December 20, 2009

A Tax You Can (Almost) Like

Filed under: Education,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 7:45 am

college_moneyTax_IncreaseTaxing college tuitions, though a really bad idea, has significant surface appeal.

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Note: This item went up at Pajamas Media and was teased here at BizzyBlog on Friday. Update: According to the AP as of Wednesday, Pittsburgh’s City Council will vote on the tax on Monday.

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The Steel City may soon come to be known as the Steal City.

In the midst of serious fiscal difficulties, 29 year-old Pittsburgh mayor Luke Ravenstahl, who is well on his way to becoming the worst “boy mayor” since Cleveland’s Dennis Kucinich in the 1970s, has proposed a 1% tax on tuitions charged at institutions of higher learning within his city. He apparently has the support of a majority of City Council. By the time you read this, the tuition tax could already be a reality.

Even though it’s an obvious example of intergenerational theft, and even though I would never ultimately support it, in some ways I almost like the idea.

Don’t get me wrong. I don’t think that any government entity can tax its way to prosperity, least of all a city that has lost about 25,000 people or over 7% of its population since 2000, and almost 50% since 1960. Pittsburgh’s serious problems, which include persistent crime, massive tracts of vacant or abandoned land, and flirtations with municipal bankruptcy, aren’t going to be solved by trying to extract more dollars from people who can have the final say by moving with their feet, as so many others have before.

The mayor’s intended use for the money is, as the Associated Press describes it, “to help pay for pensions of retired city employees.” This is a tax that if used as advertised (I know, that’s a stretch) literally takes money from the mostly young and passes it directly to the old with no kind of meaningful benefit provided in return — hence my “Steal City” nickname.

Whether the money would even solve the problem appears far less than certain. The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette reports that the pension fund involved “holds just 31 percent of what it needs to meet its obligations.” The $16.2 million the tax might raise is well short of “the $189 million the pension fund will need in the next two years to save it from a state takeover.”

The mayor’s discussions with the city’s public and private universities have been more like a mob shakedown than an attempt to fairly determine what may be legitimate and heretofore unrecognized extra costs the schools may be imposing on the community. Of course, those costs, if ever identified, have nothing to do with whether retired police and firemen continue to get their monthly pension checks. The mayor has demanded that the schools cough up $5 million a year voluntarily to avoid having the tax imposed (in light of the information in the previous paragraph, assuming that nothing is done about costs, how is $5 million even in the neighborhood of being enough?). One university president bluntly stated that she “does not negotiate with an ax hanging over” her head.

The mayor’s tactics, as well as the tax’s targets, inadvertently reveal the levy’s hidden beauty.

Many students have been led to believe by their state-loving profs, as well as by many elementary and secondary school educators who preceded them, that the government must always be granted whatever it needs to accomplish its objectives, regardless of the costs involved. Now these collegians have discovered that the government is not their presumptive friend, and will eventually turn on them if not reined in. Many of them are currently having their entire Cost of Attendance, including living expenses, financed by the federal government, and would be facing an immediate out-of-pocket cost that someone else isn’t paying for ranging from “$27 at the Community College of Allegheny County to $409 at Carnegie Mellon University.” They are not taking it well.

Faculty and administrators who so loathe the American capitalist model of free enterprise and competition have figured out that they would have an externally-imposed competitive disadvantage against their peers outside of Pittsburgh. Perhaps they’ll take a belated interest in the city’s fiscal situation. If they do, they’ll likely discover that its annual municipal budget of roughly $450 million contains more than a little fat.

Moreover, radical faculty members would have a more difficult time justifying their ardent love of statism in front of their tax-paying students if the government begins in essence biting the hand that feeds it philosophical support for its voracious desires. These poor saps must be wondering how it can be that Democrat Ravenstahl, who attended Pitt for a time, is employing the tactics normally associated with romanticized thugs like Chavez, Castro, and Ahmadinejad on his “friends.” Perhaps they’ll begin to understand how the term “useful idiots” applies to them.

My goodness, students are even engaging in anti-tax and anti-spending protests like the Tea Partiers they’ve been taught to despise. What’s more, they’re coming up with constructive, cost-saving ideas of their own.

Perhaps during all of this the kids will meet up with patriotic everyday Americans who will impart important lessons about how free markets and limited government are supposed to work. These are lessons that they more than likely won’t learn or even hear about at their institutions of so-called higher learning. They might also come to understand that what Pittsburgh is attempting is a mere microcosm of what Social Security has been doing to the young people of America for decades.

These would be very good things. Maybe the mayor should threaten such a tax every year.

Positivity: Project Rachel to tackle extreme abortion rates in Eastern Europe

Filed under: Life-Based News,Positivity — TBlumer @ 5:29 am

From Rome, Italy:

Dec 19, 2009 / 02:18 pm

Project Rachel is working to expand its ministry into Romania and Ukraine, where women report having had between 13 and 30 abortions. Speaking with CNA in Rome, Vicki Thorn, Executive Director of Project Rachel, described how the priestly vocation is fundamental to discovering and offering new opportunities for post-abortion healing.

Vicki Thorn is a veteran in the field of post-abortion healing, having been involved in the ministry for 25 years. Recently she has been traveling to Europe to address the issue of abortion in eastern European nations, especially Romania and the Ukraine.

