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Posts tagged with "politics et hoc genus omne"

So much news, so little time

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Original URL: http://bamatone.livejournal.com/294130.html

Some talk about taxing coke: http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=113634715.

Surprisingly, I'm actually ok with this. As much as I love my coke, I know it's bad for me. And if I had to pay out the rear end for it (like smokers do with cigarettes), I would probably have to cut back, at least. I'm also pretty anti-tax for everything, but I can think of worse ideas than this. Curb a particularly unhealthy behavior and it could save millions of dollars in health care costs in the future.

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Some talk about Felony Franks: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB125538779820481255.html.

James Andrews (not the famous surgeon in Birmingham) opened a hot dog stand in Chicago and hires only ex-felons in an effort to help rehabilitate them into society. He plays up the "felony" bit as part of his shtick. "Near the entrance hangs a mock list of Miranda rights: 'You have the right to remain hungry. Anything you order can and will be used to feed you here at Felony Franks.'" And so on.

Of course, there have been a lot of complaints, most prominently from a city alderman who seems to be engaged in a pissing match with Andrews over a proposed new sign that juts out into the road. A local pastor accuses Andrews of "pimping out" the community.

My take: While the name and marketing may be in extremely bad taste, Felony Franks does exactly what the pastor should be doing: helping to reintegrate ex-convicts into society in a lawful way. Andrews offers jobs, training, and stability to a class of citizens (felons are still citizens) who obviously have a difficult time finding these things after being released from prison.

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Some talk about Hispanic farmers and how they've been discriminated against by the Dept. of Agriculture (USDA): http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?storyId=113730694.

This is a very well researched and thought out story from NPR about a lawsuit Hispanic farmers brought against the federal government for discriminatory lending practices. "The government settled a similar complaint brought by African-American farmers for $1 billion. And while the claims of discrimination and other factors are almost identical, the Hispanic farmers have gotten nothing."

During the 1970s, '80s and '90s, white farmers would apply for a loan and be approved quickly. Hispanic farmers either wouldn't be approved at all, or they would be approved too late in the growing season. Since they had to use that money to survive the winter, that meant the debt grew and grew. Farms were foreclosed upon.

The USDA has even admitted to all of this. But the result has been disappointing. The main problem is the judge in their case refused to grant the Hispanic farmers the right to sue as a class, as the black farmers did. That means each Hispanic farmer has to sue on their own, and the USDA deals with them on a case by case basis.

This response — that it's not the principle of the thing but the legal ruling that matters most — outrages the Hispanic farmers. What's made them even more furious is that within months after taking office, President Obama decided that the $1 billion the government has already given to the black farmers is insufficient, and he's requesting an additional $1.25 billion for them.

It's been a bitter disappointment to the Hispanic farmers who fought the Bush Justice Department for eight years. They thought it was going be different after Obama was elected.


Sad on many levels, but just further proves that you should trust and depend on the government for nothing.

Free "Obama money" from his "stash!"

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ROGULSKI:Why are you here ?

Woman: To get some money

ROGULSKI: What kind of Money ?

Woman: Obama money

ROGULSKI: Where’s it comin; from ?

Woman: Obama

ROGULSKI: And where did Obama get it from ?

WOMAN: I don’t know, his stash. I don’t know. I don’t know where he got it from, but he’s givin’ it to us. And we love him. That’s why we voted for him. O-ba-ma. O-ba-ma.

(…)

ROGULSKI: Did you get an application to fill out yet?

WOMAN: I sure did. And I filled it out, and I am waiting to see what the results are going to be.

ROGULSKI: Will you know today how much money you’re getting?

WOMAN: No, I won’t, but I’m waiting for a phone call.

ROGULSKI: Where’s the money coming from?

WOMAN: I believe it’s coming from the City of Detroit or the state.

ROGULSKI: Where did they get it from?

WOMAN: Some funds that was forgiven (sic) by Obama.

ROGULSKI: And where did Obama get the funds?

WOMAN: Obama getting the funds from… Ummm, I have no idea, to tell you the truth. He’s the president.


Video and audio here: http://www.unitedliberty.org/articles/thousands-mob-downtown-detroit-for-free-government-money

Capitalism

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Original URL: http://bamatone.livejournal.com/291224.html

Caught this on Marketplace on my way home yesterday evening. New York Times columnist Gretchen Morgenson makes two crucial points that I wish would be stressed to the American public more often.

Capitalism is a system that can benefit the greatest array of people, but it is a system that requires an ethical backdrop, a moral compass.

