Thursday, September 27, 2007

CAGW Names Sen. Feinstein Porker of the Month

CAGW Names Sen. Feinstein Porker of the Month; Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW); September 2007.

Washington, D.C. - Citizens Against Government Waste (CAGW) today named Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.) Porker of the Month for September, 2007 for a provision inserted into the 2008 Military Construction and Veterans Affairs Act that would obstruct the Department of Veterans Affairs’ (VA) attempt to improve the West Los Angeles VA Medical Center.

In 2002, the VA began a review of all its properties as part of the Capital Asset Realignment for Enhanced Services (CARES), to determine where money could be saved and facilities improved. Eighteen properties were identified in 2004 for additional analysis, including the West LA Center.

Sen. Feinstein would prohibit enhanced use leases on the West LA property as well as outlaw any sale of the land for private use. The VA is not planning on selling any of the land; however, it would like to enter into more enhanced use leases to stop wasting money on maintaining vacant and underused buildings. The VA is already engaged in contracts with UCLA, a Hollywood production company, a rental car company, and a theater. These agreements bring revenue to the VA through rent, save the VA money on maintaining excess buildings, and often provide discounts and services to veterans. Current leases bring in about $5 million a year.

The CARES report identified 21 abandoned or underutilized buildings, out of 91 on the campus, that the VA says it has no use for, which could be turned into valuable resources. The West LA campus is about to undergo a reorganization and modernization of its medical facilities and could use an influx of cash to pay for it. The CARES Stage Two Report on the property that came out August 24 notes that:

[I]t is likely that reuse proceeds will provide a substantial offset to the significant capital investments required to render facilities modern, safe, and secure. It is prudent to maximize the potential value of vacant buildings and underutilized land to increase resources available to meet future veterans healthcare needs. Compatible development options that reduce underutilized portions of the campus have the potential to generate resources to provide additional services and/or pay for improvements to VA owned facilities.

Sen. Feinstein wants to take away these additional sources of revenue and force taxpayers to continue to pay for the continued maintenance and liability of the excess property. If Sen. Feinstein’s language is allowed to be passed into law, the VA’s hands will be tied, the buildings will continue to languish, and funding for medical center improvements will have to be redirected from somewhere else.

Critics have speculated that Sen. Feinstein is going to bat for wealthy constituents concerned that development on the land would ruin the views from their homes and hurt property values. The VA center is surrounded by the ritzy towns of Beverly Hills, Brentwood, and Bel-Air, home to many celebrities and country clubs.

Whatever the motivation, the outcome of Sen. Feinstein’s plan would be harmful to veterans. For attempting to stymie the VA’s ability to cut waste and increase funding for improved veterans care at a time when our service men and women need it the most, CAGW names Sen. Dianne Feinstein its September 2007 Porker of the Month.

Citizens Against Government Waste is the nation’s largest nonpartisan, nonprofit organization dedicated to eliminating waste, fraud, abuse, and mismanagement in government. Porker of the Month is a dubious honor given to lawmakers, government officials, and political candidates who have shown a blatant disregard for the interests of taxpayers.

Comment: Feinstein is one of 100 reasons to repeal the 17th Amendment.

Wednesday, September 26, 2007

Hands Off the Electoral College

Hands Off the Electoral College; Ron Paul; Texas Straight Talk; December 27, 2004

The intense media focus on the divide between “red” and “blue” states in the wake of the presidential election has raised new questions regarding our federal voting system. One U.S. Senator has promised to introduce legislation to abolish the electoral college, claiming it is an anachronism that serves no good purpose in modern politics. Her stated goal is “simply to allow the popular will of the American people to be expressed every four years when we elect our president.” Many Americans agree, arguing that the man receiving the most votes should win; anything else would be unfair. In other words, they believe the American political system should operate as a direct democracy.

The problem, of course, is that our country is not a democracy. Our nation was founded as a constitutionally limited republic, as any grammar school child knew just a few decades ago. Remember the Pledge of Allegiance: “and to the Republic for which it stands”? The Founding Fathers were concerned with liberty, not democracy. In fact, the word democracy does not appear in the Declaration of Independence or the Constitution. On the contrary, Article IV, section 4 of the Constitution is quite clear: “The United States shall guarantee to every state in this Union a Republican Form of Government” (emphasis added).