“Eastern Europe has had huge numbers of abortions, in part because of communism, (but it’s due to) all kinds of things. Doctors and priests see that this is a big issue because people are coming forward and they’re talking. The doctors are saying that there are women with 13 to 30 abortions,” she told CNA.

“I don’t even know what you do with that. I’ve done this for 25 years, and I’m like, whew, I don’t even know how we come at this question.”

“In Russia the average woman according to their statistics has had nine abortions, but my own experience of talking to the physicians in Romania and Ukraine is that we’re talking 13 to 30.”

Thorn said that there was a doctor in Romania who told her of a woman that had solicited 70 abortions. “Do you think that’s possible?” the doctor had asked Thorn.

“Maybe what she’s saying is the ’70 times 7′ in the Bible,” she replied to him, “perhaps she was saying, ‘I’ve had so many abortions, you wouldn’t believe it.’”

“So, this is a psychological issue. We’re looking at countries with huge depression factors in women, alcoholism, fertility questions follow this, and it’s the priests who see this in the beginning.

“When the bishops called for a post abortion healing ministry in the States, right after abortion was legalized, in their first pastoral plan, it was because they were confessors and they knew the problem. Nobody else knew it, it took me seven years to find experts, but the bishops knew because they were priests who had heard confessions.”

Go here for the rest of the story.

December 19, 2009

AP, Ohio Media, Gov. Strickland and Dems Call Retroactive Income Tax Increase a ‘Tax Cut Delay’

StricklandOnOHbudget1209On January 1, 2009, the final 4.2% stage of a four-year, 21% cut in individual income taxes took effect in Ohio. State tax withholding tables reflecting the lower rates went into effect. Ohio employees began seeing a bit more net pay in each paycheck.

This past week, the state legislature, faced with an $850 million shortfall and threats of immediate school funding cuts by Governor Ted Strickland, repealed that 4.2% cut for both 2009 and 2010. Ohioans who had taxes withheld throughout all of this year at lower levels will have to make up the difference when they file their 2009 returns next year. They will also see higher state income tax withholdings from each paycheck all of next year.

Thus, Ohioans will be paying more in income taxes for quite a while longer than they would have if things had been left alone.

But apparently we’re not supposed to call this a “tax increase,” and a clearly retroactive one at that. No-no-no. According to Strickland, Ohio Democrats, a few alleged Republicans, the Associated Press, and Ohio’s compliant establishment media, this is a “tax cut delay.” Journalists are going to extraordinary lengths to avoid writing or uttering the words “tax” and “increase” consecutively. Is there a new stylebook rule against doing that?

Here’s a roundup of some the reality-avoiding language used:

Associated Press, Steve Majors

Ohio tax cut delay means less for taxpayers

Ohioans will pay more in 2009 taxes than expected because a budget compromise that cleared the Legislature on Thursday night delays the last in a series of tax cuts begun four years ago.

…. For the majority of Ohioans, the tax change means they will have to forgo tax savings of less than $150.

…. The deal resolved what had been increasingly tense negotiations between Strickland and Democratic lawmakers on one side, and Republicans loath to suspend a tax cut on the other.

…. Minority House Republicans opposed the deal because they viewed the tax change as a job killer.

…. “This is a temporary delay. I have no intention of making it anything other than a temporary delay,” Strickland said.

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Cleveland Plain Dealer, Aaron Marshall, December 17

Strickland, Senate Republicans and House Democrats reach state budget deal

Gov. Ted Strickland and state legislative leaders struck a state budget deal late Wednesday after a late-night bargaining session.

The deal uses the delay of a 4.2 percent state income tax cut that began in January to plug an $851 million hole in the education portion of the state budget. The budget fix had been proposed by Strickland and approved by House Democrats on Oct. 21 but Senate Republicans had been balking at supporting it for months.

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Cleveland Plain Dealer, Aaron Marshall, December 18

State lawmakers pass state budget; income tax reduction put off

You will end up paying a little more in state income taxes than you would have otherwise.

But Ohio schools are saved from drastic funding cuts, and state universities will construct a few buildings differently, hoping to achieve savings.

That’s the bottom line of a state budget deal expected to hit Gov. Ted Strickland’s desk today ….

Postponing the cut will reduce the size of the refund that most taxpayers would otherwise expect to receive after filing their taxes ….

…. Senate Republicans voting against the deal labeled it a tax hike.

…. Despite what is shaping up to be a spirited 2010 gubernatorial campaign against former Republican U.S. Rep. John Kasich of Columbus, Strickland said he isn’t worried about being labeled “Tax Hike Ted” for leading the fight to delay the income tax cut.

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Dayton Daily News, Laurie Bischoff, December 17

State lawmakers reach deal to patch budget

State lawmakers on Thursday, Dec. 17, agreed on a deal to patch an $851 million hole in the budget and avert massive cuts to 600 school districts serving 1.8 million students.

“I think this is a victory for Ohio. I think it’s a victory for our schools,” Gov. Ted Strickland said.

The agreement delays a 4.2 percent income tax rate cut — scheduled to take effect this year — until 2011. Ohioans will pay $851 million more in income taxes over the next two years.

