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By Al Campbell
Saturday, Nov 15 2008, 09:48 AM
Hedged promises...
Promises are made in every election campaign, and especially in presidential election campaigns. We're told that one candidate will do this for us and the other will do that for us. We are made promise after promise, almost on the order of a 'can you top this' game.
Today, as the president-elect makes his preparations for the assumption of office, there is a decided 'tamping down' of his promises. Those promises are said to have totaled some $135 billion per year. Those are the promises that can be specifically identified. There are another 'passel of promises' that we'll never be able to price because they were implied to special interest groups and/or made in somewhat more private settings as deals were cut.
Already, we see and hear that some are "shocked" that their pet things are being relegated to the back of the line so far as promises to be kept. There is a very simple thing that all should remember, and that is this: If you vote for a person on the basis of promises made that will favor you or your special interest group, you need to step back and reassess just how you'll make voting decisions in the future. After the campaigning is done and reality begins to reestablish itself, we realize that not every promise will be kept, that some will but they won't resemble what you expected and that some will result in nothing like what you expected they would.
Today, there simply isn't $135 billion available for the grandiose promises made on the trail to the White House. And, even the money that may be available will be allocated according to lobbying and the back-room deals in Congress. Your needs and my needs be damned; there are more important things that have to be accomplished...such as the payoffs to those who got the next president to this point. And that is the case no matter which ticket won the popular vote.
Character would be a much better barometer with which to gage decisions than promises which were probably only intended to gather a few more votes. I hope all of us voted on that basis...but I am skeptical.
Bail-out expectations...
It is amazing to me, although it shouldn't be at my age, to see the length of the lines of those special interests seeking a government bail-out. The Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae sub-prime mortgage debacle (Barney Frank, Christopher Dodd, and Charles Schumer continue to try to hide from their special culpability in all this) pointed out just how shaky the economy was. That proved to be more than the economy could swallow without massive corrections.
And, it showed the truly global nature of the economy...every country was in a very tenuous position economically and all are now in the tank...except maybe for China and maybe for India. Even the oil sheiks are pinching pennies or whatever it is they pinch.
Enter stage-left...
The likely actors were lined up before we knew the magnitude of the debacle to come. The investment banks, the insurance companies, the commercial banking industry, the Wall Street stock barons, the hedge fund managers; all were waiting for their piece of the bail-out. So some $700 billion was thrown into a thing called TARP and the Treasury Secretary, Paulson, was given the go ahead to steer us through. Of course, Congress began almost immediately to try to seize the tiller and steer where it thought it could garner the greatest political gains.
Detroit has been in shambles, and that happened long before the most recent economic decline; and that is in no small part courtesy of both federal and state politics and excessive payroll costs, both labor and executive. The auto makers were 'given' $25 billion for "green" manufacturing change-overs. That money has yet to be dispensed, by the way, as is so often the case when Congress does something like this.
The Democrats are now working their behinds off to force the Bush administration to move ahead on the next major phase of the 'bail-out' by trying to get a new hand-out through in the coming "lame duck" session starting tomorrow. The obvious reason behind this is simple, they can then point to one more "failure" on the part of 'Bush 43' when this all goes down the toilet...which is most likely where it'll go.
The Republicans, of course, are trying to sit this one out by saying that the $25 billion of "green" money ought be the bridge that Detroit is seeking, to force the Democrats to finally have to show some political courage of their own come January 20th. It would make the Republicans happier if they were able to paint the Dems with the brush that had been reserved for President Bush and the Republicans.
Underlying all this action on the 'stage', to which I referred earlier, is the problem you and me are facing as members of the audience for this multiple act thriller/dark comedy. Yet again, we see that politics trumps everything in Washington, D.C.
Our representative democracy is the greatest form of government ever seen on this earth, but it sure has its seamy and vulgar sides...and we seem to be witnessing most of it today.
And you and me are the only people who can make that less a problem as we cast our future votes. We must demand better...and we must punish those who disobey our demands by sending them home!
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By Al Campbell
Thursday, Nov 6 2008, 03:00 PM
Now that the dust of the election returns has begun to settle, the talk of the governance approach of our new president has taken flight. I have read several pieces that discuss this subject and heard several discussions on the same subject. The Wall Street Journal had an excellent editorial today titled Obama's Real Opposition.
The subject of that piece was the old line liberals who will be pushing and pulling President Obama as they wish, to make him decide as they wish him to decide.
There are many who believe that President Obama will actually move to the center left as he takes office and begins to face the daily decisions required of him. There are also many who remind us of his very liberal voting record and suggest, therefore, that he'll govern from the left or far left.
We are reminded of those with whom President Obama will interact:
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David Obey from our own state who wants to slash the defense budget to get money for his social entitlements.
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Barney Frank who recently said that he thought defense could be reduced by 25%.
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Chuck Schumer who continues to push banks to lend more money even after being heavily involved in causing the Freddie Mac/Fannie Mae problems due to similar tactics.
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George Miller who heads the House Education and Labor Committee who is talking about 'nationalizing' 401K and other private pension plans to free up all that money for other purposes.
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Jim McDermott who chairs the House Ways and Means Committee and who seems to like Mr. Miller's ideas.
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John Conyers who loves the idea of the Europeans indicting President Bush and Bush officials for 'war crimes'.
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Henry Waxman who wants to grab the Chairmanship of the House Energy and Commerce Committee from Rep. John Dingell so that he can really push the global warming agenda.
