July 27, 2007

John Edwards Proposes Taxing You To Create Savings Accounts For The Poor

Yeah, that's right -- that money you earned won't go in your savings account, but in the account of someone that John Edwards views as more worthy of your hard-earned dollars.

Among the proposals, Edwards would make long-term savings easier for low-income families with "Get Ahead Accounts" that would match savings up to $500 per year. He also would provide a tax credit he calls work bonds, which would also be matched and would go directly into savings accounts. He proposes exempting the first $250 in interest, capital gains and dividends to allow low-income families to get a start on savings tax-free.

This is a whole new level of government transfer payments -- not only will the federal government continue seeing that basic needs are met (not a power delegated to it by the Constitution, but a reality for decades), but now it is going to engage in a little wealth-building for them by guaranteeing that they all have savings accounts and regular deposits by Uncle Sugar.

Don Surber comments on another aspect of the Edwards plan.

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Maybe She Should Have Stuck To Cattle Futures

After all, then Democrats would have nothing to say about any particularly good deals Senator Murkowski made.

Sen. Lisa Murkowski said Thursday she and her husband will sell Alaska land back to its owner, a day after a complaint to the Senate ethics committee about the purchase of the riverfront property.

"While Verne and I intended to make this our family home and we paid a fair price for this land, no property is worth compromising the trust of the Alaskan people," the Alaska Republican said in a prepared statement.

Murkowski said the vacant lot was being sold back to a friend, real estate developer Bob Penney, for $179,400, the same price that she and her husband, Verne Martell, had paid Penney.

Murkowski has drawn criticism over the purchase late last year of property along the scenic Kenai River, southwest of Anchorage on the Kenai Peninsula.

Real estate agents said the land could have fetched as much as $350,000. Penney, who lives two lots from the tract he sold Murkowski and owns the land in between, has said he considered the price paid a fair deal.

This seems to be a case of "less than meets the eye". However, I applaud the Senator for taking a course of action to end even the appearance of impropriety. After all, it isn't like she was making sweetheart deals with a a known criminal.

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July 26, 2007

Spitzer Stonewalls

Yesterday I wrote about the New York Times and its effort to downplay the scandal in the administration of New York Governor Eliot Spitzer. Well, now Spitzer is proclaiming that the State Senate lacks the authority to investigate his administration -- even when it involves efforts by the Governor's Office to use state law enforcement to investigate and discredit political opponents.

Gov. Eliot Spitzer vowed on Wednesday to fight any State Senate inquiry into his administrationÂ’s internal operations, even as Republican senators were laying the groundwork for an investigation that could lead to subpoenas of top officials.

The administrationÂ’s stance sets the stage for a potential showdown with the Senate, and it came amid rising concerns even among Mr. SpitzerÂ’s fellow Democrats about whether the governor and his staff had been candid about their officeÂ’s effort to discredit a political rival.

A scathing report issued on Monday by Attorney General Andrew M. Cuomo concluded that the governorÂ’s staff had broken no laws but had misused the State Police to gather information about Joseph L. Bruno, the Senate majority leader, in an effort to plant a negative story about him.

The governor has maintained that he was misled by his staff and knew nothing about the effort to discredit Mr. Bruno. But two of his closest aides refused to be interviewed by the attorney generalÂ’s investigators, intensifying suspicion, especially among the governorÂ’s critics, that Mr. Spitzer and his staff had not been forthright.

During his tenure as Attorney General, Spitzer was known for subpoenaing and investigating everyone and everything on the most tenuous grounds. here we have clear wrong-doing by the Spitzer administration, and the governor is unwilling to submit to the same sort of probing to which he subjected others. Maybe this matter needs to be turned into an impeachment proceeding -- because we know that liberal Democrats are just wild about impeachment. And i',m curious -- will the New York Times write an editorial like this about the Spitzer Administration?

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Senators Seek Government Censorship Of The Internet

It's for the children, don't you know.

US senators today made a bipartisan call for the universal implementation of filtering and monitoring technologies on the Internet in order to protect children at the end of a Senate hearing for which civil liberties groups were not invited.

Commerce Committee Chairman Daniel K. Inouye (D-Hawaii) and Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee Vice Chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska) both argued that Internet was a dangerous place where parents alone will not be able to protect their children.

“While filtering and monitoring technologies help parents to screen out offensive content and to monitor their child’s online activities, the use of these technologies is far from universal and may not be fool-proof in keeping kids away from adult material," Sen. Inouye said. “In that context, we must evaluate our current efforts to combat child pornography and consider what further measures may be needed to stop the spread of such illegal material over high-speed broadband connections."

"Given the increasingly important role of the Internet in education and commerce, it differs from other media like TV and cable because parents cannot prevent their children from using the Internet altogether," Sen. Stevens said. "The headlines continue to tell us of children who are victimized online. While the issues are difficult, I believe Congress has an important role to play to ensure that the protections available in other parts of our society find their way to the Internet."

Nobody I know is for kiddie porn or sexual solicitation of children over the internet. However, I've got a bit of a problem here, in that this proposal would make the government the censor of the internet, imposing a prior restraint upon the publication of any material until it has been signed-of on by a government employee of some sort. The First Amendment bans such prior restraint in the case of printed material and broadcast material. I fail to see how it could not do so for the internet.

And, of course, once we set the precedent for kiddie porn, the next step is to impose restraints on other material deemed harmful to children -- perhaps government limits on so-called "hate speech" -- in an attempt to make the internet safe for kids. The result, would be, limiting the freedom of adults to access legal, adult-appropriate material on the internet. because when the government decides that only that which is appropriate for children can be published, then adults are only permitted to read or watch that which is deemed to be appropriate for children.

H/T Captain's Quarters

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NASA Equipment Losses Criticized

Now it sounds like there is a problem -- but I see at least one explanation of missing equipment that I have a question about.

In one instance documented by the accountability office, an unidentified worker explained the fate of a missing laptop, worth $4,265:

“This computer, although assigned to me, was being used on board the International Space Station. I was informed that it was tossed overboard to be burned up in the atmosphere when it failed.”

The employee was not disciplined.

I suppose that there might be an obvious reason for the employee not being disciplined -- perhaps the computer was taken aboard the ISS and jettisoned after it quit working. After all, a service call was probably out of the question.

I wonder if next they will take on the issue of NASA employees managing their blogs from work?

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July 25, 2007

Fred Thompson Arrives In Houston

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Running a few minutes behind schedule, Senator Fred Thompson took some time to visit with a crowd of supporters upon his arrival in Houston this morning. Upon arrival he found a couple of hundred supporters to see and hear what the unofficial candidate for the GOP nomination had to say. I got a chance to shake hands with the Senator and even got more than just a wink and a nod when I urged him to "Make history in Houston" -- he grinned and said "I can come back, can't I?"

