TANNING TAX AND REVERSE RACISM

If you wanted to raise a little revenue and tax an industry whose product or service is not conducive to good health what industry would you choose. Hint: another objective is to discourage poor health habits and reduce the expense of healthcare. Would you choose fast food outlets widely attended by a broad spectrum of people or tanning salons only attended by a few white people? As you go about your day, do you notice that too many people are too fat, or that too many white people are too tan?

The Democrats were telling the truth, as they sometimes do, when they said you will not know what is in the Obamacare bill until after it passes into law. Included is a 10% tax on the services of tanning salons. The rational is that tanning is unhealthy and the revenue will reduce the cost of healthcare. It’s a joke, a practical joke. It is hard to imagine a tanning tax having been anything else. Whoever came up with the idea must be grinning from ear to ear.

The Washington Post addresses the issue under the heading “Tan tax discussions include allegations of reverse racism”. It’s time to call racism racism. If there is any such thing as ‘reverse racism’, it is affirmative action, intended to reverse the effects of racism. Otherwise racism is racism, so let’s call it that.

Is the ‘tan tax’ an act of racism? As GW might say – I cannot be the decider of that.  Only the concepter knows.

Bob B,  back from the sea

“A liberal is someone who wants to reach into your  shower and adjust the water.”  [or your tanning lamp]   William F. Buckley, Jr.

FAI GRAND PRIX – JAPAN

The job requirements for a professional pilot are 5% stick and rudder skills and 94% mental kills. That is why you will see no smiles on the faces of these acrobatic pilots although they are enjoying the times of their lives. The concentration is intense; the faces are stone. Well, one can hardly call Patty Wagstaff’s face “stone”. Let’s say jewel.

In case you are wondering about that other 1%, it is the ability to stay calm and use good judgment when sheer terror strikes. “Sully” Sullenberger had it when he chose to land in the Hudson River and not try to make it to Teterboro, New Jersey.

Bye the way, Sully is retired now and enjoying the freedom of flying “little” planes wherever and whenever he wants.

Bob B

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PORT CHESTER, NY ALLOWS VOTERS SIX VOTES EACH

Port Chester is a town of about 30,000 people, nearly half of which are Hispanic. Six trustees oversee management of the town. No Latino has ever been elected to a position on that board despite the numbers they constitute of the population. It begs the question, why? The answer is, very few of them vote. That begs another question, why not? For that, no answer is given; it’s left for you to surmise.

One person one vote is the essence of Democracy. It is the law of the land, except in Port Chester, NY., where everyone now gets six votes. The first “sixer” election was held on June 15, 2010 and resulted in placing one Hispanic on the board of six trustees. We don’t have a breakdown of the numbers for this race, but a basic understanding of mathematics reveals it is possible for one candidate to receive more votes than there are voters living in the town.

We are not sure of the intricacies of this weird system called cumulative voting, but we know the objective. It is to enable a candidate to gain public office who would otherwise be unlikely to do so. Port Chester was the first municipality to test this voting method. Others will surely follow.

Bob B

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POEMS IN PRAISE OF PRACTICALLY NOTHING

Ode to a boor
The jungle is a kind of grove
Where elephants, lions and Rajah’s rove.
It is not the sort of place that I
Should choose to live in, or to die.
But I would just as soon be in it
As to hear you blab another minute.
Rudyard Kipling

Where we are
Black is white, the sky is brown.
Bad is good, the world is flat.
Nothing to do but live with that.
The world sits now, with upside down
And waits for a knight to turn it around.
Bob B

Reminiscences
My hookie days are over,
My pilot light is out.
What used to be my sex appeal
Is now my water spout.

Time was, when of its own accord
From my trousers it would spring.
But know I’ve got a full time job
Just to find the blasted thing.

It used to be embarrassing
The way it would behave.
For every single morning
It would stand and watch me shave.

As my old age approaches
It sure gives me the blues
To see it hang its little head
And watch me tie my shoes.
Un-confessed author

RANDOM RECOMMENDATIONS

For something that will warm the cockles of your heart,Random Thots recommends you spend some time with a certain Sagacious Blonde. Click here and then here for uplifting experiences.

For something different in a book,The Crowd, by Gustave Le Bon. Originally published in France in 1895, is such a classic that paperback editions are readily available today. Be forewarned, it was written over 100 years ago at atime when one could say that crowds behave emotionally and illogically, like women. But even a feminist might nod with approval when reading Le Bon’s conclusions gleaned from his study of crowd behavior and how it differs from the way its members would behave individually.

