Archive | June, 2009

51% of Americans Smarter Than Obama

16 Jun

And 59% of non-Democrats:

Fifty-one percent (51%) of Americans favor an across-the-board tax cut for all Americans to stimulate the U.S. economy, according to a new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey.

Thirty-four percent (34%) oppose such a tax cut, and 15% are undecided.

Fifty-nine percent (59%) of both Republicans and adults not affiliated with either major political party think an across-the-board tax cut is a good idea. Democrats are fairly evenly divided on the wisdom of such a tax cut.

During Election 2008, then-candidate Obama promised to cut taxes for 95% of all Americans. So far, just 26% of adults believe President Obama has delivered on that promise. Forty-three percent (43%) say he has not and 31% are not sure.

Democrats are more likely than others to believe the President has delivered on the tax cut promise.

And that last would be because Democrats, on the whole, are likely to be even dumber than Obama. More importantly, we’re starting to see indicators that a supply-side, tax-cutting program will resonate well with voters in 2010 and 2012. Just takes a bit of warmed-over Carterism to bring America back to its senses, it would seem.

Phrase of the Day

16 Jun

Where to go when life gets you down:

I have read in Plato and Cicero sayings that are wise and very beautiful; but I have never read in either of them: Come unto me all ye that labor and are heavy laden. – St. Augustine

Letterman's Apology

16 Jun

The news story:

In remarks broadcast Monday night, Letterman directly apologized to the Palin family for the coarse jokes he made last Monday.

“I would like to apologize, especially to the two daughters involved, Bristol and Willow, and also to the governor and her family and everybody else who was outraged by the joke. I’m sorry about it and I’ll try to do better in the future,” Letterman told the studio audience.

He went on to explain how he had come to the realization that last week’s monologue, in which he joked about one of Governor Palin’s teenage daughters being “knocked up” by New York Yankee Alex Rodriguez, could be interpreted as being in poor taste.

“I thought I was telling it about the older daughter being at Yankee Stadium. And it was kind of a coarse joke. There’s no getting around it, but I never thought it was anybody other than the older daughter, and before the show, I checked to make sure in fact that she is of legal age, 18. Yeah. But the joke really, in and of itself, can’t be defended.

I can’t speak for Governor Palin and her family, but the matter is closed for me. The larger issue of our increasingly coarse popular culture remains a major issue.

Chastity Bono

16 Jun

Just wanted to point out a salient fact about that strange case – Being yourself never requires surgery. Now, if someone wants to slice and dice themselves into a different bathroom, that is their business, but please don’t tell me that someone who does something insane like a sex change is being courageous or being themselves.

Our Thus-Far Nauseating Reaction to Events in Iran

15 Jun

Makes me ashamed of my country:

…Lefties keep assuring me on Twitter that western meddling will only make it easier for the regime to demonize the protesters, but (a) the demonization’s going to happen anyway, (b) no one’s asking Obama to send in the Marines, just to speak up, and (c) Angela Merkel managed to issue a statement earlier today calling the Basij thuggery “completely unacceptable” without killing the uprising in its crib. And still, from the White House, nothing. To think, some commentators are accusing The One of “cowardly silence.”

You’ll also be pleased to know that, according to no less than the New York Times, Obama didn’t bother holding any meetings or conference calls about this yesterday. Remember: Health care is a “crisis.” This is but a “situation.”

State Department spokesman Ian Kelly told reporters Monday that the United States is concerned about allegations of ballot fraud.

Kelly described the U.S. government as “deeply troubled” by the events in Iran, which is a stronger expression of concern than over the weekend when Vice President Biden cast doubt on the legitimacy of the election.

When pressed by a reporter, Kelly declined to condemn the Iranian security forces for their crackdown on street protesters. And he said the U.S. knows too little about the conduct of the election to say for sure whether there was fraud.

Can’t even muster up a verbal condemnation – I guess Obama is worried that would make the Iranian dictators mad at us and we can’t have any more of that…only Bush would want theocratic mass murderers mad at him, and we saw how that turned out.

Obama Sends Gitmo Terrorists On Bermuda Vacation

15 Jun

Well, the first thing I want to say is that I am glad my wife-to-be and I are not going to Bermuda.

The second thing I want to say is, this is just another example of incompetence from the Obama administration, as their desire to give Gitmo prisoners freedom and luxurious vacation blinded them tno some standard diplomatic protocol.

Senior aides to President Barack Obama accompanied four Uighur prisoners as they were flown from Guantanamo Bay to the British colony of Bermuda, without the UK being informed, it was revealed yesterday.

In an escalating diplomatic row over the transfer of the former terrorist suspects, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton discussed the transfer with British Foreign Secretary David Miliband in what was said to be an uneasy conversation. Privately Whitehall officials accused America of treating Britain, with whom it is supposed to have a “special relationship”, with barely disguised contempt.

