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 February, 2009

February 11, 2009

What The Stimulus Is Creating

by @ 5:22. Filed under Defending the American Dream, Economy.

Bandage your heads up tight before you watch this video:

Moving past the Messiah assignment that Julio is doing, Julio is the perfect example of your brain on stimulus!

First, where did the expectation come from that college students should have well paying, high benefit plans?   The purpose of college, if you choose to go, is to learn skills that will enable you to get well paying, high benefit jobs.

Second, note the mentality that says “because I am here, I should get paid.   In fact, because I am here a longer time I should get paid or benefited more!”   Julio obviously has never heard of “pay for performance.”   It’s a nifty little concept that says that your compensation is determined by the value you bring to the organization not the length of time you’ve managed to walk through the front door of the organization.  

Julio is a perfect example of the “I’m owed something” mentality.   He has already determined that he is a person who will be perpetually disadvantaged, not because of any choices he has made or skills he does or doesn’t have, but because “the system” is fixed against him.  

As we continue the full out run towards Socialism you can expect to see more Julios.   As the government spreads its net of benefits over more of the population, more and more people will become just like Julio, slaves of the state and unable to take responsibility or act without some action or provision from the government.   Of course, along with the net of benefits comes the governments ability to dictate how you live and work.   Doubt me, just ask the banks and the auto companies.

This country has always been about the taking and rewarding of risk.   There is little the the Founders of our Country, the folks who risked their lives and livelihood for a chance in the “New World” or those who spanned out to settle the West would have had in common with folks like Julio.  

It’s unfortunate really, Julio may have talent and ability but he’ll probably never know.    Julio and those like him, are waiting for the next drop from the government gruel bucket.    They’ll eat the gruel, never being fully satisfied but justifying their situation as  being “better than nothing.”

February 10, 2009

The Morni…er, Afternoon Scramble (part 2) – 2/10/2009

by @ 16:48. Filed under The Morning Scramble.

Sorry about being so late with Part 2…

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zgtxoAsFV8[/youtube]

  • Dan Riehl find the formerly-Great Britain planning to ration air travel in the name of Gorebal “Warming”.
  • Shoebox asks, “How green is your ethanol?” If it’s corn-a-hole, it’s not exactly green.
  • Nick Schweitzer wonders just how sustainable is “sustainable” energy. It’s not exactly everything it’s cracked up to be.
  • Rep. John Shadegg raises the alarm on a $6.7 trillion tax increase in the name of Gorebal “Warming”. That would be roughly half last year’s GDP.
  • Jon Ham found an acolyte that wants to kill off over 2/3rds of the planet’s population. I wonder why the acolytes don’t have the strength of their convictions…oh wait, they want to be around to rule.
  • Christian Schneider and Dan Bice offer a few rules for those bloggers who want to cover government. I think I’ve broken them all.
  • Second dose of Christian – he outlines the latest attempt by the Government “Accountability” Board to ensure a silent election season followed by a re-ratification of ‘Rat control – the elimination of anonymous speech.
  • Trail-Mix debuts his Contract with America II.
  • Byron Audler lays out the case for using the O.H. Perrys in the role envisioned for the woefully-underequipped and -overpriced LCS.
  • Uncle Jimbo lays some serious lumber into Barack Obama’s CinC side. I don’t think “present” will work when the binary solution is “victory or defeat”.
  • Kevin Jackson explains as only he can why Obama is always late.
  • GayPatriotWest points out that Ronald Reagan never blamed Jimmy Carter for leaving stagflation behind. Unlike the current occupant of the Oval Office; despite being handed an economic mess so bad that a brand new term had to be coined to describe it, Reagan simply went to work to break the malaise.
  • Ed Morrissey wonders if Obama actually pays attention. When the essential characteristic of making a lie the “truth” is blind repetition,….
  • Stephan Tawney wonders what the presstitutes would say if Sean Hannity had received a front-row seat to George W. Bush’s first press conference as President. We know what they did to a blogger who got into the press conferences, and it’s not exactly what they did for semi-successful liberal talk-show-host Ed Schultz.
  • V the K is running a caption contest of Obama’s head/helo collision.
  • Bill Quick calls Bravo Sierra on the latest CNN 76% approval rating for Obama. Bonus item – they crow about getting the undecideds down to 1%. Let me put it this way – if a pollster asks what color a quarter is, there will be at least 4% in the “undecided” category.
  • Emperor Misha I decries the latest example of the death of the southern border – a rancher who had enough of his property being used as a border-jumping point is being sued for defending his property and country.
  • Sean M. proves BDS is alive and well in the Senate. They’re NEVER going to let it go.
  • Thomas Sowell outlines how to deprogram the young skulls full of mush after the screwels (™, Rush Limbaugh) get through with them. One slight problem; relying on simply asking whether one has been exposed to the other side isn’t going to work because critical thinking is not a natural trait.
  • Lawhawk bemoans the creeping auto-gratuity sneaking into restaurants. It is a sign of the socialist times we’re all living in now.
  • Adam hosts “24: Poker Night!” Watch Tony get drunk and Janis flub a field operation.

