If the Democrats had the better argument viz a viz the budget, would they feel the need to lie about the Ryan plan?
Victims versus unions
May 31, 2011In the political battle over tort reform, Democrats argue that discouraging frivolous lawsuits creates a chilling effect that also hurts those with legitimate claims. Are they in earnest? Or are they just making a convenient argument to protect the rent-seeking efforts of trial lawyers?
We get a hint at the answer by considering the terms of the auto bailouts:
Vicki Denton died several years ago after the airbag in her 1998 Dodge Caravan minivan failed to deploy during a head-on collision in the Georgia mountains. In 2009, a jury found Chrysler responsible for her death because of a manufacturing defect, awarding her surviving son and other relatives $2.2 million.
The family was near collecting those damages on the eve of Chrysler’s government-brokered bankruptcy. Now, two years removed from a $12.5 billion bailout, Chrysler Group LLC still hasn’t paid the damages, and doesn’t have to.
The reason: The company’s restructuring allowed it to wash away legal responsibility for car-accident victims who had won damages or had pending lawsuits before its bankruptcy filing. The same holds true for General Motors Co., which discarded the liabilities as part of its own $50 billion bailout and restructuring. . .
Among the creditors who suffered most, car-accident victims represent a distinct mold. Unlike banks and bondholders, this group didn’t choose to extend credit to the auto makers. As consumers, they became creditors only after suffering injuries in vehicles they purchased.
When push came to shove, Democrats protected the labor unions, not accident victims.
(Via Instapundit.)
Giving away missile defense
May 31, 2011Last month, Republican lawmakers wrote to President Obama asking him to promise not to give away our missile defense technology to the Russians — which obviously would help the Russians develop countermeasures. The White House refused to answer.
POSTSCRIPT: The subject of the linked article is a veiled threat by Dmitry Medvedev, but it was sufficiently veiled that I don’t understand it.
Quid pro quo
May 31, 2011While Barney Frank was protecting Fannie Mae from government scrutiny during the housing bubble, he arranged to get his partner a job there.
Wikivandals
May 31, 2011The Wikileaks gang styles themselves as transparency crusaders, but this story (especially when combined with Wikileaks’s recent efforts to stop leaks) shows that they are just vandals putting on airs.
Democrats rediscover the evils of the filibuster
May 27, 2011Good grief. Rarely is the hypocrisy so blatant as Democrats calling for the “nuclear option” to put an end to filibusters in light of the defeat of a judicial appointment.
Some are trying to allege that the Republicans are being hypocritical for defending the filibuster now that they are in the minority. That’s frankly dishonest. It’s one thing for the side that lost (the Republicans) to play by the rules they were unable to change. It’s quite another for the side that won (the Democrats) to change the rules they previously insisted upon, because those rules have since become inconvenient to them.
Do as I say, not as I do
May 27, 2011Interesting how demagoguery and hypocrisy tend to go hand-in-hand:
The new chairwoman of the Democratic National Committee was criticizing Republicans who opposed President Obama’s bailout of the American automakers union, oh, no, make that American automakers.
“If it were up to the candidates for president on the Republican side,” said Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz of Florida, “we would be driving foreign cars. They would have let the auto industry in America go down the tubes.”
So Michael O’Brien of The Hill newspaper went and checked what kind of automobile loyal-American-car-supporter Debbie Wasserman Schultz owns.
Yup, you guessed it — Japanese.
(Via Instapundit.)
Rapid propaganda czar
May 25, 2011The White House has a new rapid propaganda czar (“Director of Progressive Media & Online Response”). Jesse Lee’s job will be to respond to critical stories online, and encourage favorable stories in the “progressive media”. This sort of activity is ordinarily paid for by political parties, but now it will be paid for by our tax dollars.
Who is this guy? David Steinberg at the PJ Tatler took a look. The most interesting thing he found is that Lee’s wife was connected with (and, although we can’t be sure, was probably responsible for) MoveOn’s infamous “General Betray Us” ad.
Rule of law, please?
May 25, 2011Despite being a small and shrinking portion of the workforce, unions have received over half the Obamacare waivers. What standards the administration is using to award waivers? They don’t have a consistent answer to that question.
(Via Instapundit.) (Previous post.)
Whatever happened to Okun’s Law?
May 24, 2011Jonah Goldberg points out that we are in the midst of the lousiest recovery on record:
Okun’s Law says that recoveries should come with a drop in unemployment, but our last three recoveries have been jobless ones. The weakness of the current recovery explains some of it, but it can’t be a complete explanation. Is Okun’s Law dead? What did we do to it?
A little bit of googling found me an article from the New York Fed, written during the much-more-mild jobless recovery of 2001-2003. They found:
We advance the hypothesis that structural changes—permanent shifts in the distribution of workers throughout the economy—have contributed significantly to the sluggishness in the job market.
We find evidence of structural change in two features of the 2001 recession: the predominance of permanent job losses over temporary layoffs and the relocation of jobs from one industry to another. The data suggest that most of the jobs added during the recovery have been new positions in different firms and industries, not rehires. In our view, this shift to new jobs largely explains why the payroll numbers have been so slow to rise: Creating jobs takes longer than recalling workers to their old positions and is riskier in the current uncertain environment.
From a policy perspective, this suggests two things to me. First, there are a lot of reasons why the economy might be shifting from one industry to another, and there’s no way to stop that sort of trend (if we even wanted to). We should get it over with. What I mean by that is we should not be trying to prop up shrinking industries. We can’t do it in the long run, and our attempts serve only to push the adjustment process into recessions (reality sets in when times are tough).
Second, we should make it easier and less risky to create new jobs in new industries. That means encouraging investment and cutting regulation.
Unfortunately, our current administration is doing exactly the opposite of all the above.
The Chicago Way
May 24, 2011Marc Thiessen writes in the Washington Post:
In a television interview last October, President Obama accidentally let slip a key element of his political philosophy: “We’re gonna punish our enemies, and we’re gonna reward our friends who stand with us on issues that are important to us.” . . .
This incident is worth remembering as the president prepares to issue a far-reaching executive order that would require the government to collect detailed information about the political activities of anyone applying for a federal contract. . .
Why is this a bad idea? Recall that in August 1971, Richard Nixon’s White House counsel John Dean penned a confidential memorandum in which he proposed creating a list of “our political enemies.” The purpose of the exercise, according to Dean, was to “determine what sorts of dealings these individuals have with the Federal Government and how we can best screw them (e.g., grant availability, federal contracts.. . . etc.)” Since then, enormous steps have been taken to clean up the federal contracting process and ensure that government contracts are granted solely on the basis of merit. Obama’s proposed executive order would undermine that progress, reverse years of effort to remove politics from contracting decisions and create incentives for impropriety.
Let’s not forget, this bunch is from Chicago. To them, increasing the importance of politics and graft in government contracting is a feature, not a bug.
(Via Instapundit.)
Think globally, act foolishly
May 23, 2011Seattle contemplates a ban on paper cups.
Don’t think it can’t happen either. This is the same town that has been known to close streets for the sole purpose of making driving less convenient.
