January 2009

Resolved: The Income Tax Should Be Changed to a Flat Tax

by Bill O'Connell on January 14, 2009

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It couldn’t be more clear that the Obama administration should immediately begin the conversion from our convoluted tax code, to a flat tax that could be filed on a post card.  How can I make such a claim?

Well, Charlie Rangel, Chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, the committee that writes the tax laws, seems to have forgotten to pay his income taxes on a villa that he owns in the Dominican Republic.  More recently we learn that Timothy Geithner, Obama’s nominee to be Treasury Secretary, didn’t pay Social Security and Medicare taxes for several years.  The Treasury Department includes the Internal Revenue Service which enforces the tax laws that Mr. Rangel’s Committee writes and collects the money.

So if the tax laws are so complicated that the individual in charge of writing the tax laws cannot understand them enough to follow them, and they are so complicated that the individual in charge of enforcing those tax laws, doesn’t understand what he is charged with enforcing, don’t you think it’s time we simplified the tax laws?  If these highly educated, very experienced, extremely intelligent people cannot comply with the tax code, what hope does the average Joe have?  Perhaps that is why it is estimated we spend $200 billion per year in tax compliance.  Couldn’t that money be more productively be employed elsewhere in the economy?

What do you think?

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Cram This

by Bill O'Connell on January 13, 2009

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With Citibank caving in on the subject of cramdowns, we are all about to take it in the neck.  What the cramdown is, is where a bankruptcy judge can re-write the terms of a mortgage, including lowering the principal on the loan, in effect, “cramming” the loss down the banks throats.

Now I’m no fan of the banks making loans to people who shouldn’t have gotten them, but it has been a long standing principle that in a foreclosure, the bank gets the house, if you can’t pay.  If the loan is structured right, that is, a good down payment then this presents good security for the bank.  In return, banks have traditionally been able to offer lower rates on mortgages than on many other kinds of loans.  However, if you change the rules of the game, such that banks no longer have that kind of security, what is any rational banker going to do?  That’s right, raise the interest rates.

So any banker writing a mortgage in the future, will have to weigh that some day in the future his security could be taken away at the stroke of some legislator’s pen.  While it is true that, Sen. Schumer’s proposed deal is only on loans in place at the time of the legislation and only if the bank and the consumer tried and were unable to negotiate different terms, it still hangs over the mortgage industry.  A banker today, will have to consider that in the next thirty years of the mortgage I am about to write, there may be another serious economic downturn, and in that downturn, some legislator may decide to do this again.  Therefore, I’ll add 1/4% or 1/2% to the rate to cover it, on every mortgage I write from this day forward.

Let’s recap.  Government programs (Fannie, Freddie, Community Reinvestment Act, Clinton’s Justice Department, HUD) push very hard on banks to make loans to marginal lenders.  The housing bubble bursts causing financial crisis and government rides to the rescue so that we can pay more for mortgages forever.

And we keep electing these people.

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Fair and Balanced, Part II

by Bill O'Connell on January 12, 2009

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A week from tomorrow, at noon, Barack Obama will be sworn in as the 44th president of the United States.  At the same moment, George W. Bush will become private citizen Bush, in another peaceful transition in government that is the envy of the world.

Today, President Bush held his last news conference and at it he said that when his term ends next week he will get off the stage, which creates an interesting dilemma.  What will the main stream media do now?

For the past two years their view of fair and balanced is to bash Bush, fair, and praise Obama, balanced.  No matter what the topic of the day, they always had Bush dressed and ready as the villain.  Any serious writer can tell you that for a good story you need conflict.  Who will be the new villain?  Sure, they’ll still be firing away at Bush as he rides off into the sunset, but eventually he will dip below the horizon, and they will have to find a new target.

I can’t imagine the White House press corps at a press conference just pitching softball after softball to Obama to hit out of the park.  The news outside the building will be real and it will not always be sunny.  You will have members of Congress who will try to hold hearings to round up anyone who ever served in the Bush administration and try to throw them in jail, but I don’t think Obama has the stomach for it. He has more important things to tend to.

The press has built the expectations for Obama so high, I truly feel sorry for the guy.  I think with his speech on the economy and that it will be a long hard slog, is at least partially an attempt to lower those expectations, but I believe the damage has been done.  The Democrats now hold both houses of Congress and the White House, who can they blame if they don’t start delivering on their promises and get the economy going again?  And how is the press going to handle it?