One senior official said: “The Americans were fully aware of the foreign-policy understanding we have with Bermuda and they deliberately chose to ignore it. This is not the kind of behaviour one expects from an ally.”

Perhaps one of Obama’s defenders here can explain how this improves our image in the world?

Who Creates the Climate for Modern Anti-Semitism?

15 Jun

Jennifer Rubin answers:

…let’s be clear: ranting about Jewish control of the U.S. has been largely the role of the Left as of late. It doesn’t make good New York Times copy to point out that the carping about the Jewish Lobby comes from Harvard professors and Leftwing bloggers. It wasn’t Rush Limbaugh or Fox commentators who said during the campaign that John McCain “surrounded himself with, and [was] funded by Jewish neoconservatives”; such rhetoric came from “respectable” Left and Center-Left publications. Do I think those people are responsible for the Holocaust Museum shooting? No. But the heart of this issue is whether there are those who slowly, bit by bit, make anti-Semitism more acceptable and, therefore, more popular. On that score, the answer is sadly yes.

You liberals out there are in grave error about a lot of things, but one of the main things you get wrong is just where anti-Semitism comes from. I know, you’ve been taught that Christianity was inherently anti-Semitic and that conservatism is anti-Semitic and that Hitler was merely an outgrowth of conservative, Christian views…but the basic race theories of Adolf Hitler were generated by Houston Stewart Chamberlain, a renegade Englishman, decades before anyone ever heard of Hitler. And one may call Chamberlain what one will, but “Christian” and “conservative” don’t apply. This is not to say that Christians and conservatives cannot be infected with such a disease as anti-Semitism – it is to say that anyone can fall for such things because human beings, as has been seen since the Beginning, are susceptible to lies.

The problem, for the left as a whole, is that lies tend to build on lies – its one thing to say “well, those Zionists were wrong”, quite another to say “Zionism is racism”…there are a whole bunch of lies which have to be piled on top of each other to get from the former to the latter. Starting from the lie that the problem of the Middle East was Israel’s occupation of Gaza and the West Bank, the left has had one lie after another regarding Israel and the Moslems piled up until, now, the left is functionally anti-Semitic and is rapidly degenerating towards the most virulent, pogrom-inspiring form of anti-Semitism. Liberals are still congratulating themselves for being so tolerant of different people but, meanwhile, they are only a step away from excusing Holocaust II.

The saddest part about this is the continuing failure of the majority of Jews to see their peril. Not the first time this has happened, of course – most Jews in Germany failed to understand where anti-Semitism was leading even when Hitler was just a small-time fanatic disturbing the peace in Munich, let alone when he actually came to power. But human things don’t just happen. Earthquakes happen. Hurricanes happen. People develop. The key for anyone who wishes to prevent evil is to recognize where on the path we are and what we should do to get off it, if disaster is on the horizon. The majority of Jews – and especially American Jews – seem more interested in nursing grudges from a century or more ago rather than realizing that they’ve made a wrong turning. Just because someone says he’s tolerant doesn’t mean he is.

Phrase of the Day

15 Jun

Freedom is a duty:

When freedom does not have a purpose, when it does not wish to know anything about the rule of law engraved in the hearts of men and women, when it does not listen to the voice of conscience, it turns against humanity and society. – John Paul II

The Iranian People Need Our Help

15 Jun

Michael Totten keeps up the excellent run down on the Iranian situation – including the encouraging report that the regular Army is staying out of it…but the Mullahs have forces (Revolutionary Guards, foreign thugs, etc) to keep the people down. Bottom line, unless at least some of the Army goes over to the people, the Iranian regime will gain control of the situation. Here is a heart-rending quote:

One comment from a reader claiming to be in Tehran struck us all today. A translation follows:

I am in Tehran. Its 3:40 in the morning. I’ve connected with you [by hacking past the government filter]. It’s a big mess here. People are yelling from their houses – ‘death to the dictator.’ They are setting up a military government. No one dares to go out. No one has seen Mousavi today. Rumor has it that they have arrested him. I don’t have an email but I will contact you again.

Help us.”

The comment begs a critical question: How do we help the Iranian people during this tumultuous time?

How, indeed? By promising the Army that we’ll provide whatever is needed if they’ll overthrow the current Iranian regime and allow a genuine poll of the Iranian people to select a new government. Will Obama do it? I doubt it – he’ll still be wondering just when he should start “engaging” again…and a supreme opportunity in the War on Terror will pass us by.

A Moral Market

15 Jun

This will certainly spark a great deal of debate:

Vatican City, Jun 14, 2009 / 07:28 am (CNA).- On Saturday Pope Benedict XVI explained that his upcoming encyclical will not be a massive criticism deeming the market economy to be responsible for the current global financial crisis. Rather, it will be a presentation of the values that have to be “promoted and defended tirelessly” to achieve “human coexistence in freedom and solidarity.”

