countries were annexed and borders were changed by decree.”
Monday, June 22, 2015
Europe's being invaded by Muslims and all you care about is Kim Kardashian's big butt
Taki here:
"First we had the suicide of two world wars, then a de-Christianized Europe led by the crooks in Brussels conning everyone about the need for cheap labor and letting in millions upon millions of Muslims. Charles Martel stopped them in Tours, Don John in Lepanto, and John Sobieski at the Vienna gates, but now they’re in and they’re staying. ... The fourth and final African invasion is taking place as I write this, but most of the media are busy covering Jay Z, the Kardashians, and the odd white policeman who handcuffs a black criminal."
Friday, June 19, 2015
Republican establishment already wants to exclude Trump from televised debates because he naturally overshadows everyone else
featured in the story |
The Wall Street Journal eagerly reports here, deliberately featuring a ridiculous photograph of Trump:
Some in the GOP are counseling that Mr. Trump be kept out of candidate forums and debates. “His involvement in any televised debate will be damaging,” said Matt Mackowiak, a Republican strategist based in Texas. “It is my sincere hope that he is blocked from participating.” “He’s a very toxic addition to the field,’’ said Katie Packer Gage, deputy campaign manager of Mitt Romney’s 2012 presidential campaign. Mr. Trump so far has been invited to a number of GOP candidate forums, including one sponsored by the conservative website RedState slated for early August in Atlanta. Erick Erickson, the editor in chief of RedState, said he had concerns about including Mr. Trump but extended an invitation. “We invited him yesterday,” Mr. Erickson said. “I like him. … There is a level of the conservative base who like him. My concern is that I don’t want the other candidates to be overshadowed by Trump.”
Thursday, June 18, 2015
Minus TAA, Fastrack Trade Authority passes the House 218-208 thanks to 28 Democrats
The measure faces an uncertain future in the Senate, where TAA is critical for Democrat support.
Just 50 Republicans voted against the so-called free-trade measure both times (the latest Roll Call vote is here), vs. 54 previously (Gosar, Jolly and Young of Alaska didn't vote this time, and Yoho switched to "Aye", while previous "Aye" votes Byrne, Rodney Davis, and Kelly of Mississippi didn't vote this time):
Aderholt Amash Brat Bridenstine Brooks (AL) Buck Burgess Clawson (FL) Collins (GA) Collins (NY) Cook Donovan Duncan (SC) Duncan (TN) Farenthold Fleming Garrett | Gibson Gohmert Griffith Harris Hunter Jenkins (WV) Jones Jordan Joyce Katko Labrador LoBiondo Lummis MacArthur Massie McKinley Meadows Mooney (WV) Mulvaney | Nugent Palmer Pearce Perry Poliquin Posey Rohrabacher Rothfus Russell Smith (NJ) Webster (FL) Westmoreland Wittman Zeldin |
Wednesday, June 17, 2015
P. J. O'Rourke is a know nothing, about the dress of Donald Trump and of George Washington
Here:
Show me one candidate who has the dignity of Washington . . ..
[T]ypical of modern Americans is Trump’s bad taste. ... He puts his own individual stamp on gaucherie. And we like it. We’re a country that cherishes being individuals as much as we cherish being gauche.
Trump’s suits have a cut and sheen as if they came from the trunk sale of a visiting Bombay tailor staying in a cheap hotel in Trump’s native Queens and taking a nip between fittings. Trump wears neckties in Outer Borough colors. And, Donald, the end of your necktie belongs up around your belt buckle, not between your knees and your nuts. Trump’s haircut makes Kim Jong Un laugh.
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Washington abandoned the parodied powdered wig of custom and tied and powdered his own long hair, and to his first inauguration as president he deliberately wore a suit made from brown broadcloth from Connecticut instead of the formal black imported from Britain in order to drive home his Americanism.
To say one likes Trump's gaucherie is completely disingenuous while pivoting to correct it. It shows that P. J. O'Rourke's libertarianism is short on the Americanism and long on the snobbery of cosmopolitan liberalism, the readership of The Daily Beast.