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Columbus Dispatch, Jim Siegel, December 18

Budget deal sealed after late-night debate
Schools saved from further pain, but tax cuts postponed

Schools, libraries and other social services will not face further cuts, but many Ohioans will either pay more or get back less when they file their income taxes next year under a contentious plan to fix the $851 million budget shortfall.

State lawmakers gave final approval late last night to delaying for two years the 4.2 percent income-tax cut that took effect in January.

…. Democrats call it a tax rate freeze. Republicans called it an increase that, considering the multibillion-dollar projected budget in 18 months, is unlikely to be only temporary.

…. Income-tax withholdings in 2009 were set assuming the income tax cut would remain, so most taxpayers have withheld too little, meaning they will owe money to the state or get smaller-than-expected refunds when they file returns in the first quarter of 2010.

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Toledo Blade, Jim Provance, December 18

Deal reached to patch hole in Ohio schools budget
GOP yields crucial 5 votes to delay cut in income tax

Forget that latest income tax cut you’ve seen in your paychecks for the last 11 months.

Lawmakers and Gov. Ted Strickland yesterday broke a long-awaited deal to patch an $851 million hole in the state’s education budget by delaying for two years the final 4.2 percent installment of a total 21 percent cut set in motion in 2005.

…. With withholding rates largely having run their course for the year, the state expects to recoup roughly $844 million to apply to the $851 million hole when taxpayers file their returns next spring, with many getting smaller refunds than expected.

…. House Minority Leader Rep. Bill Batchelder (R., Medina) called the tax adjustment a “job killer” that would hit many small businesses particularly hard.

“This tax is retroactive, going back to the first of the year that we’re in now,” he said. “The first of 2009 nobody knew they had to pay this tax.”

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Marietta Times, Evan Bevins, December 19

Tax cut delay hits 2009 returns

Thursday’s approval of Ohio Gov. Ted Strickland’s plan to delay a tax cut will cost a majority of residents less than $70.

For the 20 percent of taxpayers making more than $76,000, the difference will be in the three- or even four-digit range.

The Ohio Senate narrowly approved the proposal Thursday as a way of filling an $850 million hole opened in the upcoming budget when a court challenge put Strickland’s plan to allow video slot machines at state horse-racing tracks on hold.

As far as I can tell based on this Google News Search (on “Enquirer Strickland tax,” not in quotes) and searches at the paper’s own site, the Cincinnati Enquirer only ran the AP’s report and had no original coverage of its own. I also found no original coverage at the Akron Beacon Journal.

Mr. Bevins at the Marietta Times let his journalistic peers down by showing an accompanying chart that got as close as anyone to using the dreaded term (red box is mine):

OhioTaxIncreaseTable1209

He could have avoided this near miss by describing the tax increases as “Average additional amounts paid” or something similar. Get with the program, Evan.

Oh, and one more thing. The state collected about $7.6 billion in personal income taxes during the fiscal year that ended in June. The $844 million in additional collections “when taxpayers file their returns next spring” noted above by the Toledo Blade’s Provance thus represents a retroactive 2009 tax increase of roughly 11%. I found no media outlet that mentioned the true double-digit nature of this increase.

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

Positivity: Dog Saves Family From House Fire

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 6:55 am

From Columbus, Ohio:

A pet was being hailed a hero Friday after she woke up a family in time to get them out of their burning home, 10TV’s Tanisha Mallett reported.

The dog woke up the Cusick family Thursday night when their home on McPartlan Court, near Davidson and Dublin roads, caught fire.

Robert “Cork” Cusick remembers the day he picked up Eva from the shelter.

“I thought she was an ugly little pup, that’s why I took her,” Cusick said.

Cusick and his wife said they fell in love with her right away and Eva has been a part of the family for four years.

The Cusick’s rescued Eva from a shelter and last night she returned the favor.

Investigators said the fire started in a trash can outside the Cusick’s home and quickly spread up through the attic, Mallett reported.

“Then all of a sudden I heard Eva barking and she’s pawing at the window and going about half crazy and I woke up and got out there and she alerted us definitely,” Cusick said. “The thing is I kind of saved her life, so she saved mine.”

Go here for a slide show about the incident.

December 18, 2009

As ClimateGate Goes Worldwide, AP’s Loven Grows Strangely Allergic to the ‘C-Word’

GlobalWarmingThe establishment press dispatches from Copenhagen have been remarkable exercises in unreality.

That’s because, as documented in two columns this week at Pajamas Media by Joseph D’Aleo (here and here) the ClimateGate scandal’s scope has gone worldwide. The subheadline at D’Aleo’s first column succinctly states the following (bold is mine):

The focus belongs not just on CRU (the University of East Anglia’s Climate Research Unit), but on all of the organizations which gather temperature data. All now show evidence of fraud.

That’s right, “all.” As in, “every.” As in, “no exceptions.” There is apparently no clean data anywhere. And the raw data? As noted some time ago (at NewsBusters; at BizzyBlog), that’s gone too.

Thus, there is no credible, scientific support for the assertion that the earth has been unusually warming, or for the contention that such warming if even occurring is human caused. None.

Other than to have fun and frolic in the unusual amounts of snow falling on the city, there is no reason for the climate conference in Copenhagen to even be taking place. Reporting from the event without mentioning ClimateGate, as almost no one is, is an exercise in denial.