The emphasis on democracy in our modern political discourse has no historical or constitutional basis. Yet we have become obsessed with democracy, as though any government action would be permissible if a majority of voters simply approved of it. Democracy has become a sacred cow, a deity which no one dares question. Democracy, we are told, is always good. But the founders created a constitutionally limited republic precisely to protect fundamental liberties from the whims of the masses, to guard against the excesses of democracy. The electoral college likewise was created in the Constitution to guard against majority tyranny in federal elections. The President was to be elected by the states rather than the citizenry as a whole, with votes apportioned to states according to their representation in Congress. The will of the people was to be tempered by the wisdom of the electoral college.

By contrast, election of the President by pure popular vote totals would damage statehood. Populated areas on both coasts would have increasing influence on national elections, to the detriment of less populated southern and western states. A candidate receiving a large percentage of the popular vote in California and New York could win a national election with very little support in dozens of other states! A popular vote system simply would intensify the populist pandering which already dominates national campaigns.

Not surprisingly, calls to abolish the electoral college system are heard most loudly among left elites concentrated largely on the two coasts. Liberals favor a very strong centralized federal government, and have contempt for the concept of states' rights (a contempt now shared, unfortunately, by the Republican Party). They believe in federalizing virtually every area of law, leaving states powerless to challenge directives sent down from Washington. The electoral college system threatens liberals because it allows states to elect the president, and in many states the majority of voters still believe in limited government and the Constitution. Citizens in southern and western states in particular tend to value individual liberty, property rights, gun rights, and religious freedom, values which are abhorrent to the collectivist elites. The collectivists care about centralized power, not democracy. Their efforts to discredit the electoral college system are an attempt to limit the voting power of pro-liberty states.

Comment: I will post articles I find on the effort to do away with the Electoral College because the march toward consolidation of federal power through the mask of democracy is undeniably connected to the 17th and 16th Amendments.

Electoral College Threat

Electoral College Threat by Paul M. Weyrich


A movement is underway across the nation to change the way we elect the President. Since the bitterly contested election of 2000, in which Vice President Albert A. Gore, Jr. won the popular vote but lost the election to President George W. Bush, Democrats have been anxious to modify the way in which the President is elected. For many the goal is either to eradicate the Electoral College or make its votes insignificant to the outcome of the election.

Recently, Republicans and Democrats in California have proposed two separate ballot initiatives for the 2008 election that would alter the way California’s electoral votes are distributed in the Electoral College. The Republican proposal would replace the winner-take-all system with one in which the electoral votes would be awarded by how Congressional districts vote.

Meanwhile, Democrats have introduced “The National Popular Vote for President Act.” This initiative would require States to award their electoral votes to whichever candidate wins the most actual votes (i.e., popular votes) nationally. It would take effect only if States representing a majority of the Electoral College votes agreed to the change. Because of California’s population and influence, there is a concentrated effort to push this initiative through next year.

A Democratic consultant told the LOS ANGELES TIMES that “a lot of people who lived through the 2000 election …feel pretty strongly that we ought to have a national popular vote. The Electoral College is a vestige of another time period.” The presumption behind this statement is that if history conflicts with one’s desire for power, abolish history and retain power at all costs.

But the Founders created the Electoral College because they believed it to be most prudent to protect the interests of a diverse nation. They were wary of a central government with too much power, so they established a federal system of government that limited the responsibilities of the national government and left all others to the States.

If this initiative in California and others like it across the country were to succeed our electoral system would change in two ways.

First, it would give undue influence to large urban areas at the expense of rural voters. Cities like New York City, San Francisco, Chicago and Los Angeles would have far more importance in a popular vote than they do in the Electoral College. Campaigning in Iowa and South Carolina, which currently attracts much attention, would cease because voters in those States would be of little significance to the Presidential election. Instead of representing a diverse group of Americans from across the nation, the President would represent those in large cities.

Second, it would have the potential to contradict the votes of those within the State itself. If a candidate were to win the popular vote nationwide but Californians had voted for another candidate, the votes of Californians would not go to the one for whom they had voted but to the one for whom citizens of other States had voted. So it would be possible for the voters of populous states like New York, Illinois, Texas and Florida to decide which candidate would receive California’s electoral votes.

While it theoretically is possible in the Electoral College to win the Presidential election by winning the eleven most populous states [California (55 votes), Texas (34), New York (31), Florida (27) Illinois (21), Pennsylvania (21), Ohio (20), Michigan (17), Georgia (15), New Jersey (15), and North Carolina (15)] and disregard the rest of the country, no President has ever come close to achieving such a feat. The States themselves, though populous, are too diverse. Instead, candidates must campaign across the country, maintaining the Founders’ original intent that Presidential candidates seek popular support over a geographical majority of the country, not in isolated urban areas.

