Monthly Archives: July 2011

SCORE – OBAMA 39, ANY REPUBLICAN 47

Gallup has just released their monthly poll of registered voters. Just 39% said they will likely vote for Obama in the 2012 election. While 47% said they would be more likely to vote for any Republican who ran against him. Eight points is a very significant spread. The Dude is in deep doodoo.

That’s not a pretty picture. How about this one – the bloom is off the rose. Obama was going to close Gitmo. He didn’t. Obama was going to end the “Bush tax cuts for the rich.” He didn’t. Obama was going to bring down unemployment. He didn’t. Obama was going to bring new transparency to government. He didn’t. Whatever you hoped for, Obama was going to change things and make it happen. He didn’t. Obama was going to raise worldwide respect for America. He didn’t. Obama was going to heal the planet, make the oceans recede and create new jobs for the jobless. He didn’t.

More and more of the President’s supporters are realizing that Yes We Can was a hollow slogan by a president who can’t. But conservatives must not become complacent. A day can be like a year in politics. It is not a time for rest. The truth is our weapon and we must continue brandishing it with fervor.

CANTOR vs. OBAMA, WHO DISSED WHOM ?

Rep. Eric Cantor (R VA) asked and was granted permission to speak at the Debt Ceiling debate organized (there’s that word again) by Barack Obama.  The Congressman spoke respectfully at all times and never interrupted the President.  But when Cantor said that the two sides remain so far apart at this point that he doubted they could get the $2.5 trillion in cuts (the latest debt increase requested by the administration) by August 2nd, the President lost his cool.

“Ronald Reagan wouldn’t sit here like this”.  “Eric, don’t call my bluff.  I’m going to the American people with this.”  Then Obama pushed back his chair and walked out.  If you grew up with siblings you will recognize this as the old “I’m tellin’ !” threat.

That’s one side of the story.  Here’s the other.  Cantor was harassing the President and interrupted him when he tried to speak.  Nancy Pelosi said “The president could not have been more gracious.  I have never seen a president spend so much time with the leadership of Congress day in and day out, respectful of their concerns.”  Cantor was acting like a cry baby because he was not getting his way.

Let’s be fair.  We don’t know what happened in that room; we weren’t there.  One thing we do know is that one hope for change was Obama promise to bring unprecedented transparency to government.  That promise was a significant factor in gaining favor with swing voters in 2008.  What we got was unprecedented concealment.

Previous presidents routinely allowed reporters to attend debates like this.  But, much to the consternation of both sides of the press, they were not allowed in the room, not even a lone reporter.  Why?  Is Obama afraid of truthful reporting?  What did he anticipate that he did not want the public to know?  Nothing in particular; stealth is just his style.

PAUL KRUGMAN’S CASH CON

This article was first published in the American Thinker blog on July 6, 2011 as Krugman’s Con. It is reprinted here with Mr.  Krugman’s statements indented for easier reading.

KRUGMAN’S CON
by Robert R. Barker

Taking Paul Krugman apart is such a simple task.  No other person can be so wrong so many times on so many things in just a single sentence.

Watching the evolution of economic discussion in Washington over the past couple of years has been a disheartening experience. Month by month, the discourse has gotten more primitive; with stunning speed, the lessons of the 2008 financial crisis have been forgotten, and the very ideas that got us into the crisis – regulation is always bad, what’s good for the bankers is good for America, tax cuts are the universal elixir – have regained their hold.

No one ever said “regulation is always bad,” except a few Democrats when they want to slander conservatives.  Good regulation is part of the Rule of Law applauded by the Right.  Only bad regulations are bad, and there are plenty of them.

No one ever said “what’s good for the banker’s is good for America.”  Here Krugman seems to be making a play on a famous comment Charlie Wilson’s made in 1955 when he was president of General Motors.  Wilson is said to have said — What’s good for General Motors is good for America.  But there’s one problem.  Wilson never said that.  What he actually said was quite the opposite — What’s good for America is good for General Motors.  It was a statement of acquiescence that the Left twisted to look like one of arrogance.  Are we to believe that the Nobel Prize winning economist didn’t know that?