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Senator Thompson had a few words for the waiting crowd -- I picked up right after the obligatory amusing anecdote about the state of Texas.

Overall, I was favorably impressed with how he handled the crowd, the press, and the Ron PauLunatic who attempted to disrupt the event.

Now I realize that I have endorsed a different candidate for the nomination, and I still support that candidate. I may, however, be open to reconsidering that support once Fred Thompson actually enters the race.

UPDATE: It seems that the Ron PauLunatic has become something of a story -- so how about if I tell you what happened from my perspective STANDING RIGHT NEXT TO HER (if you see a red Hawaiian shirt in any picture or video, that is me).

1) She was permitted to ask her first question -- and Fred Thompson tried to answer it. He had to ask her to stop talking in order to be able to do so. Once he was done, staff attempted to ask her to leave. She whined about being touched, and ignored their attempts to remove her from an event in a private terminal booked by the campaign (which was therefore a private venue, not a public forum).

2) At least twice more that I recall, the staff attempted to speak to her. She rebuffed them each time.

3) Finally, as she began raving again, police (presumably off-duty cops hired by the organizers to provide security) stepped in so as to prevent her from disrupting the Senator's departure. Again, this is consistent with this being an event in a non-public venue.

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Spitzer Has Lived By The Unethical Leak -- Will He Die By The Unethical Leak?

During his tenure as New York's Attorney General, Eliot Spitzer's office was noted for its willingness to leak information damaging to the targets of its investigation in an unethical attempt to pressure them to "compromise" when Spitzer had a weak case but needed to score PR points. Many views those leaks as running right up to the edge of ethical conduct -- or crossing that line. Reporters, of course, viewed those leaks as acceptable, so never raised questions about the conduct of the leaker -- Darren Dopp.

Unfortunately for Dopp and his boss, it appears that years of playing fast and loose with ethics and the law has caught up with them.

This week, though, a withering report by the attorney generalÂ’s office found that some of Mr. SpitzerÂ’s top deputies crossed an ethical line by ordering the State Police to gather embarrassing information about Mr. Bruno to share with reporters.

The report and its revelations have rocked an administration that appeared to relish political combat — a Spitzer biography, after all, was called “Spoiling for a Fight” — and they raised new questions about the bellicose, competitive ethos of an administration that has at times seemed more adept at breaking eggs than at making omelets.

But then again, why should we be surprised. Spitzer and Co. were known for splashy announcements about questionable lawsuits, demands for settlements, and leaks to friendly reporters designed to damage their opponents in teh public eye and prejudice juries. Why should they have changed simply because the moved to the Governor's Mansion?

The New York Times, of course, is more interested in salvaging the Spitzer Administration than in seeing justice done. After all, it has run a puff-piece on Dopp, another concerned about how the Administration can salvage itself, and a third that applies a radically different standard than they would if this were, for example the Bush Administration. Note the failure of Spitzer's top aides to cooperate with the investigation.

Two of Gov. Eliot SpitzerÂ’s top staff members refused requests from the attorney generalÂ’s office that they submit to interviews in the investigation of the administrationÂ’s use of the State Police to tarnish a political rival.

The two men, Darren Dopp, the communications director, and Richard Baum, the secretary to the governor, are considered Mr. SpitzerÂ’s closest advisers, and their roles in the internal effort to damage Senate Majority Leader Joseph L. Bruno have drawn intense attention. The governor has repeatedly said that his staff fully cooperated with the investigation. Mr. Dopp was suspended indefinitely by the governor on Monday, and no action was taken against Mr. Baum.

According to documents and interviews, Mr. Dopp and Mr. Baum never subjected themselves to questions under oath from investigators in Attorney General Andrew M. CuomoÂ’s office.

Instead, on Sunday, the day before the report was released, they submitted two-paragraph statements sworn before the governorÂ’s legal counsel that minimized their role.

I'm curious -- had Scooter Libby taken such a course, would the New York Times have found that acceptable? If the Bush Administration chose to follow such a path in any investigation, would the New York Times have let that matter pass? hardly -- but since Spitzer is a friendly Democrat, what do you expect. Biased reporting, double standards -- that's the New York Times.

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July 24, 2007

Blowing His Own Horn With Your Dollars

Gotta love this earmark. Congressman Charles Rangel has tucked a $2 million appropriation into a pending piece of legislation -- for the Charles B. Rangel Center for Public Service.

New York Rep. Charles Rangel has been raising funds from taxpayers and corporations for a center in Harlem to be named after a prominent U.S. congressman – Charles Rangel.

The Democrat has quietly raised nearly $25 million for the Charles B. Rangel Center for Public Service at City College, located in a four-story Harlem building and aimed at steering low-income and minority students into politics, the New York Post reports.

Last week Rangel – chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee – pushed through a $2 million "earmark” in the House to serve as seed money for the project.

Corporate contributions so far include $10 million from insurance company AIG and $500,000 from the Verizon Foundation. RangelÂ’s committee has jurisdiction over taxes and trade, including corporate taxation.

I'm curious -- aside from the fact it is named after the chairman of the committee, what does the Charles B. Rangel Center for Public Service have to do with taxes and trade? And why are we appropriating public money for a monument to a sitting congressman?

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Posted by: Greg at 01:40 AM | Comments (5) | Add Comment
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July 21, 2007

Who Said This?

Here's your quote.

"he criminal contempt of Congress statute does not apply to the President or presidential subordinates who assert executive privilege."

Answer -- Walter Dellinger, head of the Office of Legal Counsel at the Justice Department.

Under President Clinton, in 1995.

And so when Democrats object to the refusal of the Justice Department to undermine the President's use of executive privilege when they seek contempt charges against those who invoke that long-standing presidential authority, please remember that this has been official Justice Department policy for some time.

Unless you wish to finally confess that the husband of the current Democratic presidential front-runner also took us down a "lawless and unchecked path" during his time in office -- with the active support of your entire party apparatus.

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AP Double Standard Made Crystal Clear

The wonderfully talented writer and blogger Don Surber brings us this example of how the media spins its news stories to make sure that the people get the right idea (or is that the left idea?) about the investigations of two members of Congress -- one Democrat, the other Republican -- for similar alleged offenses involving real estate transactions.

AP described the organization that investigated Mollohan as “a conservative group.”

AP described the organization that investigated Murkowski as “a watchdog group” in its lead paragraph and “a government and ethics watchdog group” in its third paragraph.

Of course, in each instance, AP was describing the National Legal and Policy Center.

When a Democratic congressman’s financial records are scrutinized, the National Legal and Policy Center is “a conservative group.”