The Founding Fathers were highly suspicious of unregulated majorities. Hence, they deliberately created the Electoral College to constrain the will of the majority and to ensure that the votes of those in less populous States were heeded. Californians should be wary of this latest attempt to enfeeble the Electoral College. Power is seductive.

James Madison perceptively warned against unrestrained majority rule in Federalist # 10.

“When a majority is included in a faction, the form of popular government enables it to sacrifice to its ruling passion or interest both the public good and the rights of other citizens,” he wrote. “Either the existence of the same passion or interest in a majority at the same time must be prevented, or the majority, having such coexistent passion or interest, must be rendered, by their number and local situation, unable to concert and carry into effect schemes of oppression....”

This is great wisdom that, in spite of its age, is applicable today.

Paul M. Weyrich is Chairman and CEO of the Free Congress Foundation


Comment: The populist march toward complete democracy started before 1913 and continues today. Weyrich notes the deep suspicion the founders had with “unregulated majorities,” and as we have seen through the 17th Amendment, the suspicion was realized. We live in an era of growing consolidation of power within the hands of a few, and an ignorant population that wills it over, all in the name of democracy.

This march toward the elimination of Electoral College only demonstrates the hard work that is in front of the repeal of the 17th Amendment and also the 16th efforts, but it is not impossible. We have to educate our young so they are prepared in school, and we have to educate the teachers that are both the witting and unwitting change agents furthering this disastrous march toward democracy. We have to educate the grassroots, because the main steam news media is our adversary. This has to be central to the effort.

Tuesday, September 18, 2007

Morris: Republicans on the Verge of Loosing Senate

Repub. Sens: Endangered Species? Dick Morris 14 Sept 2007.


“Democrats may hold up to 57 U.S. Senate seats after the 2008 election — almost enough to block a Republican filibuster and likely enough to assure passage of most of the Democratic program.”


Read the full story here.

Comment: This demonstrates my belief that the United States is sliding toward the left, which makes any chance to repeal the U.S. Constitution difficult at best. Not that the republicans have been supportive of this idea…

Friday, September 14, 2007

Wrap-up of the 17th Amendment on the Web 14 September 2007

I had to delete about months worth of Google News Alerts, so this is not exhaustive, but it does demonstrate folks are talking about the repeal or the consequences of it. However, one muldoon, The Pink Flamingo, thinks the idea is wacky. Well friend, with skyrocketing government spending and enlargement that is directly attributed to the passage of the 16th and 17th Amendments, I’d say that it’s not so wacky. But then again my weblog isn't called the “The Pink Flamingo” and I might be one of those weird provocative types that enjoys being an individual and self-reliant.

Definitely check out the article written by is a Ballwin resident and co-founder of the Madison Forum, a constitutional think tank dedicated to upholding the principles of the U.S. Constitution and the Declaration of Independence. I am not sure, but I do not think there has been much research correlating this connection, so it may yield some interesting conclusions.

BD

Appeal for Repeal
By Dave
So why repeal it? Isn't it good to have a direct vote for representatives in Washington? Shouldn't the people have the final say in who speaks for them? If you read the background information on the 17th Amendment, you will discover ...
Tungsten Fluff - http://tungstenfluff.typepad.com/tungsten_fluff/

GUEST COMMENTARY: A senatorial shocker! Repeal the 17th Amendment
Suburban Journals - Town and Country,MO,USA
Further evidence of the founders' desire to assure state authority is evident in the Constitution's Tenth Amendment, which made clear that "The powers not ...

More Reasons To Repeal The 17th
By JohnJ
The reason for the passage of the 17th Amendment should be stated. The 17th Amendment was passed because of a procedural problem in the original concept and not because of a need to alter the balance of power. ...
rightlinx.com - http://www.rightlinx.com

Now They Want to Repeal the 17th Amendment
By SJ Reidhead
RON PAUL WANTS TO END DIRECT ELECTION OF SENATORS. I think I mentioned yesterday that this bunch wants to repeal ...
The Pink Flamingo - http://thepinkflamingo.blogharbor.com/blog

James Taranto On Federalism And The Seventeeth Amendment
By JohnJ
The 17th Amendment is the one providing for popular election of US senators, and its repeal is just the sort of interesting proposal we like to mull over in a contrarian spirit. But in the end we favor popular election of senators, ...
rightlinx.com - http://www.rightlinx.com

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Pork versus Bridges

Pork versus Bridges; Thurber’s Thoughts; by Maggie Thurber; 13 September 2007.

