Sep 14 2010

CT Senate Heads Towards Toss Up

The anti ‘big government’, anti ‘party of big government’ tsunami is still rising as we come ashore to this fall’s elections. This year we saw a huge lead disappear in WV’s open senate seat. We saw long time Democrat incumbents in CA, WI, WA and NV all slip into trouble – all now fighting for their political lives. We saw the blue state DE come into play. We saw Ted Kennedy’s seat go to the GOP.

We saw OH, PA, FL, VA all turn back to GOP.

And now we see the CT Senate race go from a +33% lead for the Democrat in March go to a +25% lead in May and now down to a +6% lead in September. This race should be considered a toss up, and just one more Dem senate seat in trouble. The list is CA, WA, NV, CO, WI, PA, AR, DE, WV, IN, IL, ND, CT – 13 Dems seats in play.

5 responses so far

Sep 14 2010

Dirty Political Tricks, Now Where Have We Seen That Before

As I noted in the comments on another post, the spectacle unfolding in the DE GOP senate primary has become a joke. It seems the Tea Party and Governor Palin are being brought back to Earth in DE. The movement and governor have produced surprising and needed upheaval in the GOP. They did it by bringing in talent from outside the Political Industrial Complex. Talent who can bring fresh ideas, new energy and reinforced morals to the political process and government. Hopefully they will also be putting the federal bureaucracy on a crash diet and off its addiction to tax payer incomes.

In CO, NV, AK and CT we have real people running for office, not political automatons who will literally say and do anything to get elected. In NH the leading contender for the GOP looks like a wonderful person, and in SC Nikki Haley is heading to be the new Governor. Palin has backed some ‘incumbents’ as well, such as Michelle Bachman.  All in all a laudable list of new blood I 100% support (though I am sure I do not 100% agree with).

But in DE Palin and the Tea Party picked a lemon. A really rotten lemon. Christine O’Donnell is so loose with the truth I doubt she is even as pure a conservative as Palin and others think. She has exaggerated her previous election performance, she has exaggerated her pain and suffering from being fired for breaking rules of her employer, she has lied about being in a Masters program, she has been forced to pay back taxes and wages to people who worked for her. She is not a proven paragon of conservative virtue. In fact she is just the opposite. It was a bad call.

And now her campaign is making up complete lies about Mike Castle – a long term member of the GOP with a known track record (one few would cheer):

The madness continues, as activists who support Christine O’Donnell in the Delaware Senate primary have stepped up their attacks on Mike Castle by alleging that he voted to impeach President Bush. That will come as a surprise to those who wonder how they missed such a vote, but Dan Riehl assures us that it is true. Not only that, he explicitly ties this claim to radio talk show host Mark Levin’s attack on us; he titles his post “Paging Powerline.” He says that he would “like to hear from Powerline as to why they are supporting someone who signed on to such ‘moonbattery’ and did such damage to our country.”

First of all, Riehl’s claim–which he says may have originated with Mark Levin–is absurd on its face. The House of Representatives never voted on whether to impeach President Bush. The vote that Riehl and other anti-Castle pundits refer to is this one, to refer Dennis Kucinich’s impeachment resolution to the House Judiciary Committee. That motion passed; obviously it was not an impeachment resolution, or we would have had an impeachment trial. Castle was one of 24 Republicans who voted for the referral resolution, along with conservative stalwarts like Peter King, Kevin Brady, Ralph Hall, and others.

Before the gullible get all birther on me, let me remind people that sometimes it is better to let things hit the house floor and be exposed to public humiliation, especially when it comes from Kucinich. It was always a good idea to let the impeachment nuts on the left have as much air time as possible over Iraq. It helped save the surge and our victory there because the voters saw the opposition as foolish and silly. Voting to allow Kucinich to make a fool of himself is not a traitorous act to the GOP. In fact, it is a well honored tradition.

The far right is losing it. Maybe they should take a chill pill and see if they want to continue to run around and make baseless and silly accusations about others. To do or say anything to win. To become just like those they supposedly oppose.. Because it ain’t us right of center folks whose images are getting destroyed here. No one admires people who make up lies about others. Unless of course you’re a slimy DC politician – then it is your bread and butter.