The word choices of Jennifer Loven at the Associated Press in her latest reports seem to betray a bit of anxiety that globaloney’s house of cards is quickly collapsing.

On November 17, just a few days before ClimateGate broke, Loven, in an item about the President’s meeting with Chinese “President” Hu Zintao, used the word “carbon” four times:

But the United Nations and the European Union have called for a fund of at least $10 billion annually in the next three years to help poor countries draw up plans for moving to low-carbon economies ….

…. Worldwide carbon emissions jumped 2 percent last year, said the study, published Tuesday in the journal Nature Geoscience, adding urgency to efforts to rein in pollution that traps the Earth’s heat.

…. The summit’s Danish hosts and other European leaders understood Obama’s comments on his Asian tour as a signal that he will deliver specific pledges of U.S. action on carbon emissions and financing in Copenhagen – even at the risk of moving faster than Congress would let him.

…. The administration hopes the U.S. position in Copenhagen will be fortified by evidence of some progress in Congress on climate, along other action the White House has taken to promote clean energy and rein in carbon dioxide emissions.

Remarkably, despite many obvious opportunities, neither of Loven’s two latest dispatches about President Obama’s visit to Copenhagen, as of 1:22 AM and 12:24 PM Eastern Time today (screen caps of most of each report are here and here the latter item will probably be updated frequently over the next 12-18 hours), contain the “C-word.” Instead, in her later report, she refers to “heat-trapping gasses” and “greenhouse gasses” (spelled differently from November’s “gases,” which is the usual usage). In her first item, she refers to “cuts in emissions growth” without even describing what kind of emissions.

Loven’s word choice would probably be much ado about nothing, except for two things.

First, Roger Ballentine, Loven’s husband (at least as of a few years ago), is an ardent and politically involved environmentalist. His bio at Green Strategies Inc. indicates experience inside the Clinton administration as “Special Assistant to the President for Legislative Affairs, where he focused on energy and environmental issues.” He is also a Senior Fellow at the Progressive Policy Institute. Ballentine was also an environmental spokesman for John Kerry’s 2004 presidential campaign, while the obviously conflicted-in-appearance Loven covered the Bush campaign and the Bush White House with such disgraceful bias that Powerline referred to her at the time as a “Democratic operative.”

Second, the gal has, along with her husband, been obsessing about carbon and carbon dioxide for many years.

As documented in a different 2004 Powerline post, Loven’s husband in 2002 openly criticized the Bush administration’s Clear Skies initiative because “the president’s proposal excludes …. CO2, the greenhouse gas predominantly responsible for global climate change.” In 2003, a Loven AP dispatch criticized Bush’s “so-called Clear Skies Initiative,” and echoed her husband by reporting that “Environmentalists said Bush’s proposal would actually weaken current law while doing nothing to reduce emissions of carbon dioxide, blamed by many for global warming.” (I wonder which “environmentalists” she was referring to?)

A Google News Archive search on ["Jennifer Loven" carbon] (typed exactly as indicated) comes back with 59 results before considering duplicates, all between 1998 and November 2009. Considering that AP and its subscribers very often lock up their wire service content within a month or so, that’s a lot of hits, and probably only a percentage of all actual occurrences during that time frame.

Now, suddenly after all these years, up to and including last month, the “carbon” is gone from Loven’s reports from what is supposed to be the most important enviro conference in human history. Where did it go, Jen?

Could it be that Jennifer Loven has, perhaps with her husband’s grudging, abandon-the-ship help, figured out what a comprehensive hoax the whole global warming/climate change enterprise has been all these years, and is more than a little squeamish about reporting on the farce that is Copenhagen?

Oh, and in case you’re wondering, Pajamas columnist D’Aleo is described as “Executive Director of http://icecap.us, a former professor of meteorology and climatology, the First Director of Meteorology at the Weather Channel, and a fellow of the American Meteorology Society.” Zheesh; what does he know? (/sarc)

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

Lucid Links (121809, Morning)

Filed under: Lucid Links — TBlumer @ 9:43 am

I see Howard Dean’s opposition to ObamaCare as an orchestrated attempt to get a bill passed and to make Obama come off as the moderate who at least got something done. Dean’s “I won’t vigorously support his re-election” double-down is not something a fellow party member would ordinarily say when his standard-bearer has over three years left on his term — unless he has another agenda, which I believe is the one just noted.

I hope it fails. Nothing that we’ve seen in past bills, and nothing that they’ve allowed the world to see or learn of the Senate’s attempt — which is very little, unless you’re Harry Reid or a precious few party insiders involved in writing and revising it — merits passage.

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In the midst of research for my Pittsburgh tuition tax column, I stumbled across this remarkable example from Newsweek of how a once proud and dynamic city has set its sights pathetically low:

Postindustrial cities, even relatively successful ones such as Pittsburgh, are trying to manage, rather than just reverse, population loss.

Successful? The city has faced bankruptcy at least twice, in late 2002 and early 2004. It’s on the brink again.

You can’t shrink your way to solvency if you keep chasing the productive people and companies you want to keep out of town.