From Thurber's Thoughts:


Chuck Muth (Citizen Outreach: The Blog), in his 'News & Views' brief, has been keeping track of Sen. Tom Coburn's anti-pork efforts in the Senate.

Coburn had proposed several amendments to the Transportation Bill currently being debated.

One amendment was designed to halt spending on earmarks until deficient roads and bridges are repaired.

It failed.

Another amendment would have eliminated federal spending on bike paths, arguing that federal transportation dollars shouldn't be spent on such local amenities before correcting deteriorating bridges.

It failed.

A third amendment would have removed three specific earmarks from the bill:

* $500,000 for a new baseball stadium in Montana,
* $450,000 for the International Peace Garden in North Dakota,
* $400,000 to construct a "Discovery Center" for tourists in Louisiana.

Now, certainly these are not transportation projects and really don't belong in a transportation bill, if they need federal funding at all.

It failed, too.

On the third amendment, 32 senators (31 R's and 1 D) voted to remove these specific projects - which means about 1/3 of the senate agreed that such projects don't belong in the transportation bill.

On the second amendment, only 18 senators (all R's) indicated that they believe bike paths aren't as important as infrastructure.

On the first amendment, Coburn got only 14 senators (12 R's and 2 D's) to support prioritizing deficient bridge and road repair over their own self interests of pork projects.

As Muth says: "The problem is spending. The problem is Congress. The problem is...how do you stop them?"


Comment: I can offer one solution to the problem, and that is to repeal the 16th and 17th Amendments. Since we enacted these amendments in 1913 giving Congress the ability to reach into our wallets, and removed the representation of the states in congress, spending has been on a steady increase, as has the size of government. Moreover, since the 1960s this growth has skyrocketed. Basically, we have put a huge amount of unchecked power and authority into the hands of a few. This is a complete anathema of all of the founders’ original intent. In order to turn the tide we must remove the power of direct taxation of the citizenry from Congress and return power back to the states.

A few obstacles stand in the way of this:

  • Ignorance of US History and the foundation of the US Constitution;
  • Power consolidation by the oligarchs in the US Senate;
  • The increased power of the two major parties that assist and further the centralization of power in Washington;
  • Special interest groups that also assist and further power consolidation in Washington;
  • Apathy of the average citizen;
  • Steady movement to the left in this country and the acceptance of “state” solutions over individual responsibility;
  • And the complete ignorance of state assemblies function in the federal government.

While I admit that these are substantial obstacles, I do believe that if enough folks got involved we could turn back the tide that a very few are driving us toward.

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

State's 'Hate Crimes' Code Used Against 'Pure Speech'

State's 'hate crimes' code used against 'pure speech'; Civil rights advocate warns federal plan 'still lurking in shadows' in U.S. Senate; By Bob Unruh; WorldNetDaily.com; September 12, 2007.


While California hate-crimes laws are being used to target "pure speech," a federal plan that would impose similar speech restrictions on Christians "is still lurking in the shadows" in the U.S. Senate, warns a team of civil rights advocates.

The warning comes from the Pacific Justice Institute, which is running an online petition campaign right now to alert people to the dangers the pending legislation poses.

As WND reported earlier, the federal plan, H.R. 1592, was approved by the U.S. House of Representatives, and then when it got to the U.S. Senate, instead of holding hearings and a vote, senators tried to attach it to another bill as an amendment, a maneuver that would have prevented any public input on the plan.

That effort failed, but that doesn't mean the American public is safe from the dangers the federal legislation poses, according to Matt McReynolds, a staff attorney for Pacific Justice.

The full title of the legislation is "Local Law Enforcement Hate Crimes Prevention Act of 2007," and it provides federal help to local agencies dealing with "hate crimes." It also separately creates new federal offenses for "hate crimes," including the addition of "sexual orientation" and "gender identity" for inclusion as protected characteristics.

"It hasn't gone away, it's still lurking in the shadows," he told WND. "And not just that. The U.S. House version has passed, so they can slap it on as an amendment to something else."

He said the dangers are real.