No one ever said tax cuts, or the lack thereof, had anything to do with the 2008 financial crisis.  Very few voices have called for tax cuts since 2008.  What the Right argues is that raising taxes during periods of recession can be disastrous.  If the Bush tax rates had not been extended, tax rates would be higher in 2011 than in 2010.  Only a Democrat could call that a tax cut.

Why should anyone believe that handing even more money to corporations, no strings attached, would lead to faster job creation?

This sort of notion is born of the belief that all money belongs to the government.  The issue here is not about money given to corporations by the government; it’s about how much of the money a corporation earns should the corporation be allowed to keep.

Consider first the arguments Republicans are using to defend outrageous tax loopholes. How can people simultaneously demand savage cuts in Medicare and Medicaid and defend special tax breaks favoring hedge fund managers and owners of corporate jets?

“Outrageous tax loopholes” is such an oft repeated mantra of the Left that it should be hyphenated.  A loophole is an unintended path of avoidance.  What Krugman is alluding to is the accelerated rate of depreciation offered as an incentive for investment in equipment.  It was part of the stimulus package promoted by President Obama.  It’s not a loophole; it was very much intended.

That only covers the first 3 paragraphs of Krugman’s article.  It’s enough.

CHICKEN COLLISSION

When a game of chicken ends in a collision, whom do you blame?  The driver you liked the least, of course.

And so it is in Washington.  The game is played periodically and the division has always been about spending.  Those who want to raise spending the most stand opposed to those who want to raise spending the least.  This time there is a new twist.  One side does not want to raise spending at all.  Previously, the battle has been about votes.  This time it’s about the survival of the nation.

Not that the impasse is some sort of crucial tipping point.  It’s not.  But we are facing sovereign insolvency and are governed by a president who seems to like it that way.  This is not a case where compromise is honorable.  But unfortunately, compromise is a necessary expedient.  In the final analysis, it is still about votes.  Obama and Reid are the problems du jour and they cannot be replaced without votes.  For better or worse, such are the workings of a democracy.

The debt limit will be raised, but only by a fraction of what the President wants.

JUST SOME RANDOM THOTS

If you visit quality blogs, you will find many quality comments. This is particularly true for sites that do not publish anonymous comments. What follows below is but a sample. It was submitted in response to a Power Line article about the Muslim Brotherhood and the Grand Jihad.

Ken Willis · University of Denver

The Obama Doctrine in the opposite of the Truman Doctrine. The latter was containment of Communism, the former is containment of the United States.

The Obamanists believe the U.S. is a militaristic, patronizing international bully that must be reined in. Friends and allies of the United States represent obstacles to the Obama mission of transforming the country. Enemies are seen as convenient sources of assistance to the final accomplishment of changing America’s role in world affairs from an aggressive, arrogant nation lecturing others on such things as democracy and freedom to a communal and co-equal partner with other nations. According to Obama, “any world order that elevates one nation or group of people over another will inevitably fail.”

The decline of the United States is seen as a positive development by Obama. A suggestion that the United States has been a force for good in the world is seen merely as proof of its arrogance.

That the Grand Jihad is an effort of one group to dominate others is conveniently ignored, or seen as America getting its just deserts.

The term “civil service” isn’t used as much as it once was. When I was a toddler, civil service meant low pay, low workload and early retirement with lots of security. They were positions of service to the civilian community. Today they are high pay, low workload and early retirement jobs with lots of security. They no longer qualify to be called a service. From what I see, many of the workers no longer qualify to be called civil either.

Obama said he had campaigned in all 57 states. He said it twice. Now southern California wants to split with their compatriots in the north. Could it be that Obama knew something the rest of us didn’t? Perhaps he was just off on the timing. Obama also said Hillary’s home state of Arkansas bordered on Kentucky and his state of Illinois did not. He gave that as the reason Hillary was polling better than he was in Kentucky. That would require some border changes too. Hmm…