No Runny Eggs

The repository of one hard-boiled egg from the south suburbs of Milwaukee, Wisconsin (and the occassional guest-blogger). The ramblings within may or may not offend, shock and awe you, but they are what I (or my guest-bloggers) think.

Archive for April, 2009

April 15, 2009

There’s no way out of TARP, part II

by @ 8:15. Tags:
Filed under Business, Politics - National.

Goldman Sachs said on Monday, in the wake of its $1.8 billion first-quarter profit, that it was looking to have a stock offering of $5 billion in order to repay its $10 billion loan. Tuesday, a rift developed between Rep. Barney Frank (D-MA) and the Obama administration, as the former welcomed the repayment development. The administration, on the other hand, claims to want to not “stigmatize” those still on the TARP.

As a guest on “Your World with Neil Cavuto” pointed out yesterday, the more-likely reason is the Obama adminstration would rather keep control. After all, he who doles out the gold makes the rules.

There’s no way out of TARP

by @ 7:57. Tags:
Filed under Business, Politics - National.

The comments timed out back at Sister Toldjah, so I’m bringing the entire post here and moving it to the top. The placeholder I had up since April 6 is below the fold.

(H/T – Lawhawk)

Back at my regular home, both my co-blogger Shoebox and I have been monitoring attempts, some successful, others not, by banks to get out from under the Troubled Assets Relief Program. In today’s Wall Street Journal, Stuart Varney relates the story of a larger bank that was forced to take TARP money:

Here’s a true story first reported by my Fox News colleague Andrew Napolitano (with the names and some details obscured to prevent retaliation). Under the Bush team a prominent and profitable bank, under threat of a damaging public audit, was forced to accept less than $1 billion of TARP money. The government insisted on buying a new class of preferred stock which gave it a tiny, minority position. The money flowed to the bank. Arguably, back then, the Bush administration was acting for purely economic reasons. It wanted to recapitalize the banks to halt a financial panic.

Fast forward to today, and that same bank is begging to give the money back. The chairman offers to write a check, now, with interest. He’s been sitting on the cash for months and has felt the dead hand of government threatening to run his business and dictate pay scales. He sees the writing on the wall and he wants out. But the Obama team says no, since unlike the smaller banks that gave their TARP money back, this bank is far more prominent. The bank has also been threatened with “adverse” consequences if its chairman persists. That’s politics talking, not economics.

Why can’t this bank do what some tiny banks that received TARP money have done? Varney answer that with three words – “Control. Direct. Command.” He points to the Pay for Performance Act, which many have seen as merely a ceiling on pay at any company that has so much as a dime of TARP money. Given the Democrats’ support for a “living wage”, I see that as a vehicle for raising the minimum wage by means other than legislation. After all, if the biggest banks are forced to pay a large sum of money for entry-level tellers, that will force the smaller banks and other businesses that offer entry-level jobs to follow suit.

(more…)

April 14, 2009

April Drinking Right – tonight

by @ 14:34. Tags:
Filed under Miscellaneous.

This is the Emergency Blogging System. It has been activated because Steve is overtaxed. Drinking Right is tonight at 7 pm over at Papa’s Social Club (7718 W Burleigh in Milwaukee).

You are instructed to be there at the appointed hour.

April 13, 2009

The “Do Not Disturb” lamp is lit

by @ 19:39. Tags:
Filed under Miscellaneous.

I’ll be at Blogs.4Bauer live-blogging the return of Cougar Bait.

Eggs on the road – Tax Week

by @ 8:29. Tags: , ,
Filed under Miscellaneous.

Besides being Tax season (and indeed, partly because of it), it’s road-trip season. My trips for the week:

– This one isn’t actually a trip, but I’ll be running the weekly “24” liveblog over at Blogs.4Bauer tonight. The fun will start a bit before 8.

– If it’s the second Tuesday of the month, it’s time for Drinking Right. I need to drink heavily after last week’s disaster, and Dickie over at Papa’s Social Club (7718 W. Burleigh in Milwaukee) is kind enough to serve us starting at 7 pm. He even throws in pizza from Mama’s next door.