I hope Governor Palin is learning a lesson here about vetting candidates, and vetting their impact on the broad base required to defeat the dems and roll back Obamacare and the out of control spending. It will take large majorities to tame the federal beast and its backers. Purity will not win this war. We cannot condone or support divisive candidates, nor can we waste our energies on flawed candidates. DE is a wake up call to all who oppose Obama, Pelosi and Reid – and their far left agenda. At the moment that is a large and diverse group. We need to keep it that way.

Update: And I fail to see how this kind of action is patriotic or inspiring:

The chairman of the Delaware Republican Party received a death threat last week over his support for Rep. Mike Castle (R-Del) over Tea Party challenger Christine O’Donnell in the state’s upcoming Senate primary, a party official confirmed to the Huffington Post.

The threat, issued in the form of an email, told chairman Tom Ross that he deserves “a bullet in the head” for backing “political ass-kissing RINO’s” [Republicans in name only].

“It is one thing to have your country screwed over by socialists, it is far worse to be backstabbed by people pretending to be your friends,” the email read. “We will either rid the GOP of pieces of shit like you, or we will start a new ‘Common Sense Conservative’ party and render you all useless.”

Like I said – take a chill pill and get back to us when your attitudes have matured.

20 responses so far

Sep 14 2010

Dumb Business Ideas

Published by under All General Discussions

This has to be one of the most innovative ways to go out of business to come along in a long time:

The features of this torture device:

The new “saddle” seat, to be unveiled at a conference this week, increases the number of seats an airline can have in its economy class.

The design, named the “SkyRider”, allows just 23 inches of legroom, which is about seven inches less than the average seat’s space of 30 inches.

There is no way this 6′, 220 lb frequent flyer is going to use any airline that can’t afford a proper seat. Right now I barely fit in economy class spacing. I can’t eat on the tray (the reclining head in front of me blocks access to my food) and my back is always a wreck on long flights. Unless some liberal law is passed requiring we suffer even more as we travel, this idea is DOA.

7 responses so far

Sep 13 2010

Will Tea Party Have Upset In DE, Or Will Far Right Fail Again?

Published by under All General Discussions

Public Policy Polling is out with a poll showing a nail-biter in the GOP primary in DE for VP Biden’s Senate seat. PPP has Christine O’Donnell – easily the worst candidate the Tea Party has promoted this year (outside a string of really good candidates) – leading Mike Castle 47-44%. This is within the margin of error, so turn out is key and who knows what it will be.

PPP was the only organization to detect Senator Lisa Murkowski’s troubles in her GOP Alaska primary, which she lost to a Tea Party candidate. But you can easily miss the intensity of the independents and center right in a state like DE. The dynamics are just not the same. And pollsters can easily miss the fact the Tea Party has a very small, but intense far right component to it, which makes it appear to be farther right than it really is.

O’Donnell is a true disaster, and goes to show that all political movements and parties have a range of supporters and candidates – from the abysmal to the inspiring. The Tea Party is no different. O’Donnell has some serious issues with the truth, issues with being a role model and issues with being someone you would trust your kids with for 10 minutes. While she may have some gems of sanity here and there, the total package is lacking. It is more a sign how small the conservative movement has become in deep blue states, distilled down to the far right crowd which do not represent the broader American electorate.

We shall see tomorrow if America’s priority is to throw the Dems our or to elect the most unelectable candidate in the nation simply because she is further right of the stronger GOP candidate on a handful of issues. Sadly, we see the right wing zealots raising their intolerant voices again as the would rather see radical conservative lose control of the US Senate to the dems than see a center-right conservative vote in a new GOP Senate Majority Leader. Clearly, there are those on the right who are really just the mirror image of the far left. They are creating a rift in the movement to unseat the Democrats this year, and as usual are out hunting RINOS. Pathetic.

An O’Donnell win would damage the Tea Party across the country, so don’t think the damage could be limited to DE. Someone as shaky as O’Donnell could cause a lot of doubt and loss of support for reasonable candidates in NV, CO, PA, etc. Remember, We The People recently fired the GOP from Congress in the last two elections, they are not swarming to the right out of inspiration. Jim DeMint may get his impotent rump party, pure and ineffective due to its small size (and yes, in politics size counts).

