Tuesday, March 31, 2009
In The Belly Of The Beast
Whatever your feelings are of the whole AIG bonus debacle, you should take a few minutes to read through this – it’s worth it.
Monday, March 30, 2009
With Critics Like These…
And if you happen to share one mind, all the easier…
Wagoner Out At GM
Those of you who still feel the right is hyperventilating conspiracy theories about the administration’s intent to nationalize large swatches of US industry may want to re-read that last sentence…
Saturday, March 28, 2009
ShamWow Guy Busted
I guess she didn't like his nuts...
Saturday Morning Blogroll
CENTER LEFT
Crooked Timber: The Totalitarian Temptation and all that...
Brad DeLong: J.M. Keynes comments on the current crisis...
Ezra Klein: Don't trust the regulators...
Firedoglake: Reaction to President Obama's Af-Pak speech...
Huffington Post: Reid: Justice Roberts lied to us...
CENTER RIGHT
Argghhh!: The new White House Afstan/Pakistan policy...
Back Talk: The enigma of US opinion on the death penalty as a deterrent...
Michael Barone: Obama's Cap-and-Trade will meet stiff resistance...
The Elephant Bar: Obama and Geithner worry the Czechs and the EU...
Counterterrorism Blog: Pakistan will be key factor in Af-Pak strategy...
Friday, March 27, 2009
Southpark Explains It All
WARNING: Cartoon violence
HT:Calculated Risk
Nice Work If You Can Get It
Emanuel served on the board of the failed mortgage giant Freddie Mac for fourteen months after his appointment in 2000 by then-President Bill Clinton. If the facts of the article are valid, the board met no more than six times a year, and Emanuel was not assigned to any of the board’s working committees. For his service, Emanuel received a $20,000 annual fee along with $380,000 in stock and options. Not a bad return on investment.
So while Jake DeSantis and other AIG executives are publicly flogged for accepting bonus payouts, Emanuel skirts by scrutiny. I think Emanuel will prove to be more a liability than asset for President Obama, and the President might want to consider developing an Emanuel exit strategy of his own.
Paying For The Bullet That Kills You
“You just can’t put them on the street,” said Blair. I agree, why not put them on a C130 and fly them back to their countries of origin along with note pinned to their chest thanking them for providing the CIA with intelligence on their brethren’s location and movements.
Or better yet, why not make them community activists?
White Men Can’t Save
Sort of like the voters in Brazil…
Thursday, March 26, 2009
Blue Dog Hunting
My suspicion is these dogs are going to start howling once things start to heat up over the spring when the promised economic growth doesn’t quite tie out to Administration forecasts.
Bad Money After Bad…
Why don’t we just lock a room full of monkeys in a room with flip charts and lap tops and let them have at it – we could have saved on salaries, and they’re likely to come back with more salient positions than these guys. Oops, sorry, not allowed to say that…
Volker To Lead Tax-Code Overhaul
Every President I can remember assembles one of these “blue ribbon” panels early in his administration, who then go away for six months and come back with a phonebook size report of policy recommendations, many of which wind up in the President’s circular file. I will be curious to see if this panel’s work follows this same path. The tax-code is in definite need of an overhaul, but I would have preferred it have been overseen by a President less likely to use taxation as a punitive weapon, or as a means to “level the playing field”.
Moe, Larry, The Cheese
Rumored casting for the lead roles includes Jim Carrey as Curly (I would have preferred Michael Moore), Benicio del Toro as Moe and none other than the right’s favorite Stooge Sean Penn as Larry. Please feel free to insert any other del Toro-and-Penn-are-real-life-stooges jokes here…
But admittedly – I think these casting choices are inspired, and would be mildly curious to see the finished product if it ends up with these three in the roles. But I think it should be told as a biopic as opposed to “a fictional treatment that maintains the Stooges' gleeful slap schtick updated for a modern milieu.”
Nyuk-nyuk-nyuk indeed.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Newspaper Bailout Next?
Sen. Cardin’s Newspaper Revitalization Act would allow newspapers to operate as nonprofits for “educational purposes” under the U.S. tax code, giving them a similar status to public broadcasting companies. Under the bill, newspapers would be allowed to report on all areas of interest, including political campaigns, but would be prohibited from making political endorsements.
This arrangement seems to be working splendidly with NPR’s and PBS’ neutrality.
The Tax Cut To Nowhere
The real trick here will be to see how exactly the President intends to reduce the deficit when the other three priorities appear to require massive and permanent “investment”. Washington has proven it can spend; however, it does not have the best track record on cutting back.
And what of those tax “cuts” to 95% of American households - the President sought fit to leave Congress holding that bag. “When it comes to the middle-class tax cut,” the President said, “we know that’s going to be in place for at least the next two years.” But the President continued, “If Congress has better ideas in terms of how to pay for it, then we’re happy to listen.”
“We never expected, when we printed out our budget, that they would simply Xerox it and vote on it,” Obama said. Perhaps, but that’s precisely what they did at his direction; and now, a different sort of printing press is working overtime to pay for it.
Specter A Rock On Card Check
Perhaps feeling heat from a potential election challenge from Republican rival Pat Toomey, Pennsylvania Senator Arlen Specter is apparently making it known that he will vote against cloture on card check legislation, setting back labor union efforts to eliminate workers’ secret ballot vote on unionization. Specter was the only Republican to vote for card check legislation the last time it came up in the Senate.
Grover Norquist told the American Spectator’s blog yesterday that he received a call from Specter’s chief of staff saying that the senator would be voting against cloture on card check. However, Specter left open the possibility of voting for card check in the future on the floor of the Senate later that day:
“If efforts are unsuccessful to give Labor sufficient bargaining power through amendments to the NLRA, then I would be willing to reconsider Employees’ Free Choice legislation when the economy returns to normalcy.”
At least you know where he stands.
Hat tip: The Weekly Standard
Obama Uses Monitor; Teleprompter Heartbroken
His teleprompter attempted to put up a stoic front despite the obvious snub, but friends say the device is heartbroken and seeking comfort with several IBM Thinkpads in the White House basement.