To say one likes Trump's gaucherie is completely disingenuous while pivoting to correct it. It shows that P. J. O'Rourke's libertarianism is short on the Americanism and long on the snobbery of cosmopolitan liberalism, the readership of The Daily Beast.
The Wall Street Journal decides to ignore Donald Trump on trade
That way, maybe he'll just go away.
Here, where the easy mark is Huckabee:
"Candidates who oppose free trade don’t belong in the Oval Office."
Donald Trump when no one is watching
Erick Erickson, here:
There is one more thing I want you to know about Donald Trump. I’ve met him and interviewed him before. When the camera was not on and the interview was not going, he was not The Donald. He was a guy who cared deeply for his staff and the people who merely walked in the front door of his building. I want you to know that the Donald Trump I’ve seen in private is not the Donald Trump you see on stage because I think we are not going to see that Trump. It’s our loss and it will be his own loss. The person, a separate entity from the personality, is a good man.
The reason I don’t much care for Rick Santorum is that I’ve seen him, off camera and behind the scenes when no one was supposed to be watching, behave like a spoiled and entitled rich kid snapping at people in a lower position than himself when he did not need to. It’s also why I have a soft spot for Trump. From the same vantage point, I’ve seen him behave kindly to people far lower on the rung of life than him when he did not have to. Character when the camera isn’t rolling counts in my book.
National Review libertarian wastes no time expressing his fear of what Donald Trump will do to the 2016 race
Kevin Williamson, here, goes first in the politics of personal destruction (a National Review specialty):
"Witless ape rides escalator down"
"the ridiculous buffoon with the worst taste since Caligula"
"grunting like a baboon" (I'll leave out what he said about his wife)
"Trump is an ass of exceptionally intense asininity"
"a billionaire dope"
"The problem with messiah complexes is that there’s no way to know whether you are going to rise on the third day unless somebody crucifies you. Trump has announced, and I say we get started on that."
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Get started? There's more?
Tuesday, June 16, 2015
Hillary Clinton was for the TransPacificPartnership only 45 times before she was against it
John F. Kerry was a piker by comparison.
CNN reports:
'But as members of the Obama administration can attest, Clinton was one of the leading drivers of the TPP when Secretary of State. Here are 45 instances when she approvingly invoked the trade bill about which she is now expressing concerns:'
The rest is here.
Trump pulls the trigger, runs for president as a Republican
[H]e said he'll be "the greatest jobs-president that God ever created" . . ..
He said he will: "repeal and replace the Big Lie, Obamacare";
"build a great, great wall on our southern border, and I will have Mexico pay for that wall" ("nobody builds walls better than me");
and "find the General Patton or … General MacArthur" in the U.S. military to fight the Islamic State.
More here.
Glengariff poll in Michigan obviously skewed by opinions of Lansing elites, designed to get the results it wanted
The socially liberal results of the Glengariff poll reported here were skewed by polling "Lansing leaders" and "Michigan residents". What counts is voters, and a decent sample size of same.
From the story:
"The 600-person representative sample of state voters, Lansing leaders and Michigan residents found that participants have different views on gay rights."
Monday, June 15, 2015
Parsing the meaning of Libya email: Oh we thought you just wanted the BENGHAZI email, you want the Libya too?
Hillary better hope the State Dept. has all the same email Sidney Blumenthal has just turned over.
From the Politico story here:
'House GOP Benghazi investigators have discovered additional Libya communications between Sidney Blumenthal and former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, a congressional source told POLITICO — suggesting that either the State Department or the 2016 Democratic presidential contender withheld correspondence the panel had requested. ...
'At the crux of the back and fourth is whether the committee specifically asked State for all Clinton’s Libya emails or only Benghazi-related emails. State says the panel initially asked for Benghazi material and only recently expanded that request to include all correspondence on the Middle Eastern nation. But the initial requests for information from Clinton did include all Libya correspondence, according to the congressional source.'