I need a drink. Unfortunately, it’s still over 2 hours until Drinking Right.

Rep. Paul Ryan conference call

Ed Morrissey is simulcasting the call right now on The Ed Morrissey Show. I’m over there.

Revisions/extensions (3:50 pm 2/10/2008) – The conference call is over. For those of you looking for just the conference call, it starts at about the 1h04m mark of the archived show (though I recommend you also listen to the first part; Ed did a Melt The Phones show). Besides Ed, Jo Egelhoff, Kevin Binversie and Todd Lohenry asked questions. My voice is still a bit on the gone side, so I simply enjoyed the call; besides, they had better questions than I could come up with.

Drinking Right – tonight

by @ 14:39. Tags:
Filed under Miscellaneous.

If it’s the 2nd Tuesday of the month, we’re drinking. As usual, the details are at the official home:

Date: February 10, 2009
Time: 7 pm – ???
Place: Papa’s Social Club, 7718 W Burleigh in Milwaukee

If you have to stay in Racine County to oppose KRM, we will keep the beer cold for you.

The Morning Scramble (Part 1) – 2/10/2009

by @ 10:48. Filed under The Morning Scramble.

Yes, we’re back to the multi-parters – somewhere north of 350 feeds to choose from will do that…

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ubZjbmA1Id0[/youtube]

  • The Death of Newsweek, Part I – Ken found them cheering the fulfillment of Karl Marx’s prediction. As the song says, “Mamama, we’re all crazee now.”
  • The Death of Newsweek, Part II – Jim Geraghty wonders why they’re cheering a 52% drop in single-copy circulation over 2 years.
  • The Death of Newsweek, Part III – Tom Blumer answers that they’re just being honest about being liberal partisans.
  • Lemur King compares and contrasts the presstitute coverage of the “talk-down” of 2000 to the “fear ‘n hope” of 2009.
  • Dad29 on Gubmint Spending, Part I – he points out that federal government spending, without TARP, without the bailouts, and without the Generational Theft Act, increased by roughly 7.2% per year under President George W. Bush. Only in gubmint is a rate of growth double inflation considered “starving”.
  • Dad29 on Gubmint Spending, Part II – he ran the numbers on Sen. Arlen “Scottish Law” Specter’s claim that it would cost “only” $195,000 per job saved and found that it’s 3.6 times the worth of the average job. Even if they were all UAW jobs, it would still be somewhere north of twice the worth of that job.
  • How much are all those bailouts, Part I – Doug Mataconis found that the amount committed to the various bailouts would be almost enough to pay off every last home mortgage.
  • How much are all those bailouts, Part II – John Walker found that liquidating all of the gold in the world at today’s prices wouldn’t even cover half the bill.
  • How much are all those bailouts, Part III – Ace found that the bailouts are worth 2/3rds of everything the economy produced last year. Ahem – it’s closer to 3/4ths.
  • Purple Avenger notes the beginning of health-care rationing in the Generational Theft Act. It’s no longer just the children they’re stealing from; it’s Grandma and Grandpa.
  • Ed Morrissey can’t believe that The News Organization That Cannot Be Quoted™ isn’t buying the “no pork in this Generational Theft Act” line of Bravo Sierra.
  • John Hawkins lists a few good reasons to kill the GTA (and no, I’m not talking about Grand Theft Auto).
  • Is all this pork getting you hungry? Michelle Malkin found your dish – the Turbaconduckhen. I think it’s missing some pork sausage stuffing.
  • Back to Michelle – she lists some of the things it’s not missing, like pork for golf carts, hybrids for federal employees, and Amtrak.
  • Asian Badger hosts an economics mini-lecture. Today’s topic – hyperinflation.
  • Dominic Rupprecht states that those who intentionally misrepresent history are doomed to repeat it. Can you say, “Lost Decade”?
  • Bruce proves that the road to serfdom is paved with “good intentions” married to incompetent actions.

Part 2 will be up after I’m done with some tech support.

Odd Man Out

by @ 5:23. Filed under Energy, Global "Warming".

An article out in Germany talks about growing interest in developing nuclear power in Europe.   According to the article, Germany and even Sweden are talking about restarting nuclear power development.   Apparently previous agreements to cease and desist are now considered old fashioned:

Sweden announced last week that it was revoking a 1980 referendum decision to phase out nuclear power. Prime Minister Fredrik Reinfeldt and the leaders of the three other parties in the coalition described the deal as “historic.”

The European Union gets nearly 30% of its electricity from nuclear plants.   It has 147 active nuclear power plants.   They have 2 under construction with 20 proposed plants.

Isn’t nuclear so, what’s the phrase, 1970’s?   I thought nuclear was anti green, anti new world order.   Why the sudden interest in nuclear?

With gas and oil prices rocketing and fears about global warming growing, however, nuclear power seems to be experiencing a global renaissance.