As the saying goes, be careful what you wish for.  There is also an old Chinese curse, “May you live in interesting times.”  It will be very interesting.

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Not Very Stimulating

by Bill O'Connell on January 10, 2009

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At 06:00 this fine Saturday morning, the Obama folks released an analysis by their economic team of how their economic stimulus package is supposed to work (see full text here).  Quite frankly, I think there would be more stimulus from handing out coupons to Starbucks for a good shot of Joe, than this stimulus plan suggests.

Among the first things to catch my eye was the following statement:

“It should be understood that all of the estimates presented in this memo are subject to significant margins of error.”

There’s nothing like a good caveat to start off an explanation of how you’re going to spend nearly $1 trillion.  It brings to mind the old economic joke of how economists have successfully predicted eight out of the last five recessions.  While I understand the need to explain that these economists don’t have a crystal ball, you wish they were sitting at the table with a much smaller pile of our chips.

The thrust of the plan calls for “ substantial investments in infrastructure, education, health, and energy. “  To me that translates into bigger government than we have now.  Infrastructure is largely government owned.  There is also a significant lag effect in infrastructure projects.  Education is also government run.  After over $1 trillion in spending by the Department of Education, our education system is no better and probably worse than when it started.  Teacher employment has skyrocketed with the goal of making class sizes smaller with no demonstrable improvement in learning.  So, let’s pour more money into that arena and make sure we saddle communities with higher property taxes for years to come.  Sounds great!  Where do I sign up?  But, it does make the teacher’s unions happy.

Another chunk of the stimulus packages is to provide:

“State fiscal relief designed to alleviate cuts in healthcare, education, and prevent increases in state and local taxes.”

In other words, let’s take money from one government entity and give it to another, the reason being so that they don’t have to run a deficit at the state level.  Instead, we’ll run a deficit at the federal level.  Brilliant!

When you look at the charts, here’s where it really gets interesting.  The plan says it will take 5 years for unemployment to return to a 5% level, which is higher than pre-recession levels and it will reach this level with or without a stimulus package.  The difference is that the stimulus package will provide faster relief in the intervening period.  Their forecast is that unemployment will peak at 8% in 3Q09 with the stimulus, and at 9% in 2Q10, without the stimulus.  So we are to spend ¾ of a trillion dollars for a 1% improvement in the unemployment rate, for four years.  That’s an additional $193 billion a year for four years to get us to the same place we would be without the stimulus.  What the analysis doesn’t show is the stimulative impact on the economy of not having a $775 billion dollar deficit to pay off after the economy recovers.

The analysis then addresses the effect of tax stimulus:

“It is important to note that the jobs effects of temporary broad-based tax cuts would probably be considerably smaller. Large proportions of temporary tax cuts are saved, blunting their stimulatory impact on output and employment. The prototypical recovery package only provides for the first two years of the Making Work Pay tax cut. Our analysis assumes that households treat the tax cut as permanent in determining their short-run spending.” {emphasis added}

I would take that argument a step further.  As we saw earlier in 2008, there was a minimal stimulative effect from the $300-$600 tax credit that was issued.  Given a finite dollar amount, as the proposal states, most people are inclined to save rather than spend it.  I would argue that tax relief of any fixed dollar amount, that would be realistic as we can’t give everyone a check for $1 million, is going to have a limited stimulative effect on the economy.  However, when you cut tax rates, the stimulative effect is genuine and long lasting.  Why?  In the Obama plan, the tax relief is $500 or $1000, depending on if you file individually or jointly.  If I know that I am getting $500, regardless of how much I work, the stimulative effect of the $500 depends on what portion of my income that is. But like the $300, it is likely going to be used in these times for saving or paying down debt.  The fact that I may, and I repeat, may get another $500 next year, isn’t likely going to make me splurge on a new car.  However, if I know that my taxes will be lower on every dollar I earn, because of lower tax rates,  I am encouraged to produce more, work more, keep more, and spend more.