I have  my doubts O’Donnell will win in tomorrow’s primary. Pollsters have not been able to demonstrate any accuracy this season, though PPP has done it on occasion. Whatever the result, it is the way our democracy works so we will accept the decisions of the people of DE. Even if that decisions is just as horrendous as the decisions good Americans made in 2006 and 2008. After all, if conservatives are not for democracy then they are simply pretend conservatives.

Update: Jim Geraghty at NRO has a good round up of the fault lines being established thanks to the far right slamming people who disagree with them – just like liberals do.

65 responses so far

Sep 12 2010

UK Investigation Completely Debunks Global Warming Science

Summary: This is a long post, but the bottom line is worth the time to read it. Under oath, in front of the House of Commons Committee on Science and Technology, Lord Oxburgh testified that it is impossible to reconstruct an accurate global temperature record over the past 1,000 years. Especially one that could claim modern climate is significantly different from that seen over the last 1000 years.

Main Post: There was a stunning hearing last week in the UK’s House of Commons Science and Technology Committee, wherein one Lord Oxburgh testified about his investigation of the University of East Anglia’s (UEA) Climatic Research Unit (CRU). CRU is the organization at the heart of last fall’s email controversies dubbed Climategate, when it was discovered scientists had used ‘tricks’ to fool people into thinking there has been massive global warming during the industrial revolution and subsequent population explosion. CRU scientists were also caught working in concert with leading US researchers to squash contrary science findings, using their roles as peer reviewers of science journals. They rigged the scientific process and debate to support only their views while censoring sound science that would challenge (if not out right destroy) their views.

As the world’s scientists and engineers (like myself) who work in other, more rigorous fields of science, statistics and modeling began to focus our attention on the so called settled science of global warming, we discovered errors, problems in methodology, unpublished uncertainties, and numerous questions about the science behind the claims. Some took the lead in beginning to probe the science to see if it could stand up to scrutiny through Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requests. The CRU team and its US allies denied access to the data and methods used to create the claims, to the point where FOIA requesrts were being stone walled and evidence apparently deleted. We have the emails from numerous individuals as evidence of these actions.

From my lowly perch working for NASA (where we toil to discover the wonders of this universe using state of the art robotic systems, as well as working on human exploration of space) I found the claims lacking with regard to (a) knowing ‘a global temperature’ today and going back 150 years using historic temperature records and (b) knowing the temperature going back  over one thousand years using proxies like tree rings. I concluded there was no way to know a global temperature with any accuracy that would support seeing tenth of a degree changes in the modern record, or less than two degrees increase in the last thousand years. I felt the IPCC and CRU claims of confidence to be extraordinary.

In my 3rd post on Climategate I pointed out the obvious problem of accuracy and uncertainty when dealing with available data. I used the broadly understood example of accuracy and uncertainty related to the focus of images, because everyone knows you cannot discern details in images beyond the focus (accuracy) level. Any conclusions made near the focus limit have huge uncertainties tied to them. Go beyond the focus limit and you cannot make any conclusions – the data just does not exist. At that point you are seeing patterns in the data the way your mind wants or likes to see them. I used two images of Mars to underscore this simple rule of life – one from 1956 and one from 2001.

You can click the 2nd image to see its full resolution – and this is not even the highest resolution version available (it would take way too long to download).  As you can see, there is no way to measure changes in features easily seen in 2001 back over half a century using the older photographic capabilities of the time. Even if one could measure the percentage of dark or light surface, or regular surface verses ice cap today, you cannot say how much they have change in 50 years. The accuracy (focus) of the older technology simply cannot provide the historic detail.

In that same post I also noted a CRU generated graph I discover in one of the CRU reports exposed with the emails. It was created in 2005 and actually shows the CRU estimate of accuracy in its temperature reconstructions using the 150 year old temperature record. It is itself a major admission, one which I am surprised to this day no one has picked up on, because it shows massive uncertainty in the ‘known’ temperature record (click to enlarge):

This is for the year 1969 and it shows something quite enlightening. It shows CRUs estimate for sampling error due to (1) uncertainty in the actual measurement (they claim it is 0.04° C monthly), (2) error in the adjustments they make to the raw data (homogenization in their vernacular), (3) errors from incomplete station records over the period, (4) how site  specific errors (1-3) combine to create even larger grid level errors, (5) sampling errors in the grids due to too few samples and (6) uncertainties in bias corrections. The result is incredible. Most of the southern hemisphere is showing errors of 0.5-1.0°C in final temperature anomaly values. The Northern hemisphere (where there are longer, more complete and denser measurement histories) shows errors running from 2.5-5°C! There is now way CRU knows within a tenth of a degree whether the Earth was warmer or colder than today versus 1969 – not with this kind of error model.

