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Monthly Archives: July 2009
The Conservative Agenda: Its Basis and Its Basics
by Jason Essay written by Norman L. Geisler Introduction As I listen to liberals articulate their agenda, I am struck by the stark contrast between true conservatism and liberalism. In point of fact, I am struck by the unAmerican nature of … Continue reading
Posted in American Society, Essays, Political Thought
Tagged conservatism, Conservative movement, Normal L. Geisler, Political Thought
7 Comments
I want some of what they are Huffing over at the Post.
by Mike Ugh, I cannot believe I am about to utter these words, but the Huffin-too-much Post actually has an article up worth mentioning. (I think I need to shower in turpentine now.) One of the reasons is their point … Continue reading
Posted in American Politics
Tagged bush tax cuts, CBO, Democrats, Health Care Reform, Republican
5 Comments
A Progressive America and Soft Despotism
by Jason Please go to Wintery Knight Blog and see the post he has up accompanying the video. I have never seen the guy put out trash. In fact, Mark Steyn linked to him from the The Corner at NRO. Senator Demint … Continue reading
By all means Mr. President, ‘let the thing be pressed’
President Lincoln during the American Civil War showed determination and decisiveness. Lincoln was fighting political battles at home while trying to defeat a determined army in the field. He knew the only way to win a war was to give way to it. Equip your army, define the goals, assign the mission, then throw them at the enemy’s weakness and capitalize on his own army’s advantages. War had to be brutal. Indeed the war he faced was. But, it could also end as quickly as snapping one’s neck. The key was to get him still long enough to apply the pressure. All of this can be understood by reading Lincoln’s on words — if not dry humor as well. Here is one example of Lincoln’s view on the war. To Grant, who had telegraphed, “If the thing is pressed, I think that Lee will surrender,” Lincoln replied, “Let the thing be pressed.” Continue reading
Reganite Economic Applications: The way out of the financial wilderness.
by Mike
One of my favorite economic writers is author, Amity Shlaes, an admitted classical liberal, Bloomberg columnist, and senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations. Recently she penned “The Forgotten Man,” a chronological narrative of the Great Depression.
Her latest on Bloomberg.com is titled “Reagan Recipe on Fed, Taxes Spells Path From Funk.” Here is a little taste.
July 9 (Bloomberg) — Double-digit unemployment looms. The country is in a funk. The federal budget deficit is widening to an extent not seen in decades.
This scenario isn’t new. It also describes the U.S. in 1982. Somehow, the 1980s and the 1990s turned out to be pretty good years. So it’s worthwhile to compare current policy to the one followed then.
Today, it’s hard to say where the U.S. stands when it comes to the strength of the dollar. The country is divided on the question of whether we are confronting inflation or deflation.
In the early 1980s, things were different. For a while our officials wanted a strong dollar and managed to drive the currency up so that it bought more French francs and German marks than it had in a decade. On the home front, voters in both parties had already come to see inflation as an enemy. The Federal Reserve advocated a tight-money policy and pushed interest rates up to prove it meant what it said.
Though the position on the exchange rate didn’t hold up — our own Treasury Department came to undermine it — the Fed kept up its vigilance on inflation.
Today, taxes are on their way up. Whether it will be abolishing some of the tax deductibility of health care or increasing taxes on soda, President Barack Obama and Congress are clearly signaling the direction in which they want to move. Most tax increases under discussion would make the rich, or companies, the first to pay. The justification offered for this is that the federal government needs the money and may know how to spend it better than the private sector, anyhow. read more…
Hope you enjoy. Continue reading
Posted in Economics
Tagged Amity Shlaes, Economic Downturn, Economic Health, Ronald Reagan
3 Comments
CNN to Susan Roesgen: It’s been real nice but..
If you are not familiar with Susan Roesgen, she is the infamous CNN reporter who got in a little bit of a tizzy with protesters at a Chi-Town Tea Party back in April.
For those of us whom suffer from C.R.A.F.T (Can’t Remember a F#$%-ing Thing) here is the video to her “little exchange.”
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6G3fvNhdoc0&color1=0xb1b1b1&color2=0xcfcfcf&hl=en&feature=player_embedded&fs=1]Well, it now seems that CNN is done with Roesgen. Her contract at the network will not be renewed and she will be leaving.
From TVNewser.
Breaking: TVNewser has learned CNN correspondent Susan Roesgen’s contract will not be renewed and she will be leaving the network.
Roesgen, you’ll recall, was criticized for her coverage at the tax day tea parties in April, when she said the event she was covering in Chicago was, “anti-CNN since this is highly promoted by the right-wing, conservative network Fox.”
Roesgen took a break for a few weeks after that reporting and returned to the air in May covering the Drew Peterson arrest. Most recently, she covered Michael Jackson’s death from Los Angeles. Roesgen joined CNN in 2005.