But when it goes after a Republican, why it is “a government and ethics watchdog group.”

Thanks for making the distinction clear, AP.

Of course we see this stuff all the time. The ACLU is a "civil liberties group" while the ACLJ and ADF, which are equally concerned with civil liberties, are "conservative" or "right-wing" legal groups. But never have we been presented with such a clear example of bias -- the label changing depending on who the group is targetting.

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The Post Ain't Wild About Harry

When a liberal mainstay like the Washington Post begins taking a Democrat leader to task for playing politics, you know the strategy is a real loser.

The decision of Democrats led by Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid (Nev.) to deny rather than nourish a bipartisan agreement is, of course, irresponsible. But so was Mr. Reid's answer when he was asked by the Los Angeles Times how the United States should manage the explosion of violence that the U.S. intelligence community agrees would follow a rapid pullout. "That's a hypothetical. I'm not going to get into it," the paper quoted the Democratic leader as saying.

Yeah, that's right -- Half-wit Harry doesn't want to get into the consequences of the extreme and irresponsible policy he is advocating. He wants a pell-mell, devil-take-the-hindmost retreat from Iraq that will be a disaster so that he and his party can use the resulting chaos there and vulnerability in the US to their best political advantage. This refusal to seek consensus overlooks the fact that there is, already, a broad consensus for a policy that reduces but does not eliminate the US presence in Iraq and implements the Baker-Hamilton plan put forth by the Iraq Study Group -- and which is supported by a majority of Senators AND the White House.

However, Reid and the Democrat leadership are clearly placing partisan advantage over patriotism and the best interests of country. And the Post editorial speaks eloquently on the point.

There's no guarantee that Mr. Bush can agree with Congress on those points or that he will make the effort to do so. But a Democratic strategy of trying to use Iraq as a polarizing campaign issue and as a club against moderate Republicans who are up for reelection will certainly have the effect of making consensus impossible -- and deepening the trouble for Iraq and for American security.

So which is it, Harry -- are you an American first, or merely a partisan hack?

Posted by: Greg at 02:13 AM | Comments (7) | Add Comment
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July 20, 2007

Olbermann Outrage

I usually ignore Keith Olbermann -- this third-rate sports reporter really has no credibility to comment on any issue related to politics or the War in Iraq. However, yesterday's commentary has one of the more outrageous assaults on the character of the President of the United States that I have ever heard, and deserves a response.

Go to Baghdad now and fulfill, finally, your military service obligations.

Go there and fight, your war. Yourself.

Now wait one minute, Mr. Olbermann. On October 1, 1973, George W. Bush received an honorable discharge, indicating that he had fulfilled his military service obligation in an honorable fashion. Examinations of his service records indicate that he did, in fact, complete all required hours necessary to fulfill that military service obligation.

On the other hand, Mr. Olbermann, exactly how long did YOU serve in the military, and what is your discharge status?

Oh, that's right -- you were too busy playing sports reporter to bother with military service.

You are unfit to even launder the president's soiled jockstrap.

Sit down.

Shut up.

You are the worst person in the world!


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My Eyes! My Eyes!

I think I'm going to go blind!

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There was cleavage on display Wednesday afternoon on C-SPAN2. It belonged to Sen. Hillary Clinton.

She was talking on the Senate floor about the burdensome cost of higher education. She was wearing a rose-colored blazer over a black top. The neckline sat low on her chest and had a subtle V-shape. The cleavage registered after only a quick glance. No scrunch-faced scrutiny was necessary. There wasn't an unseemly amount of cleavage showing, but there it was. Undeniable.

And might I add -- ICK!!!!!!

Now I'll concede that there are other public figures whose cleavage I would find less appealing -- Rosie O'Donnell springs to mind -- but Hillary is right down near the bottom of my list.

I'm curious -- does the feminizing campaign help or hurt the presidential campaign?

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Byrd Savages Vick

To be honest, I can't disagree with the substance of these remarks by Senator Robert Byrd, clearly directed at Atlanta Falcons quarterback Michael Vick.

"The Book of Proverbs in the Holy Bible, the King James Bible, tells us a righteous man regardeth the life of his beast but the tender mercies of the wicked are cruel," Byrd said. "The immortal Dante tells us the divine justice reserves special places in Hell for certain categories of sinners. Madam president, I am confident -- madam president, I am confident that the hottest places in Hell are reserved for the souls of sick and brutal people who hold God's creatures in such brutal and cruel contempt! I yield the floor."

I'm curious, Senator -- what of sick and brutal people who hold God's children in contempt based upon race. You know, members of the KKK, an organization dedicated to the brutal, cruel, and sadistic oppression of African-Americans, Jews, Catholics and Republicans that you proudly joined and recruited for in your youth. Have you ever issued such a stinging (and well-deserved) condemnation of a group that you once described as "needed today as never before". Would you care to offer a condemnation of those who would proclaim that "ather I should die a thousand times, and see Old Glory trampled in the dirt never to rise again, than to see this beloved land of ours become degraded by race mongrels, a throwback to the blackest specimen from the wilds"? Or do dogs have a higher place in your hierarchy of being than "race mongrels" and "the blackest specimen from the wilds"?

I'd be curious to know the answers to these questions -- after all, it would tell us whether the former Kleagle was speaking on principle, or merely because it gave him the opportunity to verbally lynch another prominent black man.

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Posted by: Greg at 06:48 AM | Comments (8) | Add Comment
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Clinton Smacked Down

I have a new hero -- Under Secretary of Defense Eric S. Edelman.

A Pentagon official has told Senator Hillary Rodham Clinton that questions she has raised about how the United States would withdraw from Iraq feed enemy propaganda.

The stinging wording of the message, from Under Secretary of Defense Eric S. Edelman, was unusual, particularly because it was directed at a member of the Senate Armed Services Committee.

Mr. EdelmanÂ’s July 16 message, in response to questions Mrs. Clinton raised in May, was obtained Thursday by The Associated Press.

“Premature and public discussion of the withdrawal of U.S. forces from Iraq,” he wrote, “reinforces enemy propaganda that the United States will abandon its allies in Iraq, much as we are perceived to have done in Vietnam, Lebanon and Somalia.”

A Clinton spokesdrone made the following response.

A Clinton spokesman, Philippe Reines, said the senator would respond to Mr. Edelman’s boss, Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates. Mr. Reines said military leaders should offer a withdrawal plan rather than “a political plan to attack those who question them.”

Excuse me -- members of the United States Senate, especially those who are putting themselves forward as candidates for the presidency, should be offering their own strategy for victory rather than cravenly undercutting the troops and emboldening the enemy with calls for unilateral retreat and surrender.