For helping the poor,
Poor Richard’s Almanac   November, 1766
Topic: Poverty
On the Price of Corn and Management of the Poor

I am for doing good for the poor, but I differ in opinion of the means. I think the best way of doing good for the poor, is not making them easy in poverty, but leading or driving them out of it. In my youth I traveled much, and I observed in different countries, that the more public provisions were made for the poor, the less they provided for themselves, and of course became poorer. And, on the contrary, the less was done for them, the more they did for themselves, and became richer.                       Benjamin Franklin

SHOULD WE WISH OBAMA TO SUCCEED?

The post will remain on the front page for a couple of days. Please scroll below it for current new articles.

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Rush Limbaugh took a lot of flak when he said of Obama on Inauguration Day, “I hope he fails”. Bombastic, irreverent, self aggrandizing though he is,  Limbaugh is worth a bit of one’s ear because, for insight, he has no peer. Many are the times I have dismissed his presumptions only to see with the passage of time his vision was correct.

To wish Obama continued success is to wish for more of what he already has done. He has subjugated the rule of law to the will of his own. He has dictated private property be diverted from the hands of its rightful owners to be given to labor unions having no legal claim on the assets. We have seen the creation of powerful czars who report to no one but the president. We have seen limits set on executive incomes in private industry at the whim of Obama.

We have seen Senators brazenly bribed to change their votes in order to enact legislation the American people clearly and fervently made known they did not want. We have seen the will of the majority ignored in wanton disregard for the spirit of democracy. We have seen expansion of government control over the care of our health and the advent of socialized medicine forced upon us.

We are watching a president inherit a recession then repeat the methods of Franklin Roosevelt who inherited a recession and turned it into a depression.

We have elected a president who has alienated our allies, Great Britain, Israel and Poland and chosen to appease our adversaries, Russia and Iran. We have chosen as our protector and Commander in Chief, a man who lays down our strongest arms in a vow not to employ our ultimate defense even in response to a nuclear attack.

We are led by a president and supported by an Attorney General who will not acknowledge the existence of Islamic terrorism, a president who appoints as a White House spokesperson a woman who names a genocidal dictator as one of the two philosophers she most admires, a president who nominates for a deputy position in the Office of Safe & Drug Free Schools, an activist for public school teaching of homosexual activity among young boys.

We have elected a president who travels abroad bowing and apologizing to nations for the role America has played in the world. We have entrusted our States now United to a man who promised  healing, but instead, waters the seeds of unrest, who upon seeing conflict between states, acts not to quell the dispute but to join in the fight.

To wish Obama to succeed is to wish for more of what we have seen thus far and more of what Obama still dreams, – visions of card check for unions, cap and trade for industry, reparations for minorities, single payer health care for us all and the dimming of our light that has shined so long and so bright proclaiming and defending freedom for all.

Bob B

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I urge you to question the observations in this post. Google is a great tool for the job and readily available to all. Here are some links where you may start, (listed in random order, of course).

http://www.washingtonexaminer.com/politics/White-House-puts-UAW-ahead-of-property-rights-44415057.html

http://charlesrowley.wordpress.com/2010/06/04/june-10-2009-barack-obama-loots-chrysler-bondholders/

http://corner.nationalreview.com/post/?q=OTA5ZTE2MGFkMzNmNGNjNDNmNTg2ZmJkNDlkM2NiNTU

http://dailycaller.com/2010/06/25/do-obamas-czars-rule-america-oil-czar-ray-mabus-brings-total-to-37-according-to-daily-caller-count/

http://www.examiner.com/x-30890-Sarah-Palin-Examiner~y2009m12d22-Buying-votes-for-Senate-heath-care-bill

http://blogs.abcnews.com/thenote/2009/11/the-100-million-health-care-vote.html

http://bungalowbillscw.blogspot.com/2010/04/obama-says-us-will-not-use-nuclear.html

http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/obama-reparations-black-farmers/2010/02/21/id/350458

http://www.catholic.org/politics/story.php?id=33737

http://www.jihadwatch.org/2010/05/eric-holder-jihad-what-jihad.html

http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer/2009/10/18/anita-dunn-mao-establishment-press-predictably-mostly-muzzled

http://biggovernment.com/publius/2010/06/17/clinton-obama-admin-to-sue-arizona-over-immigration-law/

There are many more, but these will get you started.

RANDOM EVENTS by Thomas Sowell

Our next guest this week is a man much to be admired, a profound thinker and author of many good books. His Conflict of Visions was the first of Random Thots reviews. Rarely do you find in one person, the modesty, genius and integrity of a Thomas Sowell.

THOMAS SOWELL

Random Events by Thomas Sowell
Wednesday, May 7, 2008

Sometimes unrelated events nevertheless tell a coherent story.