Cain doesn’t understand right-of-return
May 23, 2011There is a lot to like about Herman Cain, but you can’t be taken seriously as a presidential candidate without a familiarity with basic foreign policy issues. That includes the issue of right-to-return in the Israel-Palestinian conflict, which Cain seems not to understand.
POSTSCRIPT: Judging by the question, Chris Wallace doesn’t entirely understand the issue either, as he spoke of Palestinians having been kicked out of Israel in 1948. A man ready to be president would be able to correct him.
(Via Michael Barone.)
Right-to-work in New Hampshire
May 23, 2011Could New Hampshire become a right-to-work state? That would give them a huge competitive advantage in the northeast.
Useful idiot
May 23, 2011Cynthia McKinney does what Cynthia McKinney does:
A former U.S. congresswoman slammed U.S. policy on Libyan state TV late Saturday and stressed the “last thing we need to do is spend money on death, destruction and war.”
The station is fiercely loyal to Moammar Gadhafi and her interview was spliced with what appeared to be rallies in support of the embattled Libyan leader.
So she gives aid and comfort to the enemy during Democratic administrations as well as Republican ones. At least she’s consistent.
Yes, he really said that
May 23, 2011President Obama, at a fundraiser in Austin:
Internationally, we’ve gone through a Teutonic [sic] shift in the Middle East that could have enormous ramifications for years to come.
(Emphasis mine.)
It’s amusing to picture what a Teutonic shift might look like.
Amateur hour
May 22, 2011President Obama “clarifies” that when he called for a Israel to pull back to its 1967 borders, he meant “a border that is different than the one that existed on June 4, 1967.”
Philadelphia doubles down
May 21, 2011The Philadelphia police have announced that they are not going to respect the law:
With a shocking altercation between Philadelphia police and a 25-year-old IT worker putting the spotlight back on open-carry gun laws, local authorities are warning gun owners that they will be “inconvenienced” if they carry unconcealed handguns in the city. Lt. Raymond Evers, a spokesman for the city police, told FoxNews.com that gun owners who open carry, which is legal in the city, may be asked to lay on the ground until officers feel safe while they check permits.
This is going to cost Philadelphia a lot of money they don’t have.
Obama violates the War Powers Act
May 20, 2011As of today, President Obama is out of compliance with the War Powers Act, which requires the president to obtain congressional approval for military action within 60 days. Absent such approval, the president must terminate the military action after 60 days, unless he certifies in writing that “unavoidable military necessity” requires the continued use of military force, in which case the president may delay the withdrawal for at most 30 additional days.
Sixty days after the opening of the Libyan campaign, President Obama has not even tried to obtain Congressional approval, nor has he certified “unavoidable military necessity.”
Of course, it is an open question whether the War Powers Act is constitutional. But presidents usually follow the rules anyway, even while maintaining they are not required to do so. Indeed, the Obama administration pledged to act “consistent” with the Act less than two weeks ago.
Personally, I think it’s a tough call whether the Act is constitutional or not. In any case, I think the best policy is to preserve the useful ambiguity that has largely prevailed since 1973, in which presidents have followed the Act’s requirements, but have maintained they were not required to do so. For Obama to abandon that policy, for no apparent reason at all, is foolish.
POSTSCRIPT: It is interesting to note that Obama is the second president to violate the War Powers Act. The first was our last Democratic president, Bill Clinton. In 1999, President Clinton continued his Kosovo campaign for over 60 days without obtaining approval. His legal team argued that Congress had implicitly given approval by funding the campaign, but that argument was absurd, since the Act says explicitly that funding cannot be construed as approval:
Authority . . . shall not be inferred — from any provision of law . . . including any provision contained in any appropriation Act, unless such provision specifically authorizes the introduction of United States Armed Forces into hostilities . . .
San Francisco to First Amendment: drop dead
May 20, 2011AP reports:
A proposal to ban the circumcision of male children in San Francisco has been cleared to appear on the November ballot, setting the stage for the nation’s first public vote on what has long been considered a private family matter.
But even in a city with a long-held reputation for pushing boundaries, the measure is drawing heavy fire. Opponents are lining up against it, saying a ban on a religious rite considered sacred by Jews and Muslims is a blatant violation of constitutional rights. . .
If the measure passes, circumcision would be prohibited among males under the age of 18. The practice would become a misdemeanor offense punishable by a fine of up to $1,000 or up to one year in jail. There would be no religious exemptions.
The mere fact that the measure could make the ballot tells us a lot about what “tolerance” really means in San Francisco. It will be very interesting to see if it passes.
Money, not ideology, drives green car sales
May 20, 2011Autoblog reports:
Research conducted by Auto Trader suggests that money, not the environment, is the main driving force behind motorists’ interest in eco-friendly vehicles, at least in Great Britain. The majority of UK motorists (73 percent) would consider “going green” to save money on fuel, compared to just 41 percent of drivers admitting that environmental concerns would motivate them to purchase a greener vehicle.
This is good (if unsurprising) news for an efficient economy. In a competitive market, the best measure of the resources expended to make a product is price. When people base decisions on price, they are optimizing resource allocation.
The thing about price is it values all resources even-handedly, according to their scarcity. When environmentalists push us to spend more for a green product, they are encouraging sub-optimal resource allocation. Specifically, they want us to use increase our use of more-expensive (and therefore more scarce) resources in certain categories (such as labor or precious metals), in order to conserve less-expensive (and therefore less scarce) resources in other categories (such as oil). Green advocates feel that the latter categories are more important despite being less scarce.
(Via Instapundit.)
Obama still working on gun control
May 20, 2011President Obama says he is still working on gun control, “under the radar”, says Sarah Brady. Fortunately, I don’t think “under the radar” will work. The gun-rights community is paying close attention, and whatever Obama tries to sneak in by regulation will end up as a political issue.
(Via Instapundit.)
Even broker than we thought
May 20, 2011Medicare and Social Security are in even worse shape than we thought.
AFL-CIO wiretapping
May 20, 2011An AFL-CIO official boasts of intercepting their opponents’ emails.
If their opponents were foreign terrorists, this would be a scandal. Since they are not, it’s not even a story.
Pelosi’s waivers
May 20, 2011Of the latest batch of Obamacare waivers, 1 in 5 went to Nancy Pelosi’s Congressional district. With 435 Congressional districts (not counting DC), it seems hard to explain this by chance alone.
What do we, the public, know about the decision process for waivers? Anything at all?
Liu defeated
May 19, 2011In 2005 the Senate decided to keep judicial filibusters in order in “extraordinary circumstances”. Democrats, by and large, supported the filibuster, and Republicans opposed it, but a few Republicans crossed the aisle to save the maneuver.
As much as the Democrats might have hoped for it, Republicans obviously were not going to disarm unilaterally and concede the filibuster as a maneuver for Democrats only. The GOP wanted to change the rules, but the Democrats won. And if there were ever extraordinary circumstances, this was the time.
