July 25, 2011

Positivity: Young pitcher excels with one hand

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 5:56 am

From Johnson City, Kansas (video at link; HT Daryn Kagan):

Posted: Jul 04, 2011 8:27 PM
Updated: Jul 05, 2011 8:24 PM

Some youth baseball coaches refused to let Nate Muehe play on their team even though he can reach 60 mph on the radar gun.

But he’s proved them wrong. He may have just one arm, but the sixth grader is excelling as a pitcher in the 3&2 Baseball Club of Johnson County. He’s also a dynamo as center fielder and first baseman.

“I think I’m pretty good,” he told KCTV5′s Brad Fanning. “I’m not the best, but I’m pretty good.”

His coach, Donnie Happel, said Nate threw a perfect four-inning game with just 19 pitches. He said he was thrilled to get the chance to add Nate to his team.

“Frankly, we were tired of him pitching against us,” Happel said. “He’s beat us the last two years pretty good.”

Nate knows why some other coaches passed on him. He’s not embarrassed or ashamed or insecure. It’s a way of life for him, what he calls his “disability.”

One of Nate’s arms was stunted when he was born. He admits he faces taunting and teasing from less understanding classmates, but he shrugs off the hurtful comments.

“Some kids are just mean and they do say bad stuff about me. I just ignore ‘em. But some kids do say good things to me like you’re a good pitcher, nice hit, nice catch.”

Other kids and their parents will ask Nate how he manages to play baseball so well. He has a ready reply: “You know I do everything you do, except with one hand. It’s not as hard as it sounds or looks actually.”

He does get tired of discussing his birth defect, which he considers boring. So he has come up with a more dramatic story.

“This one little boy walks up to me and goes, ‘What happened to your arm? It’s so tiny.’ I look at him and smile and say, ‘I got bit by a shark.’ I’m like, ‘Yeah dude, it just ripped my arm right off. He turns around and runs back to his Mom and says, ‘Mommy that man got bit by a shark. He has no hand.’” …

Go here for the rest of the story.

July 24, 2011

In Covering State Jobs Report, AP’s Kravitz Ignores Job Gainers

In his Friday report covering the June state and local employment report released by Uncle Sam’s Bureau of Labor Statistics, the Associated Press’s Derek Kravitz told readers about the three biggest seasonally adjusted job-losing states (Tennessee, Missouri, and Virginia), but had nothing to say about states which gained jobs. This was a curious omission indeed, given that BLS told us that “nonfarm payroll employment increased in 26 states and the District of Columbia and decreased in 24 states.”

Only Kravitz knows why he neglected to tell us about the job gainers, but the list of the top eight states in that department should make readers wonder if the wire service reporter’s omission was motivated by inconvenient (for liberals and leftists) likely explanations for the improvements in most of them (keep in mind that though it’s not an apples to apples comparison, the economy as a whole added only 18,000 seasonally adjusted jobs in June):

TopJobGrowthStatesJune2011

One by one:

