Friday, December 4, 2009

TAX INCREASES on hard working Americans in the last 9 months


  • Allowing the 2001 and 2003 Tax Cuts to expire
  • War Tax
  • Tobacco Tax
  • National Energy Tax
  • Stock Tax
  • Securities Tax
  • Health Savings Account Tax
  • Health Insurance Tax
  • Business Healthcare Tax
  • Personal Healthcare Tax
  • Eliminating middle-class Making Work Pay tax credit
  • International Business Tax
  • Small Business Tax
  • Gas Tax
  • Mileage Tax
  • Payroll Tax
  • Reducing Personal Income Deductions
Most of these increases effect the poorest the most, fewer jobs, fewer benefits, more expense getting heat, food gas and everything else.

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Democrats win $400B in Medicare cuts throw seniors under bus!!

In the first showdown over the Senate health care bill, Democrats on Thursday successfully defended more than $400 billion in Medicare cuts, turning back a potentially lethal stab at the measure.

On a 58-42 vote, the Senate defeated an effort by Sen. John McCain, Arizona Republican, to send the bill back to a committee where lawmakers would have had to drop the cuts in Medicare payments and instead find another way to pay for the bill, which overhauls the nation's health insurance system and guarantees coverage for tens of millions of people who lack insurance.

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Researcher: NASA hiding climate data - Washington Times

By Stephen Dinan

The fight over global warming science is about to cross the Atlantic with a U.S. researcher poised to sue NASA, demanding release of the same kind of climate data that has landed a leading British center in hot water over charges it skewed its data.

Chris Horner, a senior fellow at the Competitive Enterprise Institute, said NASA has refused for two years to provide information under the Freedom of Information Act that would show how the agency has shaped its climate data and would explain why the agency has repeatedly had to correct its data going as far back as the 1930s.

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Wednesday, December 2, 2009

If Wayne Gretzky Were A Central Banker …

Throughout the financial crisis, central bank officials have invoked all sorts of metaphors - often involving weather - to relate monetary policy to the public. Federal Reserve Bank of Philadelphia President Charles Plosser upped the ante Tuesday, using a reference to upstate New York winters to break into a discussion of hockey star Wayne Gretzky. “I found that hockey players could teach us things that are relevant and useful in other disciplines, including, believe it or not, monetary policy,” he said in a speech in Rochester, N.Y.

If your first thought was “not,” Mr. Plosser has some words for you. Excerpts from his speech:

Hockey great Wayne Gretzky was once asked about his success on the ice. He responded by saying, “I skate to where the puck is going to be, not to where it has been.” He didn't chase the puck. Instead, Gretzky wanted his hockey stick to be where the puck would be going next. He scored many goals with that strategy, and I believe monetary policymakers can better achieve their goals, too, if they follow the Gretzky strategy.

Good monetary policymakers, like good hockey players, must be forward-looking in their actions. Setting policy that is appropriate for where the economy is today, or has recently been, is not likely to deliver the kind of economic outcomes we desire. … Gretzky, like all great hockey players, excelled, in part, because of his ability to anticipate. That does not mean he always anticipated accurately. Sometimes his forecast turned out to be wrong and the puck went in another direction. But that does not mean that his strategy was wrong, only that his execution needed improvement. The more you understand the game or the economy, the better your forecasts will be. Monetary policymakers similarly must be forward-looking despite the difficulties, uncertainties, and challenges that entails.

… Wayne Gretzky emphasized that anticipation was important to being a successful hockey player. Failing to anticipate in hockey means that you always end up chasing the puck and never catching it. Since monetary policy works with a lag, policymakers must also anticipate and be forward-looking in their actions. Failing to do so would mean that policy would always be behind the curve - playing catch-up so to speak. The result would be greater instability in the economy and a failure to achieve our policy objectives.