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Pete Stark who believes that a Canadian-style single payer health care system is exactly right for us.
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Rep. Pelosi whom we presume will retain her leadership post will continue down the very liberal path she has trod to now.
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Sen. Reid whom we presume will continue in his leadership role, although he could find that a difficult task given his miscues so far.
These men are well-seasoned congressional combat veterans who know the inner workings much better than does the new President Obama. They will stop short of nothing to take advantage of what they see as a 'significant mandate' from the United States electorate. They are running short of time in which to make the country over into the image they believe is best for us all; they will not be anxious to slow their pace simply because a new president wants that to happen.
President-Elect Obama has seemed to recognize this in his appointment of Rep. Rahm Emanuel (D from Chicago) as his new Chief of Staff. This is the single most powerful position in any White House. The person in this role manages the President; he determines who the President will see and what he will hear; he selects those on the staff who will be granted limited access to the President; he will play a very large part in determining the programs the new president will pursue and the order in which various initiatives will occur. Everything goes through the Chief of Staff. Everything.
Emanuel is a rough and tumble Chicago-style politician. He is liberal. He is going to be a tough Chief of Staff. The battles between him and those in Congress who believe they deserve the President's ear will be legend before this tour of duty is finished.
I suspect that our new president will be pushed to the left of center very quickly whether or not he wishes to be in that position. The question in my mind is just how far left of center he'll end up after the first hundred days that seem to be so magical.
He will have inherited a terrible economy and a country with so much debt that it will be able to do only limited things in the way of new programs. Against that backdrop stand the legions such as described above who simply don't care about this, that or the other. They are intent on getting their way, on making their imprint seen.
This Congress has it within its power to limit this new president to a single term, as was the case with President Carter, if it forces the new president too far to the left and pushes too hard for what it thinks is now being demanded by a country they believe to be left-leaning like themselves.
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By Al Campbell
Tuesday, Oct 28 2008, 09:19 AM
There is more and more speculation as to the potential that we'll see a 'clean sweep' by Democratic candidates on Tuesday, November 4th at both the state and federal levels. I hope that isn't the way it turns out, but I'm tiring of being beaten about the head and shoulders every time I read a newspaper article or watch the bulk of the television news items. Maybe that is the intent. If us conservatives can be sufficiently demoralized, maybe we'll just stay home. Not this conservative!
What do I mean by 'clean sweep'? I refer to the potential that both the Assembly and the Senate in Wisconsin will see a sufficient Democratic majority that will be able to pass anything they wish in spite of the number of Republican votes that could be massed, with assurances on most such items that those will be signed into law by the Democratic Governor Doyle.
Similarly, I refer to Democratic victories in both the U.S. House and Senate that will be Republican-proof and that will likely find favor with a Democratic President Obama.
Jay Weber has done a good job on setting forth 23 items that could be part of the triumvirate of Sen. Harry Reid (D), Rep. Nancy Pelosi (D) and a President Obama and you can find those by clicking here. Things included on Jay's list include renegotiating NAFTA, ending secret ballots in union organizing, government-run healthcare encroachments, reintroduction of the 'Fairness Doctrine' to control conservative access to the airways, and so on.
At the state level, we could easily see state-run health care, the increase in costs of education, ever larger portions of our income going to state and local taxes, more and more loss of personal freedoms and so.
There has been, in most of our history, a certain "check and balance" relationship in most of our governments so that not everything that was proposed was ever likely to be passed. That 'protection' could disappear for years if we see the 'clean sweep' at the state or federal levels, or both, as the result of our national election on November 4th. Our country tends not to flourish well under such governments regardless of party in power.
Vote your conscience next Tuesday!
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By Al Campbell
Thursday, Oct 16 2008, 09:19 AM
There is a very real sense that we have been placed in a new world of politics. I'll call it Politics 2.0 signifying the coming of a new genre.
As I watched the debate last evening involving Barack Obama and John McCain, it was as if I was witnessing a battle between the old and the new politics. And, that is exactly what we've been hearing during this twenty-month plus campaign. Obama has been pointedly making himself the leader of Politics 2.0 so far as the race for the presidency.
Obama has appealed to those of us who are younger and has been successful. He outlived his Democratic challengers and he appears poised, if we are to believe the pollsters and the mainstream media, to become our next President. He is a masterful communicator so far as style points. Too many of us are unable to, or don't feel the need to, dig beneath the smooth, suave surface to get at the underlying meat in his answers and in his speeches. He has run a campaign of nearly two years in length and we are still waiting for some definition to his talking points; we'll wait until after November, 2008, too.
Obama has deployed one of the most effective campaigns I can recall, and I've been an active observer since Au H20 (Goldwater) days. He has had an advantage in campaigning against one of the 'old' pols who can 'barely' communicate when viewed in the glow of Obama. He has, in my opinion, had the advantage of having the mainstream press firmly in his pocket for well over a year, if not longer. I have seen mainstream "journalism" largely trumped by Politics 2.0, and I have seen the Internet used to very nearly its current maximum potential by one candidate.
As if this wasn't sufficient, we see our economy reeling and that almost always portends defeat for the party in the Whitehouse without regard to the cause or finding of true fault.
I have made no pretense as to my views of the final two candidates. I am a fiscal and social conservative and there is but one place for my vote.
That having been said, I can say that I am fearful of a Democrat sweep that leads to control of the Congress and of the Whitehouse. If that should occur, I will see much of which I disapprove happening in our country. If there is nothing remaining but a vocal, versus meaningful, minority, the minority's voice will be silenced except for the Internet and talk radio for the next four years.
