Combs Spouts Off

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How the Repubs blew their lead

Posted by Richard on April 22, 2005

Captain Ed’s latest post on the judicial nominations provides the best brief history of Republican incompetence and squandered opportunity that I’ve read (emphases added):

Three months ago, Frist had these votes locked up, fresh off a resounding win in November 2004 and the eight-seat swing to the GOP it produced in the Senate. The Senate Democrats had started the session badly, enhancing their reputation as radical loonies as they embarassed themselves by challenging Ohio’s electors for no good reason except to bitch about losing the election and to complain about supposed voting irregularities in cities and precincts controlled by Democrats. After the ever-courageous Mark Dayton made a rare public appearance in DC to blow all precedents of courtesy and call Condoleezza Rice a liar during a Senate debate on her nomination, the American electorate understood that Democrats planned on simple-minded obstructionism for its own sake and for a few cheap headlines.

A funny thing happened on the way to restoring the Constitutional process, however; the GOP sat on the ball, a tactic well known by Minnesota Vikings fans, and one that practically guarantees a loss. This allowed the media to get back into the game, pushing the GOP around the field by constantly referring to their efforts as "radical", "extremist", and their nominees as "out of the mainstream" — even though Brown, for one, overwhelmingly won re-election to her Supreme Court post in California, hardly a bastion of conservative electors. Now the more moderate Republicans in the caucus have lost their intestinal fortitude for standing up for due process and the reputations of their nominees, or at least they had up to now.

Unfortunately, this vote will not take place now. The GOP had to schedule more pressing business before the recess in the first week of May. The emergency? The new highway bill. You all recall when we fought to expand the GOP majority in the Senate to get that highway bill passed, right? That legislation inspired all of us to donate money that could have gone to family vacations and to assist others in our community to the NRSC instead in 2002 and 2004 … right?

That’s what Frist and the GOP leadership expects you to believe now, apparently.

Effin’ unbelievable. The old joke is right: the evil party and the stupid party.

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Consistency? Yeah, right.

Posted by Richard on April 22, 2005

Pejman Yousefzadeh links to a Washington Times story about Ohio Democrat Stephanie Tubbs Jones, a member of the House ethics committee, who took a weekend trip to the Puerto Rican island of Vieques. According to her signed travel disclosure form and end-of-the-year financial disclosure forms, the trip was paid for by a lobbying firm — a violation of ethics rules. All involved are now insisting that that was a mistake, that the lobbying firm merely arranged the trip on behalf of a private Puerto Rican special interest group, Todo Puerto Rico con Vieques (TPRV).

A number of House Dems went on this trip, led by Nancy Pelosi. But the others either got their stories straight, listing TPRV as the sponsor of the trip, or, like Sheila Jackson-Lee, simply didn’t file itemized disclosure forms.

     Leon Buck, chief of staff for Mrs. Jackson-Lee, initially said he had no record of his boss going on the trip. Told about her appearance in Vieques press reports at the time, he then dismissed the story.
    "This trip is four years old," Mr. Buck said. "I’m not sure why this is even relevant."

Pejman wants the lobbyist who denied paying for the trip to testify under oath:

Well then let’s swear that man in! Because after all, this issue is all the rage, and we are supposed to investigate it beyond merely what Tom DeLay may have done, right?

Right?

Yeah, right. Don’t hold your breath.

NOTE: The Washington Times story linked above may or may not require registration. I don’t remember. You see, I’m one of those trusting — and lazy — souls who lets these corporate websites fill my computer with their cookies so that when I visit them again, they know who I am. Therefore, I may from time to time link to a site without realizing — or warning readers — that it requires registration. OK, you’ve been warned.

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Forget guns, regulate doctors!

Posted by Richard on April 22, 2005

It’s not new, but it’s still funny. Thanks to Vodkapundit for pointing to this item at Fat Steve’s Blatherings:

 Some interesting statistics:

Doctors:

      (A) The number of physicians in the U.S.is 700,000.

      (B) Accidental deaths caused by physicians per year are 120,000.

      (C) Accidental deaths per physician is 0.171. (Statistics courtesy of U.S.- Dept. of Health Human Services.)

Guns:

      (A) The number of gun owners in the U.S.is 80,000,000. Yes, that’s 80 million.

      (B) The number of accidental gun deaths per year, for all age groups, is 1,500.