One newspaper story that caught my eye recently was about two high-powered schools in South Korea where Korean girls study 15 hours a day, preparing themselves for tests to get into elite colleges in the United States. Harvard, Yale and Princeton already have 34 students from those schools.

When a copy of the 50th anniversary report on members of the Harvard class of 1958 arrived in the mail recently, I thought back to one of my fellow students in that class who had worn a hole in the sole of his shoe but put a folded piece of newspaper in his shoe to cover the hole, rather than tell his parents.

He realized that they would buy him a new pair of shoes if they knew– and he also realized that they could not afford it.

He went on to become a professor at several well-known medical schools and to have various achievements and honors over the years.

From even further back in time, I received a letter recently from a man who grew up in my old neighborhood back in Harlem. When he and I were in the same junior high school, one day a teacher who saw him eating his brown bag lunch suddenly arranged for him to get a lunch from the school cafeteria without having to pay for it.

It happened so fast that my schoolmate had already taken a bite from the school lunch when he suddenly realized that he had been given charity– and he wouldn’t swallow the food. Instead he went to the toilet and spat it out. By now his brown bag lunch had been thrown out, so he just went hungry that day. He went on to become a very successful psychiatrist.

Like everyone else, I have also been hearing a lot lately about Jeremiah Wright, former pastor of the church that Barack Obama has belonged to for 20 years. Both men, in their different ways, have for decades been promoting the far left vision of victimization and grievances– Wright from his pulpit and Obama in roles ranging from community organizer to the United States Senate, where he has had the farthest left voting record.

Later, when the ultimate political prize– the White House– loomed on the horizon, Obama did a complete makeover, now portraying himself as a healer of divisions. The difference between Barack Obama and Jeremiah Wright is that they are addressing different audiences, using different styles adapted to those audiences. It is a difference between upscale demagoguery and ghetto demagoguery, playing the audience for suckers in both cases.

People on the far left like to flatter themselves that they are for the poor and the downtrodden. But what is most likely to lift people out of poverty– telling them that the world has done them wrong or promoting the work ethic of the Korean girls, the dogged determination of my Harvard classmate with the newspaper in his shoe, or the self-reliance of my fellow junior high school student in Harlem who had too much pride to take charity?

When young people go out into the world, what will they have to offer that can gain them the rewards they seek from others and the achievements they need for themselves? Will they have the skills of science, technology or medicine? Or will they have only the resentments that have been whipped up by the likes of Jeremiah Wright or the sense of entitlement from the government that has been Barack Obama’s stock in trade?

In the real world, a sense of grievance or entitlement, as a result of the mistreatment of your ancestors, is not likely to get you very far with people who are too busy dealing with current economic realities to spend much time thinking about their own ancestors, much less other people’s ancestors.

Another seemingly unrelated experience was being in a crowd at a graveside in a Jewish cemetery last week. That crowd included people who were black, white, Asian, Catholic, Jewish and no doubt others. This country has come a long way, just in my lifetime. We don’t need people like either Jeremiah Wright or Barack Obama to take us backward.

The time is long overdue to stop gullibly accepting the left’s vision of itself as idealistic, rather than self-aggrandizing.

Thomas Sowell

ATLAS SHRUGGED, MORE TRUTH THAN FICTION

Today’s guest is Arthur McQuaid, President and Chief Investment Officer, Columbia Wanger Assset Mgmt, LLC. Mr McQuaid discusses Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand.

Squirrel Chatter II
Atlas Shrugged

I read a lot as part of my job and I also enjoy reading for pleasure. I typically read non-fiction—largely books on history, economics and politics. I haven’t made time for fiction, until recently, when I read my first fiction in decades, Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand.

Written in 1957, the book has a curious history. In 1991, it was ranked a distant second to the Bible as most influential to readers of the Book-of-the-Month Club.2 Its sales have recently been surging, hitting a record of over 500,000 copies sold in 2009.3 What I see as the book’s eerie parallels with recent events have likely caused its resurgence in popularity.

The heroes in Atlas Shrugged are entrepreneurs who create prosperity, and its villains are federal government bureaucrats who regulate and tax. Characters tend to be caricatures; entrepreneurs are cast as handsome capitalists while bureaucrats are cast as ugly, corrupt and dumb. The bureaucrats never let a crisis go to waste and use each crisis to obtain more power and create more regulations. The bureaucrats are economically illiterate, so new regulations further hurt the economy.

Ridiculous laws are passed in Rand’s tale, including the Equalization of Opportunity Bill. The law forbids entrepreneurs from owning more than one business or operating in more than one location, an attempt to spread the wealth around.