While our federal government usually takes a long time to get anything accomplished, that is usually because the two-party system is sufficiently active and potent to thwart some of the less-than-wise moves attempted by the majority. If the Democrats sweep to the degree that they have absolute control in both the House and the Senate, and if they have Barack Obama in the Whitehouse, we'll see an activist government such as we've not before witnessed.
We will see Supreme Court justices that will re-interpret the constitution to their liking. We will see congressional hearings into everyone who ever served in the Bush administration. We'll witness the complete take-over of healthcare by the government. We'll see 'progressive' taxation policies that will cripple the economy and stifle the growth of businesses. We'll see states governed by liberal majorities creating laws recognizing same sex marriage. We'll see attacks on our rights to keep and bear arms. We'll see our education system subverted to become a political indoctrination tool beyond that which already exists. We will see an inexorable slide toward socialism.
I hope that I am wrong...but I fear that I may be correct.
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By Al Campbell
Wednesday, Oct 15 2008, 02:38 PM
I had intended to scan a copy of the sample ballot for Germantown however that wasn't sufficiently legible. So, we'll list the offices for which there are candidate selections to be made by all of us who are registered to vote in the village.
You may elect to vote a straight ticket including, in the order found on the ballot:
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Democratic
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Republican
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Wisconsin Green
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Libertarian
The race for President and Vice President, in the order found on the ballot:
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Barack Obama/Joe Biden (Democratic)
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John McCain/Sarah Palin (Republican)
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Cynthia McKinney/Rosa Clemente (Wisconsin Green)
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Bob Barr/Wayne A. Root (Libertarian)
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Brian Moore/Stewart A. Alexander (Socialist Party USA)
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Gloria LaRiva/Robert Moses (Party for Socialism, & Liberation)
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Ralph Nader/Matt Gonzalez (Independent)
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Chuck Baldwin/Darrell L. Castle (Constitution Party)
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Jeffrey J. Wamboldt/David J. Klimisch (We, the People)
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Write-in________________
Representative in Congress District 5, in the order found on the ballot:
State Senator District 8, in the order found on the ballot:
Representative to the Assembly District 24, in the order found on the ballot:
District Attorney:
County Clerk:
Treasurer:
Register of Deeds:
Referendum - Germantown School District
Question #1:
Shall the following Initial Resolution be approved?
INITIAL RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING GENERAL OBLIGATION BONDS IN AN AMOUNT NOT TO EXCEED $22,500,000
BE IT RESOLVED by the School Board of the Germantown School District, Washington County, Wisconsin that there shall be issued pursuant to Chapter 67 of the Wisconsin Statutes, general obligation bonds in an amount not to exceed $22,500,000 for the public purpose of paying the cost of constructing a new elementary school on school district property next to Kinderberg Park; technology, safety and security initiatives District wide; and acquiring furnishings, fixtures and equipment.
Yes ____
No ____
Question #2
Shall the following Resolution be approved?
RESOLUTION AUTHORIZING THE SCHOOL DISTRICT BUDGET TO EXCEED REVENUE LIMIT BY $500,000
FOR RECURRING PURPOSES
BE IT RESOLVED by the School Board of the Germantown School District, Washington County, Wisconsin that the revenues included in the School District budget for the 2010-2011 school year and thereafter be authorized to exceed the revenue limit specified in Section 121.91, Wisconsin Statutes, by $500,000 a year, for recurring purposes consisting of costs associated with the new elementary school.
Yes ____
No ____
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The ballot is two-sided as you would expect from the many questions.
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By Al Campbell
Friday, Oct 10 2008, 06:33 AM
Kimberley Strassel of the Wall Street Journal has done a good job with her Obama's Magic opinion piece in today's Journal.
There will be a lot of "magic" required to accomplish all that he has promised us, but we're accustomed to 'rude awakenings' following Presidential campaigns.
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By Al Campbell
Tuesday, Oct 7 2008, 09:39 AM
The story of five school districts that invested borrowed money in an attempt to earn larger returns is back in the news as the result of their court case against the two organizations that sold them the deal.
This is an up close and personal portrayal of the rather esoteric things referred to as CDOs...Collateralized Debt Obligations. The CDOs that were purchased contained some of the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac garbage that blew up a short time ago. So, bad mortgage deals that some politicians wanted made so that their constituency would continue to vote for them have come home to roost in five school districts in Wisconsin.
Up until recently, we've listened to news and watched hearings on television and been somewhat removed from the whole discussion. Now we watch the stock market lose something on the order of thirty percent of its value even after the "bailout" plan was enacted. Those who have investments see their hopes being delayed, if not dashed. People thinking of retiring within the next year to five years are probably re-thinking if they counted on their investments as part of the money they'd live on in their 'golden years'.
All that is bad enough, but now we learn that these school districts were owners of some of the 'crap' mortgages. The districts have tried to portray themselves as 'innocents' but news articles today appear to destroy that position. They were apparently told about the 'risk' but chose to ignore it for a greater return than otherwise available.
They seem to have known that they could lose their entire investment if the default rate rose above 4.95% but would remain whole if the default rate stayed beneath 3.95%. They were also told, apparently, that the "highest historical default rate in the past 23 years" was 1.85%, so where was the risk?
The risk was in the Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac garbage loans that were a part of these 'great deals', and the default rate did exceed the 23 year high. And some of our (the nation's) elected officials were pushing for even more. 100% mortgage loans to questionable credit risks is simply stupid. These politicians wouldn't have lent their money in that manner, but they were really anxious to get our money into those deals!