From an article in Reason this past Monday before Obama’s speech:

“Lets break this down. Its nice to see that the change we can believe in won’t alter the way Washington plays games with taxpayer money. We can give Obama the benefit of the doubt until we hear from him later this week, but if “officials” are really committed to “historical and empirical evidence” of how to get out of a recession, they won’t stimulus spend. Japan spent 10 years–its “lost decade”–trying to spend its way out of recession and wound up doubling unemployment and increasing the debt level above GDP. “Historically” real tax cuts for the wealthy and business world increased productivity and national growth, but they aren’t politically savvy, so we’re unlikely to see those too.”

So the search is for “popular” tax cuts, not effective tax cuts.

If you ask someone today which president is most responsible for the Great Depression, the answer will likely be Herbert Hoover.  However, Hoover was president for only three years of the Great Depression, while Roosevelt was president for eight of those years.  So while Hoover, without question, make some key errors that made the situation worse, Roosevelt couldn’t find his way out of the problem for almost three times as long, and yet the Democrats are using Roosevelt as a model but saying we have to do it bigger.  Are you getting a little concerned now?

Obama can use this to his advantage.  Just like Roosevelt and Hoover, Obama can and will blame the economic problems all on George W. Bush, for as long as Obama remains in office.  No matter what he does or fails to do, he can point to Bush and then to the Great Depression and say, hey, these things take a long time to fix.

Another point the Reason article makes is that recipients of the Obama tax cuts are very likely to be people who do not pay income taxes:

“While Americans know better what to do with their money than the federal government, many people got those checks who didn’t pay taxes in the first place, so they got other people’s money back. That redistributory system doesn’t encourage growth, it just hands out money.”

Americans do know better what to do with their money.  So here’s my prescription for the economic problem:

  • Make the Bush tax cuts permanent
  • Explore making the tax cuts deeper, going back to the rates that Reagan put in place starting the longest peacetime expansion in history.  Face it folks, if you want to get the economy moving, you have to give tax relief to people who actually pay taxes.  That’s were the money is, and it will be put to work to invest in businesses and create jobs, not to pay off the credit cards.
  • Start dismanteling the federal government.  It is too big, it spends too much money, programs that start never end, and it is eating up too much of the economy.
    • Why is education a federal issue?  Kill the Department of Education
    • Why is the Department of Agriculture as big as it is when only 2%-3% of the population work in agriculture
    • Why are food stamps a federal program rather than being at the state or local level?
    • Why can’t we fix Social Security and Medicare.  The average return on Social Security investments is about 1%-2% per year, which is dismal
    • Why was the Grace Commission report, prompted by Reagan and finding about $400 billion in savings, largely ignored?
    • Why is our tax code, that is estimated to cost taxpayers $200 billion per year to comply with, not replaced with a flat tax?
  • Kill the uncertainty overhanging the economy.  Tell businesses that the bailout window is CLOSED. Go back to running your businesses like you should, or face the consequences of your actions.  Government should clearly state what it will do and what it won’t do.  Without that, everyone will sit on the sidelines waiting for the other shoe to drop.

Once people stop waiting to hear what the government plan is, they will set about doing what they have to do for themselves.  Many of the problems that got us into this mess were caused by the government (Fannie, Freddie, Community Reinvestment Act, bailing out this company but not that one, keeping interest rates too low for too long, enormous deficit spending).  How any sane person thinks that “only the government” can get us out of it, escapes me.  This great country has enjoyed tremendous growth and prosperity through much of its history, with government playing a very small role.  But government programs and initiatives (New Deal, Great Society) have saddled us with a host of problems that we will be dealing with for many years to come.  It’s time that when the doorbell rings and we open it to hear, “I’m from the federal government, and I’m here to help you,” that we slam the door and follow the age old advice, “If you want something done right, do it yourself.”

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Liberty Takes Another Hit

by Bill O'Connell on January 9, 2009

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Whoever conquers a free town and does not demolish it commits a great error and may expect to be ruined himself.

Niccolo Machiavelli

Under the radar of most news outlets is the new set of rules the Democrats just passed on how business will be conducted in the House of Representatives.  These rules are typically passed with each new Congress but are mostly procedural and of little consequence outside the halls of that chamber.  But Nancy Pelosi’s consolidation of power is underway.