Numerous businesses fail, but those with friends in Washington get bailed out. Rand’s bureaucrats provide favors, based on perceived need, to mediocre businessmen who can’t compete. When railroads are about to collapse, bureaucrats freeze payments on their bonds. Friends get their bonds unfrozen (which to me seems kind of like certain General Motors and Chrysler debt holders who recently received preferential treatment). Dissenters are labeled greedy or selfish.

In the book, bureaucrats adopt Directive 10-289, which requires that no one change jobs, all production remain unchanged, all goods and services continue to be sold, and all prices, wages and other income remain constant. Patent rights are to be given to the government “voluntarily” (reminiscent to me of how bailout loans were recently forced on some apparently solvent businesses). The bureaucrats in Atlas Shrugged who wonder whether the Directive is legal figure that it is covered by the many emergency laws.

Eventually entrepreneurs, egged on by the engineer John Galt, get fed up with the bureaucrats and go on strike, causing the economy’s final collapse. In the book, “Going Galt” refers to productive people dropping out rather than serving the “mooching” bureaucrats and their “looting” friends.

It appears to me that Atlas Shrugged may be as much prophecy as fiction. The Cato Institute notes that as of early 2009, there were 1,804 subsidy programs in the federal budget, up nearly 80% since 1985.4 This spending and regulatory environment drives increased lobbying expenditures, regardless of rhetoric to the contrary. According to the Center for Responsive Politics, lobbying spending reached $3.46 billion in 2009, triple the amount spent just 10 years ago.5 It seems to me that money buys friends.

The next luck-inducing principle is to expect good fortune. This is consistent with our investment philosophy. We put money into stocks with the expectation that they will make money over time. We tend to expect continued good fortune from our successful investments and, when it makes sense, let our winners run.  

Arthur McQuaid

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Acorn funds

http://www.columbiafunds.com/home.htm

RUSSIA RISING

“For Russia this situation is a challenge and an opportunity. We are living in a unique time. And we should use it to build a modern, flourishing and strong Russia … which will be a co-founder of the new world economic order and a full participant in the collective political leadership of the post-crisis world.” Russian President Dmitry Medvedev

Russia is not letting an opportunity go unexploited. Putin and Medvedev know the United States has a fool in the White House. Obama is America’s gift to Russia, The balance between superpowers is teetering; America is declining, Russia is rising.

With a wink and a nod to the Great Bear, Obama dismantled the East European missile defense system, a move even more significant in what it said than in what it did. In his speech to the United nations he declared “No nation can or should try to dominate another” and decried any “world order that elevates one nation or group of people over another”. Then he placed our big stick on the sacrificial alter with a vow that the U.S. will not use it’s nuclear capabilities even to counter a nuclear attack upon us.

Sarkozy calls Obama “a mad lunatic”. Putin just smiles.

Nor is Russia about to let a crisis go to waste. Reagan was able to bring down the wall of Russian domination because socialism had bankrupt the economy of the USSR. Therefore, it must be with some delight that the Kremlin sees the “capitalist” West going down the same road they once trod to ruin. The Euro is mortally wounded and the dollar has lost its lure. The ruble cannot replace them but a new world currency designed and supported by the strength of the the world’s rising superpower might make it as the standard for world trade. One world currency is the path to one world government and that is the goal.

Here is the coin that Medved has offered as an example of what might be minted. He distributed them to delegates to the G-8 conference last year. Curiously the inscription is entirely in English.

LAST WEEK

Week ending July 2, 2010

Monday
Russian spies arrested, 11 of them.
This stuff is no limited to the movies.

Paul Krugman warns we need to go deeper in debt to avoid a Depression
And he won a Pulitzer Prize in economics They should have given it to Joe the Plumber..

Senate gives Obama the power to close of your access to the Internet.
George Orwell should have called the book “2010”.

Tuesday
The stock market drops 268 points.
The Consumer Confidence index fell from 62 to 52 in one month.

Wednesday
Democrats deny Republican request to visit the oil spill, logisical problem.
As Yogi would say, Republicans can’t go there any more, it’s too crowded.

Congressional Budget Office projects debt to reach WW II levels by December
Krugman cries more! more! Poor Paul is puzzled, we dig and dig more, but still don’t reach the top of the hole.

Thursday
The New York Times reports Hillary warming up to Ukraine now that they have a more pro-Moscow president.

KIEV (Reuters) – Secretary of State Hillary Clinton may initiate renewed U.S. interest in Ukraine after a flurry of pro-Russian moves by its new leadership when she visits the ex-Soviet republic on Friday, analysts said.

Clinton’s stop in Kiev, at the start of a five-country regional trip, is the first to Ukraine by a top U.S. official since President Viktor Yanukovich was elected in February, ousting pro-Western leaders and tilting policy toward Russia.

Friday
Random Thots takes a break

Bob B

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