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By Al Campbell
Wednesday, Oct 1 2008, 05:19 AM
This video collage is most informative as to the sub-prime problems we are dealing with today.
It seems that there were attempts to rein these two quasi public/private entities in over the years but one party seemed to stand in the way.
You can watch it for yourself and form your own conclusions.
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By Al Campbell
Wednesday, Sep 24 2008, 09:35 AM
Our news is dominated by talk about the "bailout" that has been prompted by the collapse of the sub-prime mortgage market. Even at its current value, the bailout supposedly carries a cost of nearly $2,400 for every man, woman and child in the country.
This hits us in the last 45 days or so of the race for the presidency of our country. It hits when we face the election of those who will represent us in the House of Representatives for another two years. It is, as so much has been, being used as the proverbial "political football". It also threatens to become the largest single "pork-barrel" conveyance we've seen in recent history.
Many will argue where the blame lies, but, at the moment, I am more concerned with how this 'package' will look when it finally emerges from the 'back rooms' on Capitol Hill. Actually, I am more concerned with what will be included and obscured by political double-speak.
I must confess that I have little faith in too many of the politicians that will participate in this decision-making process to make me at all comfortable that we'll be best-served, as a nation, with the outcome.
I see the results of past such situations. I see that, when the dust settles, we find too many gifts to too many people of our hard-earned money cloaked in fine language but smarmy nonetheless. Our politcos cannot seem to help themselves when there is so much opportunity to grab so many dollars dangled in front of their eyes. And, too many of those dollars may find their way back into the pockets of these decision-makers in the form of sweetheart deals. It is too easy for the recipients of multi-million dollar 'gifts' to give a few hundred thousand of those dollars back to those who made it all possible.
I marvel at the millionaires that have been made on Capitol Hill. I look back at a congressman who had taught grade school, was elected and served in congress, the vice-presidency and the presidency and who, somehow, ended up with ownership of a chain of television and radio stations. I see a man elected to and serving as majority leader of the Senate who somehow managed to buy up property that sits perfectly in Nevada so as to now be worth many times the original price.
I suspect that Lyndon Johnson, were he alive, and Harry Reid, if pressed, could give answers to their respective 'breaks' that would seem proper...and that might, in fact, be true. But, there just seems to be too much of this kind of thing to permit me to be other than suspicious.
Those are just two stories. There must be hundreds or thousands of such stories. These are people who were thought to be honorable servants of the people. These were people to whom voters gave their trust only to learn years down the road that they had misplaced that trust.
Add to this, the recent revelations of favored mortgage deals that none of we mere taxpayers were ever given the opportunity to receive. These deals were in the news only several weeks ago, and those people are now making the 'back room' deals using our money. The news of tax payments not having been made by an official in charge of tax law was just in the headlines a week or so ago, and that man is playing in the big leagues of 'deal making' a few days later.
They make these deals as easily as we would make deals in a game of Monopoly...but they use real money...if there is such a thing. And that real money comes from us...the 'us' who pay income taxes. They make deals that protect them and that protect their large campaign donors. They make deals that will attract even bigger donations in the future.
I dislike sounding like such a skeptic...but I am. And, I don't think it is entirely my fault that I'm a skeptic; I've had a lot of help over the years from a lot of politicians.
So...Bailout or Boondoggle? What's your guess?
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By Al Campbell
Tuesday, Sep 23 2008, 01:22 PM
Lincoln's 200th birthday will see new 2009 pennies issued. That raises the question as to why we still have pennies. Is it to weigh down a lady's purse or cause a man's pocket to bulge and jingle? Is it to fill all those glass jars in which people collect their unused pennies?
A Cox News Service article by Chris Megerian discussed some of the facts regarding pennies.
In answer to the question posed in the headline, a penny minted in 2007 cost 1.7 cents but the U.S. Mint has gotten that cost down to about 1.4 cents today.
A penny in 1857 had the buying power that a quarter has today. I've not seen anything in recent memory that could be purchased for a penny, and I probably wouldn't want it if it were only a penny. On the other hand, I used to covet pennies because, as a kid, I could buy all kinds of candy at the corner grocery store with a few pennies!
It seems to me that we have outlived the usefulness of the penny. It should be eliminated and we should simply re-price things and round up or down to the nearer nickel. There used to be a half-penny but that was eliminated in 1857. We really ought to 'get with it' and make this happen.
There have been attempts in Congress in both 2002 and in 2006 to eliminate the penny, but both attempts failed. The U.S. Mint produced 7.4 billion pennies last year. At a cost of 1.4 cents each, that comes to over $103 Million if my long-hand math hasn't been lost completely.
I know that doesn't sound like much to our members of Congress, but it sounds like a whole lot to me! Especially for a coin that we simply don't have to have.
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By Al Campbell
Friday, Sep 19 2008, 03:22 PM
I listened to Senator Joe Biden telling me and the rest of the country that those of us who pay income taxes needed to pay more. He went on to tell me how patriotic that would make me feel.
Given that some 48% of Americans do not pay any income tax today, I guess they are being deprived of the patriotic feeling.
Given that some 5% of Americans pay 80% of the income taxes paid in America today, I can only imagine how patriotic they must feel every day as they awake to the knowledge that they'll be paying even more taxes.
