February 11, 2010

What The Tea Party Isn’t…

Filed under: Activism,Taxes & Government — Rose @ 11:22 am

Mark Davis at RealClearPolitics hits this out of the park…

February 11, 2010
The Tea Parties Are United in Favor of Limited, Responsible Government
By Mark Davis

On April 15 at Dallas City Hall, I looked out over a sea of attendees at one of several national gatherings that launched the Tea Party movement.

As the throng dissipated that night, messages of liberty and fiscal responsibility still ringing sweetly in their ears, the shared question was: Will this ball keep rolling? Or will it simply wane into pleasant nostalgia, a fading memory of a one-day pushback against out-of-control government?

Almost a year later, the ball still rolls. The Tea Party movement is one of the most noteworthy grassroots uprisings in recent American political history. And one of the most misunderstood.

…The Tea Party movement is not a nascent third party. Most tea partiers know that splitting the voters looking for less spending and lower taxes is a guarantee of more domination by Democrats with no interest in either.

The Tea Party movement is not “anti-tax.” It is against confiscatory taxes, outlandish taxes, excessive taxes – choose your adjective. But this “anti-tax” nonsense is the same kind of obnoxious slander as calling people who favor strong borders “anti-immigration.”

The Tea Party movement is not driven by social conservatism. That doesn’t mean you won’t find plenty of tea partiers who are devout advocates of protecting the unborn and traditional marriage – it’s just that the Tea Party engine is driven first and foremost by a desire to return government to its proper constitutional limits and run it with a lot less money. Anyone driven by that passion is welcome in any roomful of tea partiers, no matter what views they may hold about God and gays.

…Finally, the Tea Party movement is not some subculture of bug-eyed lunatics. Any political movement is going to have some characters ranging from colorful to occasionally unhinged, but the insulting tone of much of the coverage of the movement would have you believe that these are fringe extremists who could snap at any moment.

…At long last, people who might disagree on a number of other things are uniting in a fight for strong but limited government, run responsibly and frugally. It took Democrats and Republicans to create this mess, and entrenched members of both parties could soon find themselves back in the private sector if the enthusiasm of tea parties and town halls carries all the way to the November elections.

With participants from so many walks of life, and no rigid structure or leadership, it can be a challenge to define exactly what the Tea Party movement is. But I’ll tell you one more thing that it is not: It is not going away.

This is to date, the best assessment of the Tea Party movement that I have come across. Thanks, Mark.

The whole thing is here.

Lucid Links (021110, Morning)

Filed under: Lucid Links — TBlumer @ 9:12 am

Those who are thankful that snow is shutting down Congress can point to this tangible cost savings:

The Senate (“jobs”) proposal, which is more narrow than the one analyzed by CBO, is estimated to cost about $10 billion. That would add 80,000 to 180,000 jobs over the course of a year. The U.S. economy, meanwhile, has lost 8.4 million jobs since the start of the recession.

Democratic leaders had originally hoped to pass the (jobs) bill this week, before record snowfalls effectively shut down Congress and much of the rest of the federal government in the nation’s capital. Final action now may not come until March.

The cost per job supposedly to be “added” in the Senate bill is between $55,000 and $125,000. Lord have mercy.

The House’s version has a price tag of $33 billion.

More snow, please. Update: But please concentrate it in the few blocks surrounding the “A” item here.

Neither version addresses the fundamental reason why employers aren’t hiring as much as one might expect in a legitimate recovery. That reason is described by WSJ and IBD as “the uncertainty economy”; around here it’s been called the POR (Pelosi-Obama-Reid) Economy since the summer of 2008.

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Can’t make this up (HT Kaus via Instapundit):

As GM tools up for production of its Volt extended-range electric car, Automotive News has noticed something interesting: workers at GM’s new battery pack assembly plant are not represented by the United Auto Workers. Located in the heart of UAW territory (Brownstown Township, MI), the Volt battery plant represents the very jobs that local politicians and GM leadership hailed as the green future of the auto industry.

The plant’s location is about 20 miles from the UAW’s Solidarity House.

Kaus’s query: “Does the czar know?”

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SOBer Aude Sapere (HT Repeal the 17th) has dared to discern that it’s not easy seeing green in Rob Portman’s campaign logo.

Such a symbolic move implies so many things (or why do it?) that are undesirable. Sadly in the case of Portman, none of them would be surprising.