I think we had a two-pronged failure. First was the failure of people in positions of power to remember that they have a social contract. As you rise in an organization, you have a greater responsibility to do the right thing, to rein in practices, identify practices that are imperiling others. That almost got lost. But the other prong of this failure was the failure of the regulators. These entities, institutions from the highest level down to the very lowest really failed dismally at their jobs. And so you had a combination of failures here that really contributed to this disaster.


Capitalism is supposed to be a system in which there is little government intervention. We are now in a type of system where the state, i.e., the United States of America, has investments in much of the automotive industry, has deployed taxpayer money to enormous financial institutions, a great array of them, so we have a, right now in a position where capitalism is not in its sort of true form operating at all. It's really more the government stepping in. And the unfortunate aspect of that is that what has happened is that the gains that were made by reckless lenders, and people who were not overseen by regulators very closely, those gains have now been turned to losses that the taxpayers have to cover. And that is just anathema to a capitalist.


My point here is that all the anti-capitalists out there... don't hate on capitalism because of what you see going on in the U.S. This is not capitalism. And it's only going to get worse if things keep going the way they are.

The only thing I will say about this health care thingamajig

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Original URL: http://bamatone.livejournal.com/286833.html

The government has mismanaged the Post Office and is now set to cover up its mistakes with a bailout.

The government has mismanaged the Highway Trust Fund and is now set to cover up its mistakes with a bailout.

The government has mismanaged Amtrak, which is chronically unprofitable, and is set to cover up its mistakes with a bailout.

The government has mismanaged the Social Security Trust Fund and is ignoring its responsibility to fix the program.

The government has mismanaged the Medicare and Medicaid programs and is ignoring its responsibility to fix the programs.

I could probably think of several more examples, but with this lousy track record, do we really want this same government to make medical decisions on our behalf by nationalizing health care?

-- (source)

Lindsey Graham is as opportunistic and unprincipled as Arlen Specter

Original URL: http://bamatone.livejournal.com/285515.html

I meant to write about this back in May. Why yes, yes it is now July.
This past weekend at a South Carolina Republican convention, Senator Lindsey Graham adamantly defended supporting those who choose political expediency over substance. "We're not going to build [the Republican Party] around libertarian ideas," he told his audience. "[Ron Paul] is not the leader of this Party," he emphasized.

In his speech, Senator Graham noted that those who don't think winning matters should head for the Party's exits. (video here)

Winning. Apparently, that's what is most important to Graham. (And Specter.)
South Carolina's junior Senator, Jim DeMint, spoke after Graham, commenting about the Senate that he, "[w]ould rather have 30 Republicans who believe in the principles of limited government and free markets and free people than 60 Republicans who have no beliefs at all."

Well done, DeMint.

And now I will quote Ronald Reagan:

"If you analyze it, I believe the very heart and soul of conservatism is libertarianism."

"I don't believe in a government that protects us from ourselves."

"I have been doing my best to try to revitalize the Republican Party groups that I've spoken to, on the basis that the time has come to repudiate those in our midst who would blur the Republican image by saying we should be all things to all people in order to triumph... I've been urging Republicans to raise a banner and put the things we stand for on that banner and don't compromise, but don't try to enlarge the party by being all things to everyone when you can't keep all the promises. Put up a banner and then count on the fact that if you've got the proper things on that banner the people will rally round."

Individual liberty, constitutionally limited government, sound money, free markets, and a noninterventionist foreign policy. -- Campaign for Liberty

"We thought San Francisco was the world, and it wasn't."

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Original URL: http://bamatone.livejournal.com/282352.html

It's too bad it took her 32 years in prison to realize it.

'75 Gerald Ford attacker hoped to start revolution


In Sept. 22, 1975, Moore, then around 45, fired on Ford as he waved to a crowd in San Francisco. A man near her knocked the pistol out of her hand and the shot went astray. It was the second failed attempt on Ford's life in less than three weeks.

Moore was sentenced to life in prison but released on parole in December 2007. She has lived in an undisclosed location since then.

It was during the long years in prison, she said, that "gradually I began to realize that I had let myself be used. ... I definitely think that it was wrong. I think I was misled. I think I was mistaken. I think I made a serious error."

Moore, who had been loosely associated with leftist groups in California, said she "wasn't prepared" for the things she learned about the extent of poverty and other problems.

"It was a time that people don't remember. You know, we had a war ... the Vietnam War , you became — I became — immersed in it," Moore said Thursday.

"We were saying the country needed to change. The only way it was going to change was a violent revolution. I genuinely thought that (shooting Ford) might trigger that new revolution in this country."

She said she now knows she was hearing only one side of the story. "We thought San Francisco was the world, and it wasn't."

Still the savior?

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Original URL: http://bamatone.livejournal.com/278634.html

Time Magazine already has a Top 10 Obama Gaffes on its web site.

