Quoteable Comments
  • Obama, like Joe Wil­son said, “You lie!”
  • Friends don’t let friends read Wikipedia.”-DonS, com­menter on WattsUp​With​That​.com
  • If you have some­thing that you don’t want any­one to know, maybe you shouldn’t be doing it in the first place.” Google CEO Eric Schmidt’s view on pri­vacy, or lack thereof, because of Google.
  • If you have to argue your sci­ence by using fraud, your sci­ence is not valid.” – Professor Ian Plimer.
  • Poor Al Gore. Global warm­ing com­pletely debunked via the very Inter­net you invented. OH. OH the irony.” — Jon Stewart.
  • A church has to stand for its faith or it stands for nothing.” — Karl Rove regard­ing Catholic church deny­ing Holy Com­mu­nion to Patrick Kennedy.
  • You can’t vote against health­care and call your­self a black man.” — Jesse Jackson
  • You guys make a pretty good photo op.” — Barack Obama com­ment­ing on the military.
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Links of the Moment
The news and dis­cus­sion sur­round­ing global warm­ing, decline, cli­mate change, and sci­en­tific fraud per­pe­trated by Phil Jones, Michael Mann, Keith Briffa, James Hansen, and com­pany is still unfold­ing. Here are sev­eral Web sites offer­ing more detailed non-​fanatical infor­ma­tion and dis­cus­sion than you’ll find in the MSM:
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Highly Recommended!

Posts Tagged ‘Sarah Palin’

Midnight Votes, Backroom Deals, and a Death Panel

Gover­nor Sarah Palin writes the following:

Last week­end while you were prepar­ing for the hol­i­days with your fam­ily, Harry Reid’s Sen­ate was mak­ing shady back­room deals to ram through the Demo­c­rat health care take-​over. The Sen­ate ended debate on this bill with­out even read­ing it. That and mid­night week­end votes seem to be stan­dard oper­at­ing pro­ce­dures in D.C. No one is cer­tain of what’s in the bill, but Sen­a­tor Jim DeMint spot­ted one shock­ing rev­e­la­tion regard­ing the sec­tion in the bill describ­ing the Inde­pen­dent Medicare Advi­sory Board (now called the Inde­pen­dent Pay­ment Advi­sory Board), which is a panel of bureau­crats charged with cut­ting health care costs on the backs of patients – also known as rationing. Appar­ently Reid and friends have changed the rules of the Sen­ate so that the sec­tion of the bill deal­ing with this board can’t be repealed or amended with­out a 2/​3 super­ma­jor­ity vote. Sen­a­tor DeMint said:

“This is a rule change. It’s a pretty big deal. We will be pass­ing a new law and at the same time cre­at­ing a sen­ate rule that makes it out of order to amend or even repeal the law. I’m not even sure that it’s con­sti­tu­tional, but if it is, it most cer­tainly is a sen­ate rule. I don’t see why the major­ity party wouldn’t put this in every bill. If you like your law, you most cer­tainly would want it to have force for future sen­ates. I mean, we want to bind future con­gresses. This goes to the fun­da­men­tal pur­pose of sen­ate rules: to pre­vent a tyran­ni­cal major­ity from tram­pling the rights of the minor­ity or of future congresses.”

In other words, Democ­rats are pro­tect­ing this rationing “death panel” from future change with a pro­ce­dural hur­dle. You have to ask why they’re so con­cerned about pro­tect­ing this par­tic­u­lar pro­vi­sion. Could it be because bureau­cratic rationing is one impor­tant way Democ­rats want to “bend the cost curve” and keep health care spend­ing down?

The Con­gres­sional Bud­get Office seems to think that such rationing has some­thing to do with cost. In a let­ter to Harry Reid last week, CBO Direc­tor Dou­glas Elmen­dorf noted (with a num­ber of caveats) that the bill’s cal­cu­la­tions call for a reduc­tion in Medicare’s spend­ing rate by about 2 per­cent in the next two decades, but then he writes the kicker:

“It is unclear whether such a reduc­tion in the growth rate could be achieved, and if so, whether it would be accom­plished through greater effi­cien­cies in the deliv­ery of health care or would reduce access to care or dimin­ish the qual­ity of care.”