I opened up a dictionary the other day and saw Portman’s picture with the word “uninspiring.” His only saving grace is that Lugubrious Lee Fisher’s and Jenny “ACORN Owns Me” Brunner’s pictures were above his — for now.

In case you’ve missed it, BizzyBlog’s Rose is also less than impressed with Portman.

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James Pethokoukis at Reuters, in an otherwise nice piece on Wisconsin congressman Paul Ryan’s national deficit/debt-controlling designs:

Why should Tim Geithner be so confident that America will “never” lose its AAA credit rating? The White House doesn’t currently have a long-term plan to staunch America’s fiscal hemorrhaging. Hoping and wishing for a successful deficit commission does not make a plan. The Treasury secretary’s statement sounds like one of those perfunctory defenses of the dollar.

Geithner’s false confidence reminds me of this guy in “Animal House.”

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Victor Davis Hanson, in the second half of his “Why Fear Big Government?” essay at PJM:

I once lived in Greece for over two years, and visit there every other summer. Any casual observer could have predicted its present fiscal meltdown, which is emblematic of big government socialism. Here is the creed of many of the EU socialist states.

1) Praise socialism in the abstract and demonize capitalism, especially the American model, as cruel and heartless. …

2) Cheat in every way imaginable on your taxes. …

3) Connive for every imaginable state entitlement. In Greece, inventing a disability, fudging for an age subsidy, keeping a dead beneficiary on the books are likewise national pastimes. …

4) Institutionalized lethargy. When one cannot be fired, then one immediately begins to plot to slow down, how to do the least imaginable work for the greatest pay. …

Here are the apparent protocols of such big government socialism: no one believes in it; everyone seeks to cheat the system and others in it; no one wishes to criticize the system when it is easier to con it; the public pretension of humanitarianism encourages private selfishness.

In case you missed it, Greece wants the rest of the European Union to bail it out.

As with all VDH output, read the whole thing.

Positivity: U.S. lawmakers nominate Chinese human rights defenders for Nobel Prize

Filed under: Life-Based News,Positivity — TBlumer @ 6:00 am

From Washington:

Feb 9, 2010 / 10:02 pm

Three Chinese human rights advocates have been nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize by a bipartisan group of U.S. lawmakers. The nominees’ work includes defending victims of religious and political persecution and also victims of abuses related to China’s stringent one-child policy.

Rep. Chris Smith (R-N.J.) announced the nomination of Chen Guangcheng, Gao Zhisheng, and Liu Xiaobo last Friday.

“These three heroes have stood up for the cause of freedom and human dignity, and they have sacrificed and suffered for their stands,” said Rep. Smith. “They deserve consideration for the Nobel Peace Prize.”

The nomination letter, signed by six other Congressmen, praised the trio’s “outstanding” human rights advocacy and their “remarkable” patriotism and civic courage. The Congressmen said the nominees’ work called on the Chinese government to operate within its laws and in accordance with the human rights agreements it has signed.

Chen, although blind, became a self-taught lawyer and protested the Chinese government’s abuses in enforcing the one-child policy in his native city of Linyi.

Gao, a lawyer, has played a leading role in demanding that government prosecutions be conducted according to law.

The Congressmen described Liu as a “visionary leader” of the Charter 08 human rights movement.

Chen is serving a prison term, Liu has been sentenced to 11 years in prison but is appealing, and Gao has disappeared under what the Congressmen said were “suspicious circumstances.” ….

Go here for the rest of the story.

February 10, 2010

Celebrate CTP and Mike Wilson!

Filed under: Activism,Taxes & Government — Rose @ 3:45 pm

Hope to see you there…

CTPwilsonInvite031510

Driving Directions

Additional verbiage from the invite:

Guest speakers include special guest State Representative and Candidate for Ohio Auditor, Seth Morgan, Cincinnati Tea Party President, Chris Littleton and Cincinnati Tea Party board member, Shannon Hartkemeyer.

We will have limited space so please register early!

…. If you have any questions please contact me. Thank you for your support and we look forward to seeing you on March 15th!

Sincerely,

Maggi Cook
Citizens For Mike Wilson
maggi@citizensformikewilson.com

Wilson “formally” announced his candidacy in early November.

Rob Portman, Call Your Office…

Filed under: Activism,Taxes & Government — Rose @ 12:21 pm

Rob Portman, “the statesman,” hasn’t been making very good decisions lately. In fact, his behavior has been completely incongruent with the image he tries to sell. Now Rob Portman, “the statesman,” is sucking up to COAST (and vice versa) by agreeing to headline their fundraiser on March 1.

