Archive | June, 2010

What Is Google Up To?

17 Jun

Okay, I certainly have my own beef with Google, but without that, one can’t help feeling a bit… disturbed (perhaps that is the right word) at what Google is doing to the people of this country.

Google Inc.’s collection of data via Wi-Fi networks was the subject of a conference call among law enforcement officials from 30 U.S. states, according to Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal.

“We’re looking to establish where, when, why, for how long and for what purpose there was this collection of information on wireless networks,” Blumenthal said yesterday in an interview. The call included representatives of the states’ attorneys general.

The discussion reflects widening concern among law enforcement over the way Google handles user information. The company said last month it mistakenly gathered data from open wireless networks while it was capturing images of streets and houses for its Street View service, a product that lets users view photographs of an area online.

So are you concern that Google might be collecting-storing information about you?

The Guy to Make the Next GOP Response to an Obama Speech

17 Jun

Can’t think of anyone better…

Housing Crash, Part II

17 Jun

Why will it come? This article has the details – I’ll nutshell it:

The tax credit temporarily kept afloat a housing market which is still over-priced. Now that this has expired, the combination of foreclosed properties held by banks (the “shadow inventory”), tighter loan requirement, Fannie/Freddie continued insolvency (you did note they were de-listed from the NYSE, right?), and another huge wave of ARMS to adjust in 2011/12 ensures that down is the only way housing prices can go.

All of this, of course, has been discussed here and at my personal blog over the past few months. I just wanted to re-state and re-emphasize it: the second leg down for housing is coming (in fact, its already here – I’ve seen big drops in housing prices in Las Vegas, already; my guess is that my own house is now worth $150,000.00; a drop from about $170,000.00 a couple months ago) and there is no way to stop it. If Obama and Co renew the tax credit – still a possibility – all they’ll do is delay the ultimate crash a trifle.

In the long run, while this crash is bad for the economy and bad for people who already own homes, the drop in prices will make home ownership a real possibility for ever more Americans. Once we do throw out the cretins currently running our government, we’ll be able to implement some rational economic polices and get things moving again – but without the steep rise in housing prices we had over the past 20 years or so.

That is all done with – and done with, I think, for good; the demographics just don’t allow the huge demand which fueled the bubble, and stricter underwriting makes it less likely that people will buy houses on speculation. A better America will emerge out of this morass of debt and incompetence. Not while Obama is President, but once he’s gone – then its off to the races for us, as America comes roaring back.

Angle Scares the Establishment

17 Jun

Fascinating bit of news from Politico:

…Several Senate Republicans told POLITICO that they don’t favor privatizing Social Security, as Angle has supported. Small government conservatives said it doesn’t make sense to eliminate the Energy and Education departments – as she’s called for in the past. And some recoiled at the thought of pulling the United States out of the United Nations, a position Angle has touted.

“They were suggested about 18 years ago, and many times subsequently,” said Sen. Richard Lugar (R-Ind.) who disagreed with all of those views. “Some candidates from time to time, perhaps attempting to show a sense of anger, outrage or whatever, express what I would characterize as very extreme views that do not have much basis in either practicality or what is going to occur in the evolution of our country.”…

So says the hack’s hack, Richard Lugar – Lugar is just what has been wrong with the Republican party. It is because of people like him that we’re still stuck the white elephants like the Department of Energy – why we’re still fooling around with a hopelessly corrupt and anti-American United Nations. Why we’re nearly bankrupt – because Republicans like Lugar would never allow the conservative, populist base of the GOP to have it’s way.

Well, in Sharron Angle, that base is demanding a say – and it scares the bejabbers out of the political class. More so in the Democrat ranks, to be sure, but never let it be said that our Republican party wasn’t infected with the Establishment Disease.

We’ve been too timid – we need to get Angle in to the Senate just to impart some back bone in to the Senate GOP. It is time to run through the whole government and swing the axe quite mercilessly. How else are we going to balance the budget? Cross our fingers and hope that the Money Fairy comes through for us? I don’t think so.