Pope Benedict made his comments while receiving participants in the international congress “Values and news for a new model of development,” organized by the Vatican Foundation “Centesimus Annus.”

The foundation was named after the last social encyclical of Pope John Paul II.

In his brief message, Pope Benedict revealed that his upcoming encyclical “Veritas in Caritate,” expected for June 29, will be dedicated to “the extensive issue of the economy and labor.”

“The financial crisis that has hit the most developed countries and the emerging economies as well as the underdeveloped countries shows in a very evident manner how much it is needed to rethink some of the economic-financial paradigms that have been predominant in the last years,” the Pope said.

Attentive readers will realize that capitalism, as a thing, has been on the skids with me of late – actually, for about four or five years. Its not that there’s anything better than the free market but that there is something wrong with people making billions of dollars without producing any goods for the free market. If what we’re doing is just moving money around in a game of economic roulette, then I want no part of it. Always keep in mind, however, that given a choice between Big Government and Big Corporation, I’ll side with Big Corporation…better a dozen idiotically run corporate behemoths than one hideously bad government run behemoth. Freedom is the key for me – if it allows for freedom in the market, it is good; if it doesn’t, it is bad. A “general store” is a good thing; a “general motors”, is a bad thing.

Our liberal friends get it wrong because, of course, they are using 19th century solutions (warmed-over Marxism, that is) designed to fix 18th century problems (most notably the transition from a feudal to a free market) – coupled with this is an insensate desire to have everything come out just-so and, viola!, we’ve got people thinking that a few bureaucrats in DC should manage our health care. What is needed is not the substitution of dimwitted empire-building bureaucrats for venal corporate apparatchiks – what is needed is for people to be allowed to make their own living as far as possible without let or hindrance from any one else, or at least from any large institution. To nutshell it – as Chesterton said, the problem with Capitalism isn’t isn’t too many Capitalists, but too few. We need to have economic power descend down to the lowest level possible. I work for a corporation ultimately headquartered 6,000 miles away from my office…how in heck is that person 6,000 miles away to have even the faintest notion what I’m doing, or what is best for me to do? I’d do better – and the world would do better – if the decisions effecting me were made by me, or at most by a person one or two steps above me. So, too, with all else in the world.

I think what got me working towards this view was the social security debate – the realization came that the government was taking from me the wherewithal I needed in order to be, at least at some point, financially independent of both corporate and government America. I didn’t like working for a corporation (still don’t) and I sure as heck don’t want to wait until I’m 67 for permission from the government to retire. Suppose I were to work hard, save my money, invest it wisely and build up a sufficient nest egg by 55 that I could tell both corporation and government to go jump in a lake? I’ll do what I wish at that point, thanks very much – heck, I might even decide to work until I’m 90…but it will be because I want to, not because I need to…and I won’t quick working because its time for me to get a monthly check from my government masters.

The true test of an economic activity is if it increases the wealth of society – if it doesn’t increase the amount of wealth, then it should be discouraged; if it does, then even if you have to subsidize it out of the public coffers, that is better than leaving it left undone. Quick examples: suing people over car accidents doesn’t increase societal wealth; starting up a landscaping service does – more important, then, to society, is landscapers while less important, lawyers. We should be encouraging people to get into landscaping, discouraging people from getting into law. Plumber, good. CPA, bad. Steel manufacturer, good. Community organizer, bad. Farmer, good. DMV employee, bad (yeah, I know that, as individuals, they are fine people – but, come on, do we really need that many people to register cars even when the ownership doesn’t change in a particular year?).

The reason that increasing wealth is good, and should be encouraged, is because it means there will be, year by year, fewer people in poverty and for those who remain in poverty, more resources to assist them. In point of fact, anything which tends to be a dead weight on wealth creation tends towards the immoral because it keeps more people in poverty and lessens the resources available to help them. Every time someone gets in to a car accident and believes he’s won the lottery and deserves a large insurance settlement, that person (and his lawyer) are stealing food out of the mouths of the poor, in a sense.

I don’t know what the Pope’s encyclical will exactly say, but I’ll bet it will be along the lines of the necessity of economic activity having a positive moral benefit to society. It should provide wealth, health, contentment – if it doesn’t, then not only should it not be done, but it should be positively discouraged. In light of such a desired outcome, I can’t think of any argument against devolution of power down to the lowest level possible – political power and economic power. If we allow people to do, they will do – hem them in with a thousand restrictions and they’ll do that much less, and demand that much more, because they can’t get it on their own. Down with Big Government, down with Big Corporation – up with people, the dignity of work, the honor of independence, the responsibility of liberty.

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