And why not? The man is already towing the albatross ORP party line so often that he’s starting to hunch over.

Pssst, hey Rob, did you read the Enquirer this morning? Turns out the boys over at COAST are at it again…publicly celebrating the death of John Murtha. Agree with them or not, I wouldn’t think that Rob Portman, “the statesman” would condone raising money to further those types of antics…

But then again, I never thought “a statesman” would recklessly get involved in contested primaries and so shamelessly spew the establishment Kool-Aid while presenting himself as vintage wine.

Like most truth-seeking citizens, I’ll prefer vetting candidates while enjoying a “nice Chianti, ffffffffff….” Lol…

Michael Barone Almost Nails It on Why We Are Where We Are

Filed under: Economy,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 10:48 am

From his column today at the Washington Examiner, “With absolute power, Team Obama grows stupid”:

Obama was faced with a fundamental choice. He could either chart a bipartisan course in response to the economic emergency, or he could try to expand government to Western European magnitude as Democratic congressional leaders, elected for years in monopartisan districts, had long wished to do.

The former community organizer and Chicago pol chose the latter course.

To the surprise of many who watched previous presidents present specific administration policies to Congress, he allowed Democratic leaders to design the stimulus package they rushed into law in six weeks.

One-third of the money went to state and local governments — an obvious payoff to the public employee unions that contributed so much money to Democrats — and much of it went to permanently increase the baseline spending of discretionary programs, a longtime goal of Democratic congressional leaders.

Federal spending was raised from about 20 percent to about 24 percent of gross domestic product, putting the United States on a trajectory to double the national debt as a percentage of GDP in less than 10 years.

Team Obama overestimated the stimulative effect of the stimulus package and underestimated the strength of the spontaneous Tea Party movement that flared up in protest of this expansion of government.

They underestimated as well the opposition to expanding government control over health care and, through the cap-and-trade bill, to the energy sector. And the disgust over conspicuous vote-buying on health care — the Louisiana Purchase, the Cornhusker Kickback, the Labor Loophole.

Team Obama failed to realize they were no longer running in Chicago or in the Democratic primaries or facing an electorate fed up with Republicans. And, more important, they failed to realize that vastly expanding government goes deeply against the American grain — and against the basic appeal of their successful campaign.

The “almost” part is in Barone’s first sentence.

Obama didn’t consider what he faced a “choice.”

As creatures of the far left, Obama, Nancy Pelosi, and Harry Reid — but especially Obama — have never intended to chart a bipartisan course. Anyone, left or right, who closely followed the guarded and unguarded rhetoric of the Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign, as well as the guarded and unguarded rhetoric of his mentors, acquaintances, and hangers-on, should have known that. What he and Congress chose to do with the stimulus — which was in essence to let far-left activists write it — should also have “surprised” no one.

This is important to recognize as Obama and his party attempt PR-driven, pressure by photo-op “bipartisanship.” There’s not a drop of genuineness to it.

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UPDATE: CBS’s Mark Knoller, in a rare burst of candor — “Obama Says Bipartisanship, But What He Wants Is GOP Surrender.” Wow — Somebody must have swapped out Knoller’s kool-aid and replaced it with truth serum yesterday.

Arpaio v. ORPINO (Ohio Republican Party In Name Only)

Filed under: Activism,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 7:37 am

NoToDeWineMaricopa County (AZ) Sheriff Arpaio’s endorsement of J.D. Hayworth over John McCain in the Arizona U.S. Senate primary made me long to be in a state where actual voters decide such things:

“Senator McCain has served this country admirably but it’s time to replace his moderate or even liberal positions on taxes, the border, social causes and big bank bailouts with a consistent conservative like J.D.,” Arpaio writes in the letter. “I just wish Senator McCain had run as hard against Barack Obama as he is against a conservative like J.D. That could have prevented the harmful, liberal agenda we are all now suffering through.”

Sherriff Rick Jones, Joe’s law enforcement counterpart in Butler County, Ohio, was similarly opposed to the candidacy of a former U.S. Senate colleague of McCain for Ohio Attorney General:

Local ties and name recognition weren’t enough for former U.S. Sen. Mike DeWine to get support for state office from what one observer called an “angry crowd” at a Butler County GOP meeting Thursday, Nov. 12.

Instead, the party endorsed Delaware County Prosecutor Dave Yost in the leadup to the Republican primary for state attorney general.