Additionally, I think that while the DC GOP has started to move a bit towards the people (and more so in the House than in the Senate), they are still a bit out of touch in there. With millions of gallons of oil spewing in to the Gulf and the entire United States government proving itself incompetent to stop it, now is the time to make the case for eliminating whole departments of government.

We can win – we have shown that no issue is a “third rail”. President Bush won in 2004 while campaigning on privatizing Social Security. The establishment thought we had to get behind ObamaCare or become unpopular. The establishment was scared to death of Arizona’s border security law. The establishment figured that a softening of the conservative message would work best in places like New Jersey.

Screw the establishment – we’re sending Sharron Angle and others like her to DC; and we’re going to demand smaller government, not just boilerplate, conservative speeches. It is time for a change – real change.

Federal Reserve Quietly Prepares for the Double Dip

17 Jun

Mish’s has the link to the news article – a carefully written report that says everything is swell and the Fed is certain that we’re in a good, solid economic recovery and thus their only concern is just when they’ll raise interest rates to combat the inflation which simply must follow upon the Keynesian stimulus we just finished.

But what if the inflation fails to materialize? What if the whole stimulus thing doesn’t work? Ah, then we have to be prepared – and so there is in the report voice, but very muted, that there’s just that chance things aren’t going to work out as predicted:

…”If events in Europe evolve so that they have a more severe and broad impact on financial markets, then the scope of the problems for the U.S. could be magnified,” Charles Evans, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago, said in a speech last week….

…”The European sovereign-debt situation is serious, and there are many unanswered questions about how events will unfold,” James Bullard, St. Louis Fed president, said in Tokyo on Monday…

This is known as hedging – it is members of the Federal Reserve making statements which will allow them, post-crash, to claim that they saw it coming and warned us about it. They’ve got their number crunchers who have taken Keynesian economics as a law of nature and thus they’ve come out with “stimulus = inflation = economic growth”. But the problem is we’ve had all the stimulus in the world for a year now and, if anything, the global economy continues to deflate (you might recall – buried under the stories of allegedly increasing retail sales – word that Wal Mart and other retailers are severely cutting prices to try to lure buyers back in to the stores).

If we are deflating and the Eurozone crisis is as bad as some think (and it is) then the double-dip is right around the corner and no one wants to be caught like Bernanke was prior to the past recession – gleefully assuring one and all that nothing could possibly go wrong (as an aside, I don’t think the recession ever ended – the “double dip” will just be a more severe down turn than the slump we’ve already got…I know that GDP numbers show growth, but my bet is that after all the data are in, several years from now, someone will calculate that without the stimulus of entirely borrowed money, no growth would have registered, at all). Brace yourself for it, good people – and, remember, it won’t be all that bad. Poverty is good for the soul, in the long run.

Christie: The Day of Reckoning is Here

17 Jun

He just gets better and better:

Gonna be real hard to not back him for President in 2012.

Sane Republican Responds to Insane Democrat

16 Jun

Part of the United States Ruled a No-Go Zone for Americans

16 Jun

We’ve ceded control to the drug gangs who control our border because we refuse to:

About 3,500 acres of southern Arizona have been closed off to U.S. citizens due to increased violence at the U.S.-Mexico border, according to the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.

The closed off area includes part of the Buenos Aires National Wildlife Refuge that stretches along the U.S.-Mexico border.

Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu told Fox News that violence against law enforcement officers and U.S. citizens has increased in the past four months, forcing officers on an 80 mile stretch of Arizona land north of the Mexico border off-limits to Americans.

The refuge had been adversely affected by the increase in drug smugglers, illegal activity and surveillance, which made it dangerous for Americans to visit.

“The situation in this zone has reached a point where continued public use of the area is not prudent,” said refuge manager Mitch Ellis.

There is no such thing as an open border – if we don’t rule it, someone else will. In this case, it is Mexican drug lords – and I’ll bet in connivance with the Mexican police and army in the area.

Let no one tell you that border security is racism in disguise – border security is the simple application of justice and anyone who advocates anything other than strict border security is a fool or a knave.

