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 March 20th, 2009

Apology to Paul Ryan

by @ 20:56. Tags:
Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

In case you missed it, I pretty much called my Congressman, Paul Ryan, out for his vote on the 90% TARP tax. I had the fortune of running into him tonight at the Racine County Lincoln Day dinner, and he explained the plan behind it. The short version: because the House Republicans realized they couldn’t stop it in the House, they let the Dems win this round. There still is the (theoretical) stoppage in the Senate, partly because there is a different plan in the Senate, and partly because there is the (theoretical) chance of actually filibustering it.

It is also a message to companies that might otherwise want to jump on or stay on the Bailout Train – don’t trust Congress.

Since I didn’t have a chance to mention it at the dinner, I apologize to Rep. Ryan for the blasting.

I’ve got 91.45%. Do I hear 103.5%?

by @ 16:08. Tags:
Filed under Politics - National, Taxes.

James Taranto ran the numbers on the 90% tax on bonuses at companies that took TARP money, and found that it isn’t exactly 90%. While that 90% rate replaces the federal income and federal alternate income tax rates, it does not replace the Medicare FICA tax of 1.45% on employee pay, which thanks to the Clinton administration applies to all income and is not capped. It also does not replace any state or local income taxes. James used New York City as an example – New York State taxes income at 6.85% and New York City taxes income at 3.648 percent. Let’s do some math:

  90.000% – Bill of Attainder/Ex Post Facto federal punishment tax
+  1.450% – Medicare FICA tax (paid by the employee)
+  6.850% – New York State income tax
+  3.648% – New York City income tax
————————————————————————–
101.948% – total tax paid by the employee
+  1.450% – Medicare FICA tax (paid by the employer)
————————————————————————–
103.498% – Grand total tax paid by both the employee and employer

Thanks a lot, Paul Ryan. Thanks a lot, Nancy Pelosi. Thanks a lot, Charlie Rangel (BTW, has Rangel paid all of his back taxes yet?).

Before I go, there’s another tidbit in that piece. While companies would be able to avoid this if they got out of TARP, the regulators are trying to keep them in. Gee, I wonder why.

Election-rigging in Kentucky

by @ 12:08. Filed under Politics, Vote Fraud.

(H/T – Sister Toldjah)

The Lexington Herald-Leader reports that 8 people in Clay County, Kentucky, including a then-sitting (and now-senior) circuit judge, the superintendent of schools in Clay County, the county clerk (one of 4 members of the county Board of Elections, along with the sheriff, and representatives from the Republican and Democratic Parties), the Democratic appointed member of said Board of Elections, and the Democratic and Republican election judges in Manchester, Kentucky for the 2002 and 2004 election cycles, were indicted yesterday for buying and corrupting elections between 2002 and 2006.

The indictment is a rather interesting read. A quick summary:

– The judge, Russell Cletus Maricle, and the superintendent, Douglas C. Adams, styled themselves as the political bosses of Clay County, causing the appointment of corrupt people to the elections board and “recruiting” local candidates to run on a “slate” that would be guaranteed to win election.
– The Democratic member of the election board, Charles Wayne Jones, appointed elections officers who would do the bidding of himself, Maricle and Adams, including buying votes and changing votes that voters thought were properly cast but were actually not (more on that last item in a bit).
– The clerk, Freddy W. Thompson, used his position, to which he was elected in 2002 (the start of this conspiracy) to instruct corrupt election officers on how to change votes. He also supplied money used to buy votes and also is charged with lying to a federal grand jury.
– William E. Stivers, the Democratic election judge in Manchester in 2002 and 2004, handled the marking of voters whose votes were bought, and also participated in extortion schemes.
– Paul E. Bishop, the Republican election judge in Manchester in 2002 and 2004, also handled the marking of voters whose votes were bought, and also hosted “fundraisers” for the vote-buying scheme.
– William B. Morris and Debra L. Morris, who own a sanitation business that has contracts with Manchester and Clay County, provided money for the vote-buying scheme.
– In addition, Maricle and Stivers are charged with instructing one of the two Manchester election judges in 2006, identified as “W.W.” in the indictment, as participating in the vote-switching scheme to lie to a grand jury. The other person, identified by the Herald-Leader as Charles “Dobber” Weaver, previously pled guilty to vote-switching charges.