– Wednesday is the Tax Day Tea Party. Blogging will likely be non-existant that day because I will be on the road all day: Madison at the Capitol (King Street entrance) at 11, Appleton at Fox Banquets (111 E. Kimball) at 5:30, and possibly a quick stop in Fort Atkinson (Municipal Building on Main) at 4.

– Saturday is potentially another full day. The only thing confirmed is a Tea’d Off party at Racine City Hall (where 6th, 7th, and Washington meet) at noon, though it is likely I’ll add the Sammies down in Chicago to the list.

April 12, 2009

Somali pirates die from seasickness and SEAL Team bullets, but mostly from SEAL Team bullets

by @ 14:45. Filed under War on Terror.

(Headline courtesy EC at Ace of Spades HQ)

Hopefully you haven’t been in a cave the last 2 hours, because some very good news came across the wires in that time. Maersk Alabama captain Richard Phillips escaped his Somali pirate captors a second time, and this time, the US Navy was ready. The Navy plucked Phillips from the water unharmed, killed three of the pirates, and captured the fourth.

I personally wish they had put some lead into the fourth pirate’s last meal; piracy is not a capital offense anymore. Title 18, USC, Sec. 1651 proscribes life in prison for those convicted of piracy.

Revisions/extensions (3:46 pm 4/12/2008) – I’m listening to the Pentagon press conference with the CENTCOM naval commander, and a couple more details came out:

– The captured pirate was on the USS Bainbridge as part of the negotiations.
– The standing orders from the CINC (i.e. President Obama) were to engage only if Phillips’ life were in imminent danger.
– The commander of the Bainbridge saw that one of the three pirates remaining on the lifeboat had a weapon trained at Phillips, who was apparently still on the lifeboat tied up, determined that Phillips’ life was in imminent danger, and ordered the rescue.
– Snipers on the Bainbridge took out all 3 of the remaining pirates.

Bravo Zulu, Navy!

He Is Risen

by @ 7:52. Filed under Religion.

Luke 24:1-12 (NIV):

On the first day of the week, very early in the morning, the women took the spices they had prepared and went to the tomb. They found the stone rolled away from the tomb, but when they entered, they did not find the body of the Lord Jesus. While they were wondering about this, suddenly two men in clothes that gleamed like lightning stood beside them. In their fright the women bowed down with their faces to the ground, but the men said to them, “Why do you look for the living among the dead? He is not here; he has risen!” Remember how he told you, while he was still with you in Galilee: ‘The Son of Man must be delivered into the hands of sinful men, be crucified and on the third day be raised again.’” Then they remembered his words.

When they came back from the tomb, they told all these things to the Eleven and all the others. It was Mary Magdalene, Joanna, Mary the mother of James, and the others with them who told this to the apostles. But they did not believe the women, because their words seemed to them like nonsense. Peter, however, got up and ran to the tomb. Bending over, he saw the strips of linen lying by themselves, and he went away, wondering to himself what had happened.

Have a blessed Easter

April 11, 2009

The Many Permutations of Control

by @ 5:16. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

During last years campaign, as Exxon announced record setting profits, than, Senator Barack Obama said:

“No U.S. corporation ever made that much in a quarter,” Obama said. “But while Big Oil is making record profits, you are paying record prices at the pump and our economy is leaving working people behind.”

McCain’s response, Obama said, is to propose a corporate tax plan that would give “$4 billion each year to the oil companies, including $1.2 billion for Exxon Mobil alone” and a gas tax holiday that Obama said would only “pad oil company profits and save you — at best — half a tank of gas” over an entire summer.

This week, Wells Fargo, one of the banks that was forced to accept TARP fund reported record setting profits of $3 Billion.  In regard to this amazing, government supported, excess profit, President Barack Obama said:

zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

Huh, no comment.  Radio silence.

Wells Fargo was forced to take $25 billion from the government.  An amount that its CEO didn’t want.  Barack Obama complained venomously last year, about $4 billion provided to Exxon.  However, $25 billion seems to be just OK. 

If the truth be told, the $4 billion that was “given” to Exxon was really not “given” to Exxon.  The $4 billion were largely accelerated depreciation on drilling assets, a pretty good policy if you want to encourage energy production.  The money “given” to Exxon didn’t cost taxpayers a dime and in fact, if you consider that increased energy production has the effect of lowering energy prices, the taxpayer likely came out ahead. 