“They’ve set up the East Room, and Big Boy said he’d feel more comfortable having lots of friends around him,” said the teleprompter. “The LCD screen thing is gonna make life so much easier for him when he’s back in the White House.”
Stand by your man.
Tuesday, March 24, 2009
The President’s Press Conference
To make this fun for those of you playing at home, try viewing tonight’s festivities with your favorite bottle of spirits nearby, and take a drink every time you hear the President say, or make reference to the following (or close to it):
- I didn’t create this mess, but I’m going to clean it up
- The last ten years of poor policy decisions have led to this climate of greed
- I inherited over a trillion dollars in debt, but my plan will halve it by 2012
- My stimulus bill has already begun to have a positive impact on the economy
- Responsibility for the AIG bonuses begins and ends with me; but…
- Pahk-eee-stahn
That should be a good enough start. Enjoy.
Monday, March 23, 2009
The CBO Says We Are SOL…
Additionally, the study projects that Obama’s spending proposals would likely inflate the budget deficit to over 4 percent of GDP, and by the end of his second term (oy!), that figure would rise to over five percent:
More...
But so what, argue the new Keynesians, Republicans have run deficits for years and it was only until Clinton took over in ’93 did we finally balance the books to the plus side. And besides, we’re smack dab in the middle of a crisis requiring swift and bold (read: expensive) action.
Perhaps, but what if the government spending multipliers that form the basis of Obama’s economic models were based on older Keynesian assumptions? This report presented by economists/authors Cogan, Cwik, Taylor and Wieland last month conclude that government spending multipliers in new Keynesian models used universally in academia are much less than older models. How much less? The report says the spending impacts presented by Obama’s Economic Advisor Christina Romer on the President’s stimulus package and budget proposals are six times larger than those implied by government spending multipliers in a typical new Keynesian model. Romer’s numbers also report job impacts that are up to six times larger than the alternative models the authors present.
If the economy is humming along at 4% growth and the budget deficit is under three percent of GDP by this time in 2016, I’ll consider it Monopoly money well-spent. But until that time, I’ll remain a healthy skeptic.
McCain Beats Obama – In NCAA Picks
Anyway, Senator John McCain easily beat President Obama in the weekend’s NCAA men’s tournament bracket picks. McCain has 14 of his first-round teams heading to the Sweet 16, placing him in the 94th percent tile. Obama did not fare as well. But being there's a recession on and all, so I'll cut him some slack.
Exit Part Of Entrance Into Afghanistan
This particular policy nuance is in contrast to his predecessor, who resisted congressional efforts to tack timetables and exit strategies in Iraq.
Now that he’s calling the shots, it will be interesting to see exactly how this exit strategy evolves as the heat is turned up…
Updated 3/23/09, with comments from Micheal Yon on Afghanistan:
The hints coming out of Washington tend to cause me to believe we will abandon Afghanistan. I’m making no personal comment one way or the other yet, other than Iraq was worth the effort and costs all the way around – so long as we cement that success. Afghanistan seems little more than a tar pit. I want to hear General Petraeus say success is achievable, and to at least set some white lines by what he defines as success. He’s one of the very few people who have both the experience and character that are required to accurately estimate the truth and then deliver the good, bad and the ugly. If General Petraeus puts his word behind it, I’m only one man but I’ll back him. That’s about all there is to say on Afghanistan. HT: NRO
Strange Bedfellows
More...
The Geithner plan is a three-prong attack designed to stabilize the financial system and restart business and consumer lending. The plan’s components include:
- A partnership of the Treasury and FDIC to stimulate auto, credit card and consumer lending;
- Government purchasing of securities backed by the SBA loans to encourage lending; and,
- A mortgage-loan modification program to reduce foreclosures.
While the plan calls for a “stress test” for troubled major banks and new infusions of capital for those that need it, it does not address (or I didn’t see it) reorganization as a remedy for these institutions – in other words, they’re all too big to fail.
Writing in this morning’s Wall Street Journal, Secretary Geithner believes that his plan will help to unclog the lending channel and provide a market-based price for these toxic assets, which he feels to be undervalued at the moment. And to help ease the sting of Congressional spankings over executive compensation, Geithner hopes to exclude program participants from executive pay rules imposed by Congress.
Considering the anti-capitalist furor that has seemed to grip the American psyche over the last few months, this “partnership” would seem a risky proposition. And while Wall Street would be certainly within its rights to thumb its nose at the administration for its sanctimonious sermons on executive bonuses, it also understands a good deal when it sees it. If this is an opportunity to make money, Wall Street is in – it will find other ways to keep its fat cats happy.
But for any overtures made by the administration toward program participants with regard to exemption from executive pay rules, I submit the fable of the Scorpion and the Frog as a likely outcome of that proposition…
Saturday, March 21, 2009
"Job Fair" Is The New "Ballet"
Where are you going, honey?
Why, I'm going to a job fair dear.
Did The Canadian System Fail Richardson?
If the health care system in Canada is superior to that of the US, why was Richardson flown to a hospital in New York?
My initial thought was, “well, to die of course”. However, a Canadian doctor’s contention that Quebec’s lack of a medial helicopter may have played a factor in Richardson’s death puts this question into a whole new context. “Our system isn’t set up for traumas and doesn’t match what’s available in other Canadian cities, let alone the states,” said Tarek Razek, director of trauma services for the McGill University Health Centre, which represents six of Montreal’s hospitals.
Food for thought…
Kelloggs Wants Its Peanuts, And Eat Them Too
One of the interesting parts of Goldberg’s book concerns the relationship of Progressivism and “Big Business”. Many on the left point to the era of the muckrakers as one societal role liberalism played in breaking the collusion existing between corporations and the right. Goldberg asserts that this is a misconception; that “Big Business” actually welcomed government intervention and regulation and worked hand-in-hand with the Wilson and Roosevelt administrations in crafting the very rules that governed them. Why? Simply put, because it crowded out competition. The larger corporations could afford to absorb the economic costs of regulation that the smaller companies could not. And if you’re going to be regulated, why not have a hand in steering it to your advantage? The federal government benefits as well, as fewer companies in a particular industry are easier to manage.