Senator Biden has served more than three decades in the Senate, and has probably made nearly every gaffe possible over the course of those thirty-some years. I don't know that this statement was a gaffe so much as it was testimony to the fact that he and many more of our politicians are so out of touch as to be laughable...if it didn't hurt so much when I laugh.
It was this ruling elite that aided and abetted those who led Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae. It was this ruling elite that made it possible for those who had no business buying homes to become homeowners...for a few months until it caught up with them...so we all could bail them out without having learned a life lesson that most of us have come to understand.
Our scheme of income taxation began a long time ago. It was well-intended then but has grown out of control. Our tax laws today represent a gigantic tumor sucking the very lifeblood from the economy.
But...we'll all feel more patriotic if we'll just send a few more dollars on to Washington so that the grand old "income redistribution" scheme called the tax code can continue to dole out money to earn votes for those doing the doling.
And, contrary to the current elitist mantra, taxes are too high, and those taxes threaten our very existence. Government does nothing to earn any money, but it is capable of spending ours as if there is no tomorrow. And, they may succeed at the rate they're going...maybe there will someday be no tomorrow.
Interestingly enough, none of the elitists appear to be at all worried about where their next free meal is coming from.
Even Rep. Charlie Rangel, head of the committee that oversees tax code, has to pay taxes...except he doesn't seem able to understand that as well as he ought. But, that's okay. He has hired a forensic tax accountant to help him obfuscate even further so that he can maintain his office and his appointment and thereby continue to devise new schemes to take more of our money from us to be given to those who haven't yet learned that we're all expected to work and contribute.
On the other hand, maybe they're the smart ones.
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By Al Campbell
Monday, Aug 25 2008, 09:06 AM
You and me are really great people. Why is that? Well, we seem to help bail out just about everything that bangs on Washington's door.
A short time ago, the sub-prime mortgage companies received their bail out; likely the first of their bail outs since Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are still in the throes of that mess.
Now the automobile industry is in the queue for what yesterday was about $25 billion and today has already climbed to $40 billion according to the press.
Is this a proper use for the tax dollars that are extracted from each of us? Should we be funding these bail outs for industries that essentially have gone bad because of their own doing? If you or me were responsible for these 'disasters', we'd probably step up to the plate and take what was coming to us. But we didn't force people to be too gullible and let people sell them homes they couldn't afford. We didn't cause the oil price jump because we didn't approve new refineries for thirty years or drill for new fields of oil?
If any of us should be paying 'the price', it seems that the finger of blame needs to be pointed at Washington and the people we send there to represent us. That group has caused these issues to surface through favors to those putting money into their campaign accounts. That group has caved in to the environmental groups that are fanatical to the extreme in their pursuit of the ultimate goal they espouse.
Oh, that's right. We are to blame because we continue to return the same people to Washington in spite of what they do and don't do. We don't require any 'reparations' for their actions.
Maybe we all need to get a little more involved and a little more vocal starting with our upcoming local elections. Too may of us simply shake our heads and fume; we really need to be more active in our precincts and districts and villages or cities, and in our counties and states.
I saw a quote in the past few days that went along these lines: "Too many people have died for our freedoms for us to not vote."
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By Al Campbell
Friday, Aug 22 2008, 10:01 AM
Cigarette Taxes...
The state raised cigarette taxes to $1.77 per pack and promptly budgeted/spent all the new money that would bring in. The only problem is that this 230% increase in the tax rate only generated a 48% increase in the tax money received! Now, we're stuck with a lot of people circumventing the tax entirely by buying cigarettes out-of-state or over the Internet. And, we have added to an already staggering budget shortfall.
Makes a lot sense, huh?
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Clean Air Act Gone Wild...
One of my favorite agencies, the EPA, has decided that it now has free rein over so-called greenhouse gases. This came to pass as the result of a 'namby-pamby' U.S. Supreme Court decision last year that didn't go quite far enough to ward off this rampant agency. EPA has now released its Advanced Notice of Proposed Rule-making, an ANPR in the jargon, and this is astonishing. EPA would regulate airplanes, trains, ships, boats, tractors, farm and mining equipment, lawn mowers, garden equipment, portable power generators, fork lift trucks, construction equipment and logging equipment.
EPA estimates that more than 500,000 new permits will be required. Among the supposed new requirements are these:
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Lawn mower standards: "...each application could require a different unit of measure tied to the machine's mission or output-such as grams per kilogram of cuttings from a 'standard' lawn for lawn mowers."
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Truck speed standards: "Speed limiters are generally available on new trucks or as a low cost retro-fit..."
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Single family homes become polluters: "...we believe that small commercial establishments...and indeed, a large single-family residence could exceed this [CO2 pollution] threshold."
All of this means that our taxes go up exponentially since the EPA will be forced to grow staff and facilities to handle this new found mission. And, it means that we'll all pay more for products and services.
And, none of this was ever the intent of Congress nor has it had the opportunity to inject itself to this point.
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Compact Fluorescent Bulbs...
Regular, nice old incandescent light bulbs (starting with 100 watt bulbs) become illegal to manufacture in 2012. The National Center for Policy Analysis (NCPA) points out that this means we can forget about spending 20 cents or so for the old bulb while buying the new CFLs for something on the order of $3.00+ (remember that these are usually subsidized today).