Funny thing, we’ve got all the same issues and concerns.   The one advantage we do have is that we have more coal than anywhere else in the world, but that’s bad too.

I’ve looked through the entire stimulus bill and can find no reference to nuclear energy in it.   That’s kind of odd considering that President Obama continues to tout all of the green jobs that will be created.  

Europe’s decided that being anti nuclear is “historic.”   Looks like contrary to all of Obama’s talk about leading we’re just going to be plain old history.

How Green Is Your Ethanol?

by @ 5:12. Filed under Corn-a-hole, Energy.

With apologies to the New Christy Minstrels:

Green Green it’s green they say
on the far side of the hill
Green green I’m goin’ away
to where the gas is greener still

a Well I told those Greenies when they said "use the corn!"
Dontcha know it’s a fool’s game you play?
You’ll up food prices, need a huge subsidy
And not supplant one barrel of oil
a-singin"¦.

Remember all those ethanol commercials?   They used to tell us about how efficient it was because we grow it and how much greener it was than using fossil fuels.

We saw the folly of the first “benefit” a year plus ago as ethanol use contributed to a doubling of corn prices which resulted in dramatic increases in all food that contained corn or corn products.   Now we have the University of Minnesota throwing cold water on the latter.

In a study to be fully released later this week, The U of M concludes:

The researchers found that depending on the materials and technology used in production, cellulosic ethanol’s environmental and health costs (19 to 32 cents per gallon) are less than half the costs of gasoline (71 cents per gallon), while corn-based ethanol’s costs (72 to about $1.45 per gallon) range from roughly equal to about double that of gasoline.

Gosh, that’s odd.   I thought gas was the evil, anti green fuel.   Who would have thought that ethanol was a horribly ungreen fuel?   The answer is anyone who would do a little research past seeing the word “green!”   The problem with corn based ethanol has always been in what it takes to grow the corn and turn it into fuel.   Unfortunately, few people want to educate themselves and look only at the core product and what they believe comes out of a tailpipe.   Even the authors of the research see the myopia:

“To understand the environmental and health consequences of biofuels, we must look well beyond the tailpipe to how and    where biofuels are produced. Clearly, upstream emissions matter,” Hill says.

“Green” has become a pixie dust that changes anything it touches into something no longer questionable as to its economic quality or its usefulness.   Putting doggie doodoo into a bag and calling it “green” may make some folks feel good but it has no value to me as a pillow.

H/T Glenn Beck

February 9, 2009

Hey, Mr. Transparency………

by @ 8:55. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

Bloomberg chronicles how the US government has put itself on the hook now for $9.7 trillion!   That’s enough to pay off 90% of all mortgages in the US!

$9.7 trillion spent or guaranteed, most of it controlled by the Federal reserve.   Besides being an unelected body, there’s one other little bitty issue with all of this…the Fed doesn’t want to tell us where they’ve used all the money.

In December, Bloomberg sued under the Fed under the Freedom of Information Act.   At the time, the Fed had lent $2 trillion that they were unwilling to tell anyone who it was lent to.

Well, that was under BUUUUUUUUUUUUSSSSSHH, who we know was responsible for bringing down the twin towers, lying about intelligence to get a war going and spying on Americans.   We wouldn’t expect any better from that administration!

Now we have President Obama, the man who campaigned on and signed with his very own hand, a requirement that government would be fully transparent, all above board, nothing hidden!

Not so much.

Bloomberg is still in the courts, waiting for the information.   In the meantime we continue to shovel money out the door.

Hey, Mr. Transparency, how about putting all the documents out BEFORE you  put another $1 trillion  on the “to be paid later” pile!

Multi-What?

by @ 5:37. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

Let me take you back in time……

Imagine clouds, swirling optics.   You know, the kind that TV uses to indicate a dream sequence…..

It’s September, 2008.   The Barack Obama and John McCain are going toe to toe attempting to be the next President of the United States.   The US stock market has just seen a drop to approximately DOW 11,100 and the markets are nervous.   Report after report is out from banks and investment institutions that are writing down assets due to the loss in the value of highly leveraged debt instruments.   Bear Stearns was the first institution that got coined “too big to fail,” and other followed suit.   However, Lehman Brothers had somehow fallen below the threshold and was the first highly visible investment firm allowed to fail as a result of its poor choices.   What no one knew is that the markets were more than just a little nervous and within the next few weeks the DOW would drop from the 11.100 level to approximately 7,000.

In the middle of the above scenario, Hank Paulson, with President Bush’s blessing, went to Congress with  the detail of a  whole  three page outline and demanded that  Congress provide him $700 billion without which, the banking  system would collapse.   In spite of the dire predictions of the collapse of the banking system, the Paulson bail out plan received mixed reviews in Congress.    

In the House, the debate went back and forth on whether the plan should be passed.   It looked like the plan would pass the House up until the last minute.   Immediately before the vote, Nancy Pelosi decided to deride Republicans over their lack of bipartisanship.   It’s hard to say whether Pelosi had the votes to pass the bill initially.   However, after her insults, any Republican who was on the fence had been given fair license to vote against her, and they did.   The bill failed in the House.