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Harry Reid Defends "Defeat At Any Cost" Strategy

Maybe we need to send Half-wit Harry Reid a shirt that reads "No Surrender, No Peace".

Senate Majority Leader Harry M. Reid offered no apologies yesterday for his decision to reject compromise efforts to alter President Bush's Iraq strategy that had the support of a growing number of Republicans.

"We did the very best we could," the senator from Nevada said in response to criticism that he had cut off debate on Wednesday just as a bipartisan consensus on milder Iraq proposals was emerging. "I strongly believe we should have a bipartisan foreign policy." But he added: "We need to do something to change the course of the war."

But the only change he wants is from a situation in which the United State is winning to one in which the United States declares itself defeated and flees home in the face of a nearly-vanquished enemy.

Patheric, isn't it, that such a spineless man is the best that Democrats have to offer as "leader" in the Senate.

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Obama -- Genocide Not Our Concern

Damn -- not only has Obama forgotten 9/11 and the Gulf War, he clearly has forgotten Rwanda, Cambodia, and the Shoah.

Democratic presidential hopeful Barack Obama said Thursday the United States cannot use its military to solve humanitarian problems and that preventing a potential genocide in Iraq isn't a good enough reason to keep U.S. forces there.

"Well, look, if that's the criteria by which we are making decisions on the deployment of U.S. forces, then by that argument you would have 300,000 troops in the Congo right now — where millions have been slaughtered as a consequence of ethnic strife — which we haven't done," Obama said in an interview with The Associated Press.

"We would be deploying unilaterally and occupying the Sudan, which we haven't done. Those of us who care about Darfur don't think it would be a good idea," he said.

In other words, all that we have to do is "care" -- not act -- about genocide to do our duty in the the world of Senator Obama.

But he ignores one point in his analysis -- we have the means, right now, to prevent the carnage that would follow our withdrawal by not withdrawing. But his strawman argument - if we aren't stopping genocide everywhere we shouldn't stop it anywhere -- is morally bankrupt. It is like arguing that I shouldn't help one poor family in my neighborhood because I cannot wipe out world poverty.

Posted by: Greg at 02:22 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
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Plame Suit Dismissed

And the real kicker in the opinion is found here.

"But there can be no serious dispute that the act of rebutting public criticism, such as that levied by Mr. Wilson against the Bush administration's handling of prewar foreign intelligence, by speaking with members of the press is within the scope of defendants' duties as high-level Executive Branch officials."

In other words, any claim made by the perjurious, nepotism-encouraging former CIA employee and her partisan-hack husband will likely be barred by the immunity officials have for acting within the scope of their employment.

In other words, thee is no right to have one's false claims about the government and its policies stand unchallenged by the public officials involved.

Posted by: Greg at 01:57 AM | Comments (1) | Add Comment
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July 19, 2007

Headline True, But Conveys False Impression

You can tell how much the media and the Left fear Fred Thompson -- they want to do their best to undermine him with the GOP base. You therefore get this headline.

Records Show Ex-SenatorÂ’s Work for Family Planning Unit

True enough -- but what they show is that Fred Thompson really didn't perform any significant work for the pro-abortion group as a lobbyist. After all, the total amount billed over the course of 2 1/2 years was under 20 hours. Of that, just 3 1/3 hours are reported as actual lobbying work -- the rest of the time would be meetings and consultations at the request of the colleague who was working for the pro-abortion group. Indeed, the lack of specificity in the records as to who was spoken to and what was discussed leads me to wonder if the hours were not mis-categorized -- after all, not a single individual from the Bush I administration has ever stepped forward to say that Fred Thompson spoke to them about the gag-rule.

Indeed, the billing records seem to show that Fred Thompson was not hired to lobby for the pro-abortion group, contrary to the claims of the group's leader.

Posted by: Greg at 06:30 AM | Comments (19) | Add Comment
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Filibuster Hypocrisy From The Houston Chronicle

Houston Chronicle On Filibusters -- 2005.

At stake is whether senators of the minority party will be allowed to play any role in the Senate's constitutional duty to advise and consent. . . . Without the right to unlimited debate so long as 41 senators desire it, the Senate could cease to be the world's greatest deliberative body and become another rubber stamp for the party in power and the interests that fill its campaign coffers.

Houston Chronicle on Filibusters -- 2007.

Reid was right to force opponents to filibuster or allow the matter to go to a vote. At the end of the exercise, the withdrawal amendment failed to get the 60 votes needed for closure, but the public is now clearer as to which lawmakers prevented the Senate from doing its job.

In other words, the Houston Chronicle doesn't believe the filibuster is all that essential to making the US Senate "the world's greatest deliberative body" when it is used to prevent a vote on policies the paper supports. When Democrats use the filibuster, it is part of the Senate doing its job, but when Republicans use it, is is "lawmakers preventing the Senate from doing its job." I suppose that is true -- but only if one operates on the premise that the job of the US Senate is to enact the policies of the Democrats in all circumstances whatsoever.

Posted by: Greg at 01:34 AM | No Comments | Add Comment
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Harry Reid -- A Study In Hypocrisy

Harry Reid on filibusters -- 2005

Mr. President, the filibuster is a critical tool in keeping the majority in check.

Harry Reid on filibusters -- 2007.

After the results were tallied, Reid asked GOP leaders to accept simple-majority votes. When they refused, Reid announced that the debate would be suspended, possibly until after Labor Day or until Republicans dropped their filibuster. He called the 60-vote requirement "a new math that was developed by the Republicans to protect the president."

Gee, harry, what happened? I thought that the filibuster was an important tool for the minority to keep the majority in check. Did you really mean that it was an important tool for Democrats to obstruct Republican proposals, but is illegitimate when used by Republicans?

Sit down, shut up, and go back to counting your dirty money from insider real estate deals.

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July 18, 2007

Bush 34, Democratic Congress 14

If they are less than half as popular as the president, you know what that means.

Worst.

Congress.

Ever.

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A Quote For The Ages

One day a statue of Connecticut Senator Joe Lieberman will be placed in the United States Capitol to honor his dedicated service to America. On its base must be inscribed this quote from last night's debate on the War in Iraq.

“The American military will never lose the war in Iraq…if lost, it will be lost by a lack of political will.”

Ladies and gentlemen -- no truer words have ever been spoken on the floor of the United States Senate.

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FYI -- Fred Thompson In Texas

Fred will be passing through Texas on Wednesday, July 25th!

HeÂ’ll be spending the morning in Houston and the afternoon in Dallas.

The Texas FredHeads will be meeting Fred at Hobby Airport at 9:00 am and at Love Field at 3:30 pm.