Could this be a continuation on that theme? The CEO of Kelloggs testified before Congress on Thursday calling for new requirements that all food companies have written safety plans, annual federal inspections of facilities that make high-risk foods, as well as other safety measures.
Saturday Morning Blogroll
THE LEFT
crooksandliars - reactions to President Obama's performance on the Tonight Show...
firedoglake - Treasury attempts to "blame Dodd" for AIG bonuses...
Huffinington Post - Edgar Bronfman on realism and leverage for engaging Iran...
Americablog - John Aravosis on "exploding" mortgages...
FiveThirtyEight - Unintended consequences with bonus tax legislation...
THE RIGHT
Rightwing Nuthouse - a case for the defense of the Administration's handling of the AIG affair...
American Thinker - more global warming alarmist child abuse?...
TigerHawk - Iran responds to President Obama...
Powerline - Are we a banana republic?...
ScrappleFace - Union demands fair wages for Obama's Garden Kids...
Friday, March 20, 2009
Obama Lowers The Bar
The American public…patience!? Good luck with that. But I can't help feeling that Obama himself contributed in part to these unreasonable expectations through a little rainmaking of his own. Here are the growth forecasts put out by the Obama budget team (in red) followed by a consensus forecast made up of private “blue chip” forecasters (in blue):
2009: -1.2% -1.9%
2010: +3.2% +2.1%
2011: +4.0% +2.9%
2012: +4.6% +2.9%
2013: +4.2% +2.8%
HT on the data: Greg Mankiw
He can’t tell us how long it will take? According to his Administration’s forecasts, prosperity is right around the corner. Obama has banked his budget (and our collective futures) on it.
…Or Like A White Man Dancing
As Jake Tapper reports, the gaffe happened toward the end of President Obama’s appearance, as he talked about his infamous bowling prowess and how he’s improved with practice on the White House lanes. Obama said he bowled a 129, to which Leno replied sarcastically, “that’s very good, Mr. President.”
“It’s like a Special Olympics moment,” the President shot back.
Yes Mr. President, it is precisely like a Special Olympics moment – except for the fact that the participants in that event have IQs of 40 and many of them are unable to tie their shoes.
Wasn’t his election supposed to be a breath of fresh air, that his intelligence and elocution would transcend politics and even race? We’re sixty days into this presidency, and President Obama already has enough material for an “Obamansims” calendar.
He's a pretty funny guy.
Thursday, March 19, 2009
Baby Boom Or Bust?
Now the bad news – almost 40% of these babies were born to unmarried women, including almost three of every ten non-Hispanic white babies, seven out of every ten African American babies and five of every ten Hispanic babies. Additionally, the birth rate for teenage girls rose five percent from 2005 to 2007, to 42.5 births per 1,000 for girls aged 15-19.
Normally news of a minor baby boom like this would be met with relief, especially as multi-trillion dollar budget deficits loom on the horizon, not to mention the implending twin tsunamis of social security and Medicare entitlements. Baby booms mean a larger tax base, as millions of able-bodied men and women enter the workforce to replace retiring (and dying) Baby Boomer and Gen-X’ers. But judging by the socioeconomic challenges already facing this new generation, this boom might very well turn out to be a bust.
Just Wondering…
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
AIG Is A P-I-G
What I find distressing about this clip is Sen. Schumer’s eagerness to use the power of taxation in such a vindictive and punitive matter so as to confiscate the money already paid to the recipients. What is the world coming to when I actually find myself agreeing with Charlie Rangel (D-NY) that the tax code is not “a political weapon”? If only he talked this talk in other areas of taxation as well *cough* wealth redistribution! *cough*.
I have no problem with Congress putting pressure on AIG’s CEO to renegotiate the retention bonus structure – lord knows I won’t be seeing any this year – so misery loves company. But let’s face it – not only did Congress and the administration know of AIG’s intent to pay this bonus months ago, it guaranteed it by codifying it into law.
Admittedly, I don’t know the details of how this bonus program is structured, but there must be some sort of corporate “out” where AIG has the right to alter the program at its discretion (most companies with bonus and other incentive programs do). Why not restructure the program so the money is paid to the recipients as required by law, but held in escrow for a period of three to five years as the company rights itself. If the executives leave the company before this period, they forfeit the money – if they are laid off, they receive the bonus as part of their severance package. I realize this may be a bit naive, but so is passing a law specifically to tax away this income if the recipients don’t voluntarily give it up.
The Inheritance Tax
The AIG situation is unfortunate and complicated, made even more so by legislative incompetence demonstrated by the likes of Dodd, Frank and Waters. Geithner appears to be in way over his head, and gives the perception (at least to me) that he lacks any sort of coordinated plan to relieve the financial system of this mess. And even if he does, the Gang of Three mentioned above will inevitably find a way to gum it up.
If You Say It Enough Times...
Hmmm...economic catastrophe...depression...I wonder where the American public would go and get a thought like that in their heads?
Tuesday, March 17, 2009
Reading The Fine Print
And just who was responsible for insertion of this moral outrage? Why, that would be Senate Banking Chairman Chris Dodd, darling of the AIG lobby.
Perhaps President Obama may want to reconsider resurrecting that campaign pledge to sunset legislation before signing.
HT: National Review Online
Specter Staying In GOP
"We've tried," said Rendell. "Myself, Sen. [Robert P.] Casey, Vice President Biden have tried to talk him into it, but he's bound and determined to stay a Republican."
Why bother, Ed? He can do more damage on the other side of the aisle.
Monday, March 16, 2009
Not Ready For Prime Time
If I was David Letterman, I’d feel a bit slighted. After all, Letterman made no attempt to conceal his contempt for the Republican Party or John McCain this past election cycle.
But beyond the obvious pandering, I don’t really get why the President of the United States would feel the need to appear on a comedy show to discuss matters of economic and national policy. It’s not as though the two are former school chums, and Obama is making good on a long-forgotten fraternity bet. This is the President; and there are other media forums available if he wishes to connect to the American public.