On the other hand, the $25 billion dollars Wells Fargo was forced to accept is coming directly from the taxpayers pocket.  If not today, certainly tomorrow in the form of the higher taxes that will be required to pay off the debt that was incurred to put this money into Wells Fargo.

Actually, in the world of Obama, Exxon and Wells Fargo are situations for which identical outcomes are being attempted.  In both cases, Obama’s reaction, or lack of one, is a result of his desire to control the company or industry that the afflicted is in. 

In Exxon’s case, Obama found the profits obscene.  He proposed a windfall tax profit.  He did this not just to enrich the treasury but to cow Exxon and other players in the industry into doing things his way.  This is also a big reason why Obama wants a carbon tax or something similar.  By increasing the costs on the energy companies he knows that energy costs will increase.  There is no “alternative energy” that will do more than light a candle. With no real alternative, consumers will be soon condemning the energy companies just like they have been condemning banks and investment companies who they see as “deserving” the beat down they are getting.

In Wells Fargo’s case, Obama is oblivious to the profits and worse, seems uninterested in recovering the money that the American taxpayers have gone on the hook for.  Obama is uninterested in Welss Fargo’s profit because he has already taken control of this industry and is uninterested in releasing that control.

Yes, President Obama’s actions can cause confusion to those who attempt to view situations from a logical perspective.  Confusion until you remember that all of his actions are after the same end result, control of the enterprise that is in the cross hairs.

April 10, 2009

Third party in 2012?

by @ 21:49. Filed under Politics - National.

The original was posted at Sister Toldjah on April 3. Since the comments timed out there, I’m reposting it here, and moving the placeholder, also posted on the 3rd, below the fold

ST put this warning from Newt Gingrich about a third party springing up in 2012 up in Hot Headlines yesterday, which gives me the perfect opportunity to launch into my thoughts on this possibility. I’ve been tossing this around for the last 4 years, since President Bush’s re-election, when I became convinced that a significant portion of the Republican Party was more interested in purchasing the middle by growing government than actually opposing the Socialization of America espoused by the Democrats since LBJ. I’ve alluded to my thought process several times in my looks at where conservatism has been the last couple years.

First, allow me to summarize the gist of Gingrich’s comments. He notes that all of the Obama administration spending excesses were set up by the Bush administration, and that there is an undercurrent of disgust aimed at both parties. We all know about the right-v-Republican-v-right battle, and there was at one point a rather heated left-v-Democrat one. However, the Democrats in power are rapidly healing that rift, even as there are rumblings of a center-v-Democrat one. I’m not exactly convinced that “Blue Dog Democrats” or PUMAs exist, but if they do, they could make a third party a much more intriguing proposition.

The essential part of creating a third party is finding something that is not addressed by either of the two existing parties, but is popular enough to create an electoral majority. The ideology that is closest to being able to create that, social conservatism, has been sufficiently tarred by the left that even though individual issues still win on the ballot, politicians are sufficiently scared of the tar to actually attach themselves to it.

I wish I could believe that fiscal conservatism could be that glue. The scope of the various Tea Parties are encouraging. However, I’ve seen this before in the county I live in (Milwaukee County, Wisconsin), and while we still have the County Executive that got swept in, a supermajority of the County Board went back to the tax-and-spend-and-tax-and-spend-and-tax-and-spend tactics that ultimately led to the pension scandal that sparked the temporary tax revolt.

Even if a conservative glue could be found, there’s the matter of supplanting the Republican Party as the “Not-Democrat” Party. In most states, the existing “third” parties have consistently failed to get more than a handful of votes. Given the plurality-wins structure in most states, there will necessarily be a rather lengthy stretch of comlete Democrat control of government.

That brings me to the other limiting factor; time. There are actually three different clocks running; the 2010 elections, the point at which the “looters” and “moochers” are a majority, and the point at which the entitlement scheme starts drawing from the general fund rather than supplementing it. One could argue that we’re already past the second point; the fact that President Obama took a majority of the vote with a very-thinly-veiled Socialist agenda, and the Democrats in Congress and in statehouses increased their majorities with an unveiled Socialist one, would suggest that point has been crossed.