Those interested in meeting Fred in Houston should contact

HoustonFredHeads@gmail.com

and those interested in meeting Fred in Dallas should contact

allasFredHeads@gmail.com">DallasFredHeads@gmail.com

for more information.

If you email, the Thompson folks will be able to give you all the details -- and get a head-count for how many folks to anticipate.

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Mississippi Ruling To Make Democrats More Liberal, GOP More Powerful

In Mississippi, it has been the custom for many white voters to vote for moderate/conservative Democrats running for local office at primary time, while still voting for GOP candidates for statewide and national office. A recent ruling by a federal court will make that impossible -- and likely put the GOP in the driver's seat in the state for decades to come.

A federal court ruling in June that forces voters to register by party could return Mississippi to the days of racially polarized politics, as many white Democrats warn that thousands of white voters will now opt definitively for the Republican Party.

Republican-leaning voters in Mississippi have long been able to cross party lines in primaries, voting for centrist Democrats in state and local races while staying loyal to Republican candidates in national races. But political experts here say that by limiting these voters — almost all of whom are white — to Republican primaries, the ruling will push centrist Democratic candidates to the other party, simply in order to survive.

Most black voters in Mississippi are Democrats, and black political leaders have been pushing for years to prevent crossover voting in Democratic primaries. Black leaders say they want to end precisely what white Democrats here seek to preserve, a strong moderate-to-conservative voice in the Democratic Party, and in the process to pick up more state and local posts.

The ruling last month by Judge W. Allen Pepper Jr. of Federal District Court allowed the legal remedy sought by black leaders. Judge Pepper said the Democratic Party in Mississippi had a right to “disassociate itself” from voters who were not genuine Democrats. Most other Southern states also have open primaries.

Now as i see this, there are a couple of outcomes likely to arise from this. First, there will be a surge in GOP registrations and in GOP officeholders. Second, it is likely that those voter purged by the Democrats will be a moderating force in GOP politics, while their loss by the Democrats will take the party further outside the mainstream. This can only bode well for the GOP -- even as the race-baiters in the Democratic Party gain more internal power, their broader appeal will be decreased.

And lest you think that I'm over-reacting with my use of the term "race-baiters", consider the sort of person who sought and supports teh ruling.

Black Democrats who pushed the lawsuit that led to the ruling seemed to view the potential hemorrhaging of white voters with equanimity. One of their leaders is Ike Brown, a state Democratic executive committee member who was recently found by another federal judge to have systematically violated voting rights of whites, through intimidation and other means, as party boss in his home county, Noxubee, in the eastern part of the state.

Welcoming Judge Pepper’s ruling, Mr. Brown said in an interview: “We are tired of being abused by the white Democrats in Mississippi. We have just had enough. We want the Republicans out of our party.”

Yeah, that's right -- a fellow convicted of implementing a reverse-"Jim Crow" voting system in his county to disenfranchise white voters finds this to be a positive development. Tell me -- if a GOP leader were to complain about the voting preferences and habits of white voters, how loud would the outrage be? And how quickly would he be driven from party office if convicted of voting rights violations?

Of course, this entire suit is driven by those who believe that the skin color of a candidate (or voter) is more important than the content of his/her character. If the Democrats again want to segregate their party, so be it -- but recognize please, that it is once again the Democrats demanding such segregation.

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The Sort Of Gun Law We Need

I'll concede that I am not a big one for entitlement programs, but when you have a precedent reaching back to the times of the American Revolution, it might just be worth thinking about.

On Jan. 2, 1775, as historian David Hackett Fischer recounts in Paul Revere's Ride, the good people of Newton held a town meeting. The issues they discussed were similar in a certain sort of way to the issues that might be discussed today by the D.C. council. They included a proposed gun law and entitlement program.

In Newton, the gun law and entitlement program were one and the same.

The Newtonians thought it so important for every man in town to own a gun that they were ready to give him one if he could not afford it.

"Voted," say the town records, "that the Selectmen use their best discretion in providing fire-arms for the poor of the town who are unable to provide for themselves."

The District of Columbia argues that since there is no longer a colonial-style militia, the rest of the Second Amendment is meaningless -- hence it can ban the people from either keeping or bearing arms. Under that logic, the DC government could shut down the Washington Post because it no longer uses the sort of presses in vogue in the 1790s -- and there would be no First Amendment protection at all for television, radio, and the internet. But we can see what was important to those who fought for the independence of this country and later adopted our Constitution -- that each free citizen have the means of self-defense, and the assistance of the government in obtaining it if he could not.

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July 17, 2007

AP Misrepresents GOP Poll Results

This looks bad.

AP Poll: GOP pick is 'none of the above'

And it seems worse when you read the rather convoluted reporting on the poll in question.

And the leading Republican presidential candidate is ... none of the above.

The latest Associated Press-Ipsos poll found that nearly a quarter of Republicans are unwilling to back top-tier hopefuls Rudy Giuliani, Fred Thompson, John McCain or Mitt Romney, and no one candidate has emerged as the clear front-runner among Christian evangelicals. Such dissatisfaction underscores the volatility of the 2008 GOP nomination fight.

In sharp contrast, the Democratic race remains static, with Hillary Rodham Clinton holding a sizable lead over Barack Obama. The New York senator, who is white, also outpaces her Illinois counterpart, who is black, among black and Hispanic Democrats, according to a combined sample of two months of polls.

A half year before voting begins, the survey shows the White House race is far more wide open on the Republican side than on the Democratic. The uneven enthusiasm about the fields also is reflected in fundraising in which Democrats outraised Republicans $80 million to $50 million from April through June, continuing a trend from the year's first three months.

"Democrats are reasonably comfortable with the range of choices. The Democratic attitude is that three or four of these guys would be fine," David Redlawsk, a University of Iowa political scientist. "The Republicans don't have that; particularly among the conservatives there's a real split. They just don't see candidates who reflect their interests and who they also view as viable."

More Republicans have become apathetic about their options over the past month.

A hefty 23 percent can't or won't say which candidate they would back, a jump from the 14 percent who took a pass in June.

Now that sounds really bad -- until one considers that over the last two months we have seen a new major candidate (sort of) enter the picture and another one begin to swoon. And interestingly enough, the AP doesn't link back to the actual data -- I had to go to the Ipsos website to find it. And know what -- the actual data shows something very different.

1b. If the 2008 Republican presidential primary or caucus in your state were being held today, and the candidates were...for whom would you vote?