Perhaps this is just a sign of the times – a time where more and more Americans appear to be getting their news from Comedy Central than traditional “mainstream” media sources. Jon Stewart is a more trusted news source than Brian Williams; I don’t know if that is more a compliment to Stewart or an indictment of the pitiful state of network news.
The Troubles
In downplaying the possible resurgence of the IRA, the Lurgan police chief says that only a “very small group” of about 300 people was involved with the Irish Republican Army dissident groups that had claimed responsibility for recent killings of two British soldiers and a police officer. Even if this “very small group” was comprised of one, I’d be concerned.
Massachusetts Miracle Or Mirage?
The problem is they purposely deferred to another day the problem of how to control rampant health spending. And now that day of reckoning is fast approaching...
Sunday, March 15, 2009
Tough Choices Await Obama Health Plan
But don’t worry, Obama is no hypocrite, nor is he a fool. Presidential advisers have hinted that while the president will not propose the change in tax status himself, he will not oppose it if Congress does so. And if the democrats want to pass universal health legislation, they’re going to have to find the money from somewhere, so my guess is that Nan and Harry will be looked upon to take one for the team while Obama stays above the fray…
Obama: Fundamentals Are Stong
Compare these sentiments with those expressed by candidate John McCain last September: "You know, there's been tremendous turmoil in our financial markets and Wall Street and it is -- people are frightened by these events. Our economy, I think, still the fundamentals of our economy are strong. But these are very, very difficult time. And I promise you, we will never put America in this position again. We will clean up Wall Street. We will reform government."
I recall many political commentators of the mainstream press at the time being quick to pounce on this statement as a sign of how out of touch McCain had become. Rereading his words this morning, they appear pretty innocuous; but the sentiment nevertheless echoes Obama's.
But where these words were once submitted as record to demonstrate incompetence, they are now held up as the soothing reassurance of a confident leader.
Saturday, March 14, 2009
Brotherly Love
So many questions, so many answers that I just don't think I'm prepared to hear...
The Sensitive War On Terrorism
However, the Obama Justice Department is seeking to distinguish itself from the Bush Administration in this regard by stating that it would hold only terrorism suspects who “substantially supported” al-Qaeda and other groups, and not those who “provide unwitting or insignificant support.”
Toe-may-toe, toe-mah-toe; whatever helps your base sleep at night. Just keep them from blowing things up here.
Cuban Missile Crisis Redux?
Saturday Morning Blogroll
Liberal Sites
Americablog.com - There's a controversy brewing over whether the federal government should provide health benefits for gay employees…
Bagnewsnotes - At the fifty day mark of this Administration, I think this photo from yesterday's TIME White House Photo Blog carries a bit of weight...
CrooksandLiars.com - South Carolina Governor compares US black to Zimbabweans...
DailyKos.com - Musings over morning coffee. Nate Sliver answers Scott Rasmussen and Doug Schoen's WSJ piece about Obama's current approval ratings...
Firedoglake.com - The Wrath of Jon...
The Huffington Post - Thomas Frank: Obama takes on market based government...
Conservative Sites
HotAir.com - Boston Globe: Romney's the only adult left standing among the 2012 hopefuls...
Michelle Malkin - Business-as-usual Obama: OK, now "let's end the old way of doing business"...
TigerHawk - Joe Biden calls for "scaling back" in Afghanistan?...
The Volokh Conspiracy - Larry Summers Channels Gordon Gekko: Obama economic adviser Larry Summers is sounding like Gordon Gekko these days, arguing that we need more "greed" to revive the economy...
Right Wing Nut House - How radical is Barack Obama?...
Friday, March 13, 2009
Settled Science?
Now I'm going to have to hold my hands in a "tee" and say time out here. Is climate change threatening to be irreversible, or is it already irreversible - this is no small distinction. And depending upon what day it is, the answer will vary, as evidenced here, here and here.
As a favor to this global warming heretic, could you folks on the other side of the argument perhaps get together and agree on this?
Our Banker Is Getting Nervous
But don’t worry Wen, the economic crisis isn’t as bad as we think.
Raise your hand if you think this obligation will have no effect on US/China relations, or the ability of the US to exert pressure on China vis-à-vis human rights, democratic reforms, North Korea or Taiwan. Anyone…anyone?
In His Own Words...
If the left was so fearful of an imperial presidency under Bush, what are they to make of a guy who so clearly and condescendingly preaches to an audience on the evils of executive power unchecked (he taught Constitutional Law, after all), then reverses himself and adopts the same practice six weeks into office?
HT: Weekly Standard
Thursday, March 12, 2009
Which Obama Are We To Believe?
- “The worse economic crisis since the Great Depression” – Candidate Barack Obama,10/30/08
- Obama called the financial crisis one of "historic proportions" – CNN, 11/24/08
- President Obama: A crisis “unlike any we have seen in our lifetime" – MSNBC, 1/13/09
- President Obama: Inaction will "turn a crisis into a catastrophe,” – NY Newsday, 2/9/09
- President Obama: Economic crisis “not as bad as we think.” – AP, 3/12/08
He may actually come to regret that last one.
Troubled Waters
While the article acknowledges that the relationship is nothing new – the representative has detailed her ties in disclosure forms – it does call into question the appropriateness of such a relationship during a time of financial crisis given the government’s continuing role as financial overlord. Waters’ Financial Services Committee oversees financial issues, and the representative is a (*shudders*) potential future chairperson.
Rep. Waters has been a vocal supporter of the minority-owned OneUnited Bank. Both she and her husband have held financial stakes in the bank – her husband still does, and was up until recently a director.
And while the bank has received numerous raves from community groups for its lending practices under the Community Reinvestment Act; OneUnited, like many of its competitors, has succumbed to the effects of the housing bubble. The bank had invested heavily in Freddie and Fannie, and had seen most of its assets wiped out last October. It was then that Rep. Waters stepped in and secured a meeting with Treasury officials. Shortly after, OneUnited received over $12 million in TARP money. Rep. Waters says she was unaware of the transaction, and added that OneUnited was “just a small” bank.
But a small bank with big friends nonetheless.