One of the items in the Contract with America that swept many Republicans into office in 1994 and made Newt Gingrich the Speaker of the House, was term limits for committee chairmen.  The objective was to get fresh ideas into the policy making rather than creating fiefdoms that would only change when the majority of the House changed hands.  The last time Democrats were in power that lasted for forty years.

So, many of the new Democratic congressmen that Rahm Emmanuel skillfully recruited to challenge Republicans, and who were in many cases as conservative or more so than the Republican incumbents, are now shut out of power.

“All those nice pro-life, gun-owning young Democrats recruited to run by Rahm Emanuel will never have any real influence now,” says Grover Norquist, head of Americans for Tax Reform. “They were useful in getting Democrats a majority but now they’ll be in the back of the bus.”

So returning to power are the committee chairmen who ran the committees the last time the Democrats were in power and will remain in power until they die or retire.

Tax cuts will effectively be banned, because the new rules “will mean that the only way to push for a tax cut will be to propose a tax increase elsewhere.”  So if you cut taxes over here, but can only do so by raising taxes there, is that a tax cut?

Pelosi has also eliminated a procedural tool called a “Motion to Recommit.”  It sounds pretty arcane, but it was introduced a century ago to give the minority some safeguards against the Republican Speaker of the House Joe Cannon.  In effect, it allows a vote to send a bill on the floor back to the relevant committee.  Barney Frank justified this by saying the minority was “Only interested in game playing.”  Nice.  Barney Frank is only interested in doing good things for the country, like destroying the financial system by saying that Fannie Mae was fiscally sound before it imploded, but Republicans?  They’re only interested in playing games.

It will be an interesting two years to see how much more the Democrats can quash debate and try to ram their programs through.

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Borrow and Spend — Isn’t That How We Got Here?

by Bill O'Connell on January 8, 2009

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The American Recovery and Reinvestment Plan was unveiled today.  Well, a little short on details, but if there is anything true about Washington, it’s that the first thing you have to do is come up with a catchy name.  Once you craft a name that is as American as Motherhood and apple pie, the details are only a distraction.  You have to start with a name that members of Congress would be afraid to vote against.  “You mean, Congressman, that you are opposed to recovery?  And you’re against reinvestment?”  You can hear Katie Couric incredulously asking that question as the Congressman, undoubtedly Republican, struggles for an answer.

Mr. Obama said in his speech:

“It is true that we cannot depend on government alone to create jobs or long-term growth, but at this particular moment, only government can provide the short-term boost necessary to lift us from a recession this deep and severe,” Mr. Obama said. “Only government can break the vicious cycles that are crippling our economy — where a lack of spending leads to lost jobs which leads to even less spending; where an inability to lend and borrow stops growth and leads to even less credit.”

Only government can break the vicious cycles that are crippling our economy?  Okay, so the government is going to borrow and spend $1 trillion dollars, give or take a few billion, and that is going to solve the problem.  Borrow and Spend?  Isn’t that how we got here?

Between Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, The Community Reinvestment Act, Janet Reno in the Clinton Administration threatening banks if they didn’t make enough subprime loans, we had the housing bubble.  Millions of people borrowing money they couldn’t pay back for the sub prime people, and millions of people borrowing against the equity in their homes so they could spend on the good life.  The bubble burst, housing prices collapsed, mortgages went under water, and a deep recession followed.

So Barack Obama proposes borrowing $1 trillion and, unless he has a very large piggy bank from where he’s getting it, spending it to get the economy moving again.  If a significant number of Americans can’t manage their debts now, how are they going to shoulder another $1 trillion?  Let’s not forget, it’s We The People, the government is us.  There is no rich Uncle Sam who made a killing in pork bellies, who is going to foot the bill.  It is us, our children, and our grandchildren.  What we have to do is live within our means.