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Despite how objectionable the tuition tax is, especially as it would be directly imposed on many impoverished students, a somewhat related contention that universities are getting free rides from the cities in which they are located is not without merit, as argued by Elizabeth Bryan and Nathan Benefield at the Philadelphia Bulletin:

Why do public and non-profit universities enjoy a tax-exempt status when proprietary colleges receive no such exemptions, even while offering the same services to students? Additionally, the community aspect of university education has lead many institutions to manage operations not directly associated with their educational mission – such as dormitories, food services, and recreation facilities. Competing restaurants, apartment buildings, and fitness centers do not enjoy the tax exemptions bestowed among public and many private colleges.

While students can ill afford a new tax on their tuition, they are also faced with unnecessary financial burden brought on by university leaders endlessly hiking tuition and fees to pay for non-instruction costs. Colleges, like cities, are bloated institutions, managing services that are more efficiently run by the private sector. Dr. Mary Hines, spokesperson for the PCHE explained, “We’re like little municipalities. We have our own police forces. We have our own contracts with city trash collectors. We do our own snow removal. We maintain our own fire systems and fire hydrants.” But should they?

By privatizing services unrelated to education, universities could both cut costs to students and erode the city’s “fair share” argument.

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Oh, puh-leeze — Greenspan Backs Deficit-Reduction Commission (bold is mine):

A tried-and-true Washington tactic for politicians to offload painful choices, the commission could make it easier for lawmakers to sign off on unpopular measures like trimming retirement spending or raising taxes.

The 18-member commission, comprised of eight lawmakers from each party, plus two from the Obama administration, would report its findings in the months after next year’s election, when lawmakers would presumably feel less political pressure.

If ever formed, it should officially be named the Cop-Out Commission.

This is just a way for politicians who don’t care one whit about solving the problem to get cover for their past profligate actions in the 2010 congressional elections by saying that they’ve “done something” about the problem by voting for this commission.

Horse. Manure.

Whatever this commission would propose wouldn’t take effect until the fiscal year beginning October 1, 2011, almost two years from now. The commission’s creation would be used as an excuse to otherwise stay on autopilot.

Autopilot is not acceptable:

DebtHeldByPublicProj1209

Based on the results of the first two months of this fiscal year, especially considering the continuing plunge in federal receipts (thus far December is also running about 10% behind last year), even the above likely underestimates the red ink bath.

I fear that those who hold our debt won’t give us anywhere near two years to get things back in line.

Update: USA Today’s Oval Blog mischaracterizes what Greenspan wants —

The notion that President Obama should appoint a special commission on ways to reduce the yawning budget deficit is getting a big-name boost: Alan Greenspan.

As J. Kevin Edwards notes, that’s very different from what is proposed above, which would be created by Congress. What USAT thinks Greenspan endorsed (and didn’t) is a commission created by an Obama Executive Order. It would not surprise anyone if an Obama commission came out with hand-wringing proposals for tax increases and little in the way of meaningful spending reductions or even controls on spending growth.

Latest Pajamas Media Column (‘A Tax You Can [Almost] Like’) Is Up

Filed under: Education,Soc. Sec. & Retirement,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 7:01 am

college_moneyTax_IncreaseIt’s here.

It will go up here at BizzyBlog Sunday morning (link won’t work until then) after the blackout expires.

It’s about the hidden benefits of a tuition tax such as the one being pushed in Pittsburgh (the latest is that a vote is scheduled for next week) — not that I would support its implementation. But imagine the eyes it would open, especially when you consider its intended use, which is to finance the cushy retirement benefits of Steel City, now becoming the Steal City, workers.

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UPDATE: Pittsburgh Mayor Luke Ravenstahl seems to be doing all he can to alienate students and the universities they attend. His name for the levy, which has been adopted by other proponents on Pittsburgh’s City Council: The “Fair Share Tax.”

UPDATE 2: The Mayor’s name for the tax is bad enough, but what is apparently the formal name, seen in Wednesday’s City Council minutes (one-page PDF), is even worse: The “Post-Secondary Education Privilege Tax.” Pittsburgh’s city government has a serious arrogance problem.

UPDATE 3: Kelly McParland at Canada’s National Post gets the intergenerational theft connection. She also excerpts a New York Times item noting that what Pittsburgh wants has been proposed in modified form in another city, while a third is actively seeking ways to extract more dollars from universities and their students:

Taxing the young to give to the old

You know all the predictions about the high cost of an aging population, and how boomers with health problems and pensions to collect will have to be supported by a dwindling population of younger workers?

Well, it’s here.

(From the Times)

As a town-gown clash, the issue pits local taxpayers against mostly out-of-state students. But it is also a struggle between the old Pittsburgh and the new, as the mayor tries to force the city’s youngest residents to support some of its oldest.

Other cities have considered going this route. This spring, for example, Mayor David N. Cicilline of Providence, R.I., proposed a $150-per-semester tax on students at the city’s four private colleges. The State Legislature, however, did not take it up.

And in Boston, Mayor Thomas M. Menino created a task force in January to explore increasing voluntary payments from the city’s universities and hospitals.

UPDATE 4: If such a tax ever were to take effect, you’d be amazed at how quickly the universities would move to start separately charging for items currently lumped into “tuition” to reduce the amount of tax they would have to collect from their students and pass on to the city. I would also expect the colleges to lobby to have the tax included as part of their Cost of Attendance, so that students could borrow from Uncle Sam to pay it.