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Obstructing justice. The Hillary gift that keeps on . . . er . . . not giving.
Sunday, June 14, 2015
British newspaper and David Cameron government try to smear Edward Snowden
The Guardian reports on the story, here:
'Downing Street and the Home Office are being challenged to answer in public claims that Russia and China have broken into the secret cache of Edward Snowden files and that British agents have had to be withdrawn from live operations as a consequence.
'The reports first appeared in the Sunday Times, which quoted anonymous senior officials in No 10, the Home Office and security services. The BBC also quoted an anonymous senior government source, who said agents had to be moved because Moscow gained access to classified information that reveals how they operate. ...
'[Eric King of Privacy International] added that if Downing Street and the Home Office believed that Russia and China had gained access to the Snowden documents, then why was the government not putting this out through official channels.
'He added: “Given Snowden is facing espionage charges in the US, you would have thought the British government would have provided them with this information.”'
The Guardian destroyed the Snowden hard drives in front of British security in July 2013 after the British government threatened to shut down the newspaper, as reported here:
'New video footage has been released for the first time of the moment Guardian editors destroyed computers used to store top-secret documents leaked by the NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden.
'Under the watchful gaze of two technicians from the British government spy agency GCHQ, the journalists took angle-grinders and drills to the internal components, rendering them useless and the information on them obliterated.'
The Guardian acknowledged at the time that the Snowden files exist in other jurisdictions:
'[The Guardian's] Rusbridger told government officials that destruction of the Snowden files would not stop the flow of intelligence-related stories since the documents existed in several jurisdictions. He explained that Glenn Greenwald, the Guardian US columnist who met Snowden in Hong Kong, had leaked material in Rio de Janeiro. There were further copies in America, he said.'
The 86 Republicans who voted for TAA/the 54 who voted against TPP: Just five appear in both lists
Aderholt Barletta Barr Barton Benishek Bishop (MI) Blum Bost Boustany Brady (TX) Brooks (IN) Calvert Coffman Cole Comstock Costello (PA) Crenshaw Curbelo (FL) Davis, Rodney Dent Dold Donovan Emmer (MN) Fitzpatrick Fortenberry | Frelinghuysen Graves (MO) Grothman Guinta Guthrie Hanna Herrera Beutler Huizenga (MI) Hurt (VA) Issa Johnson (OH) Jolly Katko Kelly (PA) King (NY) Kinzinger (IL) Kline Luetkemeyer Marino McCarthy McHenry McKinley McMorris Rodgers Meehan Messer Mica Miller (MI) Moolenaar Murphy (PA) Nunes | Paulsen Pitts Reed Reichert Rigell Rogers (AL) Rogers (KY) Rokita Roskam Royce Ryan (WI) Scalise Shimkus Shuster Simpson Stefanik Stivers Thompson (PA) Thornberry Tiberi Trott Turner Upton Valadao Wagner Walberg Walden Walters, Mimi Whitfield Wilson (SC) Young (IA) |
The roll call vote for the TAA is here. John Boehner notably voted "No" with Nancy Pelosi and the Democrats to defeat TAA in order to be able to say at election time that he has street-cred as a conservative. Typically the Speaker doesn't vote unless the outcome the Speaker supports is in doubt. This was obviously a throw-away vote for him.
Failing 126-302, the bill was one half of a binary bill passed by the Senate which would have provided assistance to US workers displaced by the trade agreement. Its defeat meant the whole bill including the free trade half of the bill, TPP, would not advance to the president's desk for a signature.
A symbolic vote (roll call here) for the free trade half of the bill, TPP, passed 219-211, with these 54 Republicans voting "No" (note the five in blue, who appeared in both lists and voted in this instance ostensibly for the worker and against free trade):
Democrats who voted for TAA and against TPP were similarly few in number, just thirteen: Bass, Carney, Clyburn, Eshoo, Foster, Heck (WA), Hoyer, Israel, Larson (CT), Perlmutter, Price (NC), Richmond, and Smith (WA).