Over the next few days, there were a number of accusations back and forth on why the House vote failed.   Amongst Conservatives there was a desire to at the very least to  strip the pork that Pelosi had put into the bill.   They complained that Pelosi had shut them out of the process entirely.   In any event, the bill was going no where in the House, the Senate didn’t appear to be fairing any better.

Because he was “The Maverick” and had the reputation of “reaching across the aisle,” John McCain determined this was an opportunity that he could use to his advantage.   He announced that he would suspend his campaign and immediately head back to Washington.   His stated purpose was to focus on the bail out bill and provide leadership on the issue.   He added that he was considering not participating in a debate with Obama that was scheduled to occur within a few days.

When Barack Obama heard that McCain had suspended his campaign and considering opting out of the debate, he took the opportunity to ridicule McCain.   He made a note of how he, Obama,  was able to multi-task, not stopping one thing to focus on another:

"Part of the president’s job is to deal with more than one thing at once. In my mind it’s more important than ever."

Of course, the MSM and the left blog picked up on the multi-task meme.

This event stuck in many voters minds and while the polls had McCain within strking distance up until now, Obama regained momentum that would carry him through the election.

Mist and swirling optics again, we’re coming out of the dream, back to the present.

Yet today, the left blogs continue to extol the legend of Obama’s ability  to multi-task.

Sunday it was announced that for at least the  second time, the Treasury department would delay the promised release of plan to handle the toxic debt still in the banking system:

“We’re focused on working with Congress to pass an economic recovery bill so we can create the jobs and make the investments necessary to get our economy moving again,” Treasury Department spokesman Isaac Baker said.

What?

During the campaign, it was cool, young and even “Presidential” to be able to multi-task especially on issues that were of extreme importance to the US’ future and economy.   Now, we need to “focus!”

Since the inauguration, Obama’s administration seems unable to vet cabinet members, has emboldened potential enemies and failed to effect leadership in the largest single piece of non budget legislation ever.

Multi-tasking generally means the ability to do accomplish more than one thing at a time.   The only multi-tasking ability I’ve seen from the President Obama, is his ability to talk out of both sides of his mouth.

Well, Which Is It?

by @ 5:09. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

First, it was 2.5 million jobs:

Obama outlines job-creation plan

Followed by,  3.0 million jobs:

Obama ups jobs goal to 3 million on bad economic news

Next, 3.5 million jobs:

Obama: Stimulus will create 3.5 million jobs

Followed by:

Obama: Plan would create 4.1 million jobs

Earlier last week, President Obama claimed that without his plan 5 million jobs would dissapear:

“each day we wait to begin the work of turning our economy around, more people lose their jobs, their savings and their homes. And if nothing is done, this recession might linger for years. Our economy will lose 5 million more jobs. Unemployment will approach double digits. Our nation will sink deeper into a crisis that, at some point, we may not be able to reverse.”

By Saturday, he had reversed that claim.   In fact, he had reversed out of nearly all the claims he had made and was back to merely:

save or create 3 million jobs over the next two years.

One of the first things that detectives look for when interviewing a witness is consistency in their answers.   When a witness provides inconsistent answers to the same, repeated question, it typically indicates one of two things.   Either,  the witness never saw the event and thus, doesn’t know what they are talking about or, they are lying.

I’ll let you decide why President Obama can’t find the same answer twice.

February 8, 2009

Obama moves the Census under direct White House control

by @ 10:29. Filed under Politics - National.

(H/Ts – Jon Ham and Moe Lane)

Color me shocked, SHOCKED that the Obama White House would strip control of the Census Bureau the Commerce Department, set to be run by Sen. Judd Gregg (R-NH). The Census Bureau, as everybody should be aware, is responsible for conducting the census, which forms the basis of every representative district.

Allow me to take just one aspect of that; the by-state apportionment of Representatives in the House of Representatives. That is, by law, set at 435, which means if one state gains a sufficient number of residents (legal and otherwise) to gain a seat, another state must lose one. For this exercise, I’ll run with the July 2008 Census Bureau estimates of population, take the 8-year rate of growth between July 2000 and July 2008 and extend that until 2010. The formula for determining the number of Representatives, once the population of the states is known, is pretty simple; divide a state’s population by the total population of the 50 states (excluding the District of Columbia, which does not have representation), and multiply by 435, rounding as necessary to get a total of 435.

Here’s where things get a bit interesting. Just like 2000, rounding at .5000 would yield only 433 Representatives. Therefore Since there are no states that would otherwise have no representation, the 2 states closest to but not over the magic .5000 also get bumped up, like California and Utah did in 2000. Currently, the projected states are (in descending order):
Rhode Island (currently 2 Representatives, both Democrats) – 1.477614508 projected Representatives
South Carolina (currently 6 Representatives, 4-2 Republican edge in the delegation) – 6.470898967 projected Representatives

Just missing the cut would be Oregon (currently 5 Representatives, 4-1 Democratic edge in the delegation, 5.463832819 projected Representatives). Given the estimate I used, Oregon would miss by roughly 5,026 residents.