Similarily, it probably is too late to create a new “Not-Democrat” Party that will have a chance in the 2010 elections. It took the Republicans 6 years to be a force on the national scene. I’ve stated time and again that today’s Democrats will try their hardest to not repeat the mistakes of the 1850s and allow an “upstart” party to get enough roots to challenge their hegemony.

While there still is almost a decade before Social Security goes into the red, the problem is that those in office after the 2010 elections will be the ones to redraw the districts. Meanwhile, not only is nothing being done to correct the problem, but the things that can correct the problem have been systematically wrecked.

If someone could give me good news I could believe in, I would appreciate it.
(more…)

April 9, 2009

The News Organization That Cannot Be Quot…er, Embedded™ strikes again

by @ 8:45. Filed under Presstitute Follies.

TechCruch is following the battle between The News Organization That Cannot Be Quoted™ and WTNQ-FM, an AP affiliate in Lafollete, Tennessee sent a cease-and-desist notice over the station’s embedding of AP YouTube videos on its website. If The News Organization That Cannot Be Quoted™ doesn’t want people to embed their videos, then why do they allow embedding on YouTube?

I will cheer when they go out of business.

Fading capitalism

by @ 8:26. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

Once again, the meat of the commentary will be at Sister Toldjah until the comments time out there. However, there is a warning on the latest Rasmussen poll on capitalism versus socialism that I’ll tease you with here:

The worse news is that those under 30 are almost evenly divided, with 37% saying capitalism is better, 33% saying socialism is better, and 30% unsure of what they think. It is not a coincidence that the radicals of the late 1960s were entering the decision-level positions of the education establishment 30 years ago.

April 8, 2009

The one certainty in Wisconsin – higher taxes, property edition

by @ 20:53. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin, Taxes.

(H/T – Owen, mostly because I haven’t hat-tipped him lately)

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports that the Legislative Fiscal Bureau estimates that, despite the $1.7 billion in tax and fee hikes and despite the infusion of federal “stimulus” money, the property taxes on a median-valued home will go up 3.2% this year and 4.5% next year. Given the virtual sweep of liberals in yesterday’s election, it’s safe to say they low-balled it.

Money does buy elections

by @ 7:39. Filed under Elections, Politics - Wisconsin.

I’ve slightly calmed down with a fitful night’s sleep, and put up a different angle to yesterday’s election over at Sister Toldjah. Once again, I’ll direct you over there until the comments shut down. Until then, mull over this closer:

Do not mistake this for a call for public financing of elections, or for limitations on speech. Instead, it is a wakeup call for the right. The left is all-too-willing to buy elections, and we need to participate in the battle.

Some Shakin’ Goin’ On?

by @ 5:25. Filed under Politics - Minnesota.

Note this press release from today:

Dave Thompson Announces Candidacy to become next State Chair of the Minnesota Republican Party

The Republican Party needs a leader who can clearly communicate the Party vision, champion a Republican majority in the legislature and return the Party to its core principles.

When asked about the current political climate in Minnesota, Thompson replied, “I believe Republican Party principles reflect the values and priorities of most Minnesotans. Unfortunately, the Republican Party principles have not been clearly communicated in a way that allows this majority to see that Republican principles are the same as the principles that guide their own lives. As a result, a large Democratic majority controls the Minnesota House of Representatives and the Senate, thus not having enough Republicans to sustain a gubernatorial veto. We cannot afford more of the same.”

Dave is uniquely qualified to undertake this important leadership role as State Chair. For the last 7 plus years Dave has hosted “The Dave Thompson Show”, a program aired on locally owned, AM1500 KSTP. In addition, he has been part of a debate segment known as “Face Off” on KSTP TV’s Emmy Award winning news program, “At Issue with Tom Hauser”. Both of these high profile positions have afforded Dave the opportunity to cultivate and hone his understanding of the issues necessary to lead the Republican Party.

Dave is a life long Minnesotan. He graduated in 1984 from the University of North Dakota with majors in economics and political science. He received his law degree from the University of Minnesota Law School in 1987 and has been a practicing attorney representing businesses in workers’ compensation disputes, contract negotiations and estate planning.

Dave and his wife have been married 23 years, and live with their 2 children in Lakeville.

The two other candidates for party chair are Tony Sutton and Carrie Ruud. 