In October 2008, federal regulators ordered the bank to stop paying for a Porsche used by one of its executives and its chairman's $6.4 million beachfront home in Pacific Palisades, Calif., a luxury enclave between Malibu and Santa Monica.
What is the difference – propriety-wise – between the CEO of a major failed lending institution receiving a bonus, and the Porsche and $6.4 million beachfront home of “just a small” bank’s executive team being paid for by the shareholders and taxpayers?
And at the risk of poking the racial hornets nest, could someone please tell me what a "major white bank" is?
Wednesday, March 11, 2009
Separated At Birth? Part IV...
Death By A Trillion Cuts
At meeting of the ironically-named Democratic Steering and Policy Committee, democrats heard from a variety of economists and policy wonks who convinced them that the surefire way to prosperity is to take the country deeper into debt.
“We have to keep the door open,” said House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, “the word of the day is confidence. Confidence in our markets, confidence in lending, confidence in our financial institutions.”
No Nan. The word of the day is “Weimar Republic”.
Biden's Math
“Well, let me just say -- and to paraphrase Secretary Holbrooke, our Special Envoy, and I agree with his assessment after numerous visits to the region and throughout the country -- 5 percent of the Taliban is incorrigible, not susceptible to anything other than being defeated. Another 25 percent or so are not quite sure, in my view, the intensity of their commitment to the insurgency. And roughly 70 percent are involved because of the money, because of them being -- getting paid.”
What's with Biden's fascination with 70%? This is one area that the Administration can't afford to be wrong 30% of the time...
UN: Stop, Iran. This Time We Mean It.
The findings were based on an incident which took place on January 19 and 20 of this year, where the USS San Antonio boarded a cargo ship in the Red Sea bound for Syria and found several cartons containing munitions supplies, including three containers that were too heavy to move and still have yet to be searched.
Secretary Clinton is certainly going to have her hands full this year.
Gitmo Votech
Yes, yes, I know – Rasoul’s detention in Gitmo has nothing to do with his current role. If anything, his unlawful incarceration there served only to awaken his dormant hatred for the West.
If President Obama follows through with his intention to close Gitmo and disperse its population among host countries, my fear is that these out of work bad guys will look to find employment in one of the few areas of the world that appears to be hiring people of Rasoul’s limited specialties – Afghanistan. And if these bad guys start killing our good guys, the President will have a lot of esplainin’ to do.
Freeman Out At NIC
In his withdrawal notice, Freeman blames the Israeli Lobby for what he feels is a concerted effort of “dishonor and indecency, and include character assassination, selective misquotation, and the willful distortion of the record.” However, some on the other side of the argument would say that Freeman’s chumminess with the Saudis and the Chinese may have compromised his objectivity in such a sensitive post as the NIC. These relationships, and the recent report that he may also have accepted financing from these states, which is almost certainly frowned upon, or at least should be by the administration, appears to be what finally scuttled his nomination.
Tuesday, March 10, 2009
Obama And Signing Statements
In his order, the President wrote that “constitutional signing statements should not be used to suggest that the president will disregard statutory requirements on the basis of policy disagreements.” But Obama adds that he reserves this privilege to address what he calls “constitutional concerns” in such legislation, and pledged that he would use restraint in writing his own signing statements. Ummhmm...
It appears to me that he’s adding judicial review to his job description.
Losing Our Religion
The survey, based on 113,000 interviews, also contained these findings:
- Geographies with traditionally strong Catholic pockets (New England, Rust Belt) have seen shifts, due to an influx of immigrants and the exodus (so to speak) of retirees and job seekers to the South;
- Baptists and Mainline Protestants have seen their ranks decline since 1990;
- Percentages of Jewish respondents decreased, while numbers for Muslims increased;
- Americans claiming no religion at all climbed from its 1990 figure to 15%, out-ranking Mainline Protestantism. Over a third of the respondents (34%) living in Vermont qualified themselves as “None” when asked the survey’s leading question – “What is your religious identity?”
The survey also suggests that the respondents who answered “None” are not necessarily atheist; it is simply that they have remained spiritual in some way but have chosen to disaffiliate themselves with an organized religion. When asked for his thoughts, ex-Catholic Dylan Rossi, a philosophy student from Boston says that he’s typical among his friends: “If the religion comes up, everyone at the table will start mocking it.”
That’s funny; that’s just what my friends and I do when the topic of philosophy students comes up.
Chinese Flex Maritime Muscle
The AP reports that the Navy ship is not, strictly speaking, a spying vessel. Its purpose is to map the ocean floor using sonar to help guide Navy submarines as well as track those of other nations. OK, let me see if I have everything...Navy vessel…tracking submarines…in the South China Sea, but not a spy ship – check.
The Chinese armada included a Navy spy ship of its own – sorry, ocean floor mapping ship, a Bureau of Maritime Fisheries Patrol Vessel, a State Oceanographic Administration patrol vessel and two trawlers. Navy officials say the Impeccable was forced to use its fire hose in self defense, after a Chinese craft came within 25 feet of it. Strangely, the Chinese responded to this act in kind by stripping down to their underwear.
Savages.
Monday, March 9, 2009
Recovery: What To Look For
Tyson Defends Obamanomics
The meat of her argument – Obama’s economic plan is consistent with his campaign pledges and his progressive vision. President Obama’s tax changes (letting the Bush tax cuts expire) will restore the marginal tax rates to their 1990 levels of 36% and 39.6%, for qualified single and married earners, respectively. Tyson argues that these changes will affect only the top 3% of taxpayers, a group she asserts “enjoyed the largest gains in income and wealth over the last decade.” I’ll concede her point here – but would add that there is more than likely a correlation between this group of taxpayers who enjoyed such benefit and the larger economy, which also enjoyed a fairly robust growth during the same period despite a tech bubble and two wars. If you raise the water level in one harbor, you need to dredge it from another.