South Carolina has a Republican Legislature and a Republican governor, and they last voted for a Democrat Presidential candidate in 1976. Oregon and Rhode Island both have a Democratic Legislature and a Democratic governor, and they both last voted for a Republican Presidential candidate in 1984. Which is more likely to magically “find” a net few-thousand-resident difference between South Carolina and Oregon, while not “finding” that net few-thousand-resident difference between Rhode Island and Oregon, so Nancy Pelosi and Barack Obama get an ill-gotten buffer; a Census Bureau reporting to Commerce Secretary(-designate for the moment) Judd Gregg or White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel?

Revisions/extensions (10:44 am 2/8/2009) – Clarified that no state could have zero Representatives. The closest to that would be Wyoming, with a projected 0.763284928 Representatives.

February 7, 2009

A Question for Arlen Specter and Susan Collins

by @ 10:35. Filed under Economy, Politics - National, Taxes.

Can you tell the difference between this:

litchfield_manure_wagon_sm

And this:

H.R.1

 

American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Amendment in Senate)

Answer: While they’re both piles of crap, the manure will actually stimulate growth!

Revisions/extensions (12:10 pm 2/7/2009, steveegg) – Fixed the link. I agree; only the item hauled by Ford would stimulate growth.

February 6, 2009

2nd Annual Defending the American Dream – Wisconsin Summit

by @ 9:06. Filed under Defending the American Dream.

I do hope you reserved Saturday, March 7 on your calendar. Americans for Prosperity is holding the 2nd Annual Defending the American Dream – Wisconsin Summit at the Midwest Airlines Center. Yes, there is a bit of a cost involved at $36 for general admission and $19 for students, but the lineup of both guests and topics are well worth it.

Guests include Rep. Paul Ryan, Milwaukee County Executive Scott Walker, Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke, Wall Street Journal reporter Steve Moore, authors Herman Cain and Fred Kelly Grant, Judge (and candiate for Supreme Court Justice) Randy Koschnick, candidate for State Superintendent Rose Fernandez, and WIBA/WISN radio star Vicki McKenna.

Topics include the death tax, climate “change”, property rights, the upcoming state budget, and choice in education.

Do register for this great event as soon as possible.

Eggs on the road – next few weeks

by @ 8:56. Filed under Miscellaneous.

Most of this is assuming me being in better shape than I’m in (very sore throat, rather tired), but here’s what’s happening around town that I’m shooting for:

– Saturday 2/6, 2:30 pm-3:30 pm – Rose Fernandez listening session, Mayfair Mall, Community Room 150, 2500 N. Mayfair Rd. in Wauwatosa. Rose is a candidate for state superintendent, and the one I’m supporting.

– Tuesday 2/10, 7 pm-??? – Drinking Right, Papa’s Social Club, 7718 W. Burleigh St. in Milwaukee. If it’s the second Tuesday of the month, and the first one isn’t Election Night, it’s all about being drinking.

– Wednesday 2/11, 6:30 pm-9 pm – Oak Creek Mayoral Candidate forum, Oak Creek Community Center, 8580 S. Howell Ave. in Oak Creek. Come meet all three candidates running for Oak Creek Mayor, incumbent Dick Bolender, Alderman Mark Verhalen and Alderwoman Dimity Grabowski, and learn about the issues in the race. Side note; I do have a short questionnarie out to all three candidates and hope to have responses from all of them prior to this event.

– Tuesday 2/24, 7 pm-??? – Blog ‘n Grog, Sprizzos, 363 W. Main St. in Waukesha. It’s not as hard to find your way around downtown Waukesha as it used to be, so come on out and grog.

– Saturday 3/7, 8:30 am-6 pm – Defending the American Dream – Wisconsin, Midwest Airlines Center, 400 W. Wisconsin Ave. in Milwaukee. My friends at AFP are once again bringing some good guests and great conservative topics together.

In addition, I’m still working on getting to CPAC. I cannot promise that one though.

Post Office bails on Oak Creek for now

by @ 8:25. Filed under Politics - Oak Creek.

The Business Journal of Milwaukee has a rather distressing story for those of us in Oak Creek. The U.S. Postal Service has decided to delay building its planned $80 million mail processing and distribution center on the old Van Beck property at College and Pennsylvania at least a year because of their current financial condition.

Buried in that story is a real stinker of an item, especially for those that opposed the facility. The USPS bought the property from Cobalt Partners, the developer-of-record, last month for $8.1 million, after Cobalt spent $4.6 million assembling the property from the estate of the Van Becks, two other individuals, and the city. That’s right; it’s now exempt from taxes.

I sent an e-mail to Mayor Dick Bolender this morning asking for clarification on another item of interest; whether this change in ownership affects a previous agreement from Cobalt Partners to pay for part of the reconstruction of College and Pennsylvania that is scheduled to begin this year. When and if I hear back from the mayor, I’ll update this post with the answer.