"When you start down the list of Western countries, Australia, Canada, Britain, France. Everywhere hate crimes plans have been adopted there are examples of problems. It's gotten to the point even pure speech is being criminalized, with no actions or violence," he said.

"That's where hate crimes legislation inevitably has led in other Western societies," he said. His organization has worked on a number of such cases already involving California's own version of a "hate crimes" plan.

"The law of unintended consequences – or perhaps intended consequences cleverly disguised – is starkly illustrated by the ongoing federal case Harper v. Poway Unified School District," he wrote in a summary of the problems. "In Harper, a student responded to the annual pro-homosexual 'Day of Silence,' which was being heavily promoted on his high school campus, by wearing a T-shirt which expressed his religious viewpoint that homosexuality was 'shameful.'

"Instead of allowing a differing viewpoint, school officials pulled aside Harper, demanding that he change his expression or face suspension. An assistant principal even suggested to Harper that he needed to leave his faith in the car while at school, in order not to offend homosexual students," according to McReynolds.

"Such a result clearly undermines basic Constitutional protections," including free expression and religion, he noted.

"Incredibly, the federal courts in California upheld the school's actions. In one of the most sweeping, speech-restricting opinions in recent memory, Judge Reinhard of the Ninth Circuit baldly asserted that Harper's First Amendment rights – undeniably strong under Tinker and other Supreme Court precedents – were trumped by the need to protect homosexual students from an opposing viewpoint…"

"Not surprisingly, Judge Reinhardt's decision cited California's ''hate violence' educational statute, Cal. Educ. Code §§ 201, 220, et seq. as justification for stifling a politically incorrect viewpoint – even though there were no allegations of violence against Harper. In concurrence, Judge Gould followed the same line of reasoning in labeling religious opposition to homosexuality – even when expressed peacefully – as 'hate speech' which he equated with 'a burning cross' or 'a call for genocide,'" McReynolds continued.

He said such cases illustrate that once enacted, "hate crimes" legislation inevitably ends up being used as a justification for restrictions on pure speech, particularly against people of faith who raise religious objections to behavior they consider immoral.

He said it's fortunate that the Harper precedent was overturned by the U.S. Supreme Court, but he noted that the litigation of the core issues still continues, and other school districts in the state still are relying on the now-vacated decision as a basis for "stifling student speech."

He said Pacific Justice also has worked on cases involving a handful of students in Sacramento schools who in previous years were suspended, and some of them were physically assaulted, cursed and intimidated, for wearing T-shirts that peacefully expressed their religious beliefs disagreeing with homosexual behavior.

"Months of negotiations with school officials in an attempt to ensure that students' free speech rights would be respected had limited effects. As a result, the Day of Silence has proved to be even more of a flashpoint this year, with hundreds of suspensions doled out in Sacramento-area high schools for peaceful literature distribution and printed Bible verses on T-shirts. Tolerance, it seems, is becoming a one-way street," he said.

Such intolerance, he said, "appears to flow from biased policy judgments, expressed through hate crimes laws such as H.R. 1592 and its predecessors already embedded in California law, that some minorities are better than other minority or majority groups…"

He also warned that "hate crimes" labeling is not limited to the issue of sexual orientation, but poses significant dangers to the First Amendment.

He said Pacific Justice recently defended Pastor Audie Yancey, who had been ordered to appear before a local "Human Relations Task Force" to answer for some religious tracts he distributed.

They depicted the 9/11 terrorism, and said: "Remember 9/11: In the name of Allah, they brought destruction and death to thousands. In the name of Jesus Christ, you can have eternal life."

While McReynolds said it's hard to imagine a scenario more protected by the long list of leafleting precedents from the Supreme Court, Pastor Yancey still was accused of "hate speech."

The pastor's defense was successful, but "it is alarming to think that some officials believe that, under the pretext of preventing 'hate speech,' they can interrogate a clergyman concerning religious statements which could not possibly be considered threatening."

He also noted recent attacks on Christians by the Hindu American Foundation. That organization, as WND has reported, has blasted Christian organizations across the nation, including the Southern Baptists' missions board, Gospel for Asia and the Minnesota-based Olive Tree Ministries, which aims its ministry at teaching Christians about their beliefs, for having Internet "hate sites."

"The proliferation of websites promoting religious hatred is an unfortunate consequence of the universality of access to the internet," said Vinay Vallabh, the lead author of the report by the Hindu American Foundation. The organization called for Internet Service Providers to censor such postings of Christian beliefs.