Tyson also states that Obama’s proposal limits the deductions for dependents, charitable deductions and other expenses to 28%, and notes that the top rate for such deductions under Ronald Reagan, as if this somehow makes it better. But Tyson fails to mention that the only reason why the deduction was 28% under Reagan was because the top tax bracket was 28%, not 36% and 39.6% as they are today. Tyson chides critics of the president’s proposals for suggesting they might lead to class warfare, and reasons that they are “fair and reasonable” means of achieving universal health care coverage and moderating the growth of health care spending. This rhetoric of using tax policy as a means of achieving “fairness” rather than as a revenue generator is consistent with her boss’ vision.
Will it play to the Street? Wall Street, not Main Street that is – we’ll wait and see. So far, the markets have not reacted too kindly to Obama’s plans for the economy.
Sunday, March 8, 2009
Neat Stuff
World Builder from Bruce Branit on Vimeo.
Sunday Funnies
WARNING: Strong language, but very funny.
Hat tip: TigerHawk
The Times With Obama
On Afghanistan, the president indicated that he would pursue a policy of reconciliation with more moderate elements of the Taliban, similar to the roadmap implemented in Iraq by General Petraeus. You remember General Petraeus, don’t you? He’s the guy both Obama and his Secretary of State lambasted when he testified before their committee a year ago imploring Congress to give the Surge more time to work. “If you talk to General Petraeus, I think he would argue that part of the success in Iraq involved reaching out to people that we would consider to be Islamic fundamentalists, but who were willing to work with us because they had been completely alienated by the tactics of Al Qaeda in Iraq,” Mr. Obama said. I guess we should take comfort that the President now thinks our effort in Iraq was a success.
On the economy, the President says that he has no problem sleeping at night. Do you recall the public pasting Bush received when he said the same? And while Obama concedes that the economy more than likely will not begin growing again this year, Americans should not “stuff money in their mattresses.” Not yet anyway.
And how does the President respond to republican minority, critical of his deficit spending programs and far reaching policies? He asserts that his actions have been entirely consistent with free-market principles, and added that market intervention and expansion of social welfare programs began under President George W. Bush.
From deficit spending and enemy non-combatants, to rendition and Surges, how is it that a guy who spent the better part of his campaign railing against “eight years of failed policies” under George W. Bush now points to them as the basis of his own administration?
Worse yet, why is he not being called out for it?
Saturday, March 7, 2009
The President And The Bobbysoxer
Why is an administration which seemingly has no problem taking control of our health care system so reluctant to do so, even temporarily, with the nation’s ailing banking system?
Can Stem Cells Grow Republicans A Backbone?
I admired President Bush’s stance on this issue, and thought his decision carefully balanced science’s quest for knowledge with an ethical and moral responsibility to a culture of life. Did Bush’s order prevent stem cell research? No; in fact, it accelerated it. Research on adult stems cells continued unabated, culminating in recent breakthroughs and potential near-term therapies. And despite the public relations effort of the media and academia to the contrary, the promise of embryonic stems cells continues to be just that – a promise, never “settled science.”
So what’s the bottom line here? Money. The policy never prohibited access to these embryonic lines, just the use of federal funds in procuring them. Indeed, the article concedes that the inventory of embryonic stems cells continued despite the ban, fueled by private investors and venture capital – as it should. But Obama’s action now fills the slop trough with hundreds if not billions of dollars in free money for his friends in academia.
I’m reminded of Dan Ackroyd’s character Ray Stantz in the movie Ghostbusters (speaking to Dr. Peter Venkman): "Personally, I liked the university. They gave us money and facilities, we didn't have to produce anything! You've never been out of college! You don't know what it's like out there! I've worked in the private sector. They expect – results."
Bloomberg Not A Fan Of Obamanomics
Union officials were unmoved. One labor activist accused Bloomberg of being “tone deaf,” while Union Federation of Teachers President Randi Weingarten said the issue was one of “fairness”. “The people who are still doing well should help the people who are not doing well – ultimately, that’s fundamental fairness.”
One person’s fundamental fairness is another’s socialism.
If you look at the linked article, check out the part where it reports that thousands of union workers rallied outside City Hall on Thursday to demand higher taxes on the wealthy to prevent cuts in government services. The drumbeats of class war are getting louder…
Friday, March 6, 2009
Я буду иметь орехи моего помощника в петле для этого!*
The Ultimate Re-gift
Prime Minister Brown presented Obama the following gifts:
- an ornamental desk pen holder made from the oak timbers of the Victorian HMS President;
- the framed commission of the HMS Resolute, the timbers of which form the basis of Obama’s Oval Office desk; and,
- a first edition set of the seven volume biography of Winston Churchill by Sir Martin Gilbert.
Considering President Obama’s penchant for history - not too shabby. How did Obama choose to return the kindness? He presented the Prime Minister with a box set of 25 classic American films on DVD – a classic example of re-gifting if ever there was one.
I certainly hope Obama remembered that US DVDs don’t necessarily play on European DVD players – that would really be embarrassing.
Update 3/19/09: *sigh* Obama didn't remember...
If I Could Turn Back Time…
You mean they would actually pay me to work there?!
A Woman Scorned
Authorities in Britain say a woman allegedly bit off her boyfriend’s tongue during a kiss, after complaining she wanted a baby and wasn’t pregnant. I guess he should be glad it was only his tongue...
Kyrgyzstan: No Base For You!
Additionally, a spokesperson for Kyrgyzstan’s President, Kurmanbek Bakiyev, said that the base closure announcement had nothing to do with a recent Russian pledge of $2.15 billion in aid and loans. Sure it didn’t.
Is Health Care A Right?
Health care is not a right, at least not according to the conception of rights upon which this country was founded. Your rights include life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. You may not be unjustly deprived of these things. Your rights do not include things that I or anyone else must be forced to provide for you, such as a home, a car, a job, or health care.
It might or might not make sense for the government to help people obtain these things, but that's not the same thing as saying that we all have a right to them. It only takes a moment's thought to see why this is so. What is meant by people who say we all have a right to health care? Do they mean that we all have a right to any sort of treatment that modern medicine can provide, regardless of cost or necessity? Or do they mean that we all have a right to some basic level of care? If it's the latter, who decides where we will draw the line?