Don’t Know Much About ‘Rithmatic

by @ 5:59. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

Tonight, President Obama has warned the nation of dire economic consequences if the pile of garbage called a stimulus package isn’t passed immediately.

One of Obama’s key arguments for the stimulus package is jobs. In his oped piece today he warned:

Our economy will lose 5 million more jobs. Unemployment will approach double digits.

Just three weeks ago President Obama’s team released a white paper that argued for the stimulus package.   I covered the inconsistency of positions that one of it’s authors, Christina Romer has between the white paper and her previously published postions here.

In the white paper, there is a chart that shows what will happen to unemployment with and without the stimulus package.   With the latest report of new unemployment filings it is expected that the unemployment rate will rise to 7.5%, right in line with the white paper’s expectations.

From here, the white paper projects that with a stimulus package, unemployment will continue to rise and peak at approximately 8% in the third quarter of this year.   Without the stimulus package, the paper projects that unemployment will rise, peaking at 9% in the middle of next year.

There are approximately 155 million individuals in the US workforce.   If I do my math correctly and giving Obama the benefit of the doubt, the difference between 7.5% and 9% is 1.5%.   1.5% of 155 million is about 2.3 million.  

When discussing unemployment figures economists always talk about the net number of unemployed.   The reason for this is pretty straight forward.   Even in the best economic times there are people who lose their jobs.   Contrary to other economic systems, a capitalistic one does not provide cradle to grave employment.   Nor does an employee have to work at the same job and same employer for their entire life.   People move.   If Obama was talking in the same terms that labor economists use than he is grossly exaggerating the increased unemployment that his own team says will come if their own predictions come to pass.   However, even if Obama was talking gross he’s exaggerating.  

In a typical year, an average of about 3 million people quit or change jobs in any given year.   If Obama is suggesting that this year we will now have a total of 5 million people lose their jobs, that’s an increase of 2 million.   I’m not suggesting that 2 million is nothing.   Certainly to every person impacted, and their family, it is very significant.   However, to suggest that spending $900 billion will keep 2 million people from going through the process of changing jobs…that’s a cost of $450,000 per job! We could just pay them in place for a cost that is a fraction of the $900 billion!

Obama has staked a significant portion of his political capital on this stimulus bill. It contains his first installments on all the Left believes they are owed for supporting his candidacy. Unfortunately, he took his eye off the ball and let Pelosi make a mockery of what was not a correct, but at least an honest effort by him. After the Republicans did an about face in the House and with the rapidly falling public support of the bill, Obama has resorted to an increasing scare hyperbole in an attempt to move the bill along.

Obama needs to be careful. While I don’t think the bill won’t pass, he only needs to pick off two of the weak Rinos, he will likely not get more than just that couple. After using the “give it to me or it will get waaaaaaay worse,” if the bill passes, he’d better hope that things improve and fairly soon. If not, no amount of “things were worse than we thought” explanations, will restore credibility with the public and allow him to use the scare card in the future.

February 5, 2009

AFP presents NoStimulus.com

by @ 20:31. Filed under Politics - National.

I’m way late to this party, but since the Senate will continue work on their version tomorrow, and it will be going to a conference committee, it’s not “never”. My friends at Americans for Prosperity set up a site opposing the Generational Theft Act of 2009 called No Stimulus! As part of this effort, they’re gathering signatures on a petition in opposition to the expansion of government. They’re at 53,288, but they could still use your help.

Need a Little Stiffening of Your Economic Prowess?

by @ 16:29. Filed under Miscellaneous.

H/T MK Ham

The Snuggie Stimulus

by @ 13:01. Tags:
Filed under Politics - National.

Mary Katharine Ham has done it again…

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mzkSFnh7lbQ[/youtube]

The Morning Scramble/Open Thread Thursday – 2/5/2009

I’m still down with a cold, but I need to throw something up here…

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xxvJmHsyQ_g[/youtube]