"If anything … the concerns about H.R. 1592 are being understated. A decision by Congress to inject the federal government into the culture wars and fundamental theological disputes can only engender further divisiveness and limitations on free speech," the Pacific Justice Institute said.

McReynolds also warned the pending federal plan has included a provision allowing evidence of "expression or associations of the defendant" allegedly related to the "hate crime."

"In other words, a crime committed by a deranged person against someone who is gay or transgender could trigger investigations into churches the defendant attended, or conservative groups he may have been part of," McReynolds said.

As WND also has reported, a New York has even concluded that evidence of "hatred" is unnecessary for a prosecutor to pursue a "hate crimes" case.

The judge said prosecutors can seek enhanced penalties for the case defendants, if convicted, under the state's Hate Crimes Act of 2000, without any evidence of actual "hate."

Pacific Justice noted that the California legislature recently approved a resolution urging Congress to adopt a "thought crimes" plan.

"We cannot afford to lose this fight," said Brad Dacus, president of Pacific Justice. "Recent history in California and around the globe demonstrates the disastrous consequences to people of faith when so-called 'hate crimes' bills are enacted. Now is the time to sign petitions, call lawmakers and let our voices be heard."

He told WND especially dangerous is the tactic that seems to have been adopted to embed the new restrictions within another piece of legislation, such as a military funding bill.

"If the legislation is going to decide whether our men and women in Iraq are going to have the weapons they need to do their jobs, then we could very easily see this become law [even though President Bush does not support it]," Dacus told WND.

The organization's website petition says: "As a concerned citizen wishing to protect religious freedom, free speech and equal protection for all Americans, I hereby voice my OPPOSITION to the 'Hate Crimes Bill' H.R. 1592 currently being considered by Congress."

A wide range of leaders previously expressed concern over such "hate crimes" plans.

Former White House insider Chuck Colson, in his Breakpoint commentary, has labeled such a provision a "Thought Crimes" plan.

WND columnist Janet Folger wrote the idea of arresting people for stating their religious beliefs that homosexuality is wrong is no longer something that "may" happen in the future.

"Here's the Cliff Notes of what so called 'hate crime' legislation has already done IN AMERICA," she wrote. "This is no longer up for debate. Here are the facts."

· Madison, Wis. David Ott, a former homosexual, was arrested for a "hate crime" for sharing his testimony with a homosexual at a gas station. He faced a $10,000 fine and one year behind bars. Seven thousand dollars in legal fees later, [he] was ordered to attend re-education classes at the University of Wisconsin conducted by a lesbian.

· St. Petersburg, Fla. Five Christians including two pastors were arrested at a homosexual rally for stepping onto the public sidewalk instead staying caged in their officially designated "free speech zone."

· Elmira, N.Y. The Elmira police arrested seven Christians for praying in a public park where a homosexual festival was getting started.

· Crystal Lake, Ill. Two 16 year old girls are facing felony "hate crime" charges for the content of their flyers.

· Philadelphia, Pa. Arlene Elshinnawy, a 75-year-old grandmother of three, and Linda Beckman, a 70-year-old grandmother of 10 (along with nine others), were arrested for sharing their faith on the public sidewalk.


Folger said the testimony from the grandmothers can be seen and heard at the Stop Hate Crimes Now website.

"Just how many cases do we need to cite before America stands up and stops the bill that will criminalize Christianity?" she asked.

Comment: These oligarchs want to take our freedom away because it inhibits their unquenchable thirst for power. Yet everyday we continue to turn a blind eye, or in most cases not look in that direction all together, at what these people we elected are doing in office. Do we not understand that this has nothing do with the stupid party rivalry, but with OUR FREEDOMS? But we continue to be ignorant of own peril.

Aristotle

"Both oligarch and tyrant mistrust the people, and therefore deprive them of their arms."
-- Aristotle, "Politics"

Comment: An interesting quote and it aptly applies to the U.S. Senate.

Tuesday, September 11, 2007

MoveOn.org's Senators

The weblog Brain Shavings has a posting that highlights MoveOn.Org’s close ties with Senators Byrd (WV), Brown (OH), and Tester (MT).

Comments: Considering MoveOn very anti-American ideology, this connection demonstrates the shady nature of special interests groups and the U.S. Senate.

Again the only way we can reduce the amount of special interest influence and corruption in Washington is to return the rightful place of the States in the US Senate. While one should not be naive to think this will totally eliminate it from the landscape, it will reduce it significantly.