Tony is a party insider who has served as Treasurer under current Chair Ron Carey, as Republicans have watched their seats drop to a point where they can barely sustain a veto from Pawlenty.  Nuff said! 

Ruud is a former State Senator who has some difficulty figuring out what it means to be a conservative.  Along with voting for both the Twins and Gopher stadiums she also voted to support a sales tax increase that would have the funds dedicated to the environment and cultural programs.

Thompson has held to conservative principles for as long as I’ve heard him.  He’s not afraid to congratulate the folks who take the principled stance or to take down the folks who have strayed.  Perhaps most importantly, Thompson is an outsider to the “insiders club” of Minnesota politics and understands that the Republican party can not be a top down organization but needs to support and enable the local organizations that put their souls and sweat into getting their candidates elected.

Stay tuned, I think some shake up in the Republican Party at all levels, may be the only thing that ultimately save it and avoid a third party split.

April 7, 2009

Where’s the loyalty from the RINOs?

by @ 23:56. Filed under Politics - Wisconsin.

I have grown tired of demands from the liberal wing of the Republican Party to show loyalty to their candidates when they win primaries, only to see them abandon the conservative candidates when they win primaries. I know the State Superindentent race is a non-partisan one, but actually illustrates my point better than a partisan race can (though I could also point to the 2004 Senate race).

Van Mobley was considered the establishment GOP candidate. He finished third, behind the WEAC Teachers’ Industrial Complex (thanks, Marcus Aurelius) candidate Tony Evers and the more-conservative-than-outstate-“Republicans”-allow candidate Rose Fernandez. Allow me to re-group the numbers from February:

Evers/Todd Alan Price/Lowell E. Holtz – 55.3% of the vote
Fernandez/Mobley – 44.7% of the vote

Now, let’s fast-forward to today. As of 11:28 pm, with 91% of the vote counted, WTMJ-TV had the numbers as follows:

Evers – 56.8%
Fernandez – 43.2%

I do realize there were a lot more voters in April than in February. However, you can’t tell me that the teachers all of a sudden just woke up on April Fool’s Day. Hell, Randy Koschnick didn’t do that much worse against the liberal institution of the state Supreme Court, and Shirley Abrahamson has decades of incumbency on her side.

This was the one chance those on the right had to take DPI away from WEAC/TIC, and because of RINO jealousy, that slipped right through our fingers. I suppose the less-liberal moneybags of the state (the few that are left, anyway) would rather play footsie with the same Left that views us as THE MAIN ENEMY and the same Left that dumped $750,000 or so into TV ads despite no real money flowing into their opposition than actually win.

If you want a divorce, by God, you’ve got one. Go ahead and make your alliance with the Democrats and the Left official. Just don’t come crying to me when you fall short of their 110% fealty demand.

I’ve got the green eggs

by @ 18:36. Filed under Miscellaneous.

Forgive the silliness, but doubleplusundead pointed me to this story from Ananova about a Croatian farmer who has a hen that lays green eggs. The accompanying pic is priceless.

I wonder if I could have some ham with that.

New NRE poll – how much fealty will Obama show Iran’s Mad Mullahs?

by @ 13:45. Filed under NRE Polls.

With President Obama prostrating himself to whatever rival demands it, I figure it’s time for a new poll. With Vice President Joe Biden’s 30-year-long love of Iran’s Mad Mullahs, Iran is sure to be on the ObamiNation Kow-Tow Tour. The question is, how deep will the bow be?

How deep will Obama bow to Iran's Mad Mullahs when he meets them?

Up to 1 answer(s) was/were allowed

  • Let the face hit the floor (61%, 23 Vote(s))
  • As deep as the bow to the Protector of the Two "Holy" Mosques (21%, 8 Vote(s))
  • Some waist bendage (13%, 5 Vote(s))
  • No bow (3%, 1 Vote(s))
  • Head bob (3%, 1 Vote(s))

Total Voters: 38

Loading ... Loading ...

April 6, 2009

What happens when Porkulus ends – schools edition

Jo Egelhoff asks the question over at Fox Politics, and she doesn’t like the answers. In short, the expansion of existing programs and creation of new programs essentially mandated by the strings attached to Porkulus will result in a massive tax increase in 2 years when the money for those programs runs out.