While CFLs save energy, they have costs associated with them that make all this really questionable:
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The average lifetime is not 10,000 hours, but "up to 10,000 hours"
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The energy savings and lifetime of CFLs has been exaggerated in some applications
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The CFL only achieves the claimed efficiency if burned continuously for long periods
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If left on for only 5 minute periods, the CFL will burn out just as fast as an incandescent bulb
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CFLs dim over their lifetime and do not deliver what is promised
And, we're adding mercury to the environment which supposedly will be handled by proper disposal. Yeah, sure! How many of us has disposed of a burned out CFL improperly already? How is that ever going to be policed?
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Clean Water Restoration Act...
The EPA is back again. The original Clean Water Act of 1972 had gotten to be very broadly interpreted under various EPA rulings. "Navigable waters" had morphed into isolated wetlands, dry lake beds and drainage ditches, for example. Now, two Democrat members of Congress have introduced the bill named in the title. It would replace the phrase "navigable waters" with the phrase "waters of the United States" This means "all waters subject to ebb and flow of the tide, the territorial seas, and all interstate and intrastate waters and their tributaries, including lakes, rivers, streams (including intermittent streams), mudflats, sloughs, prairie potholes, wet meadows, playa lakes, natural ponds and all impoundments of the foregoing". Reason magazine, August/September 2008
If this bill were to pass in its current state, it would very likely result in massive new regulations for boaters, fishermen, hunters, and even conservationists. This act would leave it to the courts to decide what constitutes "waters of the United States".
Thanks to Ronald Bailey for writing the article "Feds in a Fishbowl" in Reason.
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Anti-Meat Campaign...
Finally, from the Heartland Institute, this on global warming activists' latest efforts. They are launching new efforts to restrict meat production and consumption, building on prior efforts to restrict various agriculture activities that supposedly would reduce 'greenhouse gases'.
More on this can be found on the worldchanging.org website.
If we continue to have a ban on drilling more oil, we won't be able to buy meat anyway, so maybe this isn't as bad as I first thought.
Maybe we really do have too many crackpots in Congress...or too many people are being paid through campaign contributions and don't have the commonsense necessary to sort out the good from the crazy.
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By Al Campbell
Wednesday, Aug 20 2008, 08:54 AM
The 'virtual fence' that was approved by Congress to extend across hundreds of miles of the border between the United States and Mexico has been been put on hold indefinitely.
Why? Well, it seems that the Interior Department has not signed off on the use of its lands. These officials have refused to accept an environmental assessment that the towers, cameras, etc. would have no appreciable effect on the lands.
Even though the Department of Homeland Security has the authority to waive environmental laws for border security projects, it apparently does not extend to the virtual fence projects. Sounds like the typical governmental bull!
An employee of a Florida hospital testified recently about the costs of treating illegal immigrants in one hospital. You can watch the testimony by clicking here.
The citizens of this country finally prevailed on border controls, and yet the government continues to thwart this solution. It seems like someone is a bit confused on just how this country works. The people in these various departments are employed because we pay taxes to support their employment. I am tiring of those within the system who pervert it to their own will.
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By Al Campbell
Friday, Aug 8 2008, 08:56 AM
Is 'perversion' too strong a term? I don't think so.
The EPA has turned down attempts by the State of Wisconsin to relax the ill-conceived S.E. Wisconsin requirement for 'reformulated' gasoline even as we are virtually in full attainment. That was probably dwarfed by comparison to the decision it announced that it was denying the State of Texas' request for a cutback on the amount of ethanol required to be blended with gasoline.
There is a radio commercial playing in our market that is sponsored by the ethanol lobby that makes the case, in essence, that we, who question the use of corn to make ethanol, are over-reacting and need to check our facts. I am angered every time I hear that commercial, including this morning as it played while I was shaving...with a blade. That could've hurt!
The simple facts are being ignored by the EPA, Congress and the President. And, these aren't stupid people. This is intentional ignorance. Our food prices are going up, and it is caused in part by the insistence that ethanol be blended with gasoline even as us taxpayers pay the price for the ethanol support being paid on every gallon. The other part of the increase is obviously that caused by the fact that Democrats have so far refused to relax their stance against oil drilling here and now.
Back to ethanol. It is causing many cattle ranchers to reduce their herd size because they can't afford the feed to grow them for market. The prices for chicken and beef are rising at a rapid pace. I looked at flank steak a few days ago since it always used to be a relatively lower priced cut of meat. That is a thing of the past. I bought chicken breasts a few days ago and was astounded at the prices I saw on the packages.
I know that my mileage with reformulated gas is less than it was before that edict; about 10% worse. I know that ethanol is much less efficient in terms of the energy it generates than is gasoline. So, I am burning more and getting less. A double-whammy in our part of Wisconsin.
The EPA stated that there was "no compelling evidence" that the mandate for ethanol is causing "severe economic harm". That had to have been spoken by a federal employee who is reimbursed for his or her mileage...from our tax dollars These people simply have no contact with reality, or manage to suppress the lessons they really learn in order to be a "dutiful servant of the people".
As if all this isn't enough to put me into a deep funk, I am confronted with the idiocy that is called political campaigning where people talk about wind power, sun power, and bio-fuels while not mentioning oil or coal or nuclear power. How in the world are we supposed to leap forward a decade or more when technology is not yet even available to soften our landing?
We are in real danger of becoming a third world nation if the current policies are not changed and changed quickly! Our economy simply cannot withstand the political assault it is under. And this is not a political assault from another country...it comes from within.
So, I don't think calling the EPA the Environmental Perversion Agency is much of a reach.
And I, for one, am very, very tired of the elected people we all put into office forgetting who it is they represent, and what it is we want.