The Mitch Daniels "Truce" Re-Stated

16 Jun

Not backing down an inch – but greatly clarifying. From Mark Hemingway over at the Washington Examiner:

…Daniels called me to say that he’s dead serious about the need for the next president to declare a truce. “It wasn’t something I just blurted out,” he told me. “It’s something I’ve been thinking about for a while.”

He’s emphasized the need to focus like a laser beam on the existential threats facing the country — the two big issues he’s previously identified being the war on terror and the country’s precarious fiscal position. “We’re going to need a lot more than 50.1 percent of the country to come together to keep from becoming Greece,” he said.

He did, however, want to clarify that he’s not just singling out controversial social issues. “I’m talking about all divisive issues,” he said. Clear and unified priorities are the only way he sees the country rallying around common purposes…

I, on the other hand, am a firm believer in the scheme, the whole scheme and nothing but the scheme. Taking my cue – and that phrase – from Lord John Fisher, First Sea Lord of the British Admiralty during his reform of the Royal Navy in the early 20th century. He got a much more powerful navy, vastly more prepared for war at no more cost than the old, weaker and less ready navy. While his special area was narrow, he showed how you go about fixing a broken governmental system – you take it apart and put it all back together the way you want.

And since Governor Daniels is repeating his statement with emphasis and without retreat (for which he gets a tip of the hat from me – courage is a rare and vital trait in a leader, and Daniels has it), I’ll repeat mine: you can’t have a truce. A truce would have been akin to trying to build a modern, efficient naval fighting force while allowing the dinosaurs to continue on in their old, inefficient ways.

Our opponents don’t look at issues in separation – any advancement of the leftist goal is good and will never be surrendered. You give them an inch, they’ll take the mile, and then demand one more inch, in preparation for taking one more mile. And it doesn’t matter if they don’t get it this year, or next year, or the year after. Patience is the one virtue they have shown – they’ll wait for years, continually grinding away at our position, knowing that they’ll eventually topple it, if given time and never hit back.

If we surrender the initiative on, say, gay marriage, then the left will just continue to press it. If we say, “let us put aside this contentious issue and concentrate on rebuilding our economy”, the left might say they agree, but that would simply be a tactical lie – the very next day they’d be back at it, pressing their agenda and if anyone on our side subsequently brought up the fact that they were, indeed, pressing their agenda, the left would scream that we’re bringing back partisanship at a time when we’re all supposed to be working together to rebuild the economy. What we’d find is that while we, acting as patriots, fixed the economy, the left had busily besieged several places we thought safe during the truce.

We have to fight them all, and all down the line. The left must be destroyed in order to save our nation – ripped out of the body politic root and branch. Exposed for their corruption and de-funded. We might beat a tactical retreat from time to time from direct assault, but we must never entirely let up the pressure. Flexibility is an absolute requirement – but we must never say, “we won’t battle on this issue, if you don’t”, simply because they’ll lie and say they agree, and then just go on as before.

As they plan to continually press us, we must change the dynamics and continually press them…force them to defend the destruction they have wrought and convince ever more Americans that liberty and safety are best secured by limiting the baleful influence of the left.

I understand where Governor Daniels is coming from – and should he win the GOP nomination at some point, I will vote for him, as he’s been an excellent governor – but he’s flat wrong on this truce idea. Battle, continual and aggressive until the war is won – that is what we must do.

What Media Bias? Part 174

16 Jun

Very interesting poll from Rasmussen:

Sixty-six percent (66%) of U.S. voters describe themselves as at least somewhat angry at the media, including 33% who are Very Angry.

A new Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 31% say they are not angry at the media, but that includes just nine percent (9%) who say they are not at all angry.

As Rasmussen goes on to note, there’s no way to differentiate between the way some might feel about CNN and others about Fox, but it is still amazing that we’ve got this result.

The result dovetails with my view that in 2010 is all about people being at war with the status quo. I’ve been calling it the “Second American Revolution” because of this – the way we’ve been doing things are being rejected by the people. A complete overturn of the power elite is what is desired – including in media.

We’re on the verge of a gigantic change in our political system.

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