  • Tom McMahon explains why Wisconsin governor Jim “Craps” Doyle (WEAC/HoChunk-For Sale) hasn’t been offered a Cabinet post.
  • Elizabeth Crum wonders whether there are 10 good people to fill 15 Cabinet positions. Maybe a dose of fire and brimstone will warm DC up.
  • Nate Beeler channels Lt. Frank Drebin, Police Squad. “There is (BOOM!) nothing to see here. (BAM!) Please (WHOOSH!) disperse (KABLAM!).”
  • Elliot found the presstitutes are still doing their halo thing.
  • Bill Quick caught one of their number taking it a leap too far (literally).
  • Confederate Yankee reports The News Organization That Cannot Be Quoted (Or Photographed)™ wants its pound of flesh from the guy who Che-ified Barack Hussein Obama. I’ll bet they’re just mad that they didn’t think to do that themselves.
  • Dicentra caught High Priest Algore Goracle trying to recreate the Octoberists and Young Pioneers. I wonder how long before stukach becomes part of the American lexicon.
  • Jim Hoft caught the Obama administration kowtowing to OPEC by shutting down the spigots in Utah. Don’t forget, Obama was only dismayed that $4.50/gallon gas came so suddenly.
  • Ed Morrissey caught probably the last Kennedy to hold office threatening the future of edible pork. He can have my honey-baked ham sandwich if he can pry it from my cold, dead fingers (first, he’d have to figure out a way to make those fingers cold and dead).
  • On to the inedible pork – Michelle Malkin reports the next in line for the teat are auto parts suppliers to the tune of $20.5 billion.
  • Kristina Rasmussen runs the numbers on the pork-filled Generational Theft Act of 2009, and proves that we’re well above the 1% pork level. What’s left unsaid is it’s somewhere north of 50% liberal wish list.
  • Kevin Binversie finds some “blue-dog-on-red-diaper” violence going on in the House. That’s right; the Blue Dogs want the “regular” process of moving legislation restored. Maybe if they hadn’t caucused with SanFranNan,….
  • Yankee Sailor asks whether the economy is our #1 security problem.
  • Charles Johnson found former Vice President Dick Cheney worried that we will suffer a WMD terrorist attack in the next 4-8 years. Put money on it.
  • Lawhawk finds the UN shocked, SHOCKED that Hamas would be stealing its humanitarian supplies.
  • JihadGene penned a love song from SanFranNan to Krazy Kim.
  • Is NOTHING sacred in Hollywood?, Part I – Ace bleeds over the pending reboot of “Predator”. I believe Blain Cooper has the perfect description of the rewriters.
  • Is NOTHING sacred in Hollywood?, Part II – Ace reports the Three Stooges are going to be remade. Hey Moe, hey Larry. There’s going to be phoneys at the mike.

Yes, it is Open Thread Thursday, so in the spirit of all the bailouts, how about bailing a sick blogger out.

This Garbage Really Stinks!

by @ 5:21. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

Those of us who live in the north know the benefits that cold and lack of sunlight have on garbage storage.   During the winter you never have to worry about garbage stinking or maggots growing in your garbage cans.   No, it’s not until heat and sunlight are applied that garbage begins to stink and you get nasty little things like really like garbage showing up to gorge on it.   A similar thing can be said about alleged, stimulus bills.

When kept in the dark and not allowed to be viewed because all around it are yelling that it will be an economic “catastrophe” if the bill isn’t passed NOW, stimulus bills don’t stink.   In fact, when kept in the dark, you can hardly tell that it’s garbage at all.   However, as light is allowed in and heat in the way of questions gets applied, even the prettiest packaged garbage begins to stink. The longer it’s in the light and heat, the more the stink increases.

Doubt me?

I wrote here  how Rasmussen had found a decline in approval rating of the stimulus bill of 8% in just one week! That change in approval was during the week in which the House passed their version of the stimulus with no Republican support. With an additional week of scrutiny and the beginning of debate on the Senate version, Rasmussen reports that support has dropped another 9% and now has more Americans against the bill than for it.

The longer the bill is exposed, the less the public supports it.   The less the public supports it, the more Senate Republicans seem to be getting the message that this is one battle worth fighting and finding a better solution for.   Even John McCain, the Senator voted “most likely to try and get a long with President Obama,” has decided that the stimulus as proposed, is unacceptable:

"’No bill’ is better than this bill," McCain told CNSNews.com just outside the Senate chamber.

It’s time to put this bill out to the curb for pickup.   McCain claims that he will reveal a new proposal on Thursday.   I don’t know if it will be any better but there’s no doubt it won’t be any worse than the current stinker.

February 4, 2009

Well, Why Didn’t You Just Say So!

by @ 9:56. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

Ashamedly, I’ve been writing consistently against the stimulus package.   I’ve believed that it was focused incorrectly and spent money that we don’t have on issues that were really political paybacks and future government budget busters.

I was wrong!

Nancy Pelosi has finally provided  the explanation that proves we need to pass the stimulus package, STAT!

Folks, we’re a country of losers! With “500 million people losing their jobs each month,” every last one of us have lost our job every month! In fact, with 500 million losing their jobs, some of you have actually lost MULTIPLE JOBS A MONTH! Good Gosh, we’ve become a country of irresponsible teenagers, not caring about showing up to work on time because we know that mom and dad will just give us a bigger allowance next month!

Huh? What? You say Nancy misspoke and really doesn’t know the difference between 500 million and 500 thousand? Oh, OK.

No wonder Nancy doesn’t understand the Republican’s rejection of her stimulus bill. Nancy can’t tell the difference between 500 million and 500 thousand, do you think she understands the difference between $1 billion and $1 trillion?

It Looked So Easy

by @ 5:48. Filed under Politics - National.

Standing around the water cooler on Monday morning, every play of the previous day’s “big game” is easy to dissect. It’s easy to see what the quarterback did wrong, where the defense missed a coverage and where a receiver ran the wrong route. It’s easy when you have the advantage of 24 hours to reflect and seeing the replay of every error from at least six different angles….in slow motion!