Goodwin Liu was an astonishing appointment to the US Court of Appeals:
A legal scholar who has never been a judge and has little experience practicing law, Liu occupies a place on the far left side of the legal spectrum. To take just one example, Republicans are fond of repeating Liu’s assertion that the Constitution guarantees the right to “expanded health insurance, child care, transportation subsidies, job training, and a robust earned income tax credit.”
His testimony against Samuel Alito was so intemperate — not to mention false — that even he admits it was wrong (although he never figured that out until he was facing confirmation himself). Worse, he believes that the Constitution requires liberal policies. Worse still, he is actually willing to proclaim those beliefs openly.
In short, Liu is a politician. As Lindsey Graham said, he should be running for office, not taking a seat on the bench. Now he will have the chance. I hope he loses.
Editor-in-chief
May 19, 2011Run an op-ed the White House disapproves of, and get yourself kicked out of the White House press pool.
Shake-up at ATF
May 19, 2011CBS reports:
CBS News has learned that virtually all the top ATF managers in Phoenix involved in the controversial “Fast and Furious” operation have been reassigned and replaced. The shake-up comes in the wake of the gunwalking scandal in which ATF allegedly allowed more than 2500 weapons to hit the streets or “walk.”
Good.
Abuse of power
May 17, 2011The Philadelphia police arrested a man and subject him to verbal abuse for legally carrying a firearm. They released him when they found they hadn’t a leg to stand on, but when he posted recordings of the incident they charged him with disorderly conduct:
The Police Department heard about the YouTube clips. A new investigation was launched, and last month the District Attorney’s Office decided to charge Fiorino with reckless endangerment and disorderly conduct because, a spokeswoman said, he refused to cooperate with police.
This is going to cost Philadelphia a lot of money. I hadn’t heard they had money to waste.
POSTSCRIPT: The police also says that their officers weren’t trained in the relevant gun laws. I’m not sure if it’s worse if that’s true or false.
The quagmire continues
May 17, 2011The New York Times isn’t giving up, but their complaints are starting to become a little thin:
In downtown Baghdad, a police headquarters has been painted two shades of purple: lilac and grape. The central bank, a staid building in many countries, is coated in bright red candy cane stripes. . .
Baghdad has weathered invasion, occupation, sectarian warfare and suicide bombers. But the latest scourge, tastelessness, may prove the toughest to overcome.
An Instapundit reader remarks:
When all the New York Times can complain about is the color of buildings in Baghdad, can we officially say that the war was a success?
BONUS: Perhaps sensing that their thesis was a bit overwrought, the NYT has changed the final sentence of the quote to “But now it faces a new scourge: tastelessness.”
Boeing was just the beginning
May 16, 2011If this report is accurate, the NLRB’s horrifying decision to try to block Boeing’s decision to locate a factory in South Carolina is not some crazy outlier, but the first wave of a deliberate push by President Obama’s NLRB to give unions a veto over company decisions.
Atlas Shrugged is starting to feel a lot less alarmist than it used to feel.
Public opposes debt ceiling increase
May 15, 2011If this Gallup poll is accurate, Republicans have the upper hand in the debt ceiling debate.
With the budget, Democrats can demagogue specific line items to attack budget cuts. As Milton Friedman famously pointed out, special interests are more passionate about protecting their specific perks than the general interests are about cutting them all. But with the debt ceiling there are no specific items to demagogue; the debate is on general terms, which favors fiscal conservatives.
Sounds like a Kennedy
May 15, 2011The Economist comments on the Kahn affair:
LEAVE aside the details of the allegations against Dominique Strauss Kahn, the head of the IMF (his lawyer indicates he will plead not guilty). Just note that the New York Times states that he was staying in a $3,000 a night suite and was taking a first class flight to Paris. This is the IMF, the body that imposes austerity on indebted countries and is funded by global taxpayers. And this was the likely leading socialist candidate for the French presidency.
Yes, but how is this unusual? You see this whenever you look at the amenities of the ruling class. Socialism’s true purpose is to protect the privilege of the nomenklatura. Everything else is just propaganda.
(Via Instapundit.)
Huckabee bows out
May 15, 2011Mike Huckabee will not run for president. This is good news. I would vote for him over Obama, but I wouldn’t be happy about it.
Doublethink
May 15, 2011It’s hard to find anything to disagree with in this Wall Street Journal editorial, criticizing Mitt Romney for his glaringly inconsistent position on health care nationalization. I really want to like Romney, but he’s weak on my number one domestic issue.
It’s not too late for him to reverse course on this. No one remembers flip-flops from the primary season, and the ever-lengthening primary season is moving them ever-further from election day. But he needs to get on with the flop. The WSJ’s advice for how to handle this is good, I think.
Drill, baby, drill
May 15, 2011In what can be seen only as a reluctant acknowledgement of political reality, President Obama has reversed course and approved more oil drilling. It may be too late, though, with oil drilling rigs already leaving US waters for greener pastures.
Rubber stamp
May 15, 2011The Democrats who control the Illinois legislature called a vote on a budget bill that no one had seen.
Card check is back
May 15, 2011The NLRB is suing the state of Arizona to block a new law that guarantees a secret ballot in union certification elections. To put it more clearly: the Obama administration is suing to deny workers a secret ballot.
Most incompetent government agency ever?
May 15, 2011When the ATF isn’t facilitating sales of weapons to Mexican drug cartels, they are starting 150 acre brush fires.
Chrysler’s bogus repayment
May 13, 2011There’s some very delicate phrasing in Timothy Geithner’s recent talk about “looking forward to the full repayment of our loan to [Chrysler]”. By “our loan” he doesn’t mean all of our loans to Chrysler. He means one of our loans to Chrysler — the $7.1 billion loan that we’re still hoping to see paid back. The other loans, on which we’ve lost a combined $3.5 billion, that money is gone for good.
(Via Kaus Files.)
POSTSCRIPT: I wasn’t able to locate the document that The Truth About Cars shows in the link above, but the Congressional report on the auto bailout has the same information on page 52.
Obama fires CEO
May 13, 2011In today’s America, the NLRB decides where companies build their factories, and the president can fire a CEO. But don’t worry, we’re not becoming socialist. That would be alarmist.
How to undermine freedom of religion
May 13, 2011If you wanted to undermine freedom of religion, can you think of a better way than expanding the notion of religion to include every sort of taste or opinion? A UK tribunal has ruled that supporting public broadcasting is a form of religion.
Uncle Sam wants to text you
May 13, 2011The Boston Herald reports:
President Obama could soon have the ability to personally text message every single cell-phone-toting American -— whether they like it or not — with “critical emergency alerts” under a new federal program that civil libertarians and political opponents say is a Big Brother-like intrusion posing a high risk of political abuse.
Federal officials in New York yesterday unveiled the three-tiered emergency alert system that would blast messages about Amber Alerts, impending weather disasters and terror threats to mobile devices.
Cell-phone users could opt out of most alerts if they want to, but not the texter-in-chief’s presidential pages.
“It’s like the state rep sending out mailings about how wonderful they are,” said Tad Kasperowicz of the Quincy Tea Party. “President Obama says,’Here come the high winds and the thunderstorms’ and it’s not really an emergency, but, hey, he gets his name out to every cell phone in the area. I can see that. Absolutely. There’s potential for abuse there.”