(Butler County Sheriff Rick) Jones, (criticized Mike) DeWine as too liberal for, among other things, supporting gun control and being soft on illegal immigration.

“It was an angry crowd,” Jones said of the question-and-answer session preceding the vote. He said DeWine was “shocked” and shook his head as the results came in.

In Ohio’s reddest of counties, followed by repeat performances in several others, Mike DeWine got his butt kicked.

Was Mike DeWine’s response to figure out what was wrong, get out among potential voters, (heaven forbid) reexamine his issue positions, genuinely apologize for past sins, and figure how to authentically appeal to the the party’s grass roots? No. Instead, he said “bleep them,” went crying to ORPINO to clear the field for him — and, I am told, played hardball with potential fund-raising defectors (“you won’t get any work from me if/when I win and you supported the other guy”).

At least Arizona Republicans are getting a chance to choose. In Ohio, GOP voters had that choice in the AG’s race manipulated away from them from by a scheming, devious, and (yes) corrupt politician and the state party he has in his pocket. My sense is that anyone who thinks this episode will be forgotten is in for a very, very rude awakening.

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Related: ORPINO and its apparatchik apologists who are crowing about the latest Rasmussen poll showing John Kasich with a 6-point lead over Ted Strickland should instead be asking themselves why his lead has narrowed from 9 points in the past two months, even though during that time the state’s economy has continued to deteriorate and Strickland pushed through an $850 million, 2-year tax increase.

With things as they are, Kasich’s lead should have gone well into double digits. Why didn’t it? Answer: The GOP has gone from having a mostly great potential ticket to having one that is mediocre at best.

Looking to November — Start with today’s conditions, including the ORPINO Effect Rasmussen has just in essence detected. Combine them with the Ohio Establishment Media Effect, which won’t start seriously kicking in until around Labor Day and which is probably worth 5 points or so to the other side. Finally, stir in a little ACORN. This race is currently in a November dead heat.

Thanks, ORPINO.

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UPDATE, 10 a.m.: Maybe the GOP establishment will understand this. My link is to the text; the related video which requires registration is called “Grand Old (Tea) Party: The People Are Furious And The Party Must Understand Why.” The most relevant point:

Now some critics of the Tea Party movement say it is hypocritical to complain about Democrat spending without complaining about Republican spending as well. Well …. that is a profound insight from someone who has obviously never been to a Tea Party event, because if they had been there, they would know that the real thunderbolts thrown in response to this spending orgy is aimed not at the Democrats but rather the Republicans; the people who should know better, the people, in fact, that we thought would be standing guard over our hard-earned treasure, not shoveling it out the door by the fork-full.

By standing by while Mike DeWine and second-cousin Kevin engineered their voter betrayal, John “I was a Tea Partier before there were Tea Parties” Kasich has silently thrown in with a candidate who had one of the worst spending records of any GOP member in the Senate.

How bad? In 2006, MIke DeWine, with a 43% score, finished behind Nebraska’s Ben “Bribe Me” Nelson’s 49% score in the Club for Growth’s scorecard. In 2005, DeWine’s score was just as bad.

Positivity: Focus on the Family reports 760,000 have watched Tebow’s story

Filed under: Life-Based News,Positivity — TBlumer @ 6:07 am

TebowFrom Colorado Springs, Colorado:

Feb 10, 2010 / 06:03 am

Gary Schneeberger, Vice President of Media Relations at Focus on the Family, has said his organization’s Super Bowl ad featuring Tim Tebow and his mother was “very directly pro-life” and has proven “extremely popular.”

The Super Bowl ad showed University of Florida star quarterback Tim Tebow and his mother, Pam, who spoke about her love for her son and how he “almost didn’t make it into the world.”

While Pam Tebow had refused doctors’ advice to abort her unborn son during a life-threatening condition, abortion was not mentioned in the advertisement, which directed viewers to the Focus on the Family website.

Schneeberger spoke about the Tebows’ ad in a Tuesday phone interview with CNA.

Asked to describe the impact of the Super Bowl advertising spots, he responded that the ad has become “extremely popular” and people generally recognize that the advertising was about “celebrating family and celebrating life.”

“It wasn’t political, it wasn’t anti-anything. It wasn’t controversial.

“We told people the truth. It was about a mother and son who love each other.”