  • Make the Bush tax cuts permanent.  That will remove the uncertainty that has been hanging over the economy ever since the presidential campaign, blaming Bush for tax cuts for the rich.  Face it, folks, tax cuts work best when they are given to people who actually pay taxes.
  • Take the tax code and shred it and recycle it.  Let’s go to a flat tax that you can file your return on a post card.  It may put a lot of accountants out of work, but it costs Americans about $200 billion a year to prepare.  After five years that’s $1 trillion back in the economy.
  • Cut the federal government down to size.  Start with the Department of Education.  Since 1980 Congress has appropriated $1.06 trillion to the Department of Education.  How’s that working out?  My father dropped out of high school in 1934, and I would put him up against many of today’s high school “graduates” in being able to put a sentence together properly.  So what has all this education spending gotten us?  I’ll wait………….  Still scratching your head, I’m not surprised.  I know it’s gotten us a lot of teachers.  When your goal is smaller classroom sizes, rather than results, the only result you get is bigger payrolls.  So not only has the Department of Education squandered $1 trillion, many school districts have seen their property taxes skyrocket.  Why?  Well, once you hire all those teachers you have to pay them and in many, if not most areas, that funding comes from property taxes.  So the Department of Education hits your left pocket for $1 trillion and your tax assessor hits your right pocket, and what do we have to show for it?  Many colleges now have to teach remedial classes to their incoming freshman to get them up to a level where they can handle freshman courses.
  • Social Security and Medicare — These have to be tackled NOW.  This is the next ticking time bomb.  Social Security is a ponzi scheme that makes Bernie Madoff look like a piker.  Social Security’s inflation adjusted rate of return is about 1.23%.  Any effort by Bush to allow future retiree’s to divert a portion of their contributions into a fund that gets a better return, was shouted down by the Democrats and demonized as trying to starve granny.  Well, keep yukking it up, and call for another round of drinks, but the bill is coming due and when it does there will be no where to hide, and we better not be trying to digest Obama’s trillion dollar deficits at the same time.
  • Couple saving Social Security with term limits.  If you are not a politician for life, you might have the guts to do some heavy lifting, but if you are always running for office and your goal is to offend as few people as possible and give out government goodies to as many people as possible, you are naturally disposed to make the government bigger and delay any tough decisions until after you’re.  So don’t fix Social Security, just make it solvent long enough for you to pick up your spoils and go home.
  • Campaign Finance Reform — this folly gets rolled out around each election.  Here’s my modest solution.  If you hack back the size of government, there will be a lot less for lobbyists to lobby about.  If they have nothing to lobby about, they will have to go find something else to do. For those that are left, it will be a lot easier to see what they’re up to, since there won’t be that many of them.
  • Go back to every government agency and look at the legislation that created them.  Has that original mission been accomplished?  If so, shut them down.  When I worked in telecommunications, one of the Federal Regulatory bodies was the Rural Electrification Administration.  This agency was created during the Great Depression to bring electricity to farms.  I wondered what that had to do with telephones.  Well, the problem of bringing electricity to farms was pretty much solved, so they needed to do something else, so why not telephones.  I am sure that cell phones will be next if they are not already working on that.  But what we should really do, what we should have done years ago, is throw a nice party, thank all the employers and managers for a job well done, send them on their way and put the buildings up for sale.  But that doesn’t happen in Washington, agencies created for one purpose just morph into something else.
  • Following on the previous point is the Department of Agriculture.  It was raised to cabinet level in 1889.  In 1870, 70%-80% of the population worked on farms.  Today that percentage is 2%-3%.  So why do we still need a Department of Agriculture? Today it has an annual budget of $95 billion, so in the next ten years about $1 trillion will be spent in the Department of Agriculture.  The Federal beast grows without bounds.

There you have it, $3 trillion between tax filing, the Department of Education, and the Department of Agriculture.

The federal government must tighten its belt like everyone else and stop soaking up an increasing share of the economy.  Barack Obama and the federal government aren’t going to create jobs unless it is by making the beast bigger.  The majority of jobs are created in this country by small businesses.  What this economy needs is a degree of certainty.

If Obama really believes in fiscal discipline he should say the bailout window is closed.  It was opened to keep money flowing during a crisis, now all companies should get off the line, and go back to running their businesses.  As long as the window stays open there is uncertainty.  Can I get a bailout?  That company got a bailout, why not me?

What roils the markets is uncertainty.  If the market doesn’t know if the government is going to act or not act;  if the Bush tax cuts are going to continue or be rolled back;  if the auto companies are going to get bailed out or not;  is the government going to spend a trillion or not.  The U.S. economy and the American people can work this out.  The more government stays involved, the longer the uncertainty will remain, and the longer and deeper the recession will be.

As General Patton said, “Lead, follow, or get the hell out of the way.”