A symbolic vote (roll call here) for the free trade half of the bill, TPP, passed 219-211, with these 54 Republicans voting "No" (note the five in blue, who appeared in both lists and voted in this instance ostensibly for the worker and against free trade):
Aderholt Amash Brat Bridenstine Brooks (AL) Buck Burgess Clawson (FL) Collins (GA) Collins (NY) Cook Donovan Duncan (SC) Duncan (TN) Farenthold Fleming Garrett | Gibson Gohmert Gosar Griffith Harris Hunter Jenkins (WV) Jolly Jones Jordan Joyce Katko Labrador LoBiondo Lummis MacArthur Massie McKinley Meadows Mooney (WV) Mulvaney | Nugent Palmer Pearce Perry Poliquin Posey Rohrabacher Rothfus Russell Smith (NJ) Webster (FL) Westmoreland Wittman Yoho Young (AK) Zeldin |
Democrats who voted for TAA and against TPP were similarly few in number, just thirteen: Bass, Carney, Clyburn, Eshoo, Foster, Heck (WA), Hoyer, Israel, Larson (CT), Perlmutter, Price (NC), Richmond, and Smith (WA).
Saturday, June 13, 2015
Completed foreclosures in April 2015 reported by Corelogic still running 90% above normal
The level has not budged much from October 2014 when there were 41,000 completed foreclosures.
Seen here:
There were 40,000 completed foreclosures nationwide in April 2015, down from 50,000 in April 2014. ...
Completed foreclosures are an indication of the total number of homes actually lost to foreclosure. Since the financial crisis began in September 2008, there have been approximately 5.7 million completed foreclosures across the country, and since homeownership rates peaked in the second quarter of 2004, there have been approximately 7.8 million homes lost to foreclosure. ...
As a basis of comparison, before the decline in the housing market in 2007, completed foreclosures averaged 21,000 per month nationwide between 2000 and 2006.
George Will appears content with judicial tyranny, the price we pay for stymieing the legislative and executive
Here:
With the composition of the Supreme Court likely to change substantially during the next president’s tenure, conservatives must decide: Is majority rule or liberty — these are not synonyms, and the former can menace the latter — America’s fundamental purpose?
A healthy housing market would have 1-2% underwater, but we still have 15% with negative equity
Mostly in the lowest third of valuation.
From the Bloomberg story, here:
"A decade after U.S. home sales peaked, 15.4 percent of owners in the first quarter owed more on their mortgages than their properties were worth, according to a report Friday by Zillow Inc. While that’s down from a high of 31.4 percent in 2012, it’s still alarmingly above the 1 or 2 percent that marks a healthy market, said [Stan] Humphries, the chief economist at the Seattle-based real-estate data provider. Worse yet: The pace of healing is losing steam. ... While 25.5 percent of homes valued in the lowest third are underwater, just 14.1 percent of those in the middle have negative equity. For the top group, the figure is even lower -- 8.3 percent."
Friday, June 12, 2015
Underwater mortgages still number 8 million, down from 25.5 million in 2011
From the story here:
"Nearly eight million borrowers, or 15.4 percent of homeowners with a mortgage, still owe more than their homes are worth, according to Zillow. While the numbers continue to improve, about half of those borrowers owe the bank at least 20 percent more than their homes are worth."
Thursday, June 11, 2015
I just got the call from the fraudsters posing as the IRS trying to shake-down the sheeple
The call originates from Bainbridge Island, Washington, and the number is 206-201-2799.
The voice is female, obviously a computer.
Presidents ranked by average monthly additions to total nonfarm employment in the post war, not seasonally adjusted
Clinton: 235,000
Carter: 215,000
Reagan: 166,000
JFK/LBJ: 164,000
Obama to date: 136,000 (77 months 1-1-09 to 5-1-15)
Nixon/Ford: 115,000
Truman: 111,000 (1949-1952/drops to 87,000 going back to April 1945 when FDR died)
GHW Bush: 49,000
Eisenhower: 34,500
GW Bush: 13,500
John Crudele isn't running for president
But he has some good ideas and some not so good ideas, just like those who are:
"When there are plenty of jobs, immigrants are no longer as unwelcome."