He told CNA that viewers have watched the ad 305,000 times on the Focus on the Family website. The full interview, an eight-minute clip in which the Tebows tell the longer story of Tim’s birth, received over 760,000 viewers on Sunday and Monday alone.

The Focus on the Family website has also witnessed a twenty-fold increase in activity.

Schneeberger told CNA his organization expects the numbers to climb because of continued publicity.

The ads were a “great investment” for Focus on the Family because it provided a national opportunity to talk about “the sanctity of life, the importance of celebrating life, and celebrating family.”

“We’ve developed now all these potential new relationships with people who hopefully will reach out to Focus on the Family when they encounter life challenges.”

He said the organization provides “help and hope” to those suffering marriage problems, parenting issues, or unplanned pregnancies.

CNA noted that some observers have called the ad “anti-climactic” and asked whether the run-up to the ad’s broadcast was misleading.

“We never said anything other than that it was an inspiring story about celebrating family and celebrating life,” Schneeberger commented. “The controversy came up because some groups who had not seen the ad decided to protest it.” ….

Go here for the rest of the story.

February 9, 2010

Lucid Links (020910, Morning)

Filed under: Lucid Links — TBlumer @ 10:15 am

How to make almost $100 billion disappear: Run the economy as the Obama administration and Congress have for about six months, stir, and — presto! — $99 billion in expected receipts vanishes, as if by magic (years presented are fiscal years ending on September 30)–

ObamaBudgetSnapshot2009to2011

In August 2009, the Congressional Budget Office projected fiscal 2010 receipts of $2.264 trillion. As seen above, Obama’s just-released budget for fiscal 2011 has knocked that number down to $2.165 trillion. $99 billion is gone, thanks the continuation of the POR (Pelosi-Obama-Reid) Economy. Only a fool or an Obama administration official (but I repeat myself) could possibly blame that decline on Bush 43.

Here’s another interesting fact: Assuming no inflation, it appears that the administration expects GDP to grow by 2.7% during fiscal 2010 ($14.624 trillion divided by $14.237 trillion). If the preliminary 4Q08 growth reading of an annualized +5.7% holds (though I don’t believe it will), that means that it expects growth for the first nine months of this calendar year (i.e., the remaining nine months of the fiscal year) to come in at an annualized +1.7%. That’s more than a little unimpressive, and definitely not stimulating. Recall that the +5.7% figure was known before the budget was released.

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Following up on the above, with all due respect to Peter Orszag (i.e., very little), that GDP assumption and the collections results of the first four months of fiscal 2010 make the full-year collections prediction of $2.165 trillion seem pretty unachievable (sources: Daily Treasury Statements of January 29, 2010 and January 30, 2009, and Monthly Treasury Statement of December 2009):

USTcollectionsThruJan2010vJan2009

Since fiscal 2010 already trails fiscal 2009 by almost $86 billion, receipts during the final eight months of fiscal 2010 are going to have to exceed fiscal 2009 by $146 billion ($86 billion plus the budget’s assumed $60 billion increase in FY10 v. FY09)  for the administration’s receipts prediction to come true.

Specifically, Uncle Sam will have to collect $1.477 trillion by the end of the year ($2.165 minus $.688), compared to the $1.332 trillion ($2.105 minus $.773) it collected during the final eight months of fiscal 2009. What has been a decrease of 11% during the first four months is supposed to turn into an increase of almost 11% ($1.477 divided by $1.332) during the remaining eight months — all while annualized economic growth is less than 2% during the balance of the fiscal year.

They’re kidding, right?

Update: A related NewsBusters post is here.

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Fox News’s Red Eye show, which airs at 3AM Eastern Time, is doing well. Another network isn’t doing so well, given that Red Eye “topp(ed) CNN prime time last week.”

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RIP, John Murtha.

It seems from this Politico item that there may be legitimate reasons to question the quality of his medical care during his final weeks.

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At Life News – “Obama’s New Budget Contains Massive Funding of Abortion, Planned Parenthood.”

Read the whole thing. It confirms what anyone who has studied this man’s record has known all along: This is most aggressively antilife president ever elected.

Before the 2008 election, I wrote that no one supporting Obama’s presidency while knowing his record and his intentions in this area, and especially no politician endorsing him, could legitimately claim to be prolife. That included, and still includes, Steve Driehaus of Ohio’s First Congressional District.