The latest faux pas occurred yesterday, when Michelle Obama briefly put her hand on the back of Queen Elizabeth II. Apparently, touching the queen is a big no no.

Edit: Newsweek also has a piece on America and her deteriorating friendships in Britain and Europe.

New Hampshire getting fed up with the feds

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Original URL: http://bamatone.livejournal.com/273570.html

The state of New Hampshire has just flipped the federal government a huge bird, and told it in no uncertain terms that if business continues as usual:
[...] all powers previously delegated to the United States of America by the Constitution for the United States shall revert to the several States individually. Any future government of the United States of America shall require ratification of three quarters of the States seeking to form a government of the United States of America and shall not be binding upon any State not seeking to form such a government.

Haven't heard anything about this? That's because no one in the mainstream media thinks this is important. But this is an actual resolution put forth by an actual state. "A resolution affirming States' rights based on Jeffersonian principles."

I'm under no illusion that this will lead to any kind of actual civil war anytime soon. But it does illustrate the changing winds in this country. The federal government has grown too big, too powerful, and too clumsy. But most of all, the federal government has willfully violated the Constitution of the United States. People are finally starting to A) notice, and B) push back. Remember "The Once and Future Republic of Vermont?" What about the governors of Montana and South Carolina telling the feds to "go to hell?"

I quote from the C4L Statement of Principles: "We oppose the dehumanizing assumption that all issues that divide us must be settled at the federal level and forced on every American community, whether by activist judges, a power-hungry executive, or a meddling Congress. We believe in the humane alternative of local self-government, as called for in our Constitution."

Further reading:
Op/Ed on the New Hampshire matter. (Sensationalist, I admit. But since the MSM won't pick it up, this is all we have.)
Full text of New Hampshire's resolution (HCR 6)

Are you smarter than a politician?

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Original URL: http://bamatone.livejournal.com/273059.html

I meant to post this a few weeks ago but never got around to it. I found this American Civics Quiz interesting for two reasons. One, because most of the questions are actually pretty good. Two, the "knowledge gap" between our elected officials and ourselves, which is humorous and pathetic at the same time.

In each of the following areas, for example, officeholders do more poorly than non-officeholders:
  • Seventy-nine percent of those who have been elected to government office do not know the Bill of Rights expressly prohibits establishing an official religion for the U.S.

  • Thirty percent do not know that "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" are the inalienable rights referred to in the Declaration of Independence.

  • Twenty-seven percent cannot name even one right or freedom guaranteed by the First Amendment.

  • Forty-three percent do not know what the Electoral College does. One in five thinks it either "trains those aspiring for higher political office" or "was established to supervise the first televised presidential debates."

  • Fifty-four percent do not know the Constitution gives Congress the power to declare war. Thirty-nine percent think that power belongs to the president, and 10% think it belongs to the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

  • Only 32% can properly define the free enterprise system, and only 41% can identify business profit as "revenue minus expenses."

The complete breakdown can be found here.

The Intercollegiate Studies Institute (who administered the quiz)'s conclusions can be found here. (And I agree with them.)

Here's the link to quiz itself if anyone is interested: http://americancivicliteracy.org/resources/quiz.aspx. Without looking anything up, I answered 28 out of 33 correctly, good for 84.85%. The average score is 74.1%.

Keep in mind, your score may be higher than it should be if you read the bullet points above prior to taking the quiz. :smile:

There's a "stimulating" joke in here somewhere

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Original URL: http://bamatone.livejournal.com/272339.html

"There is no disagreement that we need action by our government, a recovery plan that will help to jumpstart the economy." -- President-elect Obama, Jan. 9, 2009

With all due respect, Mr. President, that is not true.

Notwithstanding reports that all economists are now Keynesians and that we all support a big increase in the burden of government, we do not believe that more government spending is a way to improve economic performance. More government spending by Hoover and Roosevelt did not pull the United States economy out of the Great Depression in the 1930s. More government spending did not solve Japan’s "lost decade" in the 1990s. As such, it is a triumph of hope over experience to believe that more government spending will help the U.S. today. To improve the economy, policy makers should focus on reforms that remove impediments to work, saving, investment and production. Lower tax rates and a reduction in the burden of government are the best ways of using fiscal policy to boost growth.

This is a full page ad run in the New York Times by the Cato Institute, a libertarian think tank in D.C. that accepts no government funding. Below the message are the signatures of over 200 economists, some of whom are Nobel laureates.

You can see the ad itself here.

What makes this (and the libertarian message in general) so special is that it doesn't just harp about lower taxes. (The GOP has been playing that tune like a broken record for years.) You have to combine lower taxes with "a reduction in the burden of government." The federal government was not created to be a nanny for the American people.
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