"[A]ll you have to do is change the rules regarding how people can use their trillions in retirement savings, and you’ll give a big boost to the economy that neither spendthrift politicians nor the Federal Reserve can accomplish now."
Read the rest, here.
Doug Short makes our point: Part-time surged because of the recession, not because of ObamaCare
Here:
"With regard to Obamacare and part-time employment, the surge in part-time employment was triggered by the recession, not by the Affordable Care Act, as the next chart clearly illustrates."
---------------------------------------------------------
After studying the issue since 2010 we first began to express doubts about the meme that ObamaCare part-timed the country in July of 2013, here.
In August 2013 here we realized a part-timing trend, to be real, would have to show up in the hours data and wasn't.
By September 2013 here we were calling the meme a myth, and here we identified the part-time statistics as incapable of capturing such a trend due to the high bar set by the government definition of part-time as less than 35 hours worked.
In October 2013 here we blamed the part-time explosion on the recession.
In February 2014 we noted here that The Atlantic had finally caught on.
Mish started to catch on in September 2014, here.
Now Doug Short joins the party.
Hooray.
I still want my Pulitzer.
---------------------------------------------------------
After studying the issue since 2010 we first began to express doubts about the meme that ObamaCare part-timed the country in July of 2013, here.
In August 2013 here we realized a part-timing trend, to be real, would have to show up in the hours data and wasn't.
By September 2013 here we were calling the meme a myth, and here we identified the part-time statistics as incapable of capturing such a trend due to the high bar set by the government definition of part-time as less than 35 hours worked.
In October 2013 here we blamed the part-time explosion on the recession.
In February 2014 we noted here that The Atlantic had finally caught on.
Mish started to catch on in September 2014, here.
Now Doug Short joins the party.
Hooray.
I still want my Pulitzer.
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
Reason dot com caves to the tyranny's censors
Libertarianism doesn't really believe in what it says it believes in, and can't save you from what's coming. They fold like a house of cards.
Seen here:
"Wielding subpoenas demanding information on anonymous commenters, the government is harassing a respected journalism site that dissents from its policies. The U.S. Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New York claims these comments could constitute violent threats, even though they’re clearly hyperbolic political rhetoric. ... Reason has since removed the offending comments."
Newspeak from the Orwellian president: Ending ObamaCare would punish millions with higher costs of care
Oldspeak from the true born sons of liberty: ObamaCare has already punished millions with higher costs of care, when they can find it.
Here.
Monday, June 8, 2015
A clear majority of Americans has a stupid view about Vladimir Putin
Seen here:
It helps [Republicans] that the 62-year-old former KGB officer is deeply unpopular in the United States. A survey by the non-partisan Pew Research Center in February said Putin was viewed unfavorably by 70 percent of Americans.
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Russia is nominally a Christian country, like the United States. It is ethnically northern European, like the United States whose single largest hyphenated population remains German. Both countries share an interest in countering an increasingly aggressive Communist China as well as radical Islam, especially in Syria, Iraq, Iran and Afghanistan. Both powers share an interest in a free, demilitarized and prosperous Europe with which both can trade to everyone's benefit.
It should be a no-brainer for the West to embrace Russia. Once China moves on Taiwan and the South China Sea that may become easier, if then is not too late.
Labels:
Afghanistan,
CNBC,
communist,
Islam,
South China Sea,
Taiwan,
Vladimir Putin
Matt Latimer forgets that the Clintons win only by pluralities
In other words, Clintons win only when they can successfully divide the opposition, usually along the conservative/libertarian fault lines of taxes, sex and trade. Right now, however, it is Hillary who is more than decisively on the wrong side of an issue which divides her side. She's been dumped before for the better candidate, and can be again.