February 8, 2010

Spectacular Fib: How Horrid PBS Health Care Reporting Morphed Into an Organizing For America Embarrassment

Filed under: Economy,Health Care,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 3:10 pm

PBSnewsHourHealthReportGraphic

Over the weekend, poor and biased media reporting, dysfunctional politics, blindly ambitious activism, and economic ignorance fed on each other to produce a phenomenally false narrative that went out to hundreds of thousands if not millions of people. The result not only doesn’t pass the smell test; it fails the stench test from a mile away.

The first origins of the activist narrative burst forth during Friday’s PBS News Hour, when the network’s Betty Ann Bowser opened her report on health care costs with two sentences that belong in the Sloppy Statement Hall of Shame (bold is mine):

Health care spending devoured 17 percent of the entire economy last year, about $2.5 trillion. That’s the biggest one-year growth since record-keeping began in 1960, according to projections from the Federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, this week.

Huh?

If you don’t mind my asking — What exactly is the “that” to which Ms. Bowser referred?

Could she have meant the “biggest one-year growth” in current-dollar health care costs? If so, I found in my review of data downloaded from the relevant link (“NHE Historical and projections, 1965-2019″) at this CMS web page that this is a barely true assertion. The 2009 cost increase of $133.461 billion slightly edges out the $133.171 billion seen in 2002. But such a stat is meaningless without some kind of reference to inflation. I found that the dollar amount of cost increases after taking inflation into account were greater in five other years between 2001 and 2008 than they were in 2009.

Did the reporter, whose News Hour work on health care “just so happens” to be part of a “project” funded by the left-leaning Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, mean to refer to the rate at which costs increased during the past year? I hope not, because the 2009 rate of increase of 5.7% was lower than 38 of the other 43 previous years (1966 through 2008) listed in the downloaded file. Ah, but to be consistent, we should also look at the inflation-adjusted rate increases. Doing so is of no help to Ms. Bowser; 36 of the 43 previous years had higher real health care cost growth rates than the 3% the country experienced in 2009 (5.7% minus 2.7%).

Or did she really mean to tell us, as is indeed the case, that the percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) “devoured” by health care (the raw percentage, not its change) was the highest on record? If so, she had a funny way of expressing it.

The final possibility that is factually correct — and the one I believe the poor woman meant to relay to her audience — is that the one-year percentage-point increase in GDP taken up by health care “costs” (I would prefer to refer to them as “services provided”) was the highest ever. That is a fact, thanks largely to what I have been calling the POR (Pelosi-Obama-Reid) economy since the summer of 2008. During the two years containing what also turned out to the POR recession as normal people define it, health care costs as a percentage of GDP indeed rose:

GDPhealthCostComponent

My review indicates that the 1.14-point increase in health care costs as a percentage of GDP in 2009 is indeed the largest on record. But it is not the biggest percentage increase in the percentage. Expressed in those terms, the 2009 increase of  just over 7% (1.14% change divided by 16.20%) is less than 1982, when health care’s share of GDP went from 9.39% to 10.17%, a percentage increase of about 8.3% (.88% change divided by 9.39%).

Some of us remember 1982. What it had in common with 2009 is that the economy stunk. The real impact of Ronald Reagan’s Democrat-delayed supply-side tax cuts didn’t kick in until the next year. In both 1982 and 2009, the health care sector kept GDP from sinking further. In 2009, it was one of the very few areas in the private sector where total employment actually increased. Yet Betty Ann Bowser breathlessly blasted this as a bad thing, when the real culprit is this administration’s misguided attempt to revive the rest of the economy through historically disproven spending “stimulus” instead of employing the historically effective steps taken by JFK, Reagan, and Bush 43, i.e., cutting marginal tax rates on labor and invested capital.

In any event, it seems likely that Betty Ann Bowser, who used her opening statement as a launch point for barely disguised statist health care advocacy, knew what she wanted to say. It may be more accurate to assert that the folks at Robert Wood Johnson knew what they wanted her to say. Regardless, the end result is that she said it horribly.

Then the Obamabots at Organizing For America (OFA) went further, serially abusing Bowser’s already tortured statement.

The poor souls at OFA are desperate to find some way, any way, to help Dear Leader take over health care while proving, despite clearly declining energy and enthusiasm, that they are still relevant. In less than 24 hours, seemingly without thinking or even blinking, Mitch Stewart of OFA produced an absolute howler of an e-mail that began as follows (bold is in original):

Tom –

An alarming new study shows that health care costs increased last year at the fastest rate in more than a half century.