After two weeks in office, President Barack Obama, a man who has never run anything, is having trouble, well, running something. Specifically, after second guessing his way to the Presidency, Obama is finding it difficult to execute smoothly when there is more to deal with than just the tie that he will wear at his next photo op.

In just two weeks Obama has gone 1 for 3 on securing tax cheats into administration positions. While a .333 batting average is good if you’re a catcher in the American League, supporting these candidates even after the tax revelations, shows a complete tin ear to the expectations of average Americans.

In just two weeks, Obama has already made a shambles of his ethical standards order. At least two former lobbyists have been hired under the guise of “uniquely qualified”.   Along with the insistence that people who aren’t smart enough to get competent tax advice are still smart enough to run major Federal agencies including the IRS, the hiring of the lobbyists show that contrary to all the campaign promises, the Obama administration will look just like any other “good ol’ boy” political organization that has ever existed.

In just two weeks, legislation for a stimulus bill that was supposed to be ready for the President to sign on the day of his inauguration, has only passed the House.   The  debate is just beginning in the Senate and the bill is rapidly losing support from the American public. Oh, and in just two weeks President Obama lost control of his “post partisan” message as Nancy Pelosi rejected the ability for any input or amendments from any Republican.

In just two weeks, after attempting to be kindler and gentler with Iran, Iran responded to the Obama’s generous gesture by saying “did we say step to this line? No, you must now step to this new line.

It  seems so easy looking back from Monday morning.   It’s quite a different thing to do it right when you’re in the middle of the play on each and every down.   I hope for all our sakes, that President Obama learns the differences, quickly.

February 3, 2009

Modest?

by @ 5:26. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

Commenting on the stimulus bill that was passed in the House and a variation of it that is being debated in the Senate, President Obama said there were:

“very modest differences”

between the bills being debated and what Republicans want in a stimulus bill.

I find that hard to believe.

By any measure, the bill that came out of the House and the bill being debated in the Senate are not “modestly different” from even Obama’s outline for the bill!  

You may remember that President Obama’s original outline for the bill was for a $750 billion bill with 40% of the bill targeted on tax cuts.   What has been approved thus far is an $819 billion package with only 22% of “tax cuts.”   Meanwhile, the Senate bill being debated, is $900 billion with 29% attributed to “tax cuts.”  

The “tax cuts” in both the House and Senate bill are sleight of hand at best.   The bulk of the “tax cuts” in the house bill are really one time tax credits and not tax cuts in any classical sense.   It’s easy to see the difference.   Where as true tax cuts change the amount of money a taxpayer has to spend on an ongoing basis, a tax credit is a one time event.   The problem with credits is that they do not change spending habits on an ongoing basis.   In fact, what was seen in last year’s rebate, is that a significant portion of the refund went to paying down loans or into savings and not into direct “stimulation” of the economy.   The increase in “tax cuts” in the Senate version is mostly due to a one year patch to the AMT so that it doesn’t drag more taxpayers into it….a “patch” that has been routinely done so it’s really not a true reduction of any kind.

Modest does not describe anything about either of the bills being discussed.   Not the size, the impact on the growth of government nor the differences between them or what Republicans ought to want.   The only thing “modest” in this entire scenario is the logic of those who complained about the spending by Republicans but suddenly believe that spending is AOK now.

Conservatism Dead?

by @ 5:04. Filed under Conservatism, Politics - National, Taxes.

Following the election of Barack Obama numerous pundits across the left, middle and squishy parts of the right, pontificated that the results of the election proved that Conservatism, especially Reagan Conservatism was dead.   The argument was that the American public wanted more government solutions, more regulation, more “fairness” and more social services.

A recent poll by Rasmussen  finds results that appears to run contrary to these pontiffs:

Fifty-six percent (56%) of U.S. voters say the Republican Party should return to the views and values of the iconic 40th president of the United States.

The response from Republicans isn’t surprising:

Eighty-five percent (85%) of Republican voters believe a return to the two-term president’s views and values are the road to success. Just eight percent (8%) disagree.

However, responses from unaffiliated voters and Democrats were:

Among unaffiliated voters, 61% say the Republican Party should return to Reagan, while 23% think the party should move away from those values.

Even 29% of Democrats think Reagan is a good role model for the modern Republican Party.

Also surprising, at least if you believe that President Obama had some kind of a mandate to expand government is the following:

In his first inaugural address, Reagan declared that "Government is not the solution to our problem; government is the problem." Fifty-nine percent (59%) 59% of voters still agree with him.

Finally, the survey showed that 57% believe that tax cuts are good for the economy while only 17% disagreed.

The findings in this report provide a lot of insight as to why support for the stimulus bill is fading.   It should also be something that President Obama takes to heart.  

Contrary to what has been whispered to  Obama, or what he may believe,  about the country wanting to move quickly to the left, it appears that Reagan Conservatism is still alive and well even within the Democrat party.

Can someone please make sure that Mitch McConnell gets a copy of the poll?

To paraphrase Twain:   Rumors of Conseratism’s demise have been greatly exaggerated!

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