Potential? I’d say near-certainty. Politicians already exploit every avenue they can find to get their names in front of you, from Congress’s franking privileges to governors stamping their name on billboards at every entrance to the state. Of course they will abuse this, but they’ve never had such an invasive tool before.
(Via Instapundit.)
Irony
May 13, 2011WikiLeaks is cracking down on leaks:
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange now makes his associates sign a draconian nondisclosure agreement that, among other things, asserts that the organization’s huge trove of leaked material is “solely the property of WikiLeaks,” according to a report Wednesday. . .
The confidentiality agreement (.pdf), revealed by the New Statesman, imposes a penalty of 12 million British pounds– nearly $20 million — on anyone responsible for a significant leak of the organization’s unpublished material.
Light bulb freedom
May 10, 2011South Carolina is taking matters into its own hands. Who knows if this will stand up in court, but it’s great that they are trying. If nothing else, it will be good to see the federal government have to defend the light bulb ban.
Good question
May 10, 2011Peter Kirsanow has a question for the president:
You extended deserved praise and congratulations to the SEAL team that killed Osama bin Laden. You did not, however, extend praise and congratulations last year to the SEAL team that captured Ahmed Abed — the most wanted al-Qaeda terrorist in Iraq — responsible for killing and mutilating a number of Americans. Instead, three members of that SEAL team — Officer Second Class Matt McCabe and Petty Officers Julio Huertas and Jonathan Keefe — were tried because Abed claimed he’d been slapped by one of the operators. All three SEALs were acquitted.
Will you now praise and congratulate McCabe, Huertas, and Keefe for capturing Abed? If not, why not?
No free speech in Germany
May 10, 2011Der Spiegel reports:
A Hamburg judge has filed a criminal complaint against Chancellor Angela Merkel for “endorsing a crime” after she stated she was “glad” that Osama bin Laden was killed by US forces.
I wonder if it’s time to give up on Europe.
(Via the Corner.)
UK to regulate press Twitter
May 10, 2011It’s a pity the Brits don’t have the freedom of the press.
The particularly perverse thing about this story is that the British government is arguing that Twitter feeds from press organizations are a form of press, and that opens them up to tighter regulation. (Via Instapundit.)
Take that, nuns!
May 9, 2011Remember when Democrats’ rallying cry was “count every vote”? That was then.
Now, Joanne Kloppenberg, the defeated union candidate for Wisconsin Supreme Court, is working to get as many votes thrown out as she can. In one instance, she succeeded in getting 18 votes from cloistered nuns thrown out because they were missing witness signatures. (That gained her 10 of the seven thousand votes she needs.)
My opinion has always been that the election rules should be applied punctiliously. But it certainly is no good when the rules are applied strictly in only one direction.
Times change
May 7, 2011There was a time when Paul Krugman was serious. In 1996 he wrote:
Generous benefits for the elderly are feasible as long as there are relatively few retirees compared with the number of taxpaying workers — which is the current situation, because the baby boomers swell the workforce. In 2010, however, the boomers will begin to retire. . . The budgetary effects of this demographic tidal wave are straightforward to compute, but so huge as almost to defy comprehension.
. . .
In fact, the so-called ”trust funds” are making barely any provisions for the future. In another spectacular statistic, Mr. Peterson notes that if Medicare and Social Security had to obey the same rules that apply to private pensions, the reported Federal deficit this year would be not its official $150 billion, but roughly $1.5 trillion.
In short, the Federal Government, however solid its finances may currently appear, is in fact living utterly beyond its means. While the present generation of retirees is doing very nicely, the promises that are being made to those now working cannot be honored.
Today, demagoguing entitlements is the core Democratic strategy. Now Krugman toes the line, taking the trust fund very seriously and smearing anyone concerned about entitlement (such as 1996 Krugman) as dishonest:
Social Security has been running surpluses for the last quarter-century, banking those surpluses in a special account, the so-called trust fund. The program won’t have to turn to Congress for help or cut benefits until or unless the trust fund is exhausted, which the program’s actuaries don’t expect to happen until 2037 — and there’s a significant chance, according to their estimates, that that day will never come. . .
So where do claims of crisis come from? To a large extent they rely on bad-faith accounting. In particular, they rely on an exercise in three-card monte in which the surpluses Social Security has been running for a quarter-century don’t count — because hey, the program doesn’t have any independent existence; it’s just part of the general federal budget — while future Social Security deficits are unacceptable — because hey, the program has to stand on its own.
I don’t even understand what he is alleging that dishonest people like me and 1996 Krugman are saying. Yes, the trust fund is an accounting fiction. Social Security takes in tax money and spends it on benefits. For decades it has run a surplus doing so. (Those surpluses “don’t count”? What is that even supposed to mean?) Now it is running a deficit. Soon — long before the “trust fund” runs out of imaginary money — it will be running a massive, unaffordable deficit.
One Obama policy that is working
May 7, 2011I paid $4 per gallon for gas yesterday. The Obama administration’s energy policy is working.
Yes, it’s working. Because this is exactly what they said they wanted to accomplish, according to the Secretary of Energy, Steven Chu:
“Somehow we have to figure out how to boost the price of gasoline to the levels in Europe,” Mr. Chu, who directs the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in California, said in an interview with The Wall Street Journal in September.
The Secretary of Transportation, Ray LaHood, has also explained that it is his aim to “coerce people out of their cars.”
Neither of the aims have fully succeeded yet, but they are making excellent progress:
Note how the period of soaring gas prices coincides almost precisely with the Obama administration.
How to botch the unbotchable
May 7, 2011I’ve been puzzled by how the Obama administration could take such an unambiguously good event as the death of Osama Bin Laden, and roll out the news so ineptly, but Victor Davis Hanson explained it in the latest Ricochet podcast.
If this had happened during the Bush administration, the story would have been: we went in and shot him, he’s dead, ooo-rah. There would not have been any hand-wringing about whether this was the right thing to do. But the Obama administration is different. They are profoundly uncomfortable with extra-judicial killings. Their allies in the media attacked US special forces (which includes the team that took out Bin Laden) as the Dick Cheney’s assassination squad. In 2009, Eric Holder was even unable to answer the question of whether Bin Laden, if captured, would need to be read a Miranda warning.
As a result, a story that would have been good enough as-is for President Bush needed to be embellished for President Obama. Hence we were told he was taken in a firefight, he was resisting, using a human shield, etc. All of that was to provide an excuse for why we didn’t take him alive, read him his rights, and whisk him off to a civilian jail. All of that was to provide answers to questions no one outside the far-far-left would ask. Unfortunately for Obama, his administration has internalized the far-far-left.
California’s secret government
May 7, 2011A fascinating story on one of California’s worst ideas: a scheme whereby municipalities are encouraged to steal property using imminent domain, and are rewarded by diverting state tax money into municipal slush funds. (Via Instapundit.)
Ending gerrymandering
May 7, 2011Bob Zubrin has a proposal for ending gerrymandering. He proposes that a quantitative measure of the compactness (or conversely, the irregularity) of legislative districts be devised (such as the ratio of the area to the square of the circumference). Then both parties submit a districting plan and the more compact (less irregular) plan wins.