Though Nancy Pelosi and friends have tried to call “death pan­els” the “lie of the year,” this type of rationing – what the CBO calls “reduc[ed] access to care” and “diminish[ed] qual­ity of care” – is pre­cisely what I meant when I used that metaphor.

This health care bill is one of the most far-​reaching and expen­sive expan­sions of the role of gov­ern­ment into our lives. We’re talk­ing about putting one-​seventh of our econ­omy under the government’s thumb. We’re also talk­ing about some­thing as inti­mate to our per­sonal well-​being as med­ical care.

This bill is so unpop­u­lar that peo­ple on the right and the left hate it. So why go through with it? The Sen­ate is plan­ning to vote on this on Christ­mas Eve. Why the rush? Though we will begin pay­ing for this bill imme­di­ately, we will see no ben­e­fits for years. (That’s the trick that allowed the CBO to state that the bill won’t grow the deficit for the next ten years.)

The administration’s promises of trans­parency and bipar­ti­san­ship have been bro­ken one by one. This entire process has been defined by mid­night votes on week­ends, closed-​door meet­ings with indus­try lob­by­ists, and pay­offs to politi­cians will­ing to sell their prin­ci­ples for sweet­heart deals. Is it any won­der that Amer­i­cans are so dis­il­lu­sioned with their lead­ers in Washington?

This is about pol­i­tics, not health care. Amer­i­cans don’t want this bill. Amer­i­cans don’t like this bill. Wash­ing­ton has stopped lis­ten­ing to us. But we’re pay­ing atten­tion, and 2010 is coming.

Source: Gov­er­nor Sarah Palin, Mid­night Votes, Back­room Deals, and a Death Panel, The Governor’s Face­book page.

Copenhagen’s political science

Gover­nor Sarah PalinPalin writes the fol­low­ing in the Wash­ing­ton Post:

With the pub­li­ca­tion of dam­ag­ing e-​mails from a cli­mate research cen­ter in Britain, the rad­i­cal envi­ron­men­tal move­ment appears to face a tip­ping point. The rev­e­la­tion of appalling actions by so-​called cli­mate change experts allows the Amer­i­can pub­lic to finally under­stand the con­cerns so many of us have artic­u­lated on this issue.

Climate-​gate,” as the e-​mails and other doc­u­ments from the Cli­mate Research Unit at the Uni­ver­sity of East Anglia have become known, exposes a highly politi­cized sci­en­tific cir­cle — the same cir­cle whose work under­lies efforts at the Copen­hagen cli­mate change con­fer­ence. The agenda-​driven poli­cies being pushed in Copen­hagen won’t change the weather, but they would change our econ­omy for the worse.

Read the rest of this entry »

News

Copenhagen’s polit­i­cal sci­ence (Wash­ing­ton Post)
Gov­er­nor Palin again calls for Barack Obama to skip Copen­hagen in this Wash­ing­ton Post com­men­tary. She points to the need for real sci­ence, bal­anc­ing real-​world costs and ben­e­fits, and the inequitable pro­pos­als and expec­tions among nations.

Commonsense from Governor Palin

No, I am not for amnesty. .… Ille­gal aliens are called ille­gal for a rea­son. .… If they are not going to fol­low the rules they need to get out. – Sarah Palin

Clear, direct, and absolutely cor­rect.

 
Source: Radio inter­view with Lars Lar­son, Decem­ber 32009.

Mr. President: Boycott Copenhagen; Investigate Your Climate Change “Experts” – Sarah Palin

Gover­nor Sarah Palin on Climategate:

The president’s deci­sion to attend the inter­na­tional cli­mate con­fer­ence in Copen­hagen needs to be recon­sid­ered in light of the unfold­ing Cli­mate­gate scan­dal. The leaked e-​mails involved in Cli­mate­gate expose the unsci­en­tific behav­ior of lead­ing cli­mate sci­en­tists who delib­er­ately destroyed records to block infor­ma­tion requests, manip­u­lated data to “hide the decline” in global tem­per­a­tures, and con­spired to silence the crit­ics of man-​made global warm­ing. I sup­port Sen­a­tor James Inhofe’s call for a full inves­ti­ga­tion into this scan­dal. Because it involves many of the same per­son­al­i­ties and enti­ties behind the Copen­hagen con­fer­ence, Cli­mate­gate calls into ques­tion many of the pro­pos­als being pushed there, includ­ing any­thing that would lead to a cap and tax plan. Pol­icy should be based on sound sci­ence, not snake oil. I took a stand against such snake oil sci­ence when I sued the fed­eral gov­ern­ment over its deci­sion to list the polar bear as an endan­gered species despite the fact that the polar bear pop­u­la­tion has increased. I’ve never denied the real­ity of cli­mate change; in fact, I was the first gov­er­nor to cre­ate a sub­cab­i­net posi­tion to deal specif­i­cally with the issue. I saw the impact of chang­ing weather pat­terns first­hand while serv­ing as gov­er­nor of our only Arc­tic state. But while we rec­og­nize the effects of chang­ing water lev­els, ero­sion pat­terns, and glacial ice melt, we can­not pri­mar­ily blame man’s activ­i­ties for the earth’s cycli­cal weather changes. The dras­tic eco­nomic mea­sures being pushed by dog­matic envi­ron­men­tal­ists won’t change the weather, but will dra­mat­i­cally change our econ­omy for the worse. Pol­icy deci­sions require real sci­ence and real solu­tions, not junk sci­ence and dooms­day scare tac­tics pushed by an envi­ron­men­tal priest­hood that cap­i­tal­izes on the public’s worry and makes them feel that own­ing an SUV is a “sin” against the planet. In his inau­gural address, Pres­i­dent Obama declared his inten­tion to “restore sci­ence to its right­ful place.” Boy­cotting Copen­hagen while this scan­dal is thor­oughly inves­ti­gated would send a strong mes­sage that the United States gov­ern­ment will not be a party to fraud­u­lent sci­en­tific prac­tices. Say­ing no to Copen­hagen and cap and tax are first steps in “restor­ing sci­ence to its right­ful place.

Obama’s War of 1,000 Cuts

Yes, Afghanistan is now Obama’s War. It was his since inau­gu­ra­tion but make no mis­take, from last night’s speech, it is clearly his and we can no longer blame Bush for the mess. Obama has now cre­ated the recipe for his own disaster:

  • First, the mil­i­tary asked for as much as 60,000 troops, Obama gives them half, and
  • Sec­ond, while Obama says and repeats that his goal is “defined as dis­rupt­ing, dis­man­tling, and defeat­ing al Qaeda and its extrem­ist allies”, he spends more time Viet­namiz­ing the war with talk of how he’s going to shift the effort (and respon­si­bil­ity of achiev­ing his goal) to the Karzai’s hap­less and cor­rupt gov­ern­ment. As he clearly states “these addi­tion­alAmer­i­can and inter­na­tional troops will allow us to accel­er­ate hand­ing over respon­si­bil­ity to Afghan forces, and allow us to begin the trans­fer of our forces out of Afghanistan in July of 2011.”

What does this mean?

Read the rest of this entry »

News

Sarah Palin, ver­sion 2009: Going rogue, get­ting even (San Fran­cisco Chron­i­cle)
Debra Saun­ders writes a review of Sarah Palin’s Going Rogue, “She’s folksy and quotable. She has deliv­ered a book that will thrill a base that loves to shout, “They done her wrong.”

News

Those who fol­low Sarah Palin are sow­ing the seeds of their own destruc­tion (Guardian)
Another British col­umn, this time by Gary Younge, try­ing to explain Sarah Palin. One inter­est­ing point: “…the very things that lib­eral com­men­ta­tors ridicule her for – being inar­tic­u­late, unworldly, sim­plis­tic and hokey – are the very things that make her attrac­tive to her base. Indeed, every time she is taunted she becomes more pop­u­lar because it reaf­firms the (not entirely mis­taken) view that the deeply held val­ues of a siz­able sec­tion of the pop­u­la­tion are being dis­par­aged.” George Bush, Jr. was really sim­ply a Palin-​lite. She’s the real thing.

News

Obama inspires, Palin con­nects (Globe and Mail)
Rex Mur­phy offers a com­par­a­tive take on Obama – los­ing his lus­tre, his appeal is dim­ming – and Palin – who is stak­ing her claim. “Mr. Obama “bestows” him­self”.… while Palin “will never speak in front of faux Greek columns. She walks on the stage much the same way she’d go into a gas sta­tion. But she’s shrewd in her choice of themes, has a mar­velous feel for her audi­ence, and a con­fi­dence that will never be con­fused with arrogance.”