Take a heavy drinker who develops cirrhosis. He desperately needs a liver transplant in order to survive. But there is a shortage of available livers, and there are many other patients in need. Does he have a right to receive a life-saving transplant, or has he given up his right? Let's say he has, and we deny him a transplant, but there are still not enough livers to save the deserving patients. How do we decide among them without arbitrarily depriving some of their right to health care?
This is the problem we face when we shift from a negative to a positive conception of rights. We encounter shortages, we face tradeoffs, and at some point we have to make arbitrary decisions. When that happens — well, to quote William Munny, "Deserve's got nothing to do with it."
For some time now, the debate over how best to allocate scarce resources has been a settled matter. The market, with its system of price signals, is the most efficient way to direct resources to where they are most urgently needed. We need health-care reform that enables the market for health care to function more efficiently. Removing the distortion in the tax code that favors employer-based health insurance would be a good start.
The last thing we need is public policy based around the idea that health care is a "right" to which we are all entitled. We've seen the results when other countries have adopted such policies: shortages, rationed care, higher taxes and a less innovative health-care sector — in short, a state of affairs that infringes on everyone's right to pursue the best care he or she can obtain.
What do you think?
Gupta Out As Surgeon General
But perhaps it is something more with the good doctor. Gupta was a vocal critic of Michael Moore’s film Sicko, a movie which in part extolled the virtues of socialized medicine. This departure would also seem to coincide with Obama’s health care summit, which is seeking input into the president’s plan to overhaul the health care system. Coincidence?
...And Then There Was None...
What is most troubling to me here is that with over a month into his tenure, Geithner does not have a single top deputy or assistant secretary named to his team. So as the country attempts to weather one of the worst financial and economic storms in history, Geithner is acting as captain, first mate, navigator, chief cook and piss boy. Maybe this in part explains why Wall Street continues to tank – it has lost confidence in the administration’s ability and commitment to dealing with the problem. If Obama isn’t careful, the electorate will follow suit…
Thursday, March 5, 2009
Chavez To Nationalize McDonald’s?
This in response to rising inflation and dwindling oil revenues. Chavez has leveraged his socialist utopia on a $60 a barrel price of oil. Oil is currently trading at $40 a barrel. Uh oh.
How’s That Afghan Strategy Coming?
Rush To Judgment
The plan unfolded in January, when Limbaugh told his estimated 19 million listeners that he hoped the Obama presidency would fail, and culminated last week in Washington DC where Rush delivered what amounted to a pep talk at the annual Conservative Political Action Committee (CPAC) convention. Democrats immediately pounced on the opportunity - using the occasion to denounce Rush, and paint the conservative commentator as the unofficial spokesman for the GOP.
Republicans may have unwittingly played into the fiasco by first appearing to distance themselves from Rush, only to offer apologetic overtures toward him the next day.
The strategy is classic Carville – discourage dissent by marginalizing your enemies. Will it work? For now – yes. But if conditions continue to deteriorate, the administration will run out of political bad guys upon which to lay blame. And if this happens, people – more people – will begin to listen to Rush a little more closely. Who wins in all this – why, Rush of course.
Everyone appears to be weighing in on the whole “Rush as GOP puppetmaster”, so allow me my two cents. I listen to Rush Limbaugh, in addition to the roster of political talking heads who dominate the Philadelphia talk radio airwaves; including Glenn Beck, Hugh Hewitt, and Michael Medved. When Rush sticks to the issues, he is a compelling figure. When he drifts off into schtick, he is a bore. But at the end of the day, I take him for what he is – an entertainer. And he’s been doing so consistently, and to larger and larger audiences for over twenty years – a record unmatched by any liberal commentator in a similar medium. The fact that all of this attention is being paid to Rush Limbaugh indicates to me that the left considers him to be a threat, worthy of attempts at character assassination.
Does Rush Limbaugh speak for me, conservatism, or the GOP in general? No more than Michael Moore does for liberalism, despite similar effort by the right to link the bloated filmmaker to the Democrat Party .
But republicans do not help themselves with their deer-in-the-headlights reaction every time Limbaugh’s name is mentioned in the media. It’s understandable, given their status at the moment, but detrimental to their long-term rebuilding effort. Limbaugh fancies himself a kingmaker, but he’s no policymaker – something the GOP needs to keep reminding the media and themselves.
Wednesday, March 4, 2009
The Next Wave?
Better get a bigger bucket, the bailout’s about to become a whole lot more expensive…
The Nuclear Option
Well, it’s back. But this time the democrats are the ones with their fingers on the button.
And where’s the uproar from the Fourth Estate? cue the crickets…
Zombie Banks
The problem dogging the financial industry isn’t one of liquidity, it is insolvency. Baker’s solution, simplified – categorize banks into one of three categories: the healthy, the hopeless, and the needy. Leave the healthy alone, close the hopeless and reorganize and recapitalize the needy based on needs testing. Baker’s idea is akin to ripping the band-aid off at once, rather than slowly and potentially more painfully.
This idea is gaining more attention as ad hoc bailout solutions appear to be doing little good. The administration has shown interest in the healthy and the needy banks, but closing the hopeless appears to be off the table. For now.
Look For The Union Label
I’m hard pressed to see where this new “competitive” process will save money or encourage competition in the long run. For the president also has signaled that he intends to stop outsourcing to private contractors many services that should be performed by government employees. One of reasons why the federal government moved to private contractors in the first place was because of the inefficiency and waste of government employees.
Additionally, “independent” doesn’t necessarily translate to cheaper in Obama’s labor force. One of President Obama’s first acts in office back in January was the repeal of Executive Order 13202, signed by President George W. Bush, which prohibited federal agencies and recipients of federal funding from requiring contractors to sign union-only project labor agreements (PLAs) as a condition of performing work on federal and federally funded construction projects. Forcing small and independent contractors to agree to union wages and benefits will likely drive up project costs, while discriminating against those construction workers who opt not to join a union.
One of the oft-repeated refrains of the left during the Bush years was how the administration hijacked the system to reward their cronies at Halliburton and Big Oil. But I hear no similar caterwauls on how Obama is working the system to treat his organized labor buddies to some good old fashioned stimulus lard.
