Thursday, September 29, 2011

Too Much of a Good Thing.

"THE PROBLEM WITH such commissions is that, like automatic stabilizers and backstop rules, they reduce the power of elected officials and therefore make our government somewhat less accountable to voters. Larry Diamond of the Hoover Institution at Stanford puts it this way: “There is something undemocratic about entrusting the formation of big policy decisions to expert commissions.” And yet he also goes on to note that “the process is not less democratic than having nine unelected justices with lifetime tenure and no political accountability to anyone but themselves decide such basic questions as when a woman can have an abortion and where a child can go to school.” He concludes that, despite the risks, rising polarization justifies the increased use of these types of commissions.

As the debt-limit experience vividly illustrated, by polarizing ourselves, we are making our country more ungovernable—and no one has come up with a practical proposal to deal with the consequences. I wish it were not necessary to devise processes to circumvent legislative gridlock, but polarization isn’t going away. John Adams may have been exaggerating when he pessimistically noted that democracies tend to commit suicide, yet, as we are seeing, certain aspects of representative government can end up posing serious problems. And so, we might be a healthier democracy if we were a slightly less democratic one."
Comment: Mr Orszag's everything-but-the-kitchen-sink "remedies" aside, the sentiment buried in here is fascinating. Are we beginning to see modern Progressive thinking officially break with its founding tenants and demand a de facto mulligan to our experiments into "democracy" circa 1913? And if so, why can't the 17th Amendment's repeal be a serious subject for discussion in this sea-change?

Wall Street Donated $41 Million to Supercommittee Members


Wall Street Donated $41 Million to Supercommittee Members; Truthout


Wall Street has given $41 million in campaign contributions to the members of the Congressional "supercommittee" charged with finding $1.5 trillion worth of deficit reduction measures, according to a report released today by two watchdog groups.


The finance, insurance and real estate sector spent $3.7 billion on lobbying and campaign contributions from 1999 to 2008, according to the report, and the 12 members of the bipartisan Joint Select Committee on Deficit Reduction have all reaped the benefits. ...

Read the rest here
.


Comment: ...and if we couldn't see this coming too.

Wednesday, September 28, 2011

And If We Couldn't See This Coming; Supercommittee Meeting Secretly

Supercommittee Meeting Secretly: Open Congress


The “public access and transparency” rules that the deficit supercommittee adopted when they first convened contain a major loophole. If they want to block the media and the public out of their meetings, all they have to do is vote to do so and they can operate in total secrecy. Not surprisingly, invoking that loophole seems to have become their standard operating procedure.


Read the rest here.

Tuesday, September 27, 2011

Podcast: Duffy on the Reaction to Super Congress and SB 1564 Pt.2

Host Brian Duffy concluded the discussion concerning the media reaction to the new congressional "Joint Select Committee" (aka the Super Congress); and the newly submitted homeland security bill by Senator Lieberman, S.1546 - Department of Homeland Security Authorization Act of 2011.

The podcast
.

Listen to internet radio with repealtheseventeenth on Blog Talk Radio

Monday, September 26, 2011

Podcast: Duffy on the Reaction to Super Congress and SB 1564 Pt.1

Host Brian Duffy discussed the media reaction to the new congressional "Joint Select Committee" (aka the Super Congress); and the newly submitted homeland security bill by Senator Lieberman, S.1546 - Department of Homeland Security Authorization Act of 2011.

Note: I wasn't able to get in the entire discussion within the allotted time so I will pick up tomorrow with the remaining points and make the concluding remarks.

The podcast.


Listen to internet radio with repealtheseventeenth on Blog Talk Radio

Readings and Links related to this podcast:

The Super Congress


US Senate Bill. 1546

A Brief Enquiry into the True Nature and Character of our Federal Government

Abel Parker Upshur
A Brief Enquiry into the True Nature and Character of ourFederal Government: Being a Review of Judge Story’s Commentaries on