Sunday, December 9, 2012

Tipping Point,

Some people work for their living, some people vote for their living.  The United States may have reached a tipping point.
 

Republicans bigoted against name Susan?

  • Last Updated: 11:43 PM, December 7, 2012
  • Posted: 11:33 PM, December 7, 2012
  • headshot
    The Republicans’ opposition to Susan Rice’s potentially becoming the next secretary of state is pretty hard to understand.
    It wasn’t long ago that Republicans were all for a different black woman named Condoleezza Rice taking the same job — is the GOP just bigoted about the name Susan?
    Republicans’ stated objections to Rice make no sense. They complain that she’s “dishonest” and “incompetent,” to which she could easily respond, Well, duh, that’s why I work for the government.
    When did Republicans start insisting on approving only competent, honest people, especially with regard to the Obama administration? Is it just me, or did that come completely out of left field?
    Susan Rice: No worse than rest of O’s Cabinet.
    Susan Rice: No worse than rest of O’s Cabinet.
    I thought it was common knowledge that people who are good at things get jobs in the private sector, and those who are ambitious but not particularly useful find jobs in politics. So our expectations are similar to when we give small tasks to toddlers: As long as they don’t screw things up too badly, we consider them successes.
    So what makes Rice so horrible? That she misled everyone about Benghazi by peddling the ridiculous story that the attack was in response to some YouTube video? Is that so exceptionally awful? (Didn’t the FDR administration insist for two weeks that the Pearl Harbor attack was a spontaneous response to an Abbott and Costello routine?)
    This idea that President Obama should only appoint honest, competent people is really unfair. The guy is a Chicago politician; he’s probably never once met anyone like that.
    Just look at his first Cabinet to see how out-of-the-blue this demand for competency is. He has a treasury secretary who couldn’t figure out how to pay his own taxes. His attorney general leads a Justice Department that somehow thought selling guns to Mexican drug cartels would have good results.
    Then there are Obama’s secretaries of commerce, who were supposed to be promoting job creation and economic growth — who in the world knows what they’ve been up to these past four years?
    Really, looking at the administration as a whole, Obama did better than we could have expected by appointing only one czar who was a Communist truther.
    So, to be fair to Rice, Republicans should at least grade her on a curve. Is she really that awful . . . for an Obama appointee? That’s a pretty hefty charge that had better be backed up by a lot of evidence. Unless we really think she’ll give nuclear secrets to North Korea or accidentally burn down a foreign capitol building, she might even be above average for the Obama Cabinet.
    Republicans need to have more realistic expectations. To the average American, the secretary of state just visits foreign countries and tries not to laugh at how silly they are — which is certainly something none of us want to do.
    So as long as Rice is reasonably loyal to the United States (i.e., identifies it as one of her five favorite countries) and probably won’t accidentally start any wars (or, given recent history, not more than one), we can declare her as “good enough.” And what more can we expect from government?
    Political satirist Frank J. Fleming’s new e-book is “How To Fix Everything in America Forever.”