Health care spending rose to an estimated $2.5 trillion in 2009, or $8,047 per person — and is now projected to nearly double by 2019. If we don’t act, this growing burden will mean more lost jobs, more families pushed into bankruptcy, and more crushing debt for our nation.

The conclusion is clear: This isn’t a problem we can kick down the road for another decade — or even another year. We need to pass health reform now.

Mitch’s rich pitch fell firmly into the ditch.

A new “study”? Mitch my man, the info comes from a routine annual government report. Or did you think it really came from your buds at Robert Wood Johnson?

Although I understand how easy it might be to misinterpret Betty Ann Bowser’s opening News Hour statement, the people at OFA must be collectively leading incredibly sheltered lives if they can’t recall the double-digit percentage increases in annual health care costs that routinely occurred from the mid-1960s until the early 1990s — increases that make the OFA e-mail’s first-sentence claim so obviously absurd. (Hmm …. isn’t the mid-1960s when Medicare started? Why yes, it is. What a non-conincidence.)

There’s no way an embarrassing sentence like Mitch Stewart’s opener should have gotten past an organization allegedly run by informed, educated adults. But it did. And they and their ilk want to be in charge of everyone’s health care? Pass the tea.

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

Lucid Links (020810, Morning)

Filed under: Lucid Links — TBlumer @ 8:36 am

India has had enough of globaloney — “India abandons IPCC, sets up own panel”:

The Indian government has moved to establish its own body to address and monitor science surrounding climate change, saying it “cannot rely” on the official United Nation panel.

…. “There is a fine line between climate science and climate evangelism,” Ramesh said. “I am for climate science.”

Maybe the Indian organization will actually produce some legitimate climate science. It has become very clear that what the IPCC has published surely doesn’t qualify.

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George Will (“How to get the country to solvency on entitlements”), on Mitch Daniels, Paul Ryan, and sensible conservative ideas for escaping the loony-left mess being currently created (internal link is in original):

(Under Daniels) Indiana property taxes have been cut 30 percent, and for the first time Standard & Poor’s has raised the state’s credit rating to AAA. But in January 2010, Ryan released an updated version of his “Roadmap for America’s Future” (PDF), a cure for the most completely predictable major problem that has ever afflicted America.

…. Republicans are frequently criticized as “the party of no.” But because most new ideas are injurious, rejection is an important function in politics. It is, however, insufficient. Fortunately, Ryan, assisted by Republican Reps. Devin Nunes of California and Jeb Hensarling of Texas, has become a think tank, refuting the idea that Republicans lack ideas.

Read the whole thing.

Ryan is the Ranking Member of the House’s Committee on the Budget. Will is right. Ryan’s “Roadmap” web site makes mincemeat of the “no ideas” canard.

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Via the Wall Street Journal, Democratic Climate Revolt:

The Obama Administration has been moving full-speed ahead on anticarbon regulation, never mind waiting for Congress to pass a bill. But now opposition is building among senior Democrats, with two powerful committee Chairmen introducing a bill last week to bar the Environmental Protection Agency from declaring that carbon is a dangerous pollutant.

As the WSJ notes, there is irony in what’s motivating the effort, but says “we’ll take what we can get.”

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In a separate Wall Street Journal editorial, “Andrew Cuomo has more to answer for than does Bank of America.”

He sure does. The Journal quotes this document at HUD’s own web site bragging about what happened there during Cuomo’s tenure there (under “Increasing Homeownership and Helping Homebuyers”):

In July 1999, Secretary Cuomo established new Affordable Housing Goals requiring Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac – two government sponsored enterprises involved in housing finance – to buy $2.4 trillion in mortgages in the next 10 years.

In other words, Cuomo created the framework for the housing bubble and subprime mortgage mess — and HUD is bragging about it.

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FOF (Flat-Out Falsehood) of the Day:

OFAhealthCareCostsLie020610

The nation’s health care bill increased 5.7% last year, or 3.01% after 2009′s calendar-year inflation of 2.7%. Even for these guys, this is a spectacularly ridiculous fib, as noted in this post that I put together Monday afternoon.

More Extravagence With Our Money…

Filed under: 2nd Amendment,Taxes & Government — Rose @ 12:01 am

…so the government just spent $2.5 million advertising the fricking census? Oh yeah, that makes me want to run to the mailbox and participate…NOT.

Q: “The names of those living at your residence?”
A: 1. “Uncle Smith” 2. “Uncle Wesson”

(direct link to vid)