When TVNewser asked whether Roesgen’s comments at the Chicago tea party rally had anything to do with her not being renewed, a CNN spokesperson said, “I can’t comment on personnel matters.”
As you can see it is eluded to, but not mentioned outright, that her conduct in Chicago may have been the reason she was let go. Susan probably needs a few refresher courses in journalism reminding her she is supposed to report the news, not editorialize it.
Oh I almost forgot, “Hey Susan, I hear the Huffing-too-much Post is hiring liberal media refugees, you might want to give them a call.” Continue reading
CBO Analysis of the Long Term Budget
by Mike
After garnering an unexpected day off from my most gracious employer I found a little time to catch up on my “lite” reading list. One item of interest I came upon was a post from Douglas Elmendorf, Director of the Congressional Budgetary Office concerning the sustainability of the country’s long-term budget.
On his blog, Mr. Elmendorf has officially stated,
Under current law, the federal budget is on an unsustainable path, because federal debt will continue to grow much faster than the economy over the long run. Although great uncertainty surrounds long-term fiscal projections, rising costs for health care and the aging of the population will cause federal spending to increase rapidly under any plausible scenario for current law. Unless revenues increase just as rapidly, the rise in spending will produce growing budget deficits. Large budget deficits would reduce national saving, leading to more borrowing from abroad and less domestic investment, which in turn would depress economic growth in the United States. Over time, accumulating debt would cause substantial harm to the economy. The following chart shows our projection of federal debt relative to GDP under the two scenarios we modeled.
Of course, anyone with half a brain could have easily figured this out on October 3rd, 2008 or February 17th, 2009. All this really does is confirm concerns from an official source.
Now, since a picture is worth a trillion words or more, here is a graph provided by the CBO representing the budgetary pitfall the Director is talking about.

The 800 lb. gorilla in the room is how does this affect your, the average American’s, day-to-day financial health? As pointed out by the CBO, we can expect one of three scenarios; heightened taxes in order to sustain the the government’s increased need for revenue, substantial cuts in government programs and spending, or some combination of the two.
The somewhat left leaning Brookings Institute offers a myriad of solutions which actually coincide with the CBO suggestions of raising taxes and cutting spending. These two, besides lowering interest rates further and blaming Bush, seem to be what we can expect.
- It will prove difficult to close the gap entirely via modifications to existing taxes and spending programs. A new revenue source, such as a value added tax (VAT), may be needed. A VAT imposed at a rate between 15 and 20 percent would essentially close the fiscal gap under the Administration’s budget.
- To eliminate the long-term gap through reductions in health spending growth alone, the growth rate of spending on Medicare and Medicaid would have to fall by 3 percentage points annually over the next 75 years. That is, expenditures currently projected to grow at a rate nearly 2.5 percent faster than GDP during the next ten years would instead have to begin falling immediately as a share of GDP.
If you want health care reform, cap-and-trade, or just plain old big government, you have to pay for it and it is going to be expensive. Remember, “There Ain’t No Such Thing As A Free Lunch,” even if the Progressives tell you so.
With all of this in mind, it is just common sense that with these projected increases in government spending, as a percentage of GDP, the requirements to sustain this level of payrolls will require most everyone to shovel over their “fair share,” not just the top 5% of wage earners. Continue reading
Political Islam — Still in, or on its way out?
by Jason World Politics Review | The End of Political Islam Is the long-predicted decline of Political Islam about to occur? Several French scholars, such as Gilles Keppel and Olivier Roy, have been making this argument since the early 1990s. … Continue reading
Posted in Essays, Foreign Affairs, Political Thought, Religion, Terrorism
Tagged Arab nationalism, Hamas, Hizbullah, Iran, Iranian Revolution, Islamism, Middle East, middle east politics, political Islam
10 Comments
Enlisted Men Are the Same Everywhere
by Jason This is a very amusing story by Mike Tharp who blogs for McClatchy News at the Baghdad Observer. Got a chance to go inside the new U.S. embassy today. It’s been open several months, but it’s still got that … Continue reading
Military orders cancelled for soldier challenging Obama’s citizenship
by Jason Remember this story? I posted something about a small group of military members opposing President Obama’s eligibility as CNC back in February. It appears they have resurfaced and oddly haven’t garnered much sympathy from Obama detractors (generally and … Continue reading
You call that a pitch, Mr. President?
Mixed Boos, High Water Mom Jeans, and a very suspect camera angle made for a great day at the old ball park. I prefer this one much better.
Posted in American Society
Tagged Baseball All Star Game, first pitch, President Bush, President Obama
4 Comments
Liz Cheney: ‘The President has a duty to stand up to the lies of our enemies.’
Liz Cheney takes our president to task about his usual distortion of history and explanation of it to the world that America is the villain or has played no great role in the world. It all depends on the crowd in what … Continue reading
Posted in Foreign Policy, Opinion
Tagged American Exceptionalism, Cold War, Liz Cheney, President Obama, Russia, Soviet Union
5 Comments