News

Public­ity tour turns fresh page on ‘Palin Power’ (The Times)
A report of the crowds who started wait­ing over 24 hours before Gov­er­nor Palin arrived in Michi­gan to kick off her book tour. It cap­tures nicely the pas­sion of her sup­port­ers and the potent power she holds. The clear mes­sage is that peo­ple see her as real, some­one easy to sup­port, and wor­thy of sup­port. “It was like 2008 had never ended.”

Exit Obama
    Unless Barack Hussein Obama, II is constitutionally disqualified, resigns, or is impeached beforehand, he can be replaced at noon on January 20, 2013, in 2 years, 10 months, 8 days, 15 hours, 31 minutes
Recommended Reading

My News Clippings
  • Copenhagen's political science (Washington Post)
    Governor Palin again calls for Barack Obama to skip Copenhagen in this Washington Post commentary.  She points to the need for real science, balancing real-world costs and benefits, and the inequitable proposals and expections among nations.

  • New York State Senate Votes Down Gay Marriage Bill (New York Times)
    Another attempt, this time by a state legislature, to legalize homosexual marriage is decisively defeated.  Traditional marriage stands in New York.

  • Searching in Vain for the Obama Magic (Der Spiegel)
    Starting out with "Never before has a speech by President Barack Obama felt as false as his Tuesday address announcing America's new strategy for Afghanistan," this editorial admit "nausea" upon hearing Obama's speech.  They even note the instructions to West Point cadets to respond "enthusiastically" that was obviously ignored.

  • The Climate Science Isn't Settled, Confident predictions of catastrophe are unwarranted (Wall Street Journal)
    A rather detailed discussion on global warming that looks at that the globally averaged temperature anomaly (GATA).  It is definitely worth a read but I'm not sure what point Lindzen is trying to make in the final paragraph.

  • When scientists behave like bullies (San Francisco Chronicle)
    Debra Saunders writes about the damning corruption of science by global warming scientists.

  • Leaked emails won't harm UN climate body, says chairman (Guardian)
    Chairman of the UN's Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) says global warming is not debunk because of a few scientists.  For Rajendra Pachauri--check out the picture accompanying the article as this guy is a definite look-alike of the Unibomber and his the religion of  Anthropogenic Global Warming (AGW)  is just as dangerous to civilization.  Anyway, he claims that despite everything, AGW is alive and well.  He even defended Phil Jones and said he should not resign.

  • Diplomacy 101 (New York Times)
    New York Times editorial the president an F for diplomacy in the Middle East.  Obama "demanded that Israel freeze settlements, Palestinians crack down on anti-Israel violence and Arab leaders demonstrate their readiness to reach out to Israel."  Nine months later, Israel still says no, Palestinians refuse talks until they do, and Arab states refuse to do anything.  Obama achieved nothing, except a dismal 4% approval rating in Israel.

  • Sarah Palin, version 2009: Going rogue, getting even (San Francisco Chronicle)
    Debra Saunders writes a review of Sarah Palin's Going Rogue, "She's folksy and quotable. She has delivered a book that will thrill a base that loves to shout, "They done her wrong."

  • We will release the data...
    Climategate: University of East Anglia U-turn in climate change row (Telegraph)
    We threw away the data...
    Climate change data dumped (Times)
    The Climate Research Unit says, according to the Telegraph, that they will release the raw data that global warming is based upon.  At the same time the Times reports that the same folks now admit that the raw data was thrown away.  All they kept was the manipulated data they created to support global warming.  As Roger Pielke, professor of environmental studies at Colorado University, is quoted in the Times, “The CRU is basically saying, ‘Trust us’."

  • Afghans Detail a Secret Prison Still Operating on a U.S. Base (New York Times)
    According to this article, Obama continues to run at least two secret prisons--one in Iraq and one in Afghanistan--with reports of abuse and prisoners held without rights normally afforded prisons of war.  Surprising to hear that this continued after Bush left office.  This is a terrible stain on America's reputation and puts Americans at risk of similar mistreatment if captured.