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By Al Campbell
Monday, Aug 4 2008, 09:02 AM
Barack Obama has now decided that he needs to promise another round of stimulus checks that are discussed as being in the range of $1,000 for every family and $500 for individuals. Now, of course, even in the federal government, money does not grow on trees. This 'reward' for electing Obama and the Democrats has to be paid for. After all, they apparently hold to the approach that all things done within the government must be "revenue neutral". So, if money is going to be given to one person, it must be taken from somewhere else.
The 'somewhere else' in this instance is destined today to be a take-away from "big oil" through what is artfully called a "windfall profit tax". A Wall Street Journal editorial today takes an intriguing look at the concept of such taxes including some individuals that seem to have benefited from windfall profits..
There is a certain arbitrariness to all this posturing.
First, from whom or what will such money be taken? Well, why not target those nasty "big oil" companies. They are, after all, socking money away at record levels.
Second, what is it that constitutes a "windfall" profit? Well, this one seems to differ with the magnitude of "big oil's" profit, so it really becomes whatever the Congress thinks it is...and it can be different when applied to different entities and/or at different times.
Third, doesn't this become very much a form of nationalizing parts of companies? How does this differ from Hugo Chavez' approach in Venezuela other than in degrees? Chavez decrees that the company will be 'nationalized' and seizes whatever assets exist for which he doesn't feel obligated to pay stockholders. So if, for example, "big oil" earns a combined $10 billion, and if government decrees that it should've only earned $5 billion, the windfall profit tax levied is essentially consuming half the industry.
Fourth, from whom is this "windfall profit" being taken? Why, from the stockholders of the companies...and those stockholders are individuals, mutual funds, pension funds and so on. Too many people are seemingly unable to work through this. This money comes from them, goes to Congress and is re-distributed to other 'thems' after, of course, a few dollars are siphoned off to go to this or that pet project that gets tacked on to the legislation as it wends it way through the voting process.
Fifth, the oil companies simply pass the lost profit on to their customers in the form of increased prices to cover this unanticipated 'cost' that was levied against them. You and me pay this at the pumps, and when we turn on our lights and heat our homes and buy food and other necessities since virtually everything is dependent upon oil at one or another stage in the process.
Could it be that there really is nothing to which we can refer as a federal give-away? The federal government doesn't earn dollar one; it only takes from you and me. If it doesn't have any money of its own, then it really is only re-distributing our money like an inefficient Robin Hood. Robin didn't have the need for large sums from his takings such as Congress seems to have.
This sure sounds very much like socialism doesn't it?
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By Al Campbell
Saturday, Aug 2 2008, 07:52 AM
A week ago, I Blogged about Chrysler ending its leasing operations, and suggested that GM and Ford were close to the same decision. All this due in major part to the declining residual value of the trucks on lease.
GM announced a major hit in the last quarter with the loss of over $15 billion. It is very near the precipice, in my opinion, where it will need to actively consider bankruptcy. It has a market value today that is a mere shadow of what it was just a year or two ago.
And now, foreign auto makers are facing similar pressures although certainly not yet to the degree that U.S. auto manufacturers are confronting. BMW announced that it will raise prices and reduce production to stave off the problems faced by others. Nissan has begun to show signs of problems.
Our worldwide vehicle companies are in the throes of a major set of problems that could very likely result in fire sales or outright closures of some old-line companies.
A significant part of these problems can be traced back to fuel prices that have impacted our economy and those of other countries around the world. The costs of fuel have driven down auto and truck sales. This drain on spendable dollars has also taken a huge toll on the rest of our economy.
And, against that backdrop, what has Congress done about these problems? Through the stalling tactics employed by the Democrat-controlled House and Senate, NOTHING has been accomplished. They continue to say NO to oil, NO to nuclear, NO to coal. They feel that we need to suffer to the point that we'll roll over and let them take us where they have intended to take us for years.
We are facing some of the most serious economic issues of several generations and our government thinks this is the 'medicine' we need to get our heads more properly attuned to their 'vision' of what the U.S. and the world needs to look like in the coming half-century.
If there is any 'good news' coming from Washington, it is the fact that the law-makers have gone on their August 'vacation'. The bad news is that our government will remain paralyzed until after the new government is sworn in in 2009.
We cannot afford to simply sit back and watch this mess play out. We need to drill here and drill now! That signal will further depress the price of crude oil on the world market and begin the process of our economic recovery in a big, big way! As a pundit said in the last day or two, it is really hard to install a wind generator on your personal vehicle. It is really hard to wean our country from its primary source of vehicle fuel overnight...and it is absolutely a crime to force us into the coming series of bankruptcies to try to prove some point that is unsupported by science.
I cannot fathom what goes on in the minds of Nancy Pelosi and Harry Reid. I cannot believe that normal human beings have the kind of disregard for their brothers and sisters that these two seem to evidence. I know that politics is referred to as a "blood sport", and I don't necessarily mind them spilling their own...
But I really have to draw the line when they metaphorically spill yours and mine and never even blink in the process.
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By Al Campbell
Monday, Jul 28 2008, 08:25 AM
Have I lost my mind? I hope not.
My concern is this: With gas prices dropping and now at the mid $3.80s per gallon, will we lose our impetus to keep the pressure on our elected officials to get more drilling going and to relax the myriad rules on new refineries?
We are a strange group, we humans. We got used to paying $4.20 per gallon for regular for a week or two and now we're "saving" nearly $.40 a gallon. We forget very quickly that only a year or so ago we were paying a dollar or more less for our gas.