Positivity: New Catholic radio station launches ‘channel of evangelization’ in Phoenix

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 6:01 am

Via the Catholic News Agency:

Dec 18, 2009 / 02:40 am

A new Catholic radio station launched in Phoenix on Thursday, becoming the 24th station of the Immaculate Heart Radio network in the western United States. The local bishop says it will be a “channel of evangelization.”

The new station, broadcast at KIHP 1310-AM, is the result of a five year effort to bring Catholic radio to the Phoenix market, the Phoenix Business Journal reports. The last three letters of its call sign stand for Immaculate Heart Phoenix.

Though the radio station used by KIHP was priced at four or five million dollars five years ago, it was purchased for only one million because the recession caused a lower asking price.

Doug Sherman, president and founder of the Sacramento-based Immaculate Heart Radio, said the purchase was funded by donors, the majority of whom were local.

“This is the first time a Catholic radio station has ever to come to Phoenix,” Sherman told the Phoenix Journal. “We know there’s a market here. Over 25 percent of the population is identified as Catholics.”

Bishop of Phoenix Thomas Olmsted told the Catholic Sun that the station would be a “channel of evangelization” for those with no faith or those who have fallen away from religious practice.

“Wherever stations have opened across our country, stories of conversion have soon followed,” he added.

Such stories include babies saved from abortion, Catholics growing deeper in their faith, strengthened families and instances of confirmed atheists bringing their family into the Church.

The station will also help reach the home-bound, those in nursing homes or with limited ability to be active in a parish. Commuters too will benefit, the bishop added. ….

Go here for the rest of the story.

December 17, 2009

Man-Made Global Warming Disappears, Found to Be Man-Madeup; The One-World Band in Copenhagen Plays On

Filed under: Economy,Environment,Scams,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 9:06 pm

While we’re on the verge of promising some unspecified amount of money we don’t have to the developing world to “participate in a $100 billion annual fund by 2020 if a climate change compromise is reached,” the data underlying the entire premise of human-caused global warming has not only merely been discredited, it has most sincerely been discredited.

James Delingpole earlier this week wrote that “the Russians confirm that UK climate scientists manipulated data to exaggerate global warming.”

Today, Joseph D’Aleo at Pajamas Media elaborated, and expanded the scope —

The IEA believes that Russian meteorological-station data did not substantiate the anthropogenic global-warming theory. Analysts say Russian meteorological stations cover most of the country’s territory, and that the Hadley Center had used data submitted by only 25% of such stations in its reports. Over 40% of Russian territory was not included in global-temperature calculations for some other reasons, rather than the lack of meteorological stations and observations.

The data of stations located in areas not listed in the Hadley Climate Research Unit Temperature UK (HadCRUT) survey often does not show any substantial warming in the late 20th century and the early 21st century.

…. In the IEA report, there is a chart showing CRU’s selective use of 25% of the Russian data created 0.64C more warming than was exhibited by using 100% of the raw data. Given the huge area Russia represents (11.5% of global land surface area), this significantly affects global land temperatures.

…. Russia was not the only area that underwent cherry-picking, nor is CRU the only cherry-picker.

NOAA’s global climate database (GHCN) — according to CRU’s Phil Jones in …. (an) email — mirrors the CRU data under attack ….

…. And NASA uses the GHCN, applying their own adjustments ….

We know from the maps that NASA produces — produced using NOAA GHCN data — that Canada is largely missing. As is Greenland. The Arctic. Much of Africa. Brazil. And parts of Australia.

The data supposedly “supporting” the whole human-caused global warming presence really IS a bunch of globaloney. It proves nothing, except that virtually all of the major players involved in the enterprise are (or were) world-class con artists who have been caught dead to rights.

Yet at the Copenhagen charade Hillary Clinton today and Barack Obama tomorrow are unfazed, either oblivious to these inconvenient truths or more likely hostile to them. Because, as noted back in October, it has never really been about global warming. It has been about redistribution of wealth and power to a world body that looks, acts, and enforces its mission like a government — and eventually for all practical purposes becomes a government. By their statements and actions, I am forced to conclude that seeing this through is their mission, and obsession.

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UPDATE: It’s a complete wipeout, and nothing is reliable, as these specifics from a Joseph D’Aleo column at PJM earlier this week show (the column’s subheadline is “The focus belongs not just on CRU, but on all of the organizations which gather temperature data. All now show evidence of fraud“) –

Climategate has sparked a flurry of examinations of the global data sets — not only at CRU, but in nations worldwide and at the global data centers at NOAA and NASA. Though the Hadley Centre implied their data was in agreement with other data sets and thus trustworthy, the truth is other data centers are complicit in the data manipulation fraud.

The New Zealand Climate Coalition had long solicited data from New Zealand’s National Institute of Water & Atmospheric Research (NIWA), which is responsible for New Zealand’s National Climate Database. For years the data was not released, despite many requests to NIWA’s Dr. Jim Salinger — who came from CRU. With Dr. Salingers’ departure from NIWA, the data was released and showed quite a different story than the manipulated data. The raw data showed a warming of just 0.06C per century since records started in 1850. This compared to a warming of 0.92C per century in NIWA’s (CRU’s) adjusted data.