  • Mentioning Texas might have made some people think of generally positive economic news from the Lone Star State in general under possible GOP presidential contender Rick Perry. Others may be aware of the Obama administration’s EPA-led war on Texas, and wonder why it would be engaging in such an effort when the state, which has gained 144,000 jobs so far this year, is to a fair extent carrying the economy on its back.
  • California had a good month, but compared to Texas, it’s working off of larger base. The Golden State has picked up a total of 110,000 jobs since January, but that performance places it only 22nd in percentage employment growth.
  • Michigan had a good June, and of course needs very many more strong months to make up for its eight years under Democratic Governor Jennifer Granholm. The Wolverine State has a new GOP governor in Rick Snyder and a legislature which passed a fiscally conservative budget, getting it done before Memorial Day for the first time since 1981.
  • June was the final month in the run-up to Minnesota’s state shutdown battle. The rest of the Gopher State economy didn’t seem to care much, did it?
  • Ohio under Republican Governor John Kasich, who ousted incumbent Democrat Ted Strickland in November, is one of the states where contentiousness over public-sector labor relations reform has been greatest. The state’s two-year budget effective July 1 closed a projected $8 billion budget gap without increasing taxes. The Buckeye State also “just so happens” to have picked up over 70,000 seasonally adjusted jobs this year, the highest 2011 percentage growth (1.42%) of any industrial state.
  • Massachusetts had a good June and has had a pretty decent first half of 2011. It just may have something to do with the fact that the state, to the surprise of many, has worked on and  actually enacted a degree of pubic-sector health care cost-sharing reform.
  • Then there’s Wisconsin, where Republican Governor Scott Walker took the most intense fire of any governor in recent history over his public-sector labor relations reforms earlier this year. The Badger State is in the midst of recall election campaigns involving state senators from both parties. Perhaps voters will notice that the state’s economy under Walker has improved significantly, something which could be not said about the situation under his predecessor, Democrat Jim Doyle. Wisconsin employment grew by all of 12,000 seasonally adjusted jobs in 2010. So far this year, employment is up by 37,300, over triple the 2010 figure.
  • Finally, there’s South Carolina, where Governor Nikki Haley has been in a public battle with the Associated Press over its negative state economic reporting. Spin this, AP: The Palmetto State had the nation’s fifth-highest percentage employment growth in June, trailing only much smaller, Alaska, North Dakota, Vermont, and South Dakota. And don’t forget that the National Labor Relations Board has sued Boeing to prevent it from doing business at a plant near Charleston .

Despite the job pickups, the unemployment rate in most of the states listed above increased in June, as thousands of people who had been on the sidelines started looking for work again based on improved economic climates. One hopes that this bodes well for further job growth in these states.

As to the AP’s Kravitz, it’s awfully convenient for Democrats and the left that he neglected to relay the good news from states which are largely Republican-governed or have enacted public-sector labor relations reforms. His avoidance of South Carolina’s emphatic, in-your-face result is also quite a coincidence. Did you just run out of space, Derek?

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

Boehner to Obama: ‘Congress writes the laws and you get to decide what you want to sign’

Filed under: Economy,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 10:58 am

From the Politico (a shaky source, but it seems to fit Boehner’s personality):

Boehner walked away from talks for a large-scale deficit deal Friday, saying the White House abandoned an agreed upon number for a revenue increase and was insisting on tax hikes. That move, GOP aides and lawmakers said, was seen favorably by House Republicans, who are wary of deal making with Obama.

Boehner recounted to participants on the call what he told Obama.

“As I read the Constitution, the Congress writes the laws and you get to decide what you want to sign,” Boehner said, recounting what he told the president, according to two sources.

Importantly, it would appear that the “revenue increase” Boehner was discussing largely related to enhanced enforcement and not fundamentally changing the tax laws. If roughly $500 billion of the $800 billion involved related to that, then only $300 billion related to something else — which could easily be non-tax items such as land sales, fee adjustments, and ending industry-specific subsidies. Though the linked item appears to frame it differently, we have to remember that Senator Kyl separately referred to identified non-tax “revenue” enhancements of $150-$200 billion (not clear if annual or 10-year) which were “mis-Tweeted” as tax increases by Reuters earlier this month.

Even if the leftovers were tax increases (which, again, I tend to doubt), the fact that Obama came back with $400 billion more in tax increases at the last minute means he was demanding at least double the tax increases Boehner was willing to begrudge. Obma’s gambit was a lot of things, but “good faith negotiating” isn’t one of them.

Boehner is of course correct in his quoted statement. Further, if a law to prevent a shutdown or financial disruption gets to Obama’s desk and he vetoes it, he will have been the one who caused the shutdown or financial disruption to occur. No amount of press or White House spin can alter that reality — mabye the perception, but not the reality.

Positivity: A friend’s death leads softball team on emotional journey to championship

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 6:54 am

From Indianapolis (photo gallery at link; HT CNA):

July 1, 2011

Everywhere he looked, David Lauck savored the scenes of pure emotion that come from winning a high school state championship.