We seem to forget that we were upset over ethanol and its impact on our mileage and on our food prices.
We seem to forget that reformulated gas is costing us more and causing lower miles per gallon.
Are we going to meekly go about our daily business now until prices go back up? Are we going to give our politicians a 'free pass'?
Are we going to let the presidential candidates avoid dealing with this issue...even though they'll make promises that'll probably be forgotten in a week or two?
Are we going to demand that our state representatives push hard to get the ethanol lobby off our backs?
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By Al Campbell
Friday, Jul 18 2008, 09:48 AM
Nancy Pelosi continues to amaze though I shouldn't be amazed by her any longer. She is really a proven quantity by this time. She has made up her mind that we'll simply not have any more oil because it is not good for us and she knows best what is and isn't good for you and me. She maintains that more drilling will do nothing to lower the price of gasoline, jet fuel and diesel fuel, but she derides President Bush for not having already agreed to release some of our strategic oil reserves that would be a mere tiny blip on the radar scope of fuel prices and would do nothing to cause a decrease in futures prices.
She has led, and continues to lead, the effort in the House of Representatives to castigate the greedy oil companies, to threaten to take away their leases on the 68 million acres that have already been searched and determined to hold little that could be drilled economically, and to apply tax surcharges just to teach them a lesson.
Every action such as these does nothing but exacerbate the real problem and cost us money; it costs us more and more tax dollars and it costs us more and more as companies push their tax bills down to the consumer where all tax bills go to be paid.
More than two-thirds of the people in the United States (across all racial and political and economic strata) have told Congress to open up drilling and reduce taxes, but they won't do it because they know better. We miserable Neanderthals called voters just need to pay whenever and whatever asked (told in reality) and trust that Congress will take care of us.
* * * * * * * * * *
Al Gore delivered yet another pronouncement to the politicos, the press and the masses yesterday, as well. Jay Weber made, I thought, an excellent point on today's show on WISN 1130AM when he said that so much of Gore's emphasis on reducing our need for oil seems to hinge on electric power...none of which is generated by the use of oil. Some is generated using gas to fire the gas turbine generators, some is generated by solar and some by wind power. But, the vast majority is generated using coal-fired plants.
The idea that we should spend $3 trillion dollars in the next decade, scrap all the electric generating facilities we have now, string the power transmission lines necessary to get solar and wind-generated power to the point of use from the middle of nowhere, etc. simply defies imagination. He maintains that we need to 'green' the world through our efforts and through our example. China told us again within the past few days that it is not going to play that game. China is going to continue its economic development as is India. Yet the United States is expected to go 'green' at the expense of its own economic well-being when that will have no significant lasting impact on the global environment. The $3 trillion doesn't begin to address the debt-service we're still going to be paying on all the facilities that we've ceased to use.
So, we are being told that we need to bankrupt our economy while we're abdicating our position of power in the world community...and we're to take Al Gore's word for it that this is the way of the future. Reminds me of the old tune with the lines: Don't Worry, Be Happy.
Out of touch & out of control!
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By Al Campbell
Monday, Jun 16 2008, 08:29 AM
The mainstream media has taken up the fight now that Hillary and Barack have gotten their 'thing' settled; at least until the gathering in Denver.
The learned political scientists on our college campuses have nearly unanimously opined that Obama is incapable of being defeated. They have preordained that this election will be among the most lopsided victories for the left that we have witnessed in the entire history of our country. Polls show Obama up by double digits over McCain. It is all over but for the voting.
The election of Barack Obama as our next president is, apparently, inevitable.
So...there you go. We conservatives can simply suck it up, pack it in, and decide how we're going to survive the coming four or eight years. It is divined: Barack Obama is the next President of the United States...and will create a veto-proof majority for Democrats in both houses of our congress.
But wait. Is it really inevitable? Is the smugness of the left such that it will determine the course of history? Is it really time for undefined change simply for the sake of change? Are we in such dire straits that we will anoint Obama without so much as a discussion about that inevitable future? Will the influx of young voters automatically accrue to the benefit of Obama? Have the liberal professors that dominate our college campuses (98% + and counting) so indoctrinated the student body that inevitability is the only outcome imaginable?
Are 'we the people' so enamored of this man of change as to be taken with his oratorical skills in spite of the lack of depth of our knowledge of the details? It is commonly discussed in political circles that the 'devil is in the detail', and yet, so far, there is very little flesh to be found on the skeleton of change.
Will it remain the rule that any question of Obama's positions is akin to unfairly characterizing the man? We smear him when we reflect upon the pastor that he followed willingly for twenty years. We smear him when we talk about his very limited experience in politics, let alone on the national scene. We smear him when we criticize his broadly-brushed position papers. We smear him when he is forced to restate previous statements, sometimes more than once, to 'clarify' what he originally meant to say.
Obama has created a bubble that seems to surround him. It is a protective bubble that keeps the hounds at bay. One is to accept his speeches at face value. One must not question the lack of substance. One must not ask from where the money will come (although we know if we but listen to the tax increase rhetoric). One must not ask which of the ladies in waiting the public would prefer in the White House.
Obama has created a protective bubble with the willing assistance of the liberal media. Will that media be silent as well when we wake up to the second term of Jimmy Carter? Will that media be silent when we throw away victory in the war on terror so that foreign governments will profess to like us better? Will that media be silent when terrorists again begin to strike us in our homeland?
Is it really Obama the Inevitable? Or was the only inevitable thing about all this that the liberal media would fall into lockstep?
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