So why all the long winded history? Because Lord Oxburgh confirmed all this in his testimony. He tried to dodge investigating the science behind global warming alarmists claims, but somehow his scientific code of honor required him to be honest about the methodology and results created by the CRU. It was this testimony I want to highlight.

Here is a link to the video of the testimony. He begins his part of the hearing around the 10:39 AM mark and testifies for almost an hour. But I want to focus on a few sections. What follows is my transcription of the discussions. I will use “SATC” for the the people on the panel (since I don’t know who they are) and “OX” for Lord Oxburgh’s replies. I also note the time stamp so everyone can fast-forward to the point in question and see and hear the discussion as it played out.

The first key statement  is at 11:00 AM and is in regard to panel member on his team and his written comments about the CRU methods and products:

SATC: … I am not going to read them all out, I will give them to the clerk afterwards, but he says “I take real exception to having simulation runs described as ‘experiments’, without at least the qualification of ‘computer experiments’. This is turning centuries of science on its head”. And there are a lot of comments like that. “It is hard to directly correlate this aspect with the anthropogenic hypothesis of climate warming. Some features do correlate, others don’t. So where is the rigorous test of significance of correlation, or lack of it? ” … “the line between positive conclusions and the null hypothesis is very fine in my book” … do you not think it would be good to provide that [individual’s comments] as supporting documentation to the report?

OX: I don’t think it would have added very much. I mean Michael Kelley, um, we discussed all these things round the table with the others, I think you’ll see that as a perfectly legitimate response of, ah, an engineer [something] scientist, looking at the work in a Earth Observational Scientist.

Just a note at this point. It seems we have run up against the perennial elitism between scientist and engineers. I must note that both can be very capable with the same statistical math used for global warming, but engineers must be highly qualified and careful since, while theories can fall, buildings and planes cannot. This is what drives the ‘cultural’ differences Lord Oxburgh is going to note further in. The truth is, science is held to a lower standard primarily due to the cost associated with quality, which makes sense. Until theories and concepts are proven there is not reason to up the quality and scrutiny. Clearly, global warming theories passed this point decades ago, and should have been supported with open and bullet proof approaches. How Lord Oxburgh describes the methodology behind the theories is quite damning to the CRU and the IPCC. But I must disagree with his next statement. Neither the language nor the math is difficult or different. Especially the math, and what you can and cannot derive from it:

OX: The language is very difficult, is very different, and he [Kelley] quite legitimately says “in our area we wouldn’t call these things ‘experiments’“. It is the common thing to do in this area of activity [climate science]. So I don’t think that would have been particularly advantageous.

Oxburgh admits openly that the methodology used by CRU was not equal to that of even Earth Observation science, the ‘area of activity’ measuring the current dynamics of climate across the globe. It once again shows that the theory of global warming resides on a foundation of low quality science, misapplied statistical math and overblown results.

Oxburgh comes back to methods and results  bit later on, at time mark 11:05:25. Here he finally touches on the science in not so glowing terms, though he tries mightily to dismiss the weak foundation upon which global warming theories reside. He seems even sad that CRU failed some basic minimal level of confidence in their claims.

SATC: When the panel was carrying out its appraisal, where the scientists at CRU able to make accurate reconstructions from publications back to their raw data? That they themselves had used.

OX: Not in every case. Not in every case, not with the old material.

SATC: Isn’t that … You have really surprised me with a number things you have said Lord Oxburgh. That is very surprising, isn’t it?

OX: I think that it is undesirable, but it isn’t too surprising. Um, I think … This is perhaps one of the cultural differences between the work of the unit [CRU] and many of those who, I think, legitimately criticize it. Who frequently come from an industrial background or an engineering background, where the culture and the patterns of working are very different. In which, particularly in industry, everything is documented, your lab book contains everything you have done, and it is the property of the organization. When you leave it stays with the organization. That is not always the practice in university. Particularly for work which is 15 or 20 years old. Even if the work was properly recorded at the time, I think there are quite a few situations in which it is no longer available today. People who said ‘well that’s all history, we’ll throw that out”. And you are quite right, early work was not adequately documented, and I am not surprised – unfortunately.