He watched the girls in the dugout rush across the softball diamond to join their teammates on the field, all of them diving on each other in a joyous, tangled pile of bodies on the pitcher’s mound.

He saw the celebration in the bleachers where moms and dads beamed and hugged, and the players’ friends and fans clapped and cheered for the Roncalli High School softball team that had just captured the 2011 Class 3A state championship of the Indiana High School Athletic Association.

As the head coach of Roncalli’s team, Lauck reveled in every second of the celebration on June 11. But his joy was also touched with a feeling of wistfulness in what may have been the most emotional moment of the day.

That moment joined Lauck with Marty and Kathleen Lynch. Ever gracious, even in their deep pain, the husband and wife hugged Lauck and told him how happy they were for him and the girls on the team.

In that moment, Lauck once again pictured the couple’s daughter, Kaitlin “Katie” Lynch. As he thought of her, he knew in his heart that the overflowing joy of this state championship was inspired by the devastating heartbreak of Katie’s death.

Setting an example for living life

When Katie died at age 17 on May 20, the news rocked the Roncalli community and everyone who knew and loved her. After an announcement about her sudden and unexpected death was made at the school on that Friday morning, shocked, grief-stricken students looked for understanding and comfort from each other and their teachers—teachers who needed understanding and comfort, too.

A Roncalli teacher, Lauck was at home on that morning, helping his wife, Kara, with their newborn baby, Aubree, who had entered the world just five days earlier. When Lauck received the phone call about Katie, the news took away the breath of the father of four.

Similar to everyone familiar with Katie’s story, Lauck knew that she had been battling Hodgkin’s lymphoma—a type of cancer—for three years. But the expectations and the medical percentages were always high that she would eventually recover.

Her doctors believed that she was getting better every day after she received an adult stem-cell transplant at Riley Hospital for Children in Indianapolis on May 12. She was even dancing and laughing in her hospital room on the night before she died of a blood clot.

“She was happy-go-lucky, always smiling on the field and off the field,” Lauck recalls. “She was a very confident player. Softball was going to be her sport in high school.”

In her freshman year, she played for Roncalli even as she received radiation treatments for the disease. When she couldn’t play in her sophomore year, she served as a manager for the team. She also attended as many games as she could this season. Even more telling, she reached out to nearly everyone at Roncalli, making special efforts to connect with students who are quiet, shy or doubted themselves.

That helps explain why more than 4,000 people attended her wake in the Roncalli gym.

“She had a fighter’s personality,” Lauck says. “She went around nationally speaking about cancer awareness. She was also involved in the St. Baldrick’s Foundation [an effort in which people agree to shave their heads for donations that benefit research for a cure of childhood cancer]. A number of kids at Roncalli shaved their heads every year because of her.”

As he thought of Katie, Lauck also focused on some of the girls who knew her well—the members of the softball team.

‘We came together’

Since the beginning of the softball season in March, Lauck believed he had a state championship-caliber team. But the team just wasn’t playing like it or acting like it as the season moved deeper into May.

“There were some trust and chemistry issues with the team,” Lauck says. “It wasn’t a united team.”

Looking back now, everyone connected with the team says the change in attitude came with the news about Katie. …

Go here for the rest of the story.

July 23, 2011

11 Capitalistic Minutes: ‘Why Kill the Goose?’

Filed under: Economy,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 9:48 pm

Shaky production values, but solid 50-plus year-old wisdom — older than our President, and a whole lot smarter:

It examines profit. Nicely done.