While the vote-buying scheme was part of all three election cycles, the introduction of touch-screen voting machines in 2006 introduced a new, more-insidious method for this cabal to exploit. Summarizing Count 9, for which Maricle, Jones, Thompson and Stiver have been indicted:

– Thompson and Jones appointed Weaver and “W.W.” as the Republican and Democratic election judges in the Manchester precinct, and instructed them to “…tell voters that when they had pushed a button labeled ‘Vote’ that their votes had been cast, when, in fact, that function merely provided a review screen of the voter’s selections in each race, and that the further step of pushing the ‘Cast Ballot’ button was required.”
– When the misled voters left the voting booth with a ballot they thought they properly completed but hadn’t, one of those two would enter the booth, change the vote to the “slate” decided by Maricle, and then complete the casting of the ballot.

According to the Kentucky State Board of Elections, Clay County currently uses exclusively the ES&S iVotronic. While the current version does not use the verbiage mentioned in the indictment (it’s “review” to review and “vote” to finish casting the ballot), and I cannot confirm that the iVotronic was used in 2006, it otherwise does match up with the method described in the indictment. Further, the iVotronic does not produce a paper record, much less one that is actually handled by the voter, although there is now option for a “paper-under-glass” audit feature (again, I do not know whether this version is in use in Clay County).

Talking To Four Year Olds – Homework Edition

by @ 11:35. Filed under Economy, Politics - National.

OK, admittedly, this is more like talking to 10 year olds than 4 year olds but the issue is the same.

The Shoelets, Thing 1 and Thing 2, are good students.  They like school and are good natured about taking on new challenges such as multiplication, division or sentence structure.  Part of the reason they are good students is that Mrs. Shoe and I take their education seriously.  We make sure that it is a priority for them.

When the Shoelets come home, after greeting them, reminding them to take their shoes off and to hang up their jackets, the next thing they get hit with is “Do you have any homework?”  Homework is a priority in our house.  Homework gets done before they get to play with their friends, play video games or do anything else that is on their “fun list.”  In our house we try to instill an attitude where we take care of what we have to do before we get to do what we want to do.  Interestingly, we hear constantly from Thing 1 and Thing 2’s teachers how well prepared they are for class and how much of a challenge that issue is with many of the other kids in their classes.

In the past week, President Obama has had time to fill out his March Madness brackets and make appearances about it .  Obama has also had time to campaign in California and appear on the Tonight show.  It’s an amazing recovery for Obama.  Just 10 days ago, Obama was too tired to provide a proper reception for the British Prime Minister!

While President Obama was out doing the thing he wanted to do, the things he needed to dowere ignored.  The Treasury still has 17 lead positions unfilled.  This is the department whose head, Timothy Geithner, is still unable to deliver a promised toxic asset plan.  It is also the understaffed Treasury that not only approved of the original AIG compensation agreements, but is now unable to concoct a comprehensive string of lies that would allow them to cry “Buuuuuuuuush!”  President Obama has no plan or timeline for dealing with the Treasury vacancies.  No plan for the department that is arguably the most important given the challenges of the current economy.

In a related note, President Obama announced on the Tonight Show yesterday, that he does have a date when the First Family will be getting the First Dog.  Yup, he’ll have that task taken care of by early April!  That is, he’ll have a first dog by early April if he can get one to pass the background check and agree to have its name forever sullied by being a part of the sinking ship called the Obama administration!

Which is worse?

by @ 9:21. Filed under Politics - National.

Voting for a retroactive grab of 90% of contractually-obligated pay, or not admitting that it was done out of the hatred of the primacy of contract law? Somebody had better ask Paul Ryan and Tom Petri that.

Drip, Drip, Drip

by @ 9:21. Filed under NRE Polls, Politics - National.

approval-rating

When Will President Obama's Net Approval Ratings Become Negative?

Up to 1 answer(s) was/were allowed

  • The Teleprompter won't let it happen (68%, 59 Vote(s))
  • By the end of April, 2008 (29%, 25 Vote(s))
  • By April 3, 2008 (2%, 2 Vote(s))
  • By March 27, 2008 (1%, 1 Vote(s))

Total Voters: 87

Loading ... Loading ...

Revisons/extensions (9:33 am 3/20/2009, steveegg) – Added the “NRE Polls” category.

Bracket of Despair

by @ 6:56. Filed under Sports.

I don’t know why I do these things. The first game saw me lose one of my Final Four teams, and a second Final Four team almost choked themselves right out of the tourney. I also lost a second Sweet 16 team on my way to a 10-6 start.

The really bad news – the first day is usually my “best”. I am ready to declare the Bouncing Mozzarella rejected.

[No Runny Eggs is proudly powered by WordPress.]