Candidate7/9-11/076/4-6/073/5-7/07
Giuliani212735
Thompson1917N/A
McCain151922
Romney11108
Gingrich5711
Huckabee323
Brownback133
Other21-
None846
(DK/NS)151012

So as I see the data here, you really only have a group of 8% opposed to all the candidates. What you do have, however, is a 15% undecided group as the GOP field finds itself in a state of flux -- waiting to see what happens with the race before committing themselves to one candidate or another. That said, 2/3 of GOP voters are committed to one of the top 4 candidates -- hardly a sign of dissatisfaction, especially when our candidate list is still in flux and we are still six months away from the first primary or caucus!

I suspect that we will see some additional changes in the next couple of months, as Thompson formally declares his candidacy sometime before Labor Day and McCain continues to flounder. And when Newt Gingrich makes it official that he has just been teasing the base with his hints of a presidential run, that will cause another 5-10% to move into the folds of the other major candidates.

MORE AT Michelle Malkin

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July 16, 2007

The Truth About Taxes

Contrary to the claims of Democrats and other folks who argue that we have taken progressivity out of the tax system, a quick examination of the actual data shows something else.

The best source for objective data on the distribution of the tax burden is the Congressional Budget Office. The C.B.O. goes beyond anecdotes and bald assertions to provide hard data on who pays taxes. One can argue about the details of its methods, but there is no doubt that it is nonpartisan and that its tax analysts are some of the best in the business.

The C.B.O.Â’s most recent calculations of federal tax rates show a highly progressive system. (The numbers are based on 2004 data, but the tax code has not changed much since then.) The poorest fifth of the population, with average annual income of $15,400, pays only 4.5 percent of its income in federal taxes. The middle fifth, with income of $56,200, pays 13.9 percent. And the top fifth, with income of $207,200, pays 25.1 percent.

At the very top of the income distribution, the C.B.O. reports even higher tax rates. The richest 1 percent has average income of $1,259,700 and forks over 31.1 percent of its income to the federal government.

taxprogressivity.jpg

This does, however, take into account the fact that a good chunk of the taxes paid by the wealthy are paid indirectly, by corporations that pay taxes on profits before dividends are paid to stockholders.

When the C.B.O. studies the tax burden, it includes all federal taxes, including individual income taxes, payroll taxes and corporate income taxes. In its analysis, payroll taxes are borne by workers, and corporate taxes by the owners of capital. For the richest 1 percent of the population, 9.3 percentage points of their 31.1 percent tax rate comes from the taxes that corporations have paid on their behalf.

So, as the article points out, when you get a Warren Buffett claiming that he pays only 17.7 percent of his income in taxes, that doesn't count the indirect tax burden carried by the companies in which he hold stock (interestingly enough, the bottom 1/5 of wage earners actually pay less than the amount of their social security taxes due to the EIC and other refundable tax credits -- subtract the employer's portion of the payroll tax and you will see that they actually have a negative tax rate!).

As you can see, the wealthiest Americans actually pay very close to 1/3 of their income in taxes when one uses the CBO statistics. Here's the question to be asked of any candidate or officeholder who objects to "the Bush tax cuts for the rich" -- how much above 1/3 of their income do they believe "the rich" should pay?

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Sekula Gibbs Raises Grassroots Cash -- Lampson Plays PACman

Former Congresswoman Shelley Sekula Gibbs reports strong grassroots fundraising for the second quarter of 2007 as she seeks the opportunity to regain the seat she won in the 2006 special election, while Democrat Nick Lampson sucked up PAC dollars in his bid to retain the seat he won without a GOP opponent on the ballot following the resignation Tom Delay.

shelleysekulagibbs.jpglampson.jpg

According to his release, Lampson raised more than $288,000 between April 1 and June 30 of this year, while FEC reports show Gibbs raised more than 138,000 for the same period.

ThatÂ’s less than 10% of what Lampson raised to wage his 2006 campaign against Tom DeLay, which then morphed into a race against Gibbs.

LampsonÂ’s second quarter report somewhat resembled the firstin that then well more than half his contributions came from PACs. So far this year money has come from those operated by the likes of National Weather Service Employees, Employees of Northrop Grumman Corp., Qwest Communications, Comcast, the Sheetmetal Workers Association, Chevron Employees, Verizon Communications, the International LongshoremanÂ’s Association, the American Road and Transportation Builders Association and on and on.

“Lampson, who recently had to spend six weeks recovering from major heart surgery, now has $441,049.87 cash on hand,” his campaign said in a prepared statement. “Despite having to spend half of the last quarter recovering from a quadruple bypass heart surgery, Congressman Lampson exceeded the campaign’s original goals.”

By contrast, Gibbs got just $5,000 from PACs in the second quarter. She and campaign manager Troy Berman were quick to point out the other day that the bulk came from “grass roots” contributions.

Some of that grass was a little greener than others, as numerous dermatologists and other medical doctors kicked in $250, $500 or $1,000 apiece to fellow dermatologist Gibbs. Lampson grassroots givers were more likely to be lawyers.

Gibbs showed “an impressive $137,000 raised and over $180,000 cash on hand at the close of the reporting period,” her campaign said in a press release. “Our fundraising is just starting and will continue to grow. With influential community leaders like Mr. Bob Perry, Don Jordan, John O’Neill and Senator Mike Richards helping our campaign I know we’ll have the resources we need to take back TX-22,” Gibbs said in the release.

Lampson's reliance on out-of-district special interest money is no surprise, given that CD22 is overwhelmingly Republican and the strange route by which he won the district in 2006. And given Sekula Gibbs' support by prominent republicans from the district, it seems clear that she ought to be the favorite for the nomination in 2008 -- and in the 2008 general election.

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July 15, 2007

All Is Not Lost For GOP

If the situation in Virginia is any sign, it is likely that GOP success will continue in many states -- and this might bode well for the party nationally as well.

Virginia residents' negative feelings toward the Bush administration and the national Republican Party have not tarnished state Republicans or broadly diminished their chances to keep control of the General Assembly after the Nov. 6 election.

Although Virginia residents say they strongly disapprove of the war in Iraq, more than half of the state's voters approve of the state Republican Party, and a sizable majority has confidence in the state government to make the right decisions for the future.

If such a trend does exist, we are likely to see a continued GOP domination in many states -- and the rise of a new generation of national GOP leaders whose success at the state level will cause the people of their states to send them to Washington. So rather than a party realignment, might we instead be seeing a changing of the guard?

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Gilmore Out Of GOP Race

When you cannot even raise half-a-million dollars in six months, you simply need to get out of the race. What may sound harsh, but dollars are a practical measure of the breadth and depth of support for a candidate. As a result, Jim Gilmore has realized that he needs to be out of the race for the GOP presidential nomination.

Former Virginia governor James S. Gilmore III ended his long-shot Republican presidential campaign yesterday, saying he was unable to raise enough money to communicate his conservative vision to Americans. He held out the possibility, however, that he might soon run for public office again in Virginia.