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How the Pros Steal an Election

by Bill O'Connell on January 6, 2009

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Who could forget, if the left would ever let us, the Florida brouhaha about Bush stealing the election?  The fact is that Bush won the election, he won the recount, he won the re-recount, and he not only won according to a investigation by the Miami Herald and USA Today but according to that investigation if the rules that the Gore team wanted were applied, Bush’s margin of victory would have tripled.  But all you ever hear from the left is that Bush “stole” the election.  When it comes to stealing elections the Democrats are the pros.

In 2004, the race for the governorship of Washington state was very close with Republican Dino Rossi winning over Democrat Christine Gregoire by a mere 261 votes.  Under Washington law a vote that close requires a machine re-count.  The results of the hand recount was that Rossi won again, this time by 42 votes.  Rather than concede, the Democrats ponied up $800,000 for a hand re-count.  After that recount it showed Gregoire ahead by 129 votes.  Okay, shut it down, it’s over, we have a winner.  Due to the closeness of the race Rossi asked Gregoire to a runoff election.  Gregoire refused.  As she put it, “The bottom line is the election is over. Today we have a governor-elect. It’s time to move forward, and I am prepared to take on the people’s work.”  In King’s county, the final tally had 3,539 more votes counted than voters who participated in the election.

Fast forward to Minnesota.  When the election results came in Norm Coleman, the Republican won by just over 700 votes.  After the election, ballots started showing up in the trunk of cars; some districts were ruled that the election night votes were accurate, other districts were ruled the opposite;  a number of duplicate ballots were not marked duplicate as required and so were counted twice.  Many districts had the same situation as the Washington election where the numbers of votes tallied exceeded the number of voters.

So where is the outrage from the media.  Bush wins four out of four and he “stole” the election.  Gregoire and Franken lose the general election and some shady counting turns up in the recount or recounts (you have to keep recounting until the Democrat is ahead and then you immediately stop), where you have more votes than voters and everything it just fine.  Just like we have heard next to nothing about the Washington election these past four years, don’t expect to hear much from the press when Democrats steal an election.

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Obama’s Unraveling

by Bill O'Connell on January 6, 2009

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I was wondering how long it would take for Barack Obama’s lack of experience or a power base to manifest itself, but it appears the moment has arrived, and the problems keep coming.

His recent announcement or leak by his aides that Leon Panetta is his choice for head of the CIA is confounding, to say the least.  Panetta may be a nice man, and a good administrator, but in the midst of the War on Terror who but a rookie would put a rookie as head of the CIA?  Apparently Obama couldn’t push back those on the left who want no one who agrees with the Bush Administration in the post.  Two other potential appointees got hooted down by Obama’s supporters so he had to go with this pick.  The CIA is notorious for not liking outsiders.  Panetta has no intelligence experience, other than listening in on security briefings as Clinton’s Chief of Staff.

Bill Richardson withdraws his name from nomination as Commerce Secretary, due to a gathering scandal.

Eric Holder as Attorney General pick approved pardons for the FALN terrorists while working in the Clinton Justice Department and now he is responsible for prosecuting terrorists.

The Blagojevich scandal doesn’t want to go away and now the Democrats are battling over whether or not they will seat the man appointed to replace Obama in the Senate

We have the Coleman/Franken fiasco in Minnesota; Charlie Rangel under investigation for not paying taxes despite being chairman of the committee that writes the tax laws (Ways and Means); an item in the NY Times about a donation to the Clinton library from an individual who benefited from legislation supported by Hillary Clinton…

How long before the press decides the honeymoon is over?

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Keep the Change

by Bill O'Connell on January 6, 2009

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Early this morning I was listening to a news broadcast where they said that this fiscal year’s federal budget deficit (October 2008-September 2009) will top $1 trillion which is more that triple the largest budget deficit in history.  That sounded pretty bad even considering the financial bailout that the government was undertaking to keep the money flowing.

Reading later in the day in the Wall Street Journal, Obama is quoted as saying, “We’re already looking at a $1 trillion budget deficit or close to a $1 trillion budget deficit, and potentially we’ve got $1 trillion deficits for years to come,” {emphasis added}.  Years to Come?  This is hope? This is change? I’ll give you a moment to try to wrap your mind around that statement before I continue.