Willis Eschenbach, in a guest post on Anthony Watts’ blog, found a smoking gun at Darwin station in Australia. Raw data from NOAA (from their GHCN, Global Historical Climate Network, that compiled data that NASA and Hadley work with) showed a cooling of 0.7C. After NOAA “homogenized” the data for Darwin, that changed dramatically (to a warming of 1.2C.

…. Perhaps one of the biggest issues with the global data is station dropout after 1990. Over 6000 stations were active in the mid-1990s. Just over 1000 are in use today. The stations that dropped out were mainly rural and at higher latitudes and altitudes — all cooler stations. This alone should account for part of the assessed warming.

…. Is NASA in the clear? No. ….. They also constantly fiddle with the data. John Goetz showed that 20% of the historical record was modified 16 times in the 2 1/2 years ending in 2007.

And don’t forget that the custodians of the precious raw data have admitted that they’ve “lost” it (“The Dog Ate My Global Warming Homework).

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UPDATE 2: Related, from Mark Steyn at The Corner in late November (links were in original) —

Hysterical queens like Gordon Brown are demanding we introduce global taxation, micro-regulation of every aspect of your life, massive multi-trillion dollar transfers from the productive sector to eco-rackets and transnational bureaucracies, bovine flatulence levies and extraterrestrial surveillance of once sovereign states on the basis of fevered speculations for which there is no raw data.

Besides the temperature records, the other thing that needs to be reconstructed is any and all primary, secondary, and post-secondary education materials that claim any kind of scientific basis for the assertions that the past few decades have seen historically outsized global warming, and that human activity has been the major cause of it. There is none.

Tea Party Movement Tops Established Parties in NBC/WSJ Poll Despite Biased Question, Skewed Sample

NBCandWSJpollPic1209

Yesterday at NewsBusters, Geoffrey Dickens documented the furor of MSNBC’s Chris Mathews over the results of an NBC/Wall Street Journal poll (PDF).

Specifically, Mathews was irked that the Tea Party Movement (TPM) was viewed quite a bit more favorably than the two major political parties by those polled (VP=Very Positive; SP=Somewhat Positive; N=Neutral; SN=Somewhat Negative; VN=Very Negative; DK=No Opinion):

  • Tea Party Movement: VP-20%; SP-21%; N-21%; SN=10%; VN=13%; DK=15%
  • Democratic Party: VP-10%; SP-25%; N-19%; SN=19%; VN=26%; DK=1%
  • Republican Party: VP-5%; SP-23%; N-27%; SN=24%; VN=19%; DK=2%

Mathews dismissed the TPM’s convincing advantage over the established parties, especially in higher strong positives and lower strong negatives, as being the result of a biased poll question working in the Tea Partiers’ favor. I don’t think so. In fact, I think the result occurred even though the question is loaded against the TPM.

Here is the full text of the Tea Party poll question (Question 14b, Page 11; bolds are mine):

As you may know, this year saw the start of something known as the Tea Party movement. In this movement, citizens, most of whom are conservatives, participated in demonstrations in Washington, DC, and other cities, protesting government spending, the economic stimulus package, and any type of tax increases. From what you know about this movement, is your opinion of it very positive, somewhat positive, neutral, somewhat negative, or very negative? If you do not know enough to have an opinion, please say so.

The words “most of whom are conservatives” didn’t belong in the question.

It was more than a little presumptuous, and may even be inaccurate, for NBC/WSJ to tell those polled that “most” TPMers are “conservatives.” First, the question’s wording works to create an advance negative impression among those — even liberals mugged by the reality of the Obama administration’s spending increases — who have been conditioned to be averse to anything described as “conservative.” Additionally, the TPM has a strong libertarian streak; many libertarians are disinclined to look favorably at anything characterized as “conservative.”

The use of “any type of tax increases” is also a cheap shot, especially given that many in the TPM support the creation of Fair Tax, a national sales tax that if implemented as intended would replace the income tax and many other taxes. It would be correct to say that vast majority of the TPM opposes “any net tax increases.” If the question was going to venture into that territory, it should have included that extra word.

Additionally, the poll question’s description of the movement totally ignored one of its primary motivations: protesting and eventually doing something about the pervasive corruption present in so many levels of government, regardless of which political party happens to be in charge. Any legitimate attempt to describe what the TPM is all about cannot leave corruption out of the equation.

By comparison, a similar question about the political parties was plain vanilla, and was strangely included in a series that asked about other “public figures” (Number 7, starting on Page 5; Democrats second, Republicans third), along with Barack Obama (apparently always asked first), Tiger Woods (fourth), and Sarah Palin (last):

Now I’m going to read you the names of several public figures, and I’d like you to rate your feelings toward each one as either very positive, somewhat positive, neutral, somewhat negative, or very negative. If you don’t know the name, please just say so.

Finally, no review of an establishment media poll would be complete without identifying obvious bias in the sample. At Question F4 on Page 20, we learn of the partisan makeup of the sample:

Generally speaking, do you think of yourself as a Democrat, a Republican, an independent, or something else? (IF “DEMOCRAT” OR “REPUBLICAN,” ASK:) Would you call yourself a strong (Democrat/Republican) or not a very strong (Democrat/Republican)? (IF “INDEPENDENT,” ASK:) Do you think of yourself as closer to the Republican Party, closer to the Democratic Party, or do you think of yourself as strictly independent?