The biggest problem overcoming this is to convince the state general assemblies that their US Senators are their representatives, and they could affect the situation by a number of means, one being the requirement for periodic testimony before the general assembly.

There are two things I see blocking this; ignorance of state elected officials and big party influence. If we fix this we might be well underway to repeal the 17th Amendment.

In Honor of Our Fallen

The Big Easy’s Billion Dollar Boondoggle

The Big Easy’s Billion Dollar Boondoggle; By Larry Kudlow; National Review Online; 29 August 2007.

Larry Kudlow has an alarming look at the amount of spending the federal government has poured into Louisiana for Katrina Relief.

So, the president and Mrs. Bush went down to New Orleans to commemorate the second anniversary of Hurricane Katrina. Who knows? Maybe over a latté with leading Democratic candidates Hillary Clinton, Barack Obama, and John Edwards they discussed spending even more money down there. After all, everyone seems to be saying New Orleans needs more cash.

Here’s a pop quiz: How much money has Uncle Sam spent on New Orleans and the Gulf region since Hurricane Katrina ripped the place apart?

I’ll give you the answer because you’ll never guess it. The grand total is $127 billion (including tax relief).

That’s right: a monstrous $127 billion. Of course, not a single media story has highlighted this gargantuan government-spending figure. But that number came straight from the White House in a fact sheet subtitled, “The Federal Government Is Fulfilling Its Commitment to Help the People of the Gulf Coast Rebuild.”

Huh?

This is an outrage. The entire GDP of the state of Louisiana is only $141 billion, according to the U.S. Department of Commerce. So the cash spent there nearly matches the entire state gross GDP. That’s simply unbelievable. And to make matters worse, by all accounts New Orleans ain’t even fixed!

You might be asking, Where in the hell did all this money go? Well, the White House fact sheet says $24 billion has been used to build houses and schools, repair damaged infrastructure, and provide victims with a place to live. But isn’t everyone complaining about the lack of housing?

Perhaps all this money should’ve been directly deposited in the bank accounts of the 300,000 people living in New Orleans. All divvied up, that $127 billion would come to $425,000 per person! After thanking Uncle Sam for their sudden windfall, residents could head to Southern California and buy homes that are now on sale thanks to the sub-prime mortgage crisis and bid up the sagging house prices in the state.

The fact sheet goes on to say that $7.1 billion went to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers to rebuild the levees; that the U.S. Department of Education spent $2 billion on local schools; and that the Laura Bush Foundation for America’s Libraries has awarded more than $2.5 million (the pikers). The administration also provided $16.7 billion as part of the largest housing-recovery program in U.S. history.

So the billion-dollar question becomes: Where did the rest of that money go?

Meanwhile, according to an article by Nicole Gelinas at the Manhattan Institute, New Orleans has earned the distinct honor of becoming the murder capital of the world. The murder rate is 40 percent higher than before Katrina, and twice as high as other dangerous cities like Detroit, Newark, and Washington, D.C.

Think of this: The idea of using federal money to rebuild cities is the quintessential liberal vision. And given the dreadful results in New Orleans, we can say that the government’s $127 billion check represents the quintessential failure of that liberal vision. Hillary Clinton calls this sort of reckless spending “government investment.” And that’s just what’s in store for America if she wins the White House next year.

Remember President Reagan’s line during the 1980 campaign about how LBJ fought a big-government spending war against poverty, and poverty won? Well think of all this Katrina spending as the Great Society Redux. And it failed. I suppose the current Bush administration would like to label this “compassionate conservatism.” But guess what? That failed, too.

Right from the start, New Orleans should have been turned into a tax-free enterprise zone. No income taxes, no corporate taxes, no capital-gains taxes. The only tax would have been a sales tax paid on direct transactions. A tax-free New Orleans would have attracted tens of billions of dollars in business and real-estate investment. This in turn would have helped rebuild the cities, schools, and hospitals. Private-sector entrepreneurs would have succeeded where big-government bureaucrats and regulators have so abysmally failed.

This is the real New Orleans Katrina story. It’s a pity that the mainstream media isn’t writing about it. Call it one of the greatest stories never told.

Comment: Do you think the other 49 States would be allowing this if they had some control in Washington D.C.? I certainly do not. I truly believe that if the States had representation in Congress this wouldn’t be going on. But until we return the right full power accorded to the States in the original U.S. Constitution, we will continue to see the wasteful and unaccounted spending of our national resources.