If we see trillion dollar deficits for years to come, That’s All Folks!, our economy is gone, G-O-N-E.

Now I understand he may have just been saying that for the shock effect because he follows that statement with the another about the necessity of budget reform.  Budget reform? People, budget reform is not going to close a trillion dollar shortfall, and the very fact that the president-elect even utters the words is like shouting FIRE in a crowded theater.  Does he think that is leadership?  Here is where Obama’s lack of executive experience is on full display, and the man is yet to take office.

In an excellent piece on Cafe Hayek, Russ Roberts explains that if you cut taxes but you do not cut spending by an equal or larger amount, you are not really cutting taxes.  All you are doing is moving them around.  To put it another way, if you cut taxes today and spend the same or more, you are just deferring the taxes to later.  The debt will eventually have to be paid and it is paid through taxes.  So with trillion dollar budget deficits on the horizon, there will be a tax bill coming due that will crush the economy for us or for our children.

Someone needs to take Obama aside and tell him never to make such a public statement again, lest someone throw a net over him and carry him off to an asylum.  Second, he needs to get with his advisors and start hacking away at the size of the government and I recommend starting with the Department of Education.  Although it took 28 years for that department to spend a trillion dollars, it’s a start.  But this is not going to be fixed by tinkering or eliminating earmarks.  Our government has gotten too big and is meddling in too many things, causing many of the problems it is now trying to fix.  Government needs to be cut down to size.

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Much Ado About Nothing

by Bill O'Connell on January 1, 2009

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An editorial in today’s New York Times, the editors with high dudgeon opine about the parody “Barack the Magic Negro,”  and how inappropriate the Republicans are to stoop to these levels.  This absurdity is on par with someone setting a house on fire and then wanting to be hailed as a hero because they dialed “911″.  Let’s break this down.

Which conservative made up the “Barack the Magic Negro” moniker?  Uh, none.  Actually it was the L.A. Timesthat published an opinion piece on March 19, 2007 entitled, “Obama the ‘Magic Negro’”.  The LA Times is hardly a bastion of conservatism, being among the most liberal newspapers in the country.  In the piece it lumped Obama in with Sidney Poitier, Morgan Freeman, Scatman Cruthers, Michael Clarke Duncan, Will Smith and Don Cheadle as examples of “white America’s idealized, less-than-real black man.”  In other words, Obama was an unworthy presidential candidate because “He has no past, he simply appears one day to help the white protagonist.”  So let’s re-cap this.  The LA Times says that Obama shouldn’t be running for president because he is not sufficiently “in-your-face” anti-white, and that somehow makes the Republicans out of touch?

Paul Shanklintook the LA Times article and made a parody out of it.  In the parody (def: any humorous, satirical, or burlesque imitation, as of a person, event, etc.) Shanklin imitates the voice of Al Sharpton speaking through a megaphone.  The Sharpton character refers to the LA Times as calling Obama the “Magic Negro” and laments that people are going to vote for Obama and not Sharpton, even though Sharpton has “paid his dues” and comes from “the ‘hood.”  Where’s the racism?  Sharpton has run for the presidency.  Sharpton was unsuccessful.  Does Sharpton resent Obama for seeming to make it look so easy?  I don’t know, and he probably wouldn’t admit to it if you asked him, but let’s look to someone from a similar camp to Shapton, Jesse Jackson.  While not realizing he was within range of an open mike, Jackson was taped as saying the wanted to “cut Obama’s n**s off,” for apparently talking down to blacks.  Again, so how is this racism by conservatives ?  If you live in or around New York and have witnessed the antics of Al Sharpton over the years, this is a dead-on parody.

I disagree with Chip Saltsman’s judgment in publicly sending this parody around while running for the chairmanship of the RNC, for the simple reason the Magic New York Times would twist a liberal position into racism by conservatives.  But the New York Times fiddles as its readership collapses, because of patently ridiculous editorials such as this one.  Oh, by the way, did you see where the New York Times is being sued for $27 million in a deformation of character suit, for printing a misleading article alleging an affair between a lobbyist and John McCain?  As thin as the story was, they ran it on the front page, above the fold.  Do you think they were trying to influence the election, not on the editorial page, but on the front page?  Once known as the newspaper of record, the New York Times is now a disgrace.

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