Steyn Ridicules Press’s Insistence on Calling Budget Ideas ‘Plans’; Now It’s Ginned-up Fears of Stock-Market Plunge

MarkSteyn2011On Wednesday evening (at NewsBusters; at BizzyBlog), I noted the absurdity of Associated Press coverage characterizing the 5-page document with 3-1/2 whole pages of text issued by the “Gang of Six” as a “plan” — 12 times, plus in the item’s headline. Though I didn’t bring it up then, an obvious point to make about any of these items floating around Washington is that if the Congressional Budget Office can’t score it, it can’t be a plan. A month ago, CBO Director Doug Elmendorf told a congressional committee, in response to a question about President Obama’s April proposal, that “we can’t score speeches.” By contrast, there’s no reason to believe it can’t score Cut, Cap & Balance, because it’s actual legislation passed by the House.

Last night at Investors Business Daily, Mark Steyn, the self-described “One-Man Global Content Provider,” made more generalized comments about the media coverage of the debt ceiling-tax-spending-amending discussions and its identification of anything stated in a semi-coherent sentence as a “plan” (press-related items in bold):

Obama … claimed to have a $4 trillion deficit-reduction plan. The court eunuchs of the press corps were impressed, and went off to file pieces hailing the president as “the grown-up in the room.” There is, in fact, no plan. No plan at all. No plan whatsoever, either for a deficit reduction of $4 trillion or $4.73. As is the way in Washington, merely announcing that he had a plan absolved him of the need to have one. So the president’s staff got out the extra-wide teleprompter and wrote a really large number on it, and simply by reading out the really large number the president was deemed to have produced a serious blueprint for trillions of dollars in savings. For his next trick, he’ll walk out on to the stage of Carnegie Hall, announce that he’s going to play Haydn’s Cello Concerto No 2, and, even though there’s no cello in sight, and Obama immediately climbs back in his golf cart to head for the links, music critics will hail it as one of the most moving performances they’ve ever heard.

The only “plan” Barack Obama has put on paper is his February budget. Were there trillions and trillions of savings in that? Er, no. It increased spending and doubled the federal debt.

How about Harry Reid, the Senate Majority Leader? Has he got a plan? No.

… It seems reasonable to conclude from the planlessness and budgetlessness of the Obama/Reid Democrats that their only plan is to carry on spending without limit. Otherwise, someone somewhere would surely have written something down on a piece of paper by now. But no, apparently the Department of Writing Down Plans is the only federal expense the president is willing to cut. … the ruling party of the Brokest Nation in History has no spending plan other than to plan to spend even more. …

The domestic media coverage of this story has been almost laughably fraudulent: To the court eunuchs, a failure to raise the debt ceiling by a couple of trillion would signal to the world that American government was embarrassingly dysfunctional. In reality, raising the debt ceiling by a couple of trillion without any spending cuts would confirm to the world that American government is terminally dysfunctional.

Moving on to the apparent next strategy, the AP’s David Espo today invoked fears of a stock market plunge — without identifying a single person in the financial community to back up his and the Democrats’ fear-mongering. He also appeared to put words in Boehner’s mouth (bolded) which the Speaker seems unlikely to have said:

Debt crisis: Deal sought to head off stock plunge

Precariously short of time, congressional leaders struggled in urgent, weekend-long talks to avert an unprecedented government default, desperate to show enough progress to head off a plunge in stock prices when Asian markets open ahead of the U.S. workweek.

President Barack Obama met Saturday with Republican and Democratic leaders – but only briefly- the day after House Speaker John Boehner abruptly broke off his own once-promising compromise talks with the White House.

… House Speaker John Boehner told rank-and-file Republicans in a conference call hoped to be able to announce a “viable framework for progress” by 4 p.m. EDT on Sunday, before the stock markets open in Japan and elsewhere in Asia, according to two participants. He met later Saturday for almost an hour with House Democratic leader Nancy Pelosi, Senate Majority leader Harry Reid and Senate Republican leader Mitch McConnell.

Lawmakers fear a big drop in investor confidence in stocks and bonds could start in Asia and sweep toward Europe and the Americas, causing U.S. stock values to plunge on Monday.