Here:
Much is now being made of a CNN poll finding that a majority of Americans—57 percent—do not believe Hillary Clinton is honest or trustworthy. But is that really news? Roughly half of the country has felt that way for a long time. Forty-three percent of Americans said that a year ago. And forty-six percent said that back in 2007. Under the headline, “Hillary Clinton’s honesty problem,” an earnest reporter for The Hill newspaper asks, “Is it possible to win the White House if more than half the electorate thinks you’re dishonest?” Uh, of course, it is, people. The Clintons do this all the time.
Sunday, June 7, 2015
Democrats broke nearly every promise about ObamaCare
Jack Kelly here:
Nearly every promise Democrats made has been broken. The average family pays more (some much more) for insurance, not $2,500 less. About 9 million Americans (so far) have learned they couldn’t keep the health plans they had if they wanted. Or some of their doctors.
Federal spending for health didn’t go down. It’s zoomed upward. So have emergency room visits. Overhead costs are exploding.
The Congressional Budget Office estimates that Obamacare will lower full-time employment by 2.3 million in 2021, compared with what might have been without reform.
The ACA has hurt millions more than it’s helped. The worst is yet to come. President Barack Obama delayed or altered (mostly illegally) unpopular provisions at least 50 times. If they’re implemented fully, up to 100 million who get insurance from their employers could have their policies canceled, the American Enterprise Institute has estimated.
The Chicago Sun-Times ignores the fact that people HERE haven't answered for ONE DAMN THING
Edward Snowden has already answered for what he has done. He's sacrificed everything, and lives in exile for defending a principle called the Fourth Amendment.
The conclusion of the stupid effing Sun-Times editorial here:
"Edward Snowden, for all the undeniable good he has done, still has much to answer for."
Friday, June 5, 2015
Crackpot Rand Paul thinks proportional justice is putting James Clapper and Edward Snowden in the same jail cell
With friends like this, who needs enemies?
Snowden's already in a jail cell. It's called exile. He gave up everything to defend a principle Americans used to believe in.
Meanwhile Clapper lied under oath and obstructed justice, did not lose his job, and will not lose any of his taxpayer-funded retirement, but the government's violation of Americans' fourth amendment rights continues unabated.
Video here.
Labels:
4th Amendment,
Edward Snowden,
James Clapper,
proportion,
Rand Paul
Thursday, June 4, 2015
Wednesday, June 3, 2015
Russia's Sergey Lavrov: Obama is failing because he hates Assad more than terrorism
Quoted here:
"If people continue to acquiesce with what is going on, and continue to acquiesce with those who categorically refuse to start the political process until Bashar Assad disappears then I am not very optimistic for the future of this region," he said.
"Because these people put the fate of one person whom they hate on top of the fight against terrorism," Lavrov said.
"We have been through this repeatedly. Saddam Hussein was the one person after whom the United States went and they ruined the country."
"Gaddafi is the same," he said, referring to Libya's fallen dictator.
Labels:
Barack Obama,
Bashar al-Assad,
dictator,
Saddam Hussein,
Sergey Lavrov,
Syria,
terrorism
Tuesday, June 2, 2015
Grand Rapids, MI, 2015 temperature anomaly through May: 18 degrees F below normal
May 2015 was 2.2 degrees F above normal in Grand Rapids, MI.
The total anomaly for 2015 to date contracted from 20.2 degrees F below normal in April to 18 degrees F below normal in May.
The total anomaly for 2014 January through May was 24.2 degrees F below normal, 34% colder than presently to date.
Monday, June 1, 2015
Security Theatre still the rule at airports: DHS punks the TSA 95% of the time
Sneaking through explosives and weapons.
And forget about baggage screening.
From the story here:
"In addition, the review determined that despite spending $540 million for checked baggage screening equipment and another $11 million for training since a previous review in 2009, the TSA failed to make any noticeable improvements in that time."