Taking forward-looking policy actions is not an easy task. There are many real interest rates; they are not easily observed or measured; and they can be quite volatile. Thus, judging the appropriate response of policy at any point in time is fraught with challenges. We must assess what the current data and market interest rates are telling us about the future. But no one said hockey was easy either. Wayne Gretzky was not the fastest, nor the biggest, of hockey players, but no one was as gifted as he was in looking ahead and anticipating where the puck would be, which is why he is known as the Great Gretzky.

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Afghanistan: Obama drops the human rights case, but where does that leave us? - Michael Hastings - The Hastings Report - True/Slant

Dec. 2 2009

A former U.S. official and friend emailed me this afternoon, noting that Obama “didn’t mention women’s rights” once in his speech last night on Afghanistan. This friend thought that was a bad thing. Glenn Greenwald makes the same observation, but says it’s actually good that Obama has dispensed with “the propagandistic pretext that we are fighting in Afghanistan in order to deliver freedom and democracy to that country and to improve the plight of Afghan women.” GG continues:

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Monday, November 30, 2009

How Badly Has Congress Screwed Up Ethanol? - BrianFaughnan’s blog - RedState

And Who Will Bear the Cost?
Posted by Brian Faughnan (profile)
Friday, November 27th at 2:58PM EST


Two years ago the Democrats in Congress and the Bush administration got together to deliver a payoff to farmers: they required refiners to use 15 billion gallons of biofuels by 2012. They did not expect that a crashing recession would lead to a reduction in the amount of gasoline the nation consumes - the first such reduction in years. And they also didn’t expect a White House to push so aggressively for higher-mileage vehicle fleets.
As a result of the changed circumstance, it looks like it will be impossible for Americans to use that much ethanol. Something has to give. But what?

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Ronald Reagan’s Thanksgiving Day Address, 1985

'Good morning, everyone. You know, the Statue of Liberty and this wonderful holiday called Thanksgiving go together naturally because although as Americans we have many things for which to be thankful, none is more important than our liberty. Liberty: that quality of government, that brightness of mind and spirit for which the Pilgrim Fathers braved the seas and Americans for two centuries have laid down their lives.

'Today, while religion is suppressed in perhaps one third of the world, we Americans are free to worship the Almighty as we choose. While entire nations must endure the yoke of tyranny, we are free to speak our minds, to enjoy an unfettered and vigorous press, and to make government abide by the limits we deem just. While millions live behind walls, we remain free to travel throughout the land to share this precious day with those we love most deeply - the members of our families.

'My fellow Americans, let us keep this Thanksgiving Day sacred. Let us thank God for the bounty and goodness of our nation. And as a measure of our gratitude, let us rededicate ourselves to the preservation of this: the land of the free and the home of the brave.

'From the Reagan family to your family: happy Thanksgiving and God bless you all.'

Ex-Con Counts on “Faith Community” to Pass Health Care

AIM Column | By Cliff Kincaid | November 29, 2009

Creamer, who went to prison for ripping off non-profit entities, emphasized using “the faith community” to mobilize support for universal health care…

The media furor over the White House state dinner crashers ignores the convicted felon who was invited to attend with the approval of Obama's inner circle. The ex-convict, Robert B. Creamer, is a friend of White House adviser David Axelrod and the husband of Democratic Rep. Jan Schakowsky of Illinois. A major Democratic Party political strategist, he is the author of a 628-page book that describes how the Democrats can become the permanent majority party by passing a national health care bill and giving amnesty to illegal immigrants.

With the support of major elements of the 'faith community,' the first part of Creamer's plan is on track.

Creamer's Stand Up Straight! How Progressives Can Win,' is the book 'penned in the pen,' as one observer described it. 'I did much of the preliminary work on this book while spending five months on a forced sabbatical at the Federal Prison Camp at Terra Haute Indiana,' Creamer says. Creamer emerged from federal prison in November 2006 after serving five months for financial crimes. His prosecutor was the famous Patrick J. Fitzgerald, who also nailed disgraced former Illinois Governor Rod Blagojevich

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