Barring action by Aug. 2, the Treasury will run out of the money needed to pay all its bills, triggering a possible default that could seriously damage the domestic economy and send damaging waves across the globe. Obama has warned repeatedly of the possibility of a spike in interest rates that could affect Americans’ mortgages, credit cards and other forms of personal debt.

It doesn’t seem likely that Boehner would have made anything resembling the bolded reference in the excerpt above, which, while conveniently not in quotes, immediately follows a quoted item and precedes “according to participants.” Espo has made it look like Boehner referred to the world markets which open Monday before U.S. markets.

I say he didn’t, David, and if you won’t provide proof that he did, I’ll assume you’re engaging in a next iteration of the ongoing fraud Steyn described in his column. Given the press’s track record of the past week, where it not only called things “plans” which could barely be dignified as “thoughts” but also kept telling us that the two sides were near a deal when the Speaker says they never really were, why shouldn’t I?

Cross-posted at NewsBusters.org.

Quotes of the Day (072311, Morning)

Filed under: Quotes, Etc. of the Day — TBlumer @ 10:41 am

What’s going on here is pure political calculus. Republicans have done their job, offering a plan that raises the debt ceiling, sharply cuts current spending, reforms future spending authority and asks the states to ratify a Balanced Budget Amendment to the Constitution.

… The debt battle of 2011 is all about getting Republicans to betray their spending and tax promises so that Barack Obama can be re-elected in 2012.

– From an Investors Business Daily editorial (“Democrats
Are Obsessed with Raising Taxes”), July 23

As noted in my latest Pajamas Media column which also appeared at BizzyBlog this morning, tax increases (not needed anyway) would cripple the current “Fear-Based Economy,” which has weakened considerably in the past two-plus months.

___________________

The Republican Congress has handed the President an unparalleled opportunity. Using the UNLIMITED power provided by the 14th Amendment, President Obama can single-handed set right the myriad social injustices that have been plaguing the working poor and middle class for decades. Reversing 30 years of Republican and Corporate skullduggery. If he has the courage, and if he is actually a Democrat.

… I felt it important for someone to at least, even if tongue and cheek, layout what IS possible if Obama was of a mind. He isn’t, he is too much of a conservative lump to ever have that kind of courage to do what is REALLY in the nations best interest.

– From The Daily Kos (“The Case for Martial Law”) , July 22

“The Jester,” if he gets enough heat, will probably back down from his current “tongue in cheek” posture and say “You guys can’t take a joke.” You’re right, guy. I can’t. Not this one.

___________________

“We have run out of time and they are going to have to explain to me how it is that we are going to avoid default” on Aug. 2, the president told reporters at a hastily scheduled news after Boehner’s announcement.

– From an Associated Press report Saturday morning

The “how” is simple. Have the Senate revote and pass Cut, Cap & Balance.

Then Obama can separately bring his overpowering case for tax increases in a separate bill. If the people want it so bad, their pressure should cause it pass in a straight up-or-down vote.

From this point on, if the government shuts down or defaults, it’s on the Senate and the President. The House has done its job. All the media, Senate, and White House spinning will never, ever change that fundamental truth.

___________________

The so-called mainstream media is engaged in a bizarre propaganda effort, aimed not so much at persuading voters to agree with Obama but at convincing politicians that voters agree with Obama.

– From Jim Taranto’s Best of the Web at the Wall Street Journal, July 22

It’s beyond propaganda. They’re making stuff up trying to influence what goes on in the discussions themselves. How many times have you seen indications that “they’re close to an agreement” in the past several days? John Boehner has put it on paper that “A deal was never reached, and was never really close.” The primary motivation for relaying the false White House and Democratic leaks has been to build pressure on Boehner to make the reports true and agree to something unacceptable. Good on Boehner for holding firm (with the usual cautionary “for now”).

The Fear-Based Economy

Filed under: Economy,General,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 7:59 am

Further tax increases could bring an already frightened, sputtering economy to a standstill.

_______________________________

Note: This column went up at Pajamas Media and was teased here at BizzyBlog on Thursday.