Obama assassination plot in Turkey broken up

by @ 13:49. Filed under Politics - National, War on Terror.

(H/T – Gateway Pundit)

Adnkronos International reports that a Syrian man disguised as an Al-Jazeera reporter plotted to assassinate President Obama during his official visit to Turkey:

As United States president Barack Obama began an official visit to Turkey on Monday, reports surfaced that a Syrian man was arrested in Istanbul in connection with a plot to kill him. The man – who sought to disguise himself as a journalist for the Arab TV network Al-Jazeera – managed to obtain press accreditation and allegedly planned to stab the US president with a knife, said Saudi daily al-Watan.

Paleo Pat over at Political Byline sums up my feelings so well, I’ll just borrow them (emphasis in the original):

As an American; I am just glad to see that the plot was exposed, because the LAST THING this Country needs is our President hurt or killed. I may not agree with Obama’s Politics, but I do not want to see the guy murdered. Anyone that would say anything any different is either crazy or just an mean spirited asshole. It is one thing to chide the President because of his politics, but it’s an entire other matter to do something like this.

Revisions/extensions (12:37 pm 4/7/2009) – The News Organization That Cannot Be Quoted™ reports (H/T – Ed Morrissey) that it was a hoax involving a “mentally-disturbed” man. Oddly, the details track quite nicely with the leftist meme that popped up when the original reports came out.

Ed, however, is puzzled why the Turks would quickly release a mentally-disturbed individual connected to an assassination plot. I seem to recall John Hinckley being declared insane.

NRE recommendations, 2009 spring general election edition

I haven’t been paying nearly enough blog attention to this election. The robo-calls that have just started to come in like the snow that was supposed to be here yesterday have reminded me that the spring general election is tomorrow between 7 am and 8 pm. I may as well fire off my recommendations:

State SuperintendentRose Fernandez. Education in Wisconsin needs an outside-the-box perspective, and who better than someone heavily involved with “virtual” schools? Fernandez recognizes that no one schooling solution works for every student, and that, outside merit pay, money is not the answer. Her opponent, Tony Evers, does have a lifetime of experience in the publicc-school structure. Sometimes, that can be a good thing; however, it usually, and in this case, is not. Evers is wedded to the idea that more money, especially more money to WEAC, is the answer.

State Supreme CourtJudge Randy Koschnick. This one is quite simple. Judge Koschnick’s opponent, Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson, is so liberal that even Bill Clinton could not nominate her for the United States Supreme Court. Justice Abrahamson simply went even further to the left since then.

Milwaukee County Circuit Court, Branch 15Daniel Gabler. He and opponent J.D. Watts have engaged in a “spirited” campaign (identifiable by the local deciders’ focus on only one side of said “spirit”). Both have attempted to reach out to local conservatives; however, Watts’ attempt to justify oral sex as not harmful, especially without offering what the judge in the case deemed any real basis belies that effort.

Oak Creek Mayor – I’ve tossed this one around quite a bit. I was quite disappointed when Mark Verhalen didn’t make it out of the primary, and almost as disappointed with his decision to press on in a write-in campaign. I see the two candidates on the ballot, Dick Bolender and Dimity Grabowski, as unsuited for the office; Bolender for his “spend every dime we can get away with” attitude, Grabowski for her general anti-business one. I honestly cannot recommend anybody.

Oak Creek-Franklin School Board – Again, no recommendations. None of the three candidates for the two seats, Thomas Robe, Kathleen Borchardt, or Jim Gilmeister, offer more than empty words on the need to live within the means of those that live in the district.

April 3, 2009

Drip, Drip, Drip – Update 1

by @ 10:50. Filed under Politics - National.

I wrote here about President Obama’s steadily declining approval numbers.  I posted a poll asking when his net positive number, as measured by Rasmussen Reports, would drop below 0.  One of the options in the poll was by today, April 3rd.  If you voted for that option you were close but no cigar!

Rasmussen reports that Obama’s net approval rating has dropped to it’s lowest level thus far +3, just barely above sea level.

Of interest in the poll this week is that for the first time in over a month there was a day, March 31st, where Obama’s net approval number moved back into positive double digit territory at +11.  I’m guessing it was not coincidental that this was the same day that President Obama left the United States.  I suspect many people, myself included, felt safer with him gone.