    Saturday, December 8, 2012

    Happy Hanukkah


    Despite Major Tax increases, California Revenues in Freefall

    Despite Major Tax increases, California Revenues in Freefall

    Barry's forth column

    Now They Tell Us
    Posted By Tom Blumer On December 8, 2012 @ 12:00 am In Column,Elections 2012 | 43 Comments
    Now that Barack Obama is safely ensconced in the White House for another four years, several items which should have been noticed or revealed before Election Day have come to the fore. Collectively, they tell us two things: that the pre-election economy was worse than voters were led to believe, and that the prospects for meaningful improvement under the current regime are bleak at best. Additionally, in at least one instance, economic activity itself was likely manipulated.
    The probable gamesmanship occurred at Government/General Motors, which is still effectively under Obama administration control, still on track to saddle U.S. taxpayers with a loss of $25 billion or more [1], and still losing market share [2].
    Despite already-bloated inventories at its dealers, GM’s production lines ran full throttle during September and October. Thanks to that ramp-up and unimpressive sales growth, retail inventories grew by an astonishing 99,000 in October and November. Dealers received five vehicles for every four they sold during those two months, bringing their on-hand stocks from an already unsustainable 689,000 in September to an absolutely ridiculous 788,000. GM estimates that its dealers have a 4-1/2 month supply [3] of full-size pickups — if the economy doesn’t tank.
    It seems all too likely that a presidential campaign which used “GM is alive, Osama is dead” [4] as its campaign theme ordered or pressured GM executives to keep the assembly lines running all-out regardless of the business consequences. The campaign of challenger Mitt Romney should have been paying closer attention, as half of GM’s inventory spike occurred and was reported before Election Day. But instead, it let itself get distracted [5] by mostly irrelevant noise about Chrysler’s plans for its Jeep brand in China. It even missed touting Chrysler parent Fiat’s announcement that it plans to manufacture a new Jeep model [6] for the North American market in Italy.
    Earlier this week, almost a month removed from election-related visibility, the Wall Street Journal reported [7] that the company “is taking steps to cut excess production,” specifically citing a plant in the critical swing state of Ohio, and “signaled there may be more to come.” Imagine that. If the economy sputters badly, layoffs could easily begin occurring at GM and throughout its supply chain.
    News in the housing market, particularly concerning sales of new single-family homes, suddenly went from pre-election exuberance to post-election bleakness. The Census Bureau’s final pre-election report told us that new-home sales had reached a seasonally adjusted annual level of 389,000. The administration’s press apparatchiks dutifully reported that figure as the highest in 2-1/2 years. The Associated Press, aka the Administration’s Press [8], told readers [9] and subscribing outlets that the news was “further evidence of a sustained housing recovery that could help lift the lackluster economy.”
    Oops. The bureau’s post-Thanksgiving release [10] revised September’s number down by over 5 percent to 369,000 and also reported a slight October decline. Overall, it showed that the housing market has gone nowhere [11] during the past eight reported months. Actual monthly sales during the past five months have badly trailed 2009, when most observers thought that things were already as bad as they could get. Those who believed that clearly underestimated the Obama administration’s ability to perpetuate misery throughout a sector which would have long since recovered if it had simply been left alone. The AP’s still overoptimistic reaction to the September revision was to insist [12] that “the housing market (is) starting to recover more than five years after the bubble burst,” and to push a large portion of the blame for October onto Superstorm Sandy.
    Readers are going to be seeing a lot of Sandy-related excuse-making during the next several months, and — who knows? — maybe even the next several years. Already, Sandy is being peddled as the reason why the ADP-Moody’s November private-sector employment report came in with only 118,000 jobs added [13]. Mark Zandi, chief economist at Moody’s Analytics, claimed that the number would have been 86,000 higher if it weren’t for Sandy. Logically then, the December catch-up added to a supposedly typical month with 200,000 jobs added should cause the next ADP-Moody’s report to show a gain of almost 300,000. Wanna bet, Mark? November’s jobs report [14] from the government released on Friday, though presented as pretty decent by the press, really wasn’t [15].
    Now even the press is turning dour [16] on the economy, as if lousy conditions totally invisible before November 6 have suddenly (and of course, “unexpectedly [17]“) appeared to ruin things. But so are Obama and Democratic legislators, who while demanding economy-retarding, job-killing pound-of-flesh tax increases and insisting that entitlement spending stay off the table for another ten years [18], want to add [19] “tens of billions of dollars of … stimulus measures” to any deal to prevent the January 1 “fiscal cliff.”
    The only things which seem likely to arise out of all of this are trillion-dollar deficits as far as the eye can see, continued lackluster or worse economic growth, and indefinitely higher than acceptable levels of unemployment and under-employment. Oh, and one more thing, courtesy of Howard Dean and despite the administration’s insistence to the contrary: tax increases for everyone [20].
    More: 73% of Jobs Created in Last 5 Months Have Been Government Jobs [21]


    Article printed from PJ Media: http://pjmedia.com
    URL to article: http://pjmedia.com/blog/now-they-tell-us/
    URLs in this post:
    [1] of $25 billion or more: http://www.breitbart.com/Big-Government/2012/08/13/Double-Fail-GM-To-Recall-At-Least-38-000-Cars-Treasury-Expects-To-Lose-25-Billion-on-Auto-Bailout
    [2] still losing market share: http://online.wsj.com/mdc/public/page/2_3022-autosales.html
    [3] have a 4-1/2 month supply: http://media.gm.com/media/us/en/gm/news.detail.html/content/Pages/news/us/en/2012/Dec/gmsales.html
    [4] “GM is alive, Osama is dead”: http://articles.latimes.com/2012/sep/05/nation/la-na-tt-obamas-answer-20120905
    [5] get distracted: http://watchdog.org/60707/blumer-fiat-outsourcing-leave-romney-obama-with-explaining-to-do/
    [6] to manufacture a new Jeep model: http://newsbusters.org/blogs/tom-blumer/2012/10/30/ap-hides-fiats-plans-manufacture-jeeps-north-american-market-italy
    [7] the Wall Street Journal reported: http://blogs.wsj.com/drivers-seat/2012/12/04/general-motors-cutting-production-to-control-inventory/
    [8] the Administration’s Press: http://www.bizzyblog.com/2012/04/09/ap-the-administrations-press-and-propagandists/
    [9] told readers: http://bigstory.ap.org/article/us-new-home-sales-rise-highest-2-½-years
    [10] post-Thanksgiving release: http://www.census.gov/construction/nrs/pdf/newressales.pdf
    [11] has gone nowhere: http://bizzyblog.com/wp-images/APnewHomeSalesSAandNSA2007toOct12.jpg
    [12] was to insist: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/U/US_HOME_SALES?SITE=AP&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT&CTIME=2012-11-28-11-25-02
    [13] only 118,000 jobs added: http://adpemploymentreport.com/2012/November/NER/NER-November-2012.aspx
    [14] November’s jobs report: http://www.bls.gov/news.release/empsit.nr0.htm
    [15] really wasn’t: http://www.aei-ideas.org/2012/12/november-jobs-report-another-nasty-new-normal-month-for-u-s-workers/
    [16] even the press is turning dour: http://news.investors.com/ibd-editorials/120412-635722-press-admits-economy-stinks.htm
    [17] unexpectedly: http://pjmedia.com/instapundit/?s=unexpectedly
    [18] for another ten years: http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/politics/2012/11/durbin-wants-no-entitlements-in-fiscal-cliff-deal/
    [19] want to add: http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/05/business/economy/republicans-balk-at-obamas-short-term-stimulus.html?_r=0
    [20] for everyone: http://www.realclearpolitics.com/video/2012/12/06/howard_dean_the_truth_is_everybody_needs_to_pay_more_taxes_not_just_the_rich.html
    [21] 73% of Jobs Created in Last 5 Months Have Been Government Jobs: http://pjmedia.com/tatler/2012/12/07/73-of-jobs-created-in-last-5-months-have-been-government-jobs/