I’ve had a similar thought, but why limit it to the parties? Let’s “crowd-source” it: let anyone at all introduce a plan and take the best one.
Canada does not have a free press, 2011 edition
May 7, 2011Canada’s CBC network is in hot water for reporting election results. Canada has a law that bars the media from reporting election results in any province in which the polls are still open — a law that becomes more of a farce every year since results are easily obtainable via the internet.
Is climate change responsible for tornadoes?
May 5, 2011No. Some day, perhaps, but today? No respectable scientist would suggest such a thing.
But Think Progress seems to think that it is. And here’s the kicker, they say so with great disdain for the anti-science bent of the “deniers”.
Beware the mileage tax
May 5, 2011The Obama administration is floating a mileage tax, supported by mandatory GPS tracking.
An administration spokeperson adamantly denies that this is an administration proposal. I’m glad of that, but it’s bad enough that someone liked the idea enough to have a bill drafted.
Congratulations Canada!
May 2, 2011Canadians have elected Stephen Harper to a third term, and (according to projections) his first majority government. The Liberals and the separatist Bloc Quebecois were decimated. The openly socialist NDP will become the opposition party, which should lead to clarified debates in Parliament.
All in all, today was a good day.
A preview of coming slander
April 29, 2011The United Auto Workers is in trouble: The unionized segment of the automobile industry is dying. Most (nearly all? I don’t have the numbers.) of the growth in automobile manufacturing in the United States is with foreign automakers in right-to-work states. If the UAW can’t find a way to unionize those plants, it will die.
National Review’s F. Vincent Vernuccio and Iain Murray explain (subscription required) the UAW’s strategy. The NLRB, now controlled by Obama appointees, has instituted new rules that allow a union election to be carried out by card check (i.e., without a secret ballot) if the employer agrees. Thus, if the employer chooses not to fight the union, the union is permitted to intimidate employees into agreeing to be represented.
How does the UAW plan to get them to go along? The UAW’s president was nice enough to tell us:
If a company makes the bad business decision to engage in anti-union activity, suppress the rights of speech and assembly, we will launch a global campaign to brand that company a human-rights violator.
And lest anyone miss the message, the UAW has also said that it will defend companies from attacks “from community groups that send the message that the company is not operating in a socially responsible way” if they do not fight the union.
Ominously, the UAW has already hired Jesse Jackson, who is notorious for faux human-rights extortion. In the coming months, expect to see allegations of human rights violations leveled at a major foreign automaker (probably Toyota). When it happens, you’ll know why.
Lese majeste
April 29, 2011The White House has banned a San Francisco Chronicle reporter from the pool for recording some protesters at an Obama fundraiser. (Then they denied having done so, but the Chronicle stood by its story.)
(Via Instapundit.)
Paul Krugman, *rim shot*
April 29, 2011It has come to this for the world’s most dishonest Nobel-prize-winning economist: When Paul Krugman was cited as an authority at a town meeting in Wisconsin, the room broke into laughter.
POSTSCRIPT: On a serious note, I’ll remind readers of Robert Barro’s comments on Krugman. Krugman columns are typically on macroeconomics (when he’s not writing more general libels, such as blaming shootings on Republicans), an area in which he has no special expertise.
Jimmy Carter: US and South Korea are violating North Korea’s human rights
April 29, 2011Jimmy Carter really is one of the world’s stupidest people.
Comeuppance
April 27, 2011Wisconsin State Journal reports:
UW Health doctors who wrote sick notes for protesters at the Capitol in February face penalties up to a loss of pay and leadership positions, the UW School of Medicine and Public Health said Tuesday.
The medical school reviewed 22 UW Health doctors said to have been involved in writing medical excuses for protesters attending rallies over Gov. Scott Walker’s budget proposals, according to a medical school statement. . .
The Wisconsin Department of Regulation and Licensing and the Medical Examining Board are investigating eight people who allegedly wrote notes, the agencies said last week.
The Wisconsin Medical Society criticized the doctors’ actions, saying they threatened the public’s trust in the medical profession.
The Madison School District told teachers who turned in fraudulent sick notes to rescind them by last month or face discipline. The district received more than 1,000 notes from teachers during the protests.
These guys thought they could get away with anything, and seem to be surprised to find out they were wrong. Frankly, I’m a little surprised too.
(Via Instapundit.)
We do what we can
April 27, 2011If you’re President Obama, you can’t run a sound fiscal policy that keeps our nation’s credit from ruin, but you can pressure Standard & Poors not to report it. (And be just about as successful.)
I suspect we’re going to see renewed political attacks against the rating agencies soon.
Et tu, Massachusetts?
April 27, 2011Massachusetts is following Wisconsin’s lead and limiting the collective bargaining privileges of public-sector unions. Does this mean we’ve won?
The fall of the UK
April 27, 2011A British man has been arrested for singing “Kung Fu Fighting”. It’s sad to see the country that invented individual liberty abandoning it.
(Via Instapundit.)
Obama gets serious about rising gasoline prices
April 24, 2011A good example of how President Obama sees the world: Rising gasoline prices are not a substantiative problem, to be addressed by sound energy policy. They are a political problem, to be addressed by attacks on oil companies.
The conscience of a liberal
April 24, 2011Paul Krugman was delighted to charge the entire right with complicity in the Loughner shooting, because we (like everyone else) used the occasional violent metaphor. But Krugman now seems to have gotten over his excruciating sensitivity to violent metaphors, as he is now writing about dealing with bad ideas with “another shot to the head”.
And save your breath if you were thinking of protesting that Krugman isn’t talking about shooting people. Not a single one of the persons (e.g., Michelle Bachmann) that Krugman smeared were talking about shooting people either. That excuse doesn’t cut it in Krugman’s new era of civility.
(Via Althouse.)
Rehabilitation
April 24, 2011Gen. Ricardo Sanchez used to be reviled by the left as nearly a war criminal. (From particularly strident leftists you can strike the “nearly”.) But all that stuff is forgotten now that he is running for the Senate as a Democrat. As Glenn Reynolds put it: “It’s like they never cared about this stuff except insofar as they could score cheap partisan points.”
POSTSCRIPT: Democrats will doubtless turn this argument on its head and accuse Republicans of hypocrisy when their attacks on Sanchez begin. Let’s pre-but that argument now: Our opinion of Sanchez has changed, but for non-opportunistic reasons, and long before Sanchez hinted at becoming a political candidate. He has been a vociferous opponent of the surge — the strategy that won the war — even well after it was clearly working. The man has bad military judgement, and nothing else on his resume.
Thuggery
April 22, 2011President Obama is taking a first step toward blackballing GOP supporters from receiving government contracts:
The White House has been circulating a draft Executive Order that would make many provisions of the failed DISCLOSE Act law by fiat. . . The order would require all companies that sign contracts with the federal government to report on the personal political activities of their officers and directors.
The Chamber of Commerce’s Blair Latoff told Politico that the order “lays the groundwork for a political litmus test for companies that wish to do business with the federal government” and is “less about disclosure than intimidation.”