_______________________________

Finally, someone has publicly said what everyone has long known.

On Monday, during his company’s second quarter earnings call with investors, Wynn Resorts CEO Stephen Wynn ended the three-year truth embargo over who is holding back the U.S. economy.

In July 2008, yours truly christened the economic conditions America began facing roughly a month earlier as the POR (Pelosi-Obama-Reid) Economy, named after its primary creators: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Democratic presidential nominee Barack Obama, and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid. In a comment at that original post, I noted that the economy’s job and wealth creators were “genuinely frightened by the lack of seriousness and presence of abject irresponsibility in Congress and in Obama.”

This fright went viral long ago but remained whispered in carefully chosen company until Wynn broke the silence. When an earnings call participant asked why his firm hasn’t expanded its meeting space in Las Vegas, Wynn responded:

I’m afraid to do anything in the current political environment in the United States.

… my customers and the companies that provide the vitality for the hospitality and restaurant industry, in the United States of America, they are frightened of this administration. And it makes you slow down and not invest your money.

… this is Obama’s deal, and it’s Obama that’s responsible for this fear in America.

Why shouldn’t the economy’s key players be afraid? In 2-1/2 years, Barack Obama and his administration have shown that they will do anything in their power — even if not in their constitutional power — to further their far-left redistributionist and science-free environmental goals. If it means subverting the rule of law to favor bankrupt union-dominated car companies, so be it. If it means shutting down oil drilling and exploration in the Gulf of Mexico and restoring it in slow motion at a cost of tens of thousands of jobs, well, that’s unfortunate collateral damage. If it means revoking an already-issued permit for coal mining, too bad, so sad.

In Wynn’s case, if it means demonizing convention and tourist spots when the timing fits, well, as far as Team Obama is concerned, his company will just have to deal with it. Why should Wynn even think about adding meeting rooms when at any politically convenient moment, Obama can and has shown at least twice that he will demonize a key travel destination?

More broadly, Wynn was speaking for the entire economy’s most productive participants: the businesspeople, entrepreneurs, and investors who drive commerce, create wealth and create jobs. As long as Barack Obama is president and his apparatchiks remain in control of their expanding bureaucracies and unaccountable czardoms, fear and intimidating uncertainty will rein.

Wynn’s stated indisputable truth must be at the core of the current debt ceiling, tax, and spending negotiations taking place in Washington.

It has long been known and accepted, with proof going all the way back to Herbert Hoover’s ill-conceived actions in the early 1930s, that tax increases will at a minimum prevent an economy attempting a recovery from reaching its full potential. At worst, they will send it back into recession. Additional tax increases in the current economy will create an overwhelming danger of another recession and a subsequent malaise which could rival the Great Depression.

Did I say, “additional tax increases”? Well, yes. The Wall Street Journal helpfully reminded us on July 11 that tax hikes associated with Obamacare amounting to $438 billion over the next 10 years will begin taking effect in 2013. Of course, these impending levies, the legislation’s stifling bureaucracy and disastrous work disincentives have been hanging over employers’ growth and hiring plans since Pelosi, Reid, and Obama made it law 16 months ago.

As if we needed more problems, make no mistake: The economy, which has failed to grow at the brisk pace required for a genuine recovery in employment since the end of the recession, has shown signs of serious deterioration in the past few months. Here are just a few of the indicators:

  • In May and June combined, seasonally adjusted employment grew by only 43,000, while the unemployment rate rose in both months.
  • The new-home market has barely budged from its historic lows.
  • Consumer confidence is at its lowest level since March 2009, one of the worst months of the recession.
  • The director of the widely read Consumer Reports Index stated his belief last week in a radio interview that that seeing the unemployment rate hit 9.6% in the next few months “is not out of the question.”
  • In mid-July, announced U.S. layoffs and terminations at Cisco and Borders alone were within striking distance of the number of seasonally adjusted jobs the whole economy gained in June.
  • On Friday evening, July 15, the better to avoid attracting much attention, Goldman Sachs dropped its annualized second- and third-quarter growth forecasts to 1.5% and 2.5%, respectively, and indicated that another recession is “clearly a possibility given the recent numbers.” Putting its employment practices where its predictions are, Goldman announced on Tuesday that “it might lay off as many as 1,000 employees globally.”
  • Most germane to the Washington discussions is the fact that federal collections, after rising steadily if not spectacularly for about a year, suddenly fell on a year-over-year basis in June.