Tuesday, March 3, 2009
Arbeit Macht Frei
Judge for yourself:
But if you're really looking to transform the fabric of American society, nothing says "I won suckas" quite like this:
The Shoulders Of Giants
John Elway sounds like a class act.
Hat tip: Yeah Right
Elections Matter
The group Gay and Lesbian Advocates and Defenders is seeking to force the federal government to extend federal benefits such as Social Security survivors’ payments, to spouses in same sex marriages in states where such unions are recognized by the state. The Defense of Marriage Act prohibits the federal government from recognizing same sex marriages, extending this prohibition to federal benefits.
This has less to do with extending such benefits, as the intended plaintiffs concede, and all to do with circumventing the will of the Legislative Branch. Because while Obama knows he doesn’t have the votes to specifically repeal this legislation, he does have the ability and the majority in Congress to appoint federal judges who may use their power of judicial review to “right” perceived social wrongs.
Elections matter.
The Price Of Hope
The conclusion of the CBO is, in short, that while ARRA may have a significant short term impact on GDP and employment using the more optimistic growth estimate, it will have little effect on the economy in the long-run:
On the employment side, the CBO estimates that the bill will create 1.2 to 3.3 million jobs by the end of 2010. However, this figure is expected to shrink to 0.3 to 0.7 million jobs by the end of 2012. Of this estimate, I wonder how many are due to the increase of the federal bureaucracy. Also, keep in mind that many of the administration's growth assumptions in its spending bill are based on the higher, more optimistic growth projections. It's good to see former Reagan employee Rosey Scenario now working for the Obama team.
Do you think this is a solid enough ROI on $787 billion? It is your money, after all...
Monday, March 2, 2009
The Dow Limbo...
I wouldn’t be at all surprised if the Dow closes at 6800 or so later this afternoon…
Let The Spin Begin
But what is remarkable about this story are the comments from Obama’s advisers, Peter Orszag and Rahm Emanuel, further down in the article. “This is last year’s business,” said Orszag. “We just want to move on. Let’s get this bill done, get it into law and move forward.”
Emanuel was a little more direct as to whose feet the administration will be laying this before – “First, this is a $1.7 trillion deficit he inherited. Let's be clear about that. We inherited this deficit and we inherited $4 trillion of new debt," Emanuel said. “That is the facts.”
These comments would appear to signal a concerted PR effort among Obama’s advisers to paint the staggering budget deficits as a legacy of the Bush Administration to counteract republican efforts to draw attention to potentially damaging long-term effects of the deficit on the economy. An interesting strategy if they can pull it off.
But just how exactly does one inherit $4 trillion of new debt?
Analyze This
“It’s hard to say,” Gates began. “I think President Obama is somewhat more analytical, and he makes sure he hears from everybody in the room on an issue, and if they don't speak up he calls on them.” This in contrast to President Bush, who didn’t go out of his way to elicit input, Gates added.
Obviously, this means President Obama is of superior intellect to George W. Bush, right? Not necessarily. All it means is that Obama’s management style may be more decision-by-consensus rather than a top-down approach, but that’s not what the headlines would lead one to conclude. In his memoir of his years as advisor to President Clinton, George Stephanopoulus wrote that Clinton’s “paralysis by analysis” was one of the more annoying traits of the former president. Stephanopoulos described several instances where President Clinton and his advisors would hole themselves up in the Oval Office for hours debating and crafting policy, only to have that policy directly contradicted the next morning after the president spoke with his wife prior to retiring for the night.
Management by consensus doesn’t mean you’re smarter, it just means you have more people to yell at if your decision goes awry.
Sunday, March 1, 2009
Back Off Man, We're Actors
No political agenda? The fact that these self-serving imbeciles are even there is a political enough agenda.
A Parent Looks At 40
Some of you who read this blog with any frequency know that I was recently down in the Florida Keys for a little R&R. I’ve been to Florida several times as a child and adult, but don’t ever recall traveling down to the Keys. I was blown away by this area’s natural beauty. Florida in February sure beats Philadelphia in February, that’s for sure.
For part of the trip, I got to see how “old” money passes its time waiting for that Big Mahjong Game in the Sky. I stayed at a swanky, self-contained planned community known as the Ocean Reef Club. I didn’t see one car during my stay; didn’t need to – everyone traveled by golf cart. And not just any golf cart, mind you, but custom carts made to look like Benz’s, Bentley’s and Hummers. Everything you could ever want is pumped in for you – provided you have the means, of course.
Mrs. Goldwater then joined me later in the week for the second leg of the journey. I planned to pick her up in a shiny convertible on our way to cruise the streets of South Beach, her Ricardo Tubbs to my Sonny Crockett. However, in the eight minutes it took me to drive from the car rental place to the arrivals terminal at Miami International, my face and neck were visibly red with sunburn. After a liberal application of sun block (about as liberal as I get), we were finally off to the mean streets of South Beach. But in the twenty years since “Miami Vice” first aired, the means streets of South Beach have become more like the gay streets of South Beach. There was lots of shopping and restaurants, but not a lot of parking space. Oh well, at least the food was good.
The next day, we headed due South toward Key West. Key West is a beautiful town – similar in atmosphere and architecture to Charleston, SC. or even New Orleans. The lower part of Duval Street in Key West is like Bourbon Street without the vomit and urine smells – bar followed by tacky souvenir shop followed by bar. It must have been Spring Break, because every one of the bars was packed.
And I’ve got to admit, the sounds of laughter and fun emanating from these places called to me like a siren’s song. I wanted to slog up to Joe’s Place like Hemingway must have done years before me to embark on a bender to remember (or not). Mrs. Goldwater, on the other hand, wanted no part of it. “Honey,” she said in that sweet matronly tone I’ve heard her take a thousand times with the kids, “you’re 41 years old. We have to drive back to Key Largo in the dark. You pass out after two beers, and even when you were their age, you hated those places. Now, do you have to go pee before we take the guided tour?” And with that, I gathered the shards of my shattered ego and loaded them onto the tour bus with the other octogenarians. Sometimes that woman can be too honest.
Oh sure, overall the trip was great fun, but it could have been Hemingway fun…