There is a very simple way to prove that this Obama order is all about punishing his enemies and rewarding his friends: unions that sign collective bargaining contracts with the federal government are exempt from the “disclosure” requirements.
TSA persecutes TSA critics
April 22, 2011The TSA is targeting its critics for additional scrutiny:
CNN has obtained a list of roughly 70 “behavioral indicators” that TSA behavior detection officers use to identify potentially “high risk” passengers at the nation’s airports.
Many of the indicators, as characterized in open government reports, are behaviors and appearances that may be indicative of stress, fear or deception. None of them, as the TSA has long said, refer to or suggest race, religion or ethnicity.
But one addresses passengers’ attitudes towards security, and how they express those attitudes. It reads: “Very arrogant and expresses contempt against airport passenger procedures.”
Uh oh. I think my contempt is rising as we speak.
(Via Instapundit.)
More signing statements
April 22, 2011Yet another signing statement from the president who pledged never to use signing statements.
Doublespeak
April 22, 2011Nice:
White House: When Obama said Paul Ryan is ‘not on the level,’ he meant Ryan is ‘absolutely sincere’
Let them eat cake
April 22, 2011President Obama says not to blame him for high gas prices: if you’re having trouble paying for gas, you ought to buy a more fuel-efficient car. Oh, I see. Thanks for nothing.
What Obama and the rest of the left fail to appreciate (or at least approve) is that people make decisions for their own reasons, and often their reasons are good ones. Cue to 1:48 here to see Obama make fun of the questioner for having a big car, then nearly do a spit-take when he learned the man had ten kids.
ASIDE: At that point, Obama said he needed to buy a hybrid van. If you’re having trouble paying for gas, can you afford an expensive hybrid? And hybrid vans (the few that exist) don’t get very good mileage either, for that matter.
There’s also a media failure aspect to this story. The Associated Press has sent this entire story down the memory hole and replaced it with a completely different story without the callous indifference. (Aaron Worthing says that doing so violated the AP’s policy, but come on, who really takes that stuff seriously?)
Appeasement fail
April 22, 2011The pharmaceutical industry is upset that the Obama administration is reneging on the deal it made to buy the industry’s support for health care nationalization:
Drug industry sources tell FOX Business the Administration is backtracking on what is called the “PhRMA deal” in health reform, a deal that was struck behind closed doors in late 2009 and early 2010 in order to get the industry to support and endorse health-care reform.
In the “PhRMA” deal, drug companies would fork over $80 billion in fees as well as give drug discounts to seniors in Medicare over 10 years, among other things.
In exchange, the White House agreed, among other items, to not force the drug industry to accept rebates on drugs sold through Medicare Part D, a program launched under President George W. Bush to subsidize prescription drugs for seniors.
But President Barack Obama’s new deficit push calls for those Medicare rebates, via the Simpson-Bowles plan.
The deficit plan “has blown the deal to smithereens,” says William S. Smith, managing director of Healthcare National Strategies, a D.C.-based government affairs consulting firm. “The Obama Administration has repudiated the PhRMA deal,” says Smith, a former vice president for US public affairs and policy at Pfizer (PFE).
I know it shouldn’t, but this really makes me smile. These people sold us all out to protect their own interests, and I’m glad to see them get screwed for it. I hope this example will teach the next industry in line the folly of trying to appease the rapacious state.
Don’t know much about history
April 22, 2011President Obama explains his unpopularity in Texas, saying “Texas has always been a pretty Republican state, for, you know, historic reasons.” Good grief. Just one data point: Republicans took control of the Texas legislature for the first time since Reconstruction in 2002.
Glenn Reynolds piles on:
Apparently, when Obama taught Constitutional Law he never got around to teaching the Texas White (Democratic) Primary cases. Or talking about which side was which in the Civil War . . . .
. . . It was the Texas Democrats who excluded black voters (and Mexican-Americans) from their primaries (and then dodged further with the Jaybird Democratic Association when the courts struck down the White Primaries). This is a major set of cases under state action, and I’m surprised that Obama is unfamiliar with this history. I wonder what he covered in his Constitutional Law classes?
Overreach outrage
April 22, 2011I would not have thought that the Obama administration could still shock me. I was wrong.
The National Labor Relations Board has ruled that Boeing cannot build its new 787 plant in South Carolina, where the labor environment is friendlier than Puget Sound. The board claims that Boeing expanding operations in a right-to-work state “discourag[es] membership in a labor organization” and thus violates the law.
This is so astonishing, it bears repeating: the NLRB is trying to dictate to a private company where it builds its plant.
The NLRB relies on the courts to enforce its rulings, and presumably this one will not stand. The NLRB certainly has no authority under the law to prevent businesses from locating in right-to-work states.
Nevertheless, this is an outrage. Ed Morrissey likens this to Ayn Rand’s fictional anti-dog-eat-dog rule. I think that’s right. If anything, I think that understates the outrage of this. Surely none can now deny that we are suffering under a socialist administration.
POSTSCRIPT: The NLRB currently has four seats (one is vacant). The chairwoman is a Clinton appointment (unwisely reappointed by President Bush in an effort to achieve comity with Democrats — how well did that work again?) who was elevated to chair by President Obama. The other three seats are Obama appointments. One of them, the radical Craig Becker, was a recess appointment. So Obama owns this board.
UPDATE: Jonathan Adler comments.
Smoking gun
April 21, 2011I trust no one will be shocked to learn that February’s illegal teachers’ strike in Madison, Wisconsin was coordinated by the Madison teachers’ union, MTI.
(Via Instapundit.)
Obama administration spikes terror prosecutions
April 21, 2011A Pajamas Media source within DOJ says that prosecutions of domestic organizations (such as CAIR) that support terrorism have been spiked for political reasons.
(Via the Corner.)
UPDATE (4/27) : Confirmed.
Kloppenburg’s folly
April 21, 2011JoAnne Kloppenburg, the would-be judicial activist who lost her bid for Wisconsin Supreme Court, is demanding a recount. Good luck with that:
(Chart from Politico.) (Via Instapundit.)
In contempt
April 21, 2011Rep. Darrell Issa (R-CA) has lost patience with ATF’s stonewalling over the “gunwalking” scandal. Despite subpoenas, the ATF is refusing to produce the required documents, so Issa is ready begin contempt proceedings.
Democrats support CO2 regulation
April 13, 2011Senate Democrats have blocked an effort to forbid the EPA from regulating carbon dioxide.
The battle is not over, in so far as the EPA simply does not have (subscription required), under the law, the authority to do what it is doing. The Clean Air Act is designed to deal with pollution, and sets thresholds for action that are entirely inappropriate for carbon dioxide, which is much more prevalent than pollutants in even the worst polluted air. The EPA recognizes that applying the Clean Air Act’s rules to carbon dioxide would be absurd, but rather than abandoning the effort (as it should), it simply made up its own rules. This is an unconstitutional usurpation of legislative authority.