No wonder the MET Office is redoing all of CRUs temperature reconstructions over the last 150 years. The current CRU data is garbage if it cannot be reconstructed. And Oxburgh basically admits he knows from interviews with CRU scientist a lot of data was thrown out. Only question now is when was it thrown out? Either way, he just pulled the rug out from all the IPCC conclusions and the Hockey Stick, because the underlying CRU data is not of sufficient quality or sufficiently recorded to support their claims.

But it gets worse for CRU and Jones, as Oxburgh admits there is too much uncertainty (error bars) in the data to make any conclusions on temperature trends over the past 150 years of recorded temperatures:

SATC: Did Professor Jones say, when he was in the discussions, that it was actually impossible to reconstruct temperatures over the past thousand years?

OX: I don’t believe he said it. But it probably would have been true. Well, it depends on what you mean ‘reconstruct temperature over the last thousand years’.

Here we get the Clintonian “depends on what ‘is’ is” dodge. But Oxburgh goes into great specificity on why it is a true statement that we have not, and cannot, reconstruct temperatures over the past thousand years. Without that reconstruction, there is no proof the current climate is significantly different from past warm periods. Without that reconstruction, there is no proof of human induced global warming. Oxburgh’s analysis is as damning as it is correct:

OX: I mean, the whole concept of a global temperature is actually a very subtle one. I mean, how do you decide what the temperature of the globe is? We know all sorts of local circumstances are associated with local weather, are giving you all sorts of local variations. You know that most of the observations until the last century were based on land, most of the land is in the northern hemisphere, so you had relatively few observations in the greater part of the surface. So once you have decided what a global temperature is, it is pretty darn difficult . You may be able to track global temperature – I’m sorry – track temperature at a particular area, but how that relates to other [areas] is much more difficult. And I think that I am fairly convinced by the work of Jones himself – which is based largely on instrumentation and instrumental records over the last 150 years, something of that kind. But clearly, in the early days, these are a little bit … [long coughing fit]. I think the instrumental records give us the best guide now. Then what you got to do with those instrumental records, which are not distributed geographically as you would really like, you’ve got to interpolate between them, you’ve got to then make extrapolations to the areas you cannot get to. So it is a pretty difficult business. That is why the serious CRU, on the serious publications, massive uncertainty boundaries are associated with the temperature reconstructions.

Incredible. I and many others have been claiming for years now that the lack of accuracy in the temperature record of even the last 150 years contained uncertainties so great you could not determine a global temperature within a degree C. And here is Lord Oxburgh laying out the same error sources I did in my original post, and discussing how each step of interpolation and extrapolation expands the uncertainty, to the point the results are completely INCONCLUSIVE!

Under oath, the man chartered with investigating CRU concludes in full confidence it is impossible to reconstruct global temperatures. Therefore, he also casts doubt in any and all claims of recent global warming – human induced or otherwise. Scientifically, then it is settled. We don’t know how today’s climate compares to previous climates. That is the only conclusion possible.

Other important posts on the hearings can be found at Harmless Sky and Climate Audit (here and here).

9 responses so far

Sep 11 2010

Remembering 9-11

I was not sure what to say this year on this 9th anniversary of 9-11. The nation is in a rut and heading down a bleak path. The political front is anything but serene or positive. And we have Americans who want to recognize this national day of memorial with book burnings, to show they are as intolerant and insecure as the Islamo Fascists that brought us 9-11. I seriously doubt those who have given their lives in our cause on that day in September 2001, and every day since, were fighting so we could become as fanatical and brutal as our enemies. Though many factions on the political fringe do tend to flirt with crossing that line. Maybe it is about time we expected more from ourselves, and demanded it in others.

I think I want to note on this 9-11 what we may have lost since we let go of our collective outrage and fear in the days, months and years after 9-11. We drifted from a sea of American flags unified in cause despite our differences, back to the mindless fight of the hyper partisans who keep trying to yell and brow beat the other side into submission. Under our system of individual rights and our demonstrable will to chart our own individual paths – at times with enormous success and failure – submission to one group’s views of right and acceptable will never happen. Not without the heart of this nation being ripped out in the process. Why can’t we all be what we want to be, and let others do the same? Why can’t we stop trying to use government to control.