    Friday, December 7, 2012

    Thomas Sowell,

    NATIONAL REVIEW ONLINE www.nationalreview.com PRINT
    One of the big advantages that President Obama has, as he plays “chicken” with congressional Republicans along the “fiscal cliff,” is that he is a master of the plausible lie, which will never be exposed by the mainstream media — nor, apparently, by the Republicans.
    A key lie that has been repeated over and over, largely unanswered, is that President Bush’s “tax cuts for the rich” cost the government so much tax revenue that this added to the budget deficit — so that the government cannot afford to allow the cost of letting the Bush tax rates continue for “the rich.”
    It sounds very plausible, and constant repetition without a challenge may well be enough to convince the voting public that, if the Republican-controlled House of Representatives does not go along with Barack Obama’s demands for more spending and higher tax rates on the top 2 percent, it just shows that they care more for “the rich” than for the other 98 percent.
    What is remarkable is how easy it is to show how completely false Obama’s argument is. That also makes it completely inexplicable why the Republicans have not done so.
    The official statistics that show plainly how wrong Barack Obama is can be found in his own “Economic Report of the President” for 2012, on page 411. You can look it up.
    You may be able to find a copy of the “Economic Report of the President” for 2012 at your local public library. Or you can buy a hard copy from the Government Printing Office or download an electronic version from the Internet.
    Those who find that “a picture is worth a thousand words” need only see the graphs published in the November 30 issue of Investor’s Business Daily.
    What both the statistical tables in the “Economic Report of the President” and the graphs in Investor’s Business Daily show is that: (1) Tax revenues went up — not down — after tax rates were cut during the Bush administration, and (2) the budget deficit declined, year after year, after the cuts in tax rates that have been blamed by Obama for increasing the deficit.
    Indeed, the New York Times reported in 2006: “An unexpectedly steep rise in tax revenues from corporations and the wealthy is driving down the projected budget deficit this year.”
    While the New York Times may not have expected this, there is nothing unprecedented about lower tax rates’ leading to higher tax revenues, despite assumptions by many in the media and elsewhere that tax rates and tax revenues automatically move in the same direction. They do not.
    The Congressional Budget Office has been embarrassed repeatedly by making projections based on the assumption that tax revenues and tax rates move in the same direction.
    This has happened as recently as the George W. Bush administration and as far back as the Reagan administration. Moreover, tax revenues went up when tax rates went down as far back as the Coolidge administration, before there was a Congressional Budget Office to make false predictions.
    The bottom line is that Barack Obama’s blaming increased budget deficits on the Bush tax cuts is demonstrably false. What caused the decreasing budget deficits after the Bush tax cuts to suddenly reverse and start increasing was the mortgage crisis. The deficit increased in 2008, followed by a huge increase in 2009.
    So it is sheer hogwash that “tax cuts for the rich” caused the government to lose tax revenues. The government gained tax revenues; it did not lose them. Moreover, “the rich” paid a larger amount of taxes, and a larger share of all taxes, after the tax rates were cut.
    That is because people change their economic behavior when tax rates are changed, contrary to what the Congressional Budget Office and others seem to assume, and this can stimulate the economy more than a government “stimulus” has done under either Bush or Obama.
    Yet there is no need to assume that Barack Obama is mistaken about the way to get the economy out of the doldrums. His top priority has always been increasing the size and scope of government. If that means sacrificing the economy or the truth, it’s no deterrent to Obama. That is why he is willing to play chicken with Republicans along the fiscal cliff.
    Thomas Sowell is a senior fellow at the Hoover Institution. © 2012 Creators Syndicate, Inc.