The Supreme Court has ruled against the EPA on carbon dioxide once already, in Massachusetts v. EPA. It may well do so again. A legislative solution would have been preferable to a judicial one, but unfortunately the Democrats have prevented that. In the meantime, they own the problem.
(Via Instapundit.)
Democracy fatigue
April 13, 2011Nancy Pelosi says “elections shouldn’t matter as much as they do.”
Her point, if I can render it fairly, is the two parties ought to have “shared values”, in which case the election winner wouldn’t matter as much. In particular, the Republicans ought to be more like Democrats.
She’s right, of course, that the two parties do not have shared values. The Democrats embrace statism, while the Republicans (at least officially, and often in reality) embrace personal liberty. But Pelosi never had a problem with that divide while they were winning the elections. Now that we are winning the elections, we have a serious problem.
UPDATE: Related thoughts at Power Line.
Tyranny
April 11, 2011Chicago’s public schools are banning homemade lunches. In order to assure that students eat healthy lunches, students are required to eat cafeteria food or go hungry. Many are going hungry.
That’s your law of unintended consequences in a nutshell: in the interest of ensuring students eat well, students are going hungry.
But let’s not be distracted by the predictable failure of the policy. This would be a travesty even if it worked perfectly. Who do these people think they are, to usurp control of children’s diets from their parents?!
(Via Instapundit.)
Do gooder
April 11, 2011The Economist (subscription required) tells the inspiring story of Vinod Khosla, who wants to save the planet using venture capitalism:
His next move was characteristically unpredictable: he temporarily moved his family to India. “I wanted to see if I could have a social impact,” he says. “I quickly realised that any non-profit activity I could do would be no more than a drop in the ocean. Most non-profit organisations are completely ineffective. That’s when I decided that I needed to look for scalable solutions, which meant self-propagating solutions, which meant capitalist solutions. Proving the capitalist tool as a solution for poverty is high on my priority list.”
That’s exactly right. Profitable solutions are scalable. Expensive solutions are not.
Khosla also has sharp words for the environmental movement:
If Mr Khosla is unapologetic about making money while helping some of the world’s poorest people, he is equally outspoken when it comes to the environmental movement in the West. “Wind projects are a waste of time. And the reality is that electric cars today are coal-powered cars, because the USA and much of Europe have mostly coal-based electricity,” he says. “Environmentalists use artificial rates of return, buried assumptions and ‘what if’ assumptions about behaviour changes. It’s useless crap.”
Lies, Damn Lies, and Paul Krugman
April 10, 2011You knew, of course, that Paul Krugman would attack Paul Ryan’s proposed budget, but you had to wait to find out exactly what howlers Krugman would tell. The attack column is out now, and among his many absurdities (e.g., his outrage at the notion that the private sector might deliver health care more efficiently than the federal government) there is this outright lie:
In fact, the budget office finds that over the next decade the plan would lead to bigger deficits and more debt than current law.
This is untrue. It’s not close to true. It’s not even within a country mile of true.
According to the Congressional Budget Office, current law (that’s the March 2011 baseline) will result in a $6.737 trillion deficit from 2012 to 2021 (see table 1, here). President Obama’s budget will result in a $9.470 trillion deficit over that 10-year period (ibid). Under Ryan’s budget, that deficit would be $5.088 trillion (see table S-1, here).
At the risk of belaboring the point, $5.088 trillion (Ryan’s budget) is smaller than $6.737 trillion (current law). To be precise, it’s $1.649 trillion smaller. That’s nearly a quarter of the ten-year deficit.
Ryan’s budget deficit is not larger than current law; it’s much, much smaller. On the other hand, Krugman’s credibility deficit is growing all the time.
(Via the Weekly Standard.)
Waukesha
April 10, 2011Some people are trying to draw an analogy between the vote-counting snafu in Waukesha County, Wisconsin and the controversy in Minnesota 2008. For example, Dave Weigel:
WANTED: A pundit who had the same reaction to missing ballots being found and changing result in Minnesota 2008, Wisconsin 2011.
The reason you don’t see many with the same reaction is there really is no parallel. In Minnesota 2008, you had Al Franken’s lawyers spending weeks mining rejected ballots until they found enough votes to win. Or worse, in Washington 2004 (a travesty that Weigel wisely doesn’t even mention), you had boxes of uncounted ballots being “discovered” on a daily basis, and ultimately many Democratic precincts actually reported more votes than registered voters.
In Waukesha County, you have votes that were counted and reported on election night, but were mistakenly not incorporated into the unofficial totals. That’s all. In fact, the city of Brookfield (whose votes were mistakenly dropped) reported its results to the media on election night, and those results were published in the local paper. (The paper recognized the significance of their story the following day.) Moreover, the correct Brookfield results are well in-line with historical norms, while the original results were not.
What we had here was simply an example of why election officials double-check the unofficial totals before they become official totals.
(Via Kaus Files.) (Previous post.)
UPDATE: Despite all that, John Fund is right. We should embrace an investigation, so long as the investigation is a broad one. It won’t hurt us to do so: the new Waukesha results seem to be solid, but Wisconsin’s election system as a whole is a mess. (Via Althouse.)
UPDATE: The day that the totaling error was announced, the vice-chair of the Waukesha Democratic Party said she stood by the corrected results. Now it seems someone has gotten to her, and she has recanted.
I think Allahpundit is right. There’s no earthly way those votes are going away, especially since they were reported contemporaneously to the Brookfield Patch, and the Democrats have to know that. This is part of an effort to delegitimize Governor Walker (no one actually cares about the supreme court seat) and energize the base.
UPDATE: Another analysis says that the corrected Waukesha results make more since than the original ones.
UPDATE: An investigation has confirmed the corrected numbers:
GAB Director Kevin Kennedy says the agency’s investigation of spring election procedures in Waukesha County remains ongoing, but that the final canvass numbers in the city of Brookfield match the initial tallies from poll workers on Election Night.
(Via Hot Air.)
DOJ explains presidential war-making power
April 10, 2011The Department of Justice has completed its legal opinion justifying President Obama’s power to launch his war kinetic military action in Libya without Congressional approval. The opinion is based on two findings (page 10): First, the war serves “sufficiently important national interests” (as if that could ever be found not to be the case). Second, the war isn’t really a “war”.
No really, that’s exactly their argument:
Turning to the second element of the analysis, we do not believe that anticipated United States operations in Libya amounted to a “war” in the constitutional sense necessitating congressional approval under the Declaration of War Clause. This inquiry, as noted, is highly fact-specific and turns on no single factor. [Scofflaw: yeah, I’ll bet!] See Proposed Bosnia Deployment, 19 Op. O.L.C. at 334 (reaching conclusion based on specific “circumstances”); Haiti Deployment, 18 Op. O.L.C. at 178 (same). Here, considering all the relevant circumstances, we believe applicable historical precedents demonstrate that the limited military operations the President anticipated directing were not a “war” for constitutional purposes.
(Emphasis mine.)
You want to know why the Obama administration is refusing to call this a war? There’s your answer right there. If they called it a war, their own analysis says it would be illegal.