Continue Reading »

11 responses so far

Sep 10 2010

Weekly Unemployment Numbers A Bit Hinky

I am not really sure what ‘hinky’ means, but I do know this week’s first time unemployment claims are not something to put a lot of hope into. It seems much of the data was estimated by bureaucrats. Next week’s numbers will be more solid, but will also cover a short week due to labor day. I am sure this economy will begin to turn around once people are confident the voters will slay the liberal beast in DC come November. That is probably the best stimulus the nation could receive.

6 responses so far

Sep 10 2010

Nation Itching To Dump Dems Come November

Updates Below!

While Gallup’s generic ballot poll bounced ten points in favor of the Dems over the labor day weekend (note the connection between a long weekend and one strange poll result) a slew of other polls came out that showed an enormous lead for the GOP in this fall’s elections. As I predicted on June 28th, when Senator Byrd passed away, his WV senate seat is now in play since the Mountaineers of WV despise this administration and government in general. The race has moved from ‘solid Dem’ to ‘toss up‘ in a few short weeks. Also as I predicted, FL has joined OH and PA (and many other senate races) in the ‘leans GOP‘ at RCP, putting the Dems at 48 seats and the GOP at 46 – with six toss ups. The Senate map is turning redder (and darker red) every week now. In the House the GOP leads by 14 seats: 207-193. I see that lead growing in the coming weeks as well.

There are a lot of Dems who are pretending this is all not happening – like VP Biden who pathetically claimed the Dems would be in the majority on November 3rd (technically true, but really just a classic elitist half truth). A new study has come out pretty much confirming what has been obvious to many for months – people are lining up to get a chance to send the Political Industrial Complex a clear, unambiguous message. The study shows the number of people voting GOP vs Dem in the run-up primaries is heavily tilted in favor of the GOP, at a level not seen in 80 years:

For the first time since 1930, more Republican voters showed up to vote in statewide primaries this year than Democrats — another sign of the huge challenges facing President Obama’s party in this year’s elections.

The new figures come from a just-released report by voter turnout expert Curtis Gans of American University.

Gans looked at 35 primaries held before Sept. 1 and found that 4 million more Republicans voted than Democrats — statistical proof of the “enthusiasm gap” that pollsters and pundits have been talking about.

That, combined with the fact that the percentage of voters who identify themselves as Democrats has been on a steady decline for decades, spells big trouble for the president’s party, Gans said: “The Democrats are at an enormous disadvantage.”

This reaction by America to busy-body bureaucrats really should not be a surprise to anyone who really understands the good heart and soul of this nation, and respects its people (instead of looking down their nose at them). Liberals really think they are God’s gift to humanity, and that the common folks (bitter and clinging of course) require constant guidance. They even think Americans desperately want to be constantly guided from DC, and will be wildly grateful when liberals finally control their lives. It is a serious form of insanity on the part of the left.

This is what I wrote in March 2009 when Obama and Pelosi were in full liberal madness:

President Obama is a running disaster. He and his liberal friends are going to keep pushing the envelope of socialist control until things break (which they probably already are doing). They have no clue what they are into, or how naive they are to the challenges. And they have no idea how big a backlash can erupt from this nation when its people are pushed too far by too many freedoms being taken away.

DC is heading towards a harsh lesson: they are the servants of the people, not the other way around.

As the wave begins its final rise this fall, possibly reaching historic peaks in living memory, and maybe for all time, it is important to understand that this nation is led only because the people agree to be led. We are not led because there is inherent good in government over all other human endeavors (just the opposite). Nor are we led because the federal government is all powerful. The people are the power of this nation – the private sector especially.

It is imperative that the GOP not screw up this opportunity being handed to them this fall, and they CAREFULLY start dismantling the federal bureaucracy. We need to neutralize the busy-bodies and reign in government.

Keep one thought in mind as this opportunity arrives: give people time to adjust. We cannot be tossing people into upheaval. We can dismantle the bloated behemoth in DC carefully and with minimal pain and disruption. Keep that basic tenant in mind and the nation will allow the GOP to seriously reduce the carbon footprint of the federal government (most easily by moving the decision power back to the states and the people). The era of big government can be over – but it will take time, compassion and ingenuity.