Gilmore, the son of a butcher who had improbably risen to become a local prosecutor, a state attorney general and a governor of Virginia, dropped out of the crowded GOP primary field a day before reporting that he had raised $211,000 between April and June.

Since January, he has raised $381,000, while his rivals have collected tens of millions of dollars.

"You have to build a large organization of people who will raise money for you. That takes years to develop," Gilmore said yesterday. "While the other candidates are raising tens of millions, we were raising hundreds of thousands. We would have to change that paradigm to stay in this race."

My only question is why Gilmore thought he had a chance of getting the nomination in the first place.

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July 14, 2007

Ellison Outrage

Rep. Keith Ellison has certainly crossed a line with this one.

America's first Muslim congressman has provoked outrage by apparently comparing President George W Bush to Adolf Hitler and hinting that he might have been responsible for the September 11 attacks.

Addressing a gathering of atheists in his home state of Minnesota, Keith Ellison, a Democrat, compared the 9/11 atrocities to the destruction of the Reichstag, the German parliament, in 1933. This was probably burned down by the Nazis in order to justify Hitler's later seizure of emergency powers.

"It's almost like the Reichstag fire, kind of reminds me of that," Mr Ellison said. "After the Reichstag was burned, they blamed the Communists for it, and it put the leader [Hitler] of that country in a position where he could basically have authority to do whatever he wanted."

To applause from his audience of 300 members of Atheists for Human Rights, Mr Ellison said he would not accuse the Bush administration of planning 9/11 because "you know, that's how they put you in the nut-ball box - dismiss you".

Excuse me, Keith, but your fellow Muslim, Osama bin Laden, admits that he and his people were behind 9/11. That means that, in fact, MUSLIMS WERE TO BLAME FOR 9/11.

And since you want to make comparisons to Hitler, I'd like to note that this Administration has made extreme efforts to be conciliatory towards Muslims, and to discourage anti-Muslim bias.

On the other hand, Much of the Islamic world revels in anti-Semitism, and rhetoric about killing Jews is considered mainstream. That sounds a whole lot more like Hitler than anything coming from the bush Administration. But then again, given the Muslim support for Hitler that was seen during WWII, we shouldn't be surprised that the Muslim world still echoes with that same foul ideology today. For that matter, given Ellison's history of associating with anti-Semitic organizations, I think that his comparing anyone to Hitler is more a case of projection than anything else.

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Whitewashing Plame

Democrats really don't want little things like the facts to get in the way of the clear conclusion that Valerie Plame Wilson is a liar.

Rep. Tom Davis, ranking Republican on the House Oversight and Government Reform Committee, is puzzled by the House Intelligence Committee's claim that Valerie Plame Wilson has been consistent in her sworn testimony. He is asking the Intelligence Committee for documents to back up their contention.

Davis last month noted that Mrs. Wilson had testified to his committee that she, as a CIA employee, had not suggested the fact-finding mission to Niger by her husband, former Amb. Joseph Wilson. She earlier had told the Senate Intelligence Committee staff that she did not recall whether she made such a proposal. Davis also cited an internal CIA e-mail by her saying Wilson "may be in a position to assist."

Davis asked that Mrs. Wilson be recalled for testimony by his committee. Democratic Chairman Henry Waxman bucked the issue over to the House Intelligence Committee. When it responded she had been consistent in denying that she suggested her husband's mission, Davis was baffled in view of contradictory evidence.

Let's see -- "I don't recall", "No", and "Maybe my hubby could help" doesn't seem all that consistent to me. Indeed, it reeks of perjury. And we all know how the Democrats are against perjury in this case, right?

Kudos to Rep. Davis for pursuing this matter.

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Delay Prosecutor Whines About Unequal Justice

Prosecutor Ronnie Earle complains that the decision to dismiss a charge against Tom Delay because it did not exist in Texas law at the time the alleged offense was committed somehow "skews" justice.

A Texas prosecutor said in court filings Friday that the state's highest criminal appeals court created a "separate — but not necessarily equal — system of justice" by refusing to reinstate a conspiracy charge against former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay.

Travis County District Attorney Ronnie Earle wants the Texas Court of Criminal Appeals to reconsider its decision.

Last month, the court refused to reinstate charges against DeLay and two former aides of conspiracy to violate campaign finance laws.

A state district judge threw out that charge after defense lawyers argued that the law DeLay is accused of violating in 2002 wasn't written until 2003.

A regional appeals court upheld the judge's decision. Prosecutors appealed to the Court of Criminal Appeals. The Republican-controlled panel ruled 5-4 in favor of DeLay and his co-defendants, John Colyandro and Jim Ellis.

Apparently Earle thinks that enforcing the constitutional prohibition on ex post facto laws somehow creates a two-tiered justice system. I suppose it does, in a sense -- one that allows prosecution for offenses that the accused could have known were illegal, and another that forbids the prosecution of offenses that would have required the defendant to have precognitive abilities to know that they were breaking a law not yet written.

But then again, justice has been skewed in a two-tiered fashion during the entire process.

What other person would Earle or any other prosecutor have invented an entirely new charge to indict him for -- one that did not exist at the time of the alleged offense?

What other individual would have been the subject of presentations of the same evidence to multiple (I believe it was six) grand juries before an indictment could be obtained -- including at least three in one weekend?

For what other individual would a prosecutor break grand jury confidentiality laws over so that he could massage his presentation to a future grand jury?

Yes, justice is skewed in this case -- against Tom DeLay by a rogue, partisan prosecutorial hack whose words and actions have betrayed a partisan animus in his use of the the powers of his office to undermine the justice and overturn the results of valid elections?

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Kerry Hypocrisy

This is clearly political payback by the Massachusetts Senator, not a principled stand.

Former Wisconsin congressman Mark Green's nomination to become the ambassador of Tanzania hit a snag today because of Democratic opposition.

Senator John Kerry of Massachusetts placed a hold on the nomination.

A Kerry aide says the reason is Green is a political appointee and not a career foreign service officer.

Green -- a Green Bay Republican -- was nominated for the post in Africa last month by President Bush.

Excuse me, but that really is not a legitimate basis for opposing the nomination of an ambassador. Political supporters, including many with no diplomatic experience, have often been appointed as ambassador -- indeed, the percentage of such political appointees has generally hovered around 35%. And I don't recall any John Kerry objections to such practices in the past,m such as the appointment of former Vice President Walter Mondale as Ambassador to Japan, or the appointment of gay rights activist James C. Hormel as Ambassador to Belgium. neither of those individuals was a career foreign service officer -- and both were clearly political appointees.

I think that perhaps Kerry is simply seeking revenge for Green's efforts against Kerry during the 2004 presidential campaign.