When the economy is sitting on such a dangerous precipice, unless the goals are to deliver a knockout punch and to take the intimidating uncertainty to the level of debility (given this administration’s mindset, these cannot be ruled out), you don’t even think about raising taxes. With a federal budget hopelessly out of balance, all you can do is cut spending, period.

You also don’t raise taxes when you know, as anyone with an ounce of perception does, that for the next eighteen months if we’re lucky, or an unthinkable 66 if we’re not, we’re stuck with the current fear-based economy. I could be wrong, but I can’t conceive of anything this administration could do to change the current frightened mindset in the business community before it leaves the stage. Wynn agrees, saying that until Obama is gone, “everybody’s going to be sitting on their thumbs.”

You could also call this “going Galt.”

Positivity: 85-year-old band director still inspires

Filed under: Positivity — TBlumer @ 7:00 am

From Troy, Alabama (video at link: HT Daryn Kagan):

July 1, 2011 6:58 PM

The National Band Directors Hall of Fame in Troy, Alabama has about 52 inductees – 48 of them you’ve probably never heard of.
Johnny Long introduced CBS News correspondent Steve Hartman to “Paul Yoder – father of the band movement in Japan.”

Then, Long said, “This is Mr. Sousa, one of the great, great band directors,”

“You’re what they call a living legend,” Hartman said.

“I don’t know about that,” Long replied, “But I’m living, and that’s important.”

Starting in 1949 as a high school band director and later as director of the Troy University band – Johnny Long became known as one of the most inspirational band directors in America.

Learn more about Troy University’s “Sound of the South

More than three hundred of his students went on to become band directors themselves.

“AlI I know about band – which isn’t very much – but I’ve done it for 60-some years – is that you spell it F-U-N,” Long said. “And if you change that, it’s over.”

Long retired 14 years ago to spend more time with his wife Mary Lynn. But his passion for band never went away. He dreamed of forming a top-notch community band in Troy. But Troy is a small town – with not a ton of top-notch talent.

“I didn’t think it would work, I really didn’t,” Long said.

Fortunately, there was one thing Johnny hadn’t considered: the devotion of his former students.

Now, once a week during concert season, they drive in from all over the south and across the decades.

65-year-old Bobby Johnson was in Long’s first college class. He lives in Atlanta and drives 3 hours each way to practice.

Johnson said he does it because Long’s “such a unique character and I just admire him so much.”

That characterization of Long was echoed in the rehearsal hall by many people. …

Go here for the rest of the story.

July 22, 2011

Boehner Walks …

Filed under: Economy,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 6:46 pm

as he should have.

Letter to colleagues here (server may be busy).

________________________________________

UPDATE, 9:15 p.m.: In an email from MIchael Steel, Boehner spokesperson —

Folks – The White House is misleading reporters tonight by claiming that new revenue in the framework that was discussed would have been generated by letting the current tax rates expire. That is simply false. Under the framework, a CEILING was offered by the White House that would generate $800 billion in new revenue over ten years. This would be done through comprehensive tax reform that would clear out deductions, credits, and loopholes in the system – and spur economic growth.

After the gang of six plan came out, the White House moved the goal posts and insisted on $400 billion more in higher taxes – a 50% increase in revenue – and wanted that to be the FLOOR instead of the ceiling. The President acknowledged this in his remarks tonight. “Letting tax cuts expire” was never part of the tax reform agreed to. Please let me know if you have any questions. – steel

Summary of the White House ‘walk backs’ during discussions of the ‘framework.’:

TAXES

· The White House agreed to a revenue total that would set a ceiling of about $800 billion in new revenue over ten years that could be generated through economic growth and efficiencies in our tax system (not tax hikes).