Strong Democrat – 22%
Not very strong Democrat – 8%
Independent/lean Democrat – 10%
Strictly Independent – 19%
Independent/lean Republican – 13%
Not very strong Republican – 9%
Strong Republican – 12%
Other (VOL) – 5%
Not sure – 2%

A sample with 22% strong Democrats only represents one thing: A sample that should be thrown out.

Mathews’s contention that the poll favored the TPM is self-evidently ludicrous on not just one but two levels.

The NBC/WSJ poll Mathews disputes as would have turned into a TPM rout if the movement had been properly described (or alternatively, not described at all), and if the poll’s sample had been truly representative.

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

Lucid Links (121709, Morning)

Filed under: Lucid Links — TBlumer @ 9:03 am

In a year where no one person really stood out for accomplishing anything positively meaningful, Time had an obviously difficult task in naming a Person of the Year.

In picking Ben Bernanke, the magazine claims “he led an effort to save the world economy.”

Later, we read Bernanke is the guy who let Lehman Brothers fail, which “nearly croaked the global economy.”

What’s not stated is that letting Lehman fail was the “brilliant” call by Fed-New York head Tim Geithner, who is now Barack Obama’s Treasury Secretary. If the world economy needed “saving” by Big Ben, it was because he didn’t stop Little Timmy.

While we’re on the topic, no one has ever made convincing case, even with Lehman’s failure, that the financial system faced a meltdown that required the blackmail-driven creation of TARP in early October 2008, or the mid-October gun to the head tactics of Hank Paulson.

We were all just supposed to assume in hindsight that the world economic system would have ended if TARP hadn’t passed. I don’t, and no one else should.

Update: Michelle Malkin — “The witlessness and un-wisdom of Ben Bernanke”

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The real People of the Year are those in the Tea Party Movement.

From absolutely nothing just ten months ago, its everyday people have created a genuine grass-roots movement that is generically more popular than Democrats or Republicans. They have also politically engaged millions of people who had been relatively uninvolved.

The movement is so potentially powerful and threatening to the established order/disorder that sneering liberal pundits are spending an inordinate amount of time trying to smear them, while at least three of the nation’s leading conservative talkers are taking up an inordinate amount of air time lamely trying to discredit the idea of a third party.

I know it’s early, and of course once you put real people on ballots things can and will change. But an NBC/Wall Street Journal Poll (PDF; HT First Read via Instapundit) shows at Question 14b that the Tea Party Movement is seen positively by 41%-23% (20% very positive, 21% somewhat positive, and only 13% very negative) despite the related question’s incredibly loaded wording. In neutrally worded Question 7, the Republican Party’s analogous result is 28%-43% (only 5% very positive, and 19% very negative), while the Democrats come in with 35%-45% (only 10% very positive, and 26% very negative).

I don’t think any non-single-issue movement in American history has gained so much ground so quickly.

Update, Dec. 31: Ed Morrissey at Hot Air agrees.

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A lot can change in a short amount of time, but based on the current political landscape, the preceding item demonstrates why this item (“Obama’s Gift to Republicans: Their Resurgence”) is a load of wishful thinking.

Positivity: Dad Delivers Baby With Help of Internet Search

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 5:59 am

From the UK (via Slashdot; HT to an e-mailer):

Published: 10 Dec 2009

DESPERATE dad Leroy Smith resorted to Google with the request “how to deliver a baby” when his wife went into labour.
He was so clueless when wife Emma suddenly started to give birth at home he opted to use the internet.

Mr Smith called a midwife for advice but before she arrived Emma, 25, began having powerful contractions.

So the 29-year-old grabbed hold of his BlackBerry, accessed the internet and sought help from search engine Google for step-by-step instructions.

And after following the detailed guide on the internet’s wikiHow Emma safely gave birth to daughter 6lb 11oz Mahalia Merita Angela Smith.

Five minutes after the delivery the midwife arrived to cut the umbilical cord of their fourth child.

Today proud Mr Smith said: “The midwife had checked Emma earlier in the day but contractions started up again at about 8pm so we called the midwife to come back.

“But then everything happened so quickly I realised Emma was going to give birth.

“I wasn’t sure what I was going to do so I just looked up the instructions on the internet using my BlackBerry.

“I was very, very nervous. I never thought I’d actually have to do it.

“The BlackBerry told me that when I saw the head, I had to support it.

“And when the baby actually comes out, I had to place her on Emma’s chest, then covered them both with a blanket and make sure they were both comfortable and relaxed.

“It was amazing. It was just us two in the house because the other kids were with their grandma – Emma’s mum.

“The midwife arrived about five minutes after the birth and told me I’d done good. She clamped the umbilical cord and I cut it.”

Mr Smith, a security guard, added: “I couldn’t believe I had done it and Emma was such a soldier, no pain relief or anything.

“I knew the midwife was on her way but Emma went into labour very quickly, the whole thing only took about 40 minutes.”

Leroy said before the birth of Mahalia on December 1, his wife disapproved of his BlackBerry because he was always playing with it but now she has “changed her tune”. ….

Go here for the rest of the story.