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Democrats To Do What SCOTUS Said To Do

When the Supreme Court issued its ruling on wage discrimination suits, the justices noted that their ruling was based upon the language of the statute, which constrained them to rule as they did. They also invited Congress to fix the statute in question in order to achieve what everyone views as a more just solution to the problem of wage discrimination.

Well, Congress has finally gotten its butt in gear and begun to consider legislation to solve the problem.

A Supreme Court decision restricting workersÂ’ ability to sue for wage discrimination has prompted Democrats to introduce legislation to counteract the ruling.

In May, the Supreme Court ruled 5 to 4 against a supervisor at a Goodyear tire plant in Alabama who discovered, after working there for nearly 20 years, that her male colleagues, including those with less experience, had been receiving higher salaries. Most courts had ruled that each unfair paycheck was a new act of discrimination, effectively a new opportunity for an employee to sue. But the justices said that the clock started running out the first time a worker was paid unfairly and that therefore, the plaintiff, Lilly M. Ledbetter, had waited too long to file suit.

The main federal antidiscrimination law, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, says that employees must make their charge of employment discrimination within 180 days after the alleged unlawful practice occurred.

Now I'm shocked and appalled that anyone would question the need to do this, and heartily condemn the members of my party who appear opposed to solving the problem at hand. However, I'd like to urge the Congress to be sure that it does not completely remove the statute of limitations here, and that it does retain a limit on how far a suit can reach back, if only because the entire purpose of a statute of limitations is to allow a defendant to have the means to offer an effective defense against charges in a timely fashion.

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July 13, 2007

Censure Murtha

If Mike Nifong can be disbarred for his attempt to railroad the innocent for political purposes, shouldn't John Murtha at least be censured by his peers for doing the same?

The parents of a U.S. Marine accused of killing three Iraqis execution-style in Haditha in late 2005 said Thursday they would ask Congress to censure Rep. John Murtha (D-Pa.) for saying that the Marines "overreacted" during the incident and killed civilians "in cold blood."

"It's too late for an apology," Darryl Sharratt of Canonsburg, Pa., told Cybercast News Service after the hearing officer in the case, Lt. Col. Paul Ware, released an 18-page report recommending that all charges against Sharratt's son, Lance Cpl. Justin Sharratt, be dismissed because his actions "were in accord with the rules of engagement and use of force."

Sharratt said that he, his wife Theresa and other supporters of their 22-year-old son were planning to visit Martha's office, and "we're going to ask for more than an apology."

"We need this man censured by our Congress," he said, because "he denied my son -- and the other Marines involved -- their constitutional rights to a fair trial and a presumption of innocence."

"This is what we've been fighting for in Iraq," Sharratt added. "This is what we've been fighting for -- what soldiers and Marines have been dying for -- for the past 200 years."

Before he had even been briefed by military officials, Jon Murtha had acted as judge, jury, and would-be executioner in declaring these Marines guilty of cold-blooded murder -- because it fit with the narrative he was constructing to justify his lack of support for the troops in Iraq. He has refused to apologize, despite a flood of evidence that shows his words to have been objectively false and defamatory of these fighting men.

Doesn't simple justice require that the House of representatives go on the record as declaring Murtha to have been morally and ethically wrong in his words and actions?

Posted by: Greg at 02:26 AM | Comments (2) | Add Comment
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Should We Be More Like Europe?

I'm always interested when liberals point to Europe as a model for the values and policies that we in the United States should follow. I'm curious -- would they be supportive of implementing this sort of policy in the United States, in place of the Patriot Act and other Bush Administration security initiatives?

Germany, fearful of being the next major target for Islamic terrorists, is edging away from its deep aversion to intrusive and harsh enforcement tactics, provoking a storm of protest from those who recall the official brutality of Nazism and Communism in decades past.

Sensing a growing threat, Germany’s top security official, Wolfgang Schäuble, is breaking down resistance within the government to surreptitious online searches of computers belonging to people they deem suspicious. He is pushing for a law to allow security forces to shoot down a plane commandeered by hijackers. And he said this week that Germany should consider detaining potential terrorists and approving the killing of terrorist leaders abroad.

Hey, liberals -- it is coming out of Europe, so it must be good. Right?

And you do support security in the face of the terrorist threat. Right?

Or do you really believe there is a terrorist threat at all?

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Less than Meets The Eye

Of course he admits this -- after all, we know the name of the leaker and it is "Richard Armitage".

President Bush on Thursday acknowledged publicly for the first time that someone in his administration likely leaked the name of a CIA operative, although he also said he hopes the controversy over his decision to spare prison for a former White House aide has "run its course."

"And now we're going to move on," Bush said in a White House news conference.

The president had initially said he would fire anyone in his administration found to have publicly disclosed the identity of Valerie Plame, the wife of former Ambassador Joseph Wilson and a CIA operative. Ten days ago, Bush commuted the 30-month sentence given to I. Lewis "Scooter" Libby by a federal judge in connection with the case.

Patrick Fitzgerald chose not to charge the leaker, who came forward before the special prosecutor was ever appointed. Fitzgerald decided instead to go after non-leakers as part of his out-of-control investigation of what he had determined was a non-crime within days of his appointment.

What we have here, then is not evidence of an intentional leak by the Bush Administration. Instead we have evidence of why there should not be special prosecutors in cases like this one.

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July 12, 2007

House Votes To Support Al-Qaeda Troops

No other way to interpret today's vote by the House of Representatives to give a victory to the terrorists. We now know who this motley crew of traitors in Congress have meant when they said they support the troops -- the troops operating under the banner of al-Qaeda, not the Stars and Stripes.

unclesambinladen.jpg

Defying a White House veto threat, the U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday approved legislation to bring combat troops out of Iraq by April 1, 2008.

By a vote of 223-201, the Democratic-controlled House approved the legislation in the hope it will pressure the Senate to attach a similar mandatory troop withdrawal timetable to a military policy bill it is debating.

Passage of the House bill marked the third time this year it has voted for timetables to end the U.S. involvement in the war that is now in its fifth year. Two previous efforts either died in the Senate or were vetoed by President George W. Bush.

The measure that passed on Thursday would tell the Pentagon to begin withdrawing combat troops within four months and complete the redeployment by April 1.

Under the bill, an unspecified number of U.S. soldiers would stay in Iraq to train Iraqi soldiers, conduct counter-terrorism operations and protect U.S. diplomats.

And folks wonder why there were reports today about al-Qaeda gaining strength. Of course they are -- when one side has indicated its willingness to surrender, it is natural to for folks to flock to the banner of the likely victor. It is called the bandwagon effect -- and today a majority of the House of Representatives have decided to march along with Osama and the boys.

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