· After the ‘Gang of Six’ plan was released, and in the wake the reaction from Hill Democrats, they moved the goal posts and insisted on $400 billion more in higher taxes – a 50% increase – and wanted that to the floor instead of the ceiling.

· At the same time, they struck principles of tax reform that were already agreed to, including
o a protection against tax hikes on small businesses
o and a guarantee that there were would be only 3 tax rates and highest one would be below 35%

SOCIAL SECURITY

· There was an agreement to change the way government calculates inflation that would significantly extend Social Security’s solvency

· The White House moved off of a previously agreed to solvency target, suggesting a weaker level with 25% less in savings

________________________________________

UPDATE, 9:20 p.m.: BOOHOO, OUCH; What a crybaby

President Obama unleashed a tirade of frustration, anger and disappointment toward Republicans Friday after House Speaker John Boehner (R-Ohio) announced he was withdrawing from negotiations with White House.

The president, in possibly his most emotional and stern appearance to date, said in no uncertain terms that he is summoning congressional leaders to the White House on Saturday morning.

“I want them here at 11 o’clock tomorrow,” Obama said. “We have run out of time, and they are going to have to explain to me how it is we are going to default.”

Obama’s fury toward Boehner was on full display as he several times accused the Speaker of walking away from the talks.
“I’ve been left at the altar now a couple of times,” Obama said.

The president was angry on a number of counts, but he seemed especially miffed by Boehner’s refusal to communicate with him on Friday before he walked away from the table.

Obama said he had a “cordial” relationship with Boehner “up until sometime today when I couldn’t get a phone call returned.”

Wahhhhh.

Name That Party: No Media Report Acknowledges That Embezzling Santa Fe, N.M. Sheriff Is a Democrat

namethatpartyIt doesn’t get more obvious than this.

Former Santa Fe County Sheriff Greg Solano, who pleaded guilty Wednesday to five felony counts, is a Democrat.

What follows are the results of three searches demonstrating that every media outlet which can be found by Google News which has tracked the story in the past 30 days has failed to note Solano’s party affiliation.
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Ohio’s Job Performance Thus Far in 2011: Still the Leading Industrial State

Filed under: Economy,Taxes & Government — TBlumer @ 2:25 pm

On a seasonally adjusted basis, the Buckeye State is Number 5 in job growth during the first six months of 2011:

SeasonallyAdjStateJobGrowthTop10First6Mos2011

Ohio is still the top industrial state in job growth, trailing only resource-rich North Dakota, immigration-reforming Oklahoma, and much smaller Nebraska and Montana.

I’ve also highlighted Michigan and Wisconsin because they are two states which elected Republican governors after disastrous Democratic regimes. The Badger State’s public-sector unions may not like what Scott Walker is doing, but it would appear that the state’s workers as a whole should be relatively pleased. Ohioans should be feeling the same way about what has happened thus far under John Kasich.

Also noteworthy: Downward revisions to April and May in the June report were significant. Ohio didn’t escape those revisions, but they weren’t nearly as bad as in many other states. Illinois, for example, has added only 53,900 jobs year-to-date through June, when May’s five-month report had an estimate of 64,400.

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UPDATE: I know it’s not apples-to-apples, but the economy as a whole has added 757,000 seasonally adjusted jobs this year. The 10 states listed above, all but one of which has a Republican Governor (and Montana is a usually a presidential election red state) have added 390,400 of them, or just over half, even though they only have about 20% of the nation’s population.

UPDATE 2: Gateway Pundit points out that Wisconsin picked up 9,000 jobs in June, which in the context of population is a better June performance than Ohio’s. The Badger State’s unemployment rate, like Ohio’s, also increased, but that’s because, as is the case in Ohio, more people started looking for work in what is perceived as a better business climate.