Sunday, May 31, 2015
Saturday, May 30, 2015
Thursday, May 28, 2015
Wednesday, May 27, 2015
Delusional Rand Paul might as well run as a Democrat, blames Republicans for creating ISIS
Rand Paul, quoted here:
"ISIS exists and grew stronger because of the hawks in our party who gave arms indiscriminately, and most of those arms were snatched up by ISIS. These hawks also wanted to bomb Assad, which would have made ISIS’ job even easier. They created these people."
--------------------------------
ISIS wouldn't exist if Obama hadn't pulled out of Iraq, had not opposed Mubarak in Egypt, Gaddafi in Libya, Assad in Syria and the state of Israel, and let ISIS' leader out of Camp Bucca.
Hysterical Glenn Beck makes hysterical liberals, well, hysterical
It's hard to keep all the hysteria separate at The Daily Beast, where libertarian hysteria meets liberal hysteria and proves what we knew all along: hysteria is a defining feature of both liberalism and libertarianism.
Glenn Beck:
'“I would open it up to all drugs [potentially being legalized],” and leave it up to the states.'
The Daily Beast:
'In Beck’s telling, the main consequence of this police escalation and the war on drugs was not the mass incarceration of millions . . .."
The one exaggerates what society can stand, the other what it can't.
Beer, wine and liquor have a long record of being more or less controllable while opiates do not. No one with much experience of the latter is clamoring for their wider use.
On the other side 2.3 million adult incarcerates barely qualifies as millions in a society of 321 million people. The only people demanding the release of the duly captive are Democrats and other racists.
Tuesday, May 26, 2015
Blame the libertarians for handing Romney his loss in 2012, not conservatives
Third parties bled away over 60% of the few votes Romney lost by in his failed eastern strategy in Election 2012.
Mitt Romney's bid to win the White House failed by 64 electoral college votes, all of which he narrowly lost in an eastern strategy in just four states by a total of only 429,522 popular votes:
Mitt Romney's bid to win the White House failed by 64 electoral college votes, all of which he narrowly lost in an eastern strategy in just four states by a total of only 429,522 popular votes:
Florida, lost by 74,309 votes, where third parties garnered an unbelievable 90,972 votes;
Virginia, lost by 149,298 votes, where third parties garnered 60,147 votes;
Ohio, lost by 166,272 votes, where third parties took a whopping 101,788 votes;
and New Hampshire, lost by 39,643 votes, where third parties took 11,493 votes.
That's a loss for Romney of 64 electoral college votes, enough to have taken him from 206 to 270 to take the presidency, losing 429,522 total popular votes in just four states where third parties all told took 264,400 votes, 61.5% of the total needed by Romney to win.
This isn't to say that those were all necessarily Republican votes which went third party, but fully 50.5% of the 264,400 were cast for the libertarian candidate, Gary Johnson of New Mexico, who had been a Republican candidate for president until late 2011 when he was excluded from the Republican debates. At that point he bolted to the Libertarian Party, and openly stated his intention to play a spoiler role:
“I hope that I would get labeled as a ‘spoiler’ from the standpoint of people actually focusing on what it is I am saying, and that this changes the way whoever wins governs,” Johnson told Sunshine State News in an exclusive interview Saturday at the 2012 Ron Paul Festival.
“I hope that I would get labeled as a ‘spoiler’ from the standpoint of people actually focusing on what it is I am saying, and that this changes the way whoever wins governs,” Johnson told Sunshine State News in an exclusive interview Saturday at the 2012 Ron Paul Festival.
Combine the pique factor around that with the natural alienation felt by libertarians toward a Mormon candidate who was himself socially conservative in his habits and loathe to exercise himself on behalf of libertarians' usual limited government ideas and you can make a case that it was libertarians who cost Romney the election, by casting spoiler votes, staying away from the polls entirely, or even voting for Obama out of spite.
This is a better explanation for the Romney loss than some mythical 4 million conservatives staying away from the polls in 2012 as Rush Limbaugh keeps saying. The numbers themselves disprove that, as Romney garnered 1 million more votes in 2012 than McCain in 2008. It was a much closer election than the (mostly libertarian) punditocracy wants you to know.