Also interesting this week is that after a couple of days of higher than recent ratings, Obama’s ratings are right back on the path to go below zero in the not too distant future.  Again, I doubt it is any coincidence that the new low approval rating comes on the day when it is obvious that Obama is not staying in Europe but is planning to come back to the US.

If Obama really does pay attention to polling do you think we could find him a nice, lonely, isolated island far from the shores of the US to live on?  It would help his approval rating!

But, But, But…

by @ 9:04. Filed under Economy, Energy, Politics - National.

From CNNmoney:

America’s oil bust

BRADFORD, Pa. (CNNMoney.com) — Six months ago this oil town in Western Pennsylvania was booming. You couldn’t find a worker to paint a house, let alone man a drill rig. The nearby oil fields buzzed with activity as high prices drove a production frenzy.

Now this boomtown’s bustle is as quiet as the surrounding late-winter forest.

but, but, but I thought we were supposed to be getting all kinds of “Green Jobs!”  I thought we were going to grow jobs!  Is it possible that Obama’s plan to “grow green jobs” might actually cause massive unemployment in industries that are not in favor?  Is it possible that some areas of the country may actually have significantly worse unemployment because of Obama’s plan to “grow jobs?”

Elkhart Indiana, Saaaalute!

If At First You Don’t Succeed

Earlier this week, the three judge panel reviewing the Coleman/Franken contested case, issued a ruling that appears to have negative implications for Coleman, at least in this phase:

 

As a result, Harry Reid is looking again to seat Al Franken as Senator for Minnesota:

Upping the ante in his crusade to anoint Democrat Al Franken the next senator from Minnesota, Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., is blaming Senate Republican leader John Cornyn for the impasse that has left Minnesotans minus one senator for five months now.

Harry, via his spokesman, goes on to explain that his desire has nothing to do with him personally.  You see, Harry is just looking out for us poor Minnesotans who are short a Senator:

Reid spokesman Jim Manley told Politico.com on Thursday: “It’s not fair to the people of Minnesota to be represented by only one senator, and it’s about time a senator from Texas stop telling the people of Minnesota what’s best for them. Enough is enough.”

Hey, Harry, I know you read our blog.  I just want you to know as one Minnesotan who doesn’t think it really matters whether you have anywhere from 57 to 60 Democrat votes, I’m in no hurry to get a second Senator.  The one we have now is horrible at her job, why would I want to double down on that?  I’m sure with as quickly as you’re expanding the Federal Government payroll you could put the office space of our second Senator to some good use!

 

Call Me Puzzled

One week ago, the President of Brazil President Luiz Inacio Lula de Silva, blamed the world financial crisis on “whitey”:

“this was a crisis that was fostered and boosted by irrational behavior of people that are white, blue-eyed, that before the crisis looked like they knew everything about economics.”

He further removed any misunderstanding about the nature of his comments when he added:

“I’m not acquainted with any black banker,” Lula said. “The part of humanity that’s responsible should pay for the crisis.”

Today, President Obama praised President Lula:

“That’s my man, right here, love this guy. He’s the most popular politician on Earth. It’s because of his good looks,” Obama said.

I saw Obama greet the Queen of England, I didn’t hear him make a comment about how well she looked.  Obama met Sarkozy and didn’t mention his looks.  Obama met Brown last month and didn’t mention his looks. 

Why would Obama mention Lula’s looks? 

I’m left with two possibilities.  With his comment, either Obama was saying:

Lula, you’re speaking truth to power, brother.  The man is just trying to keep us down!

or he was saying:

You can tell by looking at me that I didn’t cause this problem.  But, that guy I inherited this all from?  He was sure enough a honky cracker!

The problem is that I’m not really fluent in victimese so I’m puzzled on the exact translation.

April 2, 2009

Roll bloat – guest-blogging edition

by @ 19:18. Filed under The Blog.

I’ve had Anthony on my overstuffed feed reader for a while, but until Sister Toldjah tapped both him and me (along with Brian) to guest-blog over at her place, I didn’t realize that I never put Public Secrets on that bloated roll to your right. It’s past time to correct that oversight.

[No Runny Eggs is proudly powered by WordPress.]