POSTSCRIPT: My personal opinion is that the president has plenary authority as commander-in-chief to carry out brief military actions, and he doesn’t need to make up delicate, bogus, and insulting legal tests. However, he was unwise to use that authority in a situation such as this, where the war kinetic military action is unlikely to be over within 60 days. He was particularly unwise, given his emphatic earlier statements against presidential war-making power. He should have sought Congressional approval, and he would have received it easily.
(Via Beltway Confidential.)
The Frank J plan
April 10, 2011Most of our wars follow a consistent pattern. In phase one we smash the enemy. In phase two we rebuild their country. Frank J notices that, in recent wars, phase one is fast, cheap, and carried out with strong popular support. Phase two, on the other hand, is slow, expensive, and plagued with hypocritical political attacks. Ergo, we should skip phase two:
So what’s the solution? Don’t get into any more wars? Well, President Obama has pretty much proven that’s not a possibility. I mean, he was the stereotypical liberal peacenik, denouncing President Bush as vehemently as possible as an awful, awful man for even contemplating getting us into a conflict with a country that was no direct threat to us, and even he couldn’t help but start another war in the Middle East (I mean, “kinetic military action in the Middle East,” wink wink). It’s like the dictators there exist just for the purpose of being villains. If you accurately portrayed them in a movie, critics would call them unrealistic for being too one-dimensionally evil and crazy. And when you see people that terrible and also so much weaker than us militarily — the U.S. fighting them outright on a battlefield would be like the NFL versus a peewee league team — no one has the willpower to not smack them around. Obviously avoiding wars in the Middle East is not a realistic option, and I’m sure we’ll get involved in plenty more in the future. . .
It’s useful to understand that no matter how much the left screamed about the Iraq War in those protests, 95% of that was partisan silliness and, at most, 4% actual deeply held belief (and possibly 1% brain parasite). That’s pretty evident when you consider how relatively quiet they are with Obama — pretending to care about civilians being killed today won’t help defeat Republicans, so why bother? That’s the big problem now — there’s no longer a separation of war and politics. And our staying in a country and trying to help people means the war goes on longer, which gives it more time to be exploited politically while our troops are in constant peril. Plus, everyone else grows tired of hearing about it. So I ask: Why should we even stay and help a country after we’ve bombed it?
I don’t think he’s serious, although it’s hard to say with Frank J. But either serious or no, it’s hard to fault his logic. This is what our contemporary politics urges us to do. The only reason we wouldn’t do it that way is because we are better people than them.
Heh
April 10, 2011From what I’ve read, the budget deal is okay given the circumstances, but Michael Ramirez puts it into perspective:
(Via Power Line.)
Obama to troops: drop dead
April 8, 2011President Obama has reversed policy from 1995, and will withhold military pay if the government shuts down:
When the government was shut down in 1995, military personnel continued to report to work and were paid, but the planning guidance sent to the services and defense agencies says a shutdown this time will be different.
“All military personnel will continue in normal duty status regardless of their affiliation with exempt or non-exempt activities,” says the draft planning guidance that was prepared for the services and defense agencies. “Military personnel will serve without pay until such time as Congress makes appropriated funds available to compensate them for this period of service.”
I’m astonished.
(Via Hot Air.) (Previous post.)
Obama to troops: drop dead
April 7, 2011President Obama has pledged to veto a proposed bill that would maintain funding for our troops during a government shutdown. That doesn’t sound like smart politics to me.
A wild one in Wisconsin
April 7, 2011I was just getting ready to write some comments on Tuesday’s supreme court election in Wisconsin, when the result was turned upside down.
I noticed Wednesday morning that Prosser (the Republican) had not picked up as many votes from Waukesha County as I expected. But my estimate was a highly unscientific, back-of-the-envelope calculation, so I didn’t think much of it. Ann Althouse noticed the same thing (and, unlike me, she actually blogged it):
Waukesha is now shown as completely in, but the numbers didn’t change, so I think something may have been misreported. I took the trouble to do a calculation and was going to predict that Prosser would net 40,000 more votes in Waukesha. What happened?
Well, it turns out that something did happen. The Waukesha County clerk failed to record the votes from one city. (She failed to save the database after importing the data.) When the error was discovered during canvassing, Prosser gained 7,582 net votes, demolishing his razor-thin 204-vote deficit.
The clerk emphasized:
This is not a case of extra votes, or extra ballots, being found. This is human error, which I apologize for. . . Which is why the state requires us to conduct a canvass.
Prosser’s new lead is outside the margin that requires an automatic recount, but I suspect we will see a recount nevertheless. I won’t go out on a limb and say that this thing is over, but I think Prosser’s campaign has to be pretty happy with their position.
Democrats and union bosses had been crowing about the Prosser’s apparent defeat as a rebuke to Scott Walker, the Republican governor, and indeed to Republicans nationwide. (This was already foolish, given the narrowness of the margin despite the huge union effort for Kloppenburg, Prosser’s opponent.) Now, well, Mary Katharine Ham puts it best:
Small, state-wide election with vital national implications soon to have no national implications whatsoever.
ASIDE: If you want more schadenfreude, watch this video in which Kloppenburg brushes off the question of whether she should be claiming victory with such a narrow margin.
Now, although the tone will be quite a bit different than it might have been, I still need to remark on why it was so important that Kloppenburg lose this race (and therefore that Prosser win). This photo, taken by Ann Althouse, tells the whole story:
Kloppenburg was campaigning on a promise to overturn Wisconsin’s budget repair bill that was fiercely opposed by public-sector unions. This is absolutely not what a court is supposed to be doing. Under the rule of law, a court is supposed to rule on the law, not pursue a political outcome. Of course, this rule is frequently violated, especially by the left’s judicial activists, but always they at least pretend to take a proper judicial view.
That pretense is valuable. While I would prefer their counterfeit judicial temperament to be real instead, their need to pretend does limit how far they can go in carrying out their political aims. When judicial candidates can come out and promise to rule a particular way in particular controversies, the courts will have become just another political body. We don’t need a third branch of the legislature. We need the rule of law.
Mickey Kaus put it this way, when we all thought Kloppenburg had probably won:
There is also the minor issue of whether opponents of the anti-union law have a case. Or does everyone agree that doesn’t matter anymore?
Fortunately, it looks like that still does matter. For now.
(Via Althouse.)
UPDATE: The vice-chair of the Waukesha Democratic Party stands by the new totals.
UPDATE: Apparently Prosser had already taken a narrow lead in canvassing before the Waukesha correction.
Hotlined war
April 5, 2011The Senate was tricked into approving a non-binding resolution approving the no-fly zone in Libya.
It’s hard to know who is worse here: the people who would secretly slip such a measure into a unanimous consent resolution, or the senators who give their consent to such measures without reading them.
Bush policy wins again
April 5, 2011In President Obama’s latest reversal, (alleged) 9/11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed will be tried at Guantanamo by a military tribunal.
Liberals for misogyny
April 3, 2011The left’s dedication to multiculturalism (and opposition to our own culture) trumps its support for women’s rights.
I admit, the title isn’t fair. It’s not really that most of the left is for misogyny, so much as anti-anti-misogyny.
Posted by K. Crary 




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