Conservatives, most of whom are Christians, aren't put off by abstainers like Mitt Romney the way libertarians might be (many Christians are abstemious too), and Christians find it much more morally problematic to stay away from the polls, or to vote out of spite, in a way which libertarians would not. Christian voters are nothing if not preoccupied with their moral and social responsibility, but libertarians care little for that.
Conservatives, most of whom are Christians, aren't put off by abstainers like Mitt Romney the way libertarians might be (many Christians are abstemious too), and Christians find it much more morally problematic to stay away from the polls, or to vote out of spite, in a way which libertarians would not. Christian voters are nothing if not preoccupied with their moral and social responsibility, but libertarians care little for that.
In fact, withdrawing from social responsibilities is elevated to the level of a moral principle by libertarians. Staying away from the polls is a John Galt tactic straight out of the playbook from Ayn Rand. It's an ongoing and adolescent fantasy of theirs. It's not a Christian tactic, which is to say it's not a conservative tactic. Conservatives love their country too much to let it go down the drain, and they actively admired Mitt Romney for his commitment to and long record of public service even if his religion and social policy positions bothered them.
It remains a question if Republicans can expect to succeed in future with a brood of vipers in their party such as the libertarians. Republicans should reconsider their tilt toward libertarianism and seriously ask themselves whether things might not go better for them if they more actively pursued the social conservative vote. From the Christians Republicans can expect forgiveness, but from the libertarians only vindictiveness. Isn't that how the Bushes got elected after turning their backs on the Reagan revolution? Isn't that the conceit of moderate Republican presidential aspirants still today?
Why isn't that an easy call? After all, the libertarian Ron Paul who bitterly lost to Romney in the Republican primaries never left the Republican Party, but he never endorsed Mitt Romney either: "I don’t fully endorse him for president,” he said, as late as August 2012, less than three months before the election. Message to libertarians: good ahead, stay home, see if I care.
Call it an ironic payback to Romney, whose moderate Republican father likewise wouldn't endorse the conservative Barry Goldwater after losing to him in 1964, but it's also another sign in a long list of signs that libertarians have more in common with liberals than with conservatives.
They're content if they too can defeat Republicans.
It remains a question if Republicans can expect to succeed in future with a brood of vipers in their party such as the libertarians. Republicans should reconsider their tilt toward libertarianism and seriously ask themselves whether things might not go better for them if they more actively pursued the social conservative vote. From the Christians Republicans can expect forgiveness, but from the libertarians only vindictiveness. Isn't that how the Bushes got elected after turning their backs on the Reagan revolution? Isn't that the conceit of moderate Republican presidential aspirants still today?
Why isn't that an easy call? After all, the libertarian Ron Paul who bitterly lost to Romney in the Republican primaries never left the Republican Party, but he never endorsed Mitt Romney either: "I don’t fully endorse him for president,” he said, as late as August 2012, less than three months before the election. Message to libertarians: good ahead, stay home, see if I care.
Call it an ironic payback to Romney, whose moderate Republican father likewise wouldn't endorse the conservative Barry Goldwater after losing to him in 1964, but it's also another sign in a long list of signs that libertarians have more in common with liberals than with conservatives.
They're content if they too can defeat Republicans.
What a shock: Now beholden to Amazon, WaPo approves of Senate's TPP vote
Here:
This action is a great victory for the president, who aggressively lobbied wavering members of his party, and for Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.), who piloted the measure past every last-minute obstacle its opponents threw up.
This bipartisan vote was also, we’re obliged to say, a victory for truth.
Monday, May 25, 2015
Libertarian anarchist Murray Rothbard ripped off Christian idealist G. K. Chesterton
“The Christian ideal has not been tried and found wanting. It has been found difficult; and left untried.”
-- G. K. Chesterton, WHAT'S WRONG WITH THE WORLD? (1910)
“Liberty has never been fully tried in the modern world."
-- Murray Rothbard, FOR A NEW LIBERTY (1973)
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