Update: A must read article from Mort Zuckerman on how public servants are now masters of the public.

Update: Kimberly Strassel at WSJ does a good job of noting how all the liberal successes passed under Obama-Reid-Pelosi are NOT being touted by Dems in this year’s elections:

And now that the ambitious Obama experiment in liberal governance is going kaboom, his members—even those who voted with him—are running for cover.

A total of 279 House and Senate Democrats voted for ObamaCare. Not one is running an ad touting that vote. How can they, given headlines about Medicare cuts and premium hikes? You will, however, find a growing catalogue of ads such as this one from Maryland Rep.

Liberalism is toxic. Who knew?

10 responses so far

Sep 08 2010

White House Finally Awakes From Fantasyland

It has been a long time since President Obama promised in 2009 that:

… this was the moment when we began to provide care for the sick and good jobs to the jobless; this was the moment when the rise of the oceans began to slow and our planet began to heal; this was the moment when we ended a war and secured our nation and restored our image as the last, best hope on earth.

Now that the liberals in DC have been forced to descended back amongst us simple mortals (as they must every 2-4-6 years depending on their demigod rating) they are seeing reality:

White House senior adviser David Plouffe — Obama’s 2008 presidential campaign manager — said that a bevy of races were in play, from the national to local level.

“There are a lot of competitive races out there. There’s going to be at least 70 House races in play, about 15 competitive Senate races, a couple dozen tough gubernatorial races,” he said in a video to supporters of Organizing for America, the president’s political arm.

Reality can suck at times. But its better than living in a fantasy world.

15 responses so far

Sep 08 2010

Dumb Quran-Burning Protest Is Un-American

Those yahoos in that FL church who plan to reenact one of the worst aspects of Nazi politically-correct policing (book burning) are demonstrating why just because an act may be legal, it still not ought to be done. Burning the Quran is not going to enrage the militants to new levels of hate. They already want to kill Americans in droves, they simply lack the capability to do so (until the Mad Mullahs of Iran get a nuke). And I doubt it will significantly increase recruitment into the suicide corpse – Americans patrolling Taliban, al Qaeda and Muslim lands are a sufficient affront to those who dream of dying a Jihadi death to keep the ranks filled to some level.

But if even a single American dies because of this self-promoting stunt, then this act of book burning is a unforgivable sin – a premeditated sin. All these so-called people of faith behind it are going to rot in hell for not checking their egos and, instead, destroying a good life. A life better than any of them.

The worst aspect of this is the lame excuse these people use for not listening to what everyone else is trying to explain to them. They don’t get that this kind of act is not what the nation wants linked to its remembrance of 9-11. Their rationale (if anyone would dare use ‘rational’ in the same sentence) is they want the militants to know how it feels when they burn American flags and bibles. The so-called thinking is we should act like fanatical Islamo Fascists in response to fanatical Islamo Fascist. Pathetic.

9-11 is a day to remember those who died and those who sacrificed themselves to save others (firefighters, police, medical personnel, the passengers and crew of flight UA 93, etc). It is a day to reaffirm why we sacrificed so many in the deserts of Iraq and the mountains of Afghanistan in order to free Islam and the world from the cutthroat terrorists. It is a day to look back and remember how, on 9-12-01, al Qaeda and Bin Laden where the future of Islam, and how today they are seen as the enemy of Islam by a vast majority of Muslims across this world. It is a day to reflect on how we can help Islam deal with the cancer of Islamo Fascists, and emerge out of all this once again a tolerant, peaceful and modern religion. 9-11 is not about creating anger, which will lead to more useless bloodshed.

It is not a day for ego-stroking, grand-standing that lowers us to the same gutter-level as the sick people who perpetrated the mass murder on 9-11. Whatever that sad group of people in FL do, they are no better than that whacked out church who protest the funerals of our fallen military heroes. They will not succeed in highjacking the memorial of 9-11 from this great nation. They will not divert us from the cause we took up with President Bush, when he used that bullhorn on top of the rubble of the World Trade Center. We will bring justice and enlightenment and tolerance – not hate and book burning.

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