      (C) The number of accidental deaths per gun owner is 0.0000188.

      SUMMARY: Statistically, doctors are approximately 9,000 times more dangerous than gun owners.

      Remember: "Guns don’t kill people, doctors do."

      Fact: NOT EVERYONE HAS A GUN, BUT ALMOST EVERYONE HAS AT LEAST ONE DOCTOR.

      Please alert your friends to this alarming threat.  We must ban doctors before this gets completely out of hand.  (Out of concern for the public at large, I have withheld the statistics on lawyers for fear that the shock would cause people to panic and seek medical attention.)

Note: Fat Steve got it from Baen’s Bar and provides the link, but there’s a "sign-in/visit" gatekeeper process in the way, so…  

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Confirm Them

Posted by Richard on April 22, 2005

For all the information and intellectual ammunition you could ever want on the judicial confirmation battles, including links to petitions, visit Confirm Them. Today’s post offers a prediction/threat and minces no words (emphasis in original):

How is it remotely possible that the Republicans supposedly on the fence on this could fail to understand that if they don’t get these judges through, they will fail to see a majority again for a generation?!? I mean, this is serious. If they fail to break the filibuster against these judges, the revolt on the right will be profoundly huge. …  Hagel and McCain and Snowe and Collins will all be in the minority again, for good. And they will deserve it, because they will have failed to stand up against character assassination, the tyranny of a minority, the abrogration of Senate precedent, and the obvious meaning of the Constitution — ALL AT ONCE. This is serious, folks. If Schumer and company succeed at their sick perversion of decency, precedent and fair play, then there is no reason, none whatsoever, to believe that the GOP in Washington is anything other than an invertebrate mass of barely breathing protoplasm.

As the puppy blender would say, indeed.

Hugh Hewitt has his own predictions:

The failure to break the filibuster will result in the defeat of Senators Snowe and Chaffee in their 2006 re-election campaigns if they are among the defectors, the end of any idea of Susan Collins joining the leadership, and the end of Senator Hagel’s and senator Frist’s presidential ambition.  Fundraising for the National republican Senatorial Committee will crater, and the majority so recently and dearly won could well vanish in a matter of 18 months.

If the filibuster continues, it will spread to Supreme Court  –hard-left activist Nan Anton has guaranteed it– and the deserting senators will have the responsibility for that on their heads as well.  If the Democrats are going to run the chamber, it might as well be done formally so that the public can assess the blame for the gridlock.
 

UPDATE: Tonight’s 10 o’clock 9News reported that Sen. Ken Salazar (D-Colo.) and Focus on the Family were trading barbs. Focus on the Family has been running ads accusing Senate liberals of opposing judicial nominees because the have strong religious beliefs. Sen. Salazar took exception, insisting that he’s as strongly Christian as anyone and doesn’t appreciate their accusations.

As a strongly non-Christian person, all I can say to Salazar is, "How do you reconcile lying during the campaign with your faith?" I’ve sent him the following letter:

I am not religious. I am not Republican. I am not anti-abortion. But I am quite certain of what is fair, what is right, and what is in keeping with Senate precedent and with the Constitution.

During your campaign, you made a promise about judicial nominations. You committed to voting to give every nominee an up-or-down vote on the floor of the Senate. Will you keep that promise?

Please let me know whether I can count on your word or not.

If you’re a Colorado resident, please contact Sen. Salazar with a similar message. Regardless of where you live, please contact your senators and some of the gutless, wavering Republicans and demand an up-or-down vote on the Senate floor for all nominees reported favorably out of committee.

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Question of the week

Posted by Richard on April 20, 2005

Rush Limbaugh had a caller today named Cory (and if I’m any judge of accents, he must be one of those  –gasp!– black conservatives) who was just brilliant. I wish I had a recording of that call, and I’m hoping the transcript and/or audio will be posted on Rush’s non-member site later today.

Cory thought Bush was just wonderful in his handling of international matters and the war, and just awful in his handling of the domestic agenda. He gave some examples (the drug benefit, spending binge, lack of resoluteness on judges and appointments, lack of strong leadership over the spineless members of his party), and then Cory posed a brilliant question: If Ronald Reagan had had all the political advantages that Bush has, what would he have been able to accomplish?

I think someone needs to talk to Bush about that. When a McCain or Voinovitch bails on Bush, when one of his appointees is unfairly savaged by the Dems, when the compromisers and appeasers are urging him to reach out to Dems once more, to offer another olive branch, to move further left, Bush should ask himself: WWRD?*

*What Would Reagan Do?

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Stupid law of the week

Posted by Richard on April 20, 2005

Via FARK.com, I found this testament to the intelligence of Fort Wayne city council members. Apparently, they passed an "open container" law to crack down on the miscreants who drive while drinking a beer. But they worded their law rather poorly, so there were "unintended consequences":

That means an open can of soda, or even an open bag of chips in the car, is technically against the law, and could be subject to a 50-dollar fine.

They’re correcting the wording. Probably had to bring in a consultant to recommend addition of the phrase "of alcoholic beverages." A third try will probably be necessary to nail down the definition of alcoholic beverages.

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Libertarian paternalism???

Posted by Richard on April 20, 2005

If "libertarian paternalism" strikes you as one of the most moronic (both the regular and oxy kind) phrases you’ve ever seen, you won’t be surprised to learn that it’s being promoted by some leftist busybodies who think that we’re suffering from too many choices and that the government ought to do us a favor and limit our choices more.

If you can stand to learn more about these horse’s asses, check out the sound thumping that Pejman Yousefzadeh applies in his new TCS column, Choice and Its Enemies.

I think Yousefzadeh is correct in suspecting that there are political reasons why certain psychologists, economists, and other academics are suddenly discovering that (a) most people are incapable of making good choices, and (b) having too many choices makes us unhappy. Yousefzadeh mentions Social Security reform, health care reform, and the school choice movement as policy areas in which the left desperately needs a counter-argument to the idea of more individual choice.

I wouldn’t be surprised if George Soros or the Tides Foundation funded the "studies" proving that we need fewer choices.

(HT: Instapundit)

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OK City, Waco, and … Baghdad?

Posted by Richard on April 20, 2005

This morning, I heard on the news that today is the 10th anniversary of the Oklahoma City bombing. The thought that immediately entered my mind was, "Also, the 12th anniversary of the Waco massacre. And the 230th anniversary of Concord and Lexington."

I’m sorry that Waco has been so thoroughly forgotten. Not to mention Concord and Lexington.

But I’m also sorry that some who still remember Waco think like Anthony Gregory, who says in this LewRockwell.com column:

Some conservatives still condemn Waco all the while cheering on Iraq, where Waco has been happening every day since the invasion.

Yeah, right, Waco and Iraq are morally equivalent. Since the invasion. Killing Islamofascists who revel in hacking off heads and blowing up schools, markets, and hospitals and whose avowed goal is to force everyone on earth to submit or die; fighting these monsters while taking the greatest pains ever taken to minimize innocent civilian casualties, even though it greatly increases the risk to our troops — that’s pretty much the same as gassing and shooting 80 peaceful, non-violent Americans, mostly unarmed women and children, because one of the adults may possibly have been guilty of a technical paperwork violation of some stupid gun control act.

And making it possible for millions of Iraqis to lift their purple fingers with pride is just like having a sniper shoot Vicki Weaver on her porch while she held her baby.

Morally equivalent? Yeah, right. Remind me to quit paying any attention to LewRockwell.com. It’s bad for my blood pressure.

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The definitive Churchill-news blog

Posted by Richard on April 20, 2005

If you just haven’t heard enough already about Ward Churchill, go visit Jim Paine’s blog, Pirate Ballerina. There’s a cornucopia of information, criticism, discussion, and links to other sources on the subject of Colorado’s own Che wannabe.

For instance, Paine provides the definitive summary and review of Churchill’s speech (noting that "honestly, he just has the one") in his April 18 post, ‘Churchill’ Like a Pro. Here’s a taste:

As the satirist Karl Kraus pointed out (which quote I’ve shamelessly cribbed from The Weekly Standard ), "’the secret of the demagogue is to make himself as stupid as his audience, so they believe they are as clever as he." In achieving that level of stupidity, Churchill has succeeded, and judging from his audience, it was no mean feat. 

As they say, read it all. And spend some time browsing through the top posts, essays, and articles.

Today, Paine links to Mac Johnson’s wonderful Human Events story,  Ethnic Drag Queens: Red-Faced in Red Face, about ethnic poseurs and the liberals who love them. Here’s Johnson’s take on Churchill:

A professor of ethnic grievance and Native American studies, Mr. Churchill claimed to be an American Indian, a combat veteran, an artist creating original Native American paintings, an author of scholarly writings on Indian grievances, and a militaristic self-appointed leader of "his" people.

In reality, Ward Churchill is a delusional white boy from Urbana, Ill., who never saw combat, created his "art" by scanning and colorizing other people’s photographs and sketches, is accused of plagiarizing some of his scholarly writings, and has made a life’s work out of denying, defaming and defrauding his actual people.

 Yeah, read all of this one, too.

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About those Gitmo detainees

Posted by Richard on April 20, 2005

Rowan Scarborough, in the Washington Times, has an interesting story based on a new Pentagon report about the Guantanamo detainees. Of course, the information comes from the Pentagon, which does have an interest in rebutting the critics of the detentions. So take it with a grain of salt.

Nonetheless, the report includes sufficient details, examples, and names that it’s hard to dismiss the whole thing as government spin.

The report contends that even now, three years after their capture, some of the detainees are providing useful intelligence, and it provides some examples. More interesting to me, however, are two other items in the report.

Item one: Where are they now?

    The report said that at least 10 former detainees the Pentagon knows by name have rejoined the war against coalition forces. 
     One of them, Abdullah Mahsud, had denied links to al Qaeda and said he was forced to join the Taliban army. Today, Mahsud is back in Afghanistan leading a gang of kidnappers.

Item two: What about the ones that aren’t cooperating?

     "A detainee who has assaulted [Guantanamo] guards on numerous occasions and crafted a weapon in his cell stated that he can either go back home and kill as many Americans as he possibly can, or he can leave here in a box," the report said. "Either way, it’s the same to him."

If he’s going to leave it up to us, I know which option I’d vote for.

The story closes with this food for thought:

    The capture of these terrorists and others likely deprived al Qaeda of new leaders. "It is likely that many Guantanamo detainees would have risen to positions of prominence in the leadership ranks of al Qaeda and its associated groups," the Guantanamo report said.

As a libertarian, I’m not at all happy with the notion that the President can simply decide to detain someone indefinitely, with no review or appeal.

But…but…but… My fellow libertarians, civil libertarians, ACLU members, and others outraged by the Guantanamo detentions, you’re going to have to offer an alternative other than waving your arms and insisting that we release them all now. If you expect me to take you seriously, that is.

I don’t pretend to have an answer. Maybe there isn’t one, except a reluctant admission that sometimes you have to do something that, judged in a vacuum, would be wrong — but you’re doing it to prevent even greater wrongs.

Does that make me a moral relativist? I don’t think so. Rand argued that there can’t be a conflict between the moral and the practical, properly understood. A rational moral code can’t require you to act in an impractical, quixotic, or self-destructive manner. A similar thought lies behind the contention that the Constitution is not a suicide pact.* Context matters. Consequences matter.

* That phrase is often rendered in quotes and attributed to one of several Supreme Court justices. Slate provides the whole convoluted story here. The original source is Justice Robert Jackson, writing in a 1949 dissenting opinion:

"There is danger that, if the court does not temper its doctrinaire logic with a little practical wisdom, it will convert the constitutional Bill of Rights into a suicide pact."

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Pope-bashing begins

Posted by Richard on April 19, 2005

While taking my lunch-time walk, listening to talk radio (Rush), I heard a news story about Cardinal Ratzinger being named pope. I don’t know which radio network it was (due to a Rockies game, Rush was pushed to a "sister station" that I don’t normally listen to). Could be CNN, ABC, …

The reporter noted that Ratzinger was head of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, and added parenthetically that it used to be the Inquisition. As if it had just recently changed its name.

Just in case that wasn’t biased and pointed enough, he went on to describe Ratzinger’s role as "head of the thought police" for the Catholic church.

I’m an atheist libertarian. It’s bad enough that I find myself having to defend Republicans from scurrilous attacks by the Left and smears and distortions from their media mouthpieces. Do I have to start defending Catholics, too?

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Pot, kettle, … same old story

Posted by Richard on April 19, 2005

I’m not a fan of Tom DeLay. I’ve disliked him since the outrageous arm-twisting that got the Medicare drug benefit passed. Besides, he just looks like a pugnacious, pusillanimous thug. That’s unfair, I know, but…

Then there’s my firm conviction that at least nine out of ten congresscritters, DeLay included, ought to be horsewhipped for a multiplicity of good reasons.

Nevertheless, the orchestrated moral outrage of the Dems and their media mouthpieces regarding DeLay is getting a bit hard to take. Let’s look at the critics’ charges.

DeLay was admonished three times last year by the House Ethics Committee, all by unanimous vote. The first was over the aforementioned dirty tactics on the drug benefit bill, and I heartily concur in that criticism. In fact, I’d have favored something stronger than an admonishment (the committee’s lightest "penalty," if it can be called that) — at the least, a reprimand, and more likely, a formal censure.

The second and third were less clear-cut — asking for FAA help in tracking Texas Dems who fled to avoid a redistricting vote, and participating in a golfing fundraiser that created the "appearance that donors were being provided special access" to him. The committee said, in effect, "we can’t find proof that you’ve broken any rules or laws, but it looks like you’re getting close." I don’t know — that sounds like a cop pulling you over and saying "Technically, you may have been within the legal speed limit, but you were getting close to speeding, so I’m warning you." How would that sit with you?

Next, the critics charge that Colo. Rep. Joel Hefley was "ousted" as Ethics Committee chairman because he supported the above admonishments. Nope, not "ousted" or "bounced" or "purged" (as Nancy Pelosi said) — the GOP has term limits for committee chairs, and Hefley was term-limited out. Critics say that the term limit rule could have been waived on Hefley’s behalf. Umm, yeah, OK — but how is not waiving the rule an ouster or purge?

Hefley was replaced by Rep. Doc Hastings, the second-ranking Republican, moving up to the chairmanship just as one would expect in a system that’s mostly seniority-based. Critics calling Hastings a "party loyalist" are ignoring the fact that he also voted to admonish DeLay three times, just like Hefley. Critics point to two other Republican "critics of DeLay" who were replaced on the committee. But all the DeLay votes were unanimous, so the Republicans who weren’t replaced were just as much "critics of DeLay." I don’t know what the normal turnover rate for committees is, but I’m less than persuaded that this is some nefarious scheme.

Critics note that the PACs of two new committee appointees (Smith and Cole) had donated to DeLay’s legal defense fund in 2001 and 2004. OK, maybe you’re wondering if they’ve been rewarded for their support. But does it look anything like the congressional vote-buying that Nancy Pelosi appears to have indulged in? From an April 14 Roll Call story (emphasis added):

A controversial fundraising committee run by House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) was slapped with a $21,000 fine by the Federal Election Commission for enabling Pelosi to funnel more than $100,000 in illegal contributions to Democratic candidates in late 2002 as she was vying to become Democratic leader.

Of course, there are the indictments in Texas of three people involved in a DeLay PAC. I don’t know much about those charges, but the Wall Street Journal described the indicting DA this way (link — registration required):

Mr. Earle, a partisan Democrat, has a record of making suspect accusations: In 1993, he indicted newly elected Senator Kay Bailey Hutchison on evidence so weak the case was never brought to trial. The indictments of Mr. DeLay’s associates came just six weeks before November’s elections; Mr. Earle’s primary aim, it seemed, was to derail Mr. DeLay’s ultimately successful efforts to achieve the first Republican majority in the Texas delegation to the U.S. House since Reconstruction.

Again, I’m not ready to put the needle in DeLay’s arm just yet.

Junkets? Paid for, indirectly, by private interests who might want to curry favor with politicians? Yeah, I’ve got a problem with that. But am I supposed to believe that DeLay’s junkets are somehow unique or something? I can’t find it right now, but I know I’ve seen a recent analysis showing just how prevalent these privately-funded congressional junkets are (with Dems in the lead). "Everyone does it" isn’t much of a defense, but I look askance when the same everyones who are doing it themselves feign outrage that their opponents are doing it.

I’m not at all bothered by Delay’s hiring of family members for his campaign staff. The salaries came to around $50-60k/yr., so he isn’t exactly throwing huge gobs of money at them. I don’t see an ethical issue with hiring qualified, trusted family members to work on the campaign (if you do, don’t contribute to those campaigns). Apparently, a lot of congresscritters share my view. From an April 14 LA Times story:

WASHINGTON — At least 39 members of Congress have engaged in the controversial practice of paying their spouses, children or other relatives out of campaign funds, or have hired companies in which a family member had a financial interest, records and interviews show.

House campaign funds have paid more than $3 million to lawmakers’ relatives over the last two election cycles, records show.

The real ethical problem, IMHO, isn’t when congresscritters hire their relatives, it’s when lobbying groups hire congresscritters’ relatives. And there are plenty of instances of that, Republican and Democrat. Take a look at the table at the bottom of this 2003 CNBC report. The all-time champ seems to be one of the most self-righteous critics of DeLay and of Republican ethics in general, Sen. Harry Reid. From a 2003 LA Times story (emphases added):

Nevada’s senior U.S. senator, Democrat Harry Reid, assured colleagues that his bill was a bipartisan measure to protect the environment and help the economy in America’s fastest-growing state.

What Reid did not explain was that the bill promised a cavalcade of benefits to real estate developers, corporations and local institutions that were paying hundreds of thousands of dollars in lobbying fees to his sons’ and son-in-law’s firms, federal lobbyist reports show.

At least 17 senators and 11 members of the House have children, spouses or other close relatives who lobby or work as consultants, most in Washington, according to lobbyist reports, financial-disclosure forms and other state and federal records. Many are paid by clients who count on the related lawmaker for support.

But Harry Reid is in a class by himself. One of his sons and his son-in-law lobby in Washington for companies, trade groups and municipalities seeking Reid’s help in the Senate. A second son has lobbied in Nevada for some of those same interests, and a third has represented a couple of them as a litigator.

In the last four years alone, their firms have collected more than $2 million in lobbying fees from special interests that were represented by the kids and helped by the senator in Washington.

So pervasive are the ties among Reid, members of his family and Nevada’s leading industries and institutions that it’s difficult to find a significant field in which such a relationship does not exist.

Another leading critic of Republican ethics is Sen. Boxer. From a 2003 Weekly Standard story:

Three years ago, Sen. Barbara Boxer pushed through Congress a bill providing federal recognition for Northern California’s Coast Miwok tribe. Boxer circumvented the Bureau of Indian Affairs after receiving assurances from the Miwoks that they would not open a casino. But this past April the tribe hired a team of influential political advisers, which included Boxer’s son Doug, and announced plans for a massive casino and resort operated by Nevada financiers.

So the tribe represented by Boxer’s son is working with Nevada financiers, who are no doubt represented by Reid’s son.

I could go on with additional examples, but why bother? The point is that most politicians are more or less ethically challenged, and Tom Delay no more or less so than most. All the clamor aimed at him has less to do with any honest outrage or concern than with the Dems’ desire to damage a Republican leader who’s been particularly effective in shepherding the Bush agenda through Congress.

Toppling DeLay, blocking Bolton, continuing to block Bush’s appeals court nominees — these are all part of an organized and orchestrated campaign involving the DNC, their many friends in the MSM, various "non-partisan public interest" groups, and bags full of money from Soros, Heinz, et al. Expect to see lots more of these tactics as the mid-term election approaches. From the party that taught us that everything’s relative, everyone lies, and it all depends on what the meaning of "is" is.

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What? No indoor swimming pool?

Posted by Richard on April 19, 2005

Read this QandO post about LA’s new $17 million homeless shelter, named the Midnight Mission, complete with gym, library, movies, hair salon, etc. Unbelievable. McQ closes with a warning for those of us not in LA:

Only in California and naturally first in LA. If it becomes a trend you could see one in a town or municipality near you soon.

I’m not worried, I’ve got a plan. I’m going see if I can locate more info on the Midnight Mission — maybe a few pictures of the amenities — and then make up a few hundred flyers promoting it. I’ll distribute them to the "differently hygiened" denizens of Denver’s Civic Center Plaza and 16th Street Mall. With any luck, two-thirds of Denver’s homeless will begin making their way to the Left Coast.

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If you’re a Republican…

Posted by Richard on April 15, 2005

… or generally more sympathetic to Republicans than Democrats, or a Libertarian who’s angry about this "living Constitution" crap, go right now to read Captain Ed’s rant about the Republicans’ handling of the judicial confirmation standoff. Then, go to Hugh Hewitt and read everything he’s posted in the past couple of days. This is getting ridiculous.

The Dems keep citing the couple of hundred Bush appointments who’ve been confirmed. But that’s pure obfuscation, since the vast majority of those are trial court judges, and who cares about them? The fact is that the Dems have blocked (by merely threatening to filibuster) almost a third of Bush’s appeals court nominations.

And the Republicans have trembled and quaked. If we’re confrontational, there goes all hope of compromise and congeniality. The Senate is a club. We have to get along. The Dems will "get along" with you only as long as you bend over for them. Where are your cojones? But the mainstream media will portray us as the bad guys. And since when do they not? Learn to bypass them; alternative media exist. But I won’t be invited to appear on the Sunday talk shows as often, and I’ll be dropped from some of the tony D.C. parties. Is that all that matters to you, you contemptible piece of shit??

I’m beyond disgusted. The Dems are rewriting the Constitution to require a super-majority for confirmation of Presidential appointments, and the R’s are tiptoeing around on this issue. If the Dems succeed, the whole idea of interpreting the Constitution according to its literal meaning or the original intent will be forever painted as crazed, out-of-the-mainstream lunatic thinking. Because that’s really their basis for rejecting these nominees.

I agree with Hewitt: this is the most important domestic issue facing the Senate in many years. As he says:

The Senate GOP is destroying itself, and it does not appear to be aware of the fact.  They think they are losing a public relations war with the media elite when in fact they are losing something far more critical –the allegiance of their base.

More importantly, they’re surrendering in perhaps the most important ideological battle of the past half century. If Bush is unable to break the Dems on this one, he either won’t get a Supreme Court appointment at all (in eight years!) or he’ll have to fold and nominate a "moderate," meaning someone significantly to the left of Rehnquist. Since Rehnquist is likely the first vacancy, this means the court will move significantly to the left if the Senate Republicans don’t win this battle.

If your’e a Colorado resident, write and call Sen. Salazar. During the campaign, he said that all judicial nominees deserved an up-or-down vote on the Senate floor. Remind him of that and insist that he stick to it. Everybody, Colorado or not, should write and call the Republican wobblies — Alexander, Chafee, Collins, Hagel, Snowe, Sununu and Warner. 

Don’t just email, they pretty much ignore that. Write a real letter and/or call. So you’re not a constituent? Never mind, talk money. Tell them that if they don’t back their president on this issue, you’ll donate money to whoever opposes them, primary or general election, in the future.

Also, contact McCain, who’s already bailed on this issue, and totally unload on him. With the wobblies, it’s best to be firm, but polite. With McCain, forget polite.

As Captain Ed says:

To hell with Frist, to hell with Thune, and to hell with the GOP if they wait until the session is half-over before finding their spine or other significant parts of their anatomy. The GOP campaigned on judicial nominations as the second-highest priority for the Senate, and the electorate rewarded them with a healthy gain of four seats, remarkable for an election in which the incumbent president won by a tight margin. …

What has this bunch of Republican milquetoasts done? Nothing.

Why? Apparently, they’ve changed their priorities since the election. No longer are judicial nominations the leading priority. In fact, they’ve done everything they can to backpedal from the frightening spectre of Harry Reid, for Pete’s sake. Now they claim that they want to pass as much legislation as they can before the vote on nominations comes up … meaning that the judges are actually the lowest priority for Frist and his band of merry cowards.

I’m with Captain Ed. Normally, I don’t contribute to any Senate candidates, and most of the exceptions have been Libertarians. But I intend to let the "wobbly" Republicans — Alexander, Chafee, Collins, Hagel, Snowe, Sununu, and Warner — know that, if they don’t support simple majority consent on judicial appointments, I’ll be contributing to their future opponents, whoever they may be.

This is getting ridiculous.

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Dem’s calculator: dishonest or stupid?

Posted by Richard on April 15, 2005

The aforementioned Pejman Yousefzadeh points out this fine FactCheck.org article about the bogus Social Security "calculator" that MoveOn.org, the AFL-CIO, Sen. Harry Reid, and other Dems are promoting.

The short version is this: The "calculator," which purports to show you how much you’ll lose under the Bush plan, uses the absurd assumption that future real returns on equity will average 3%.

To justify this bit of nonsense, the authors simply lied about what the Congressional Budget Office said in its analysis. Either that, or they’re so ignorant about economics, finance, statistics, and math in general that they shouldn’t be allowed to create something that’s got the word "calculator" associated with it.

Dishonest or stupid? Dishonest or stupid? Hmm… I’ll go with the former. Everyone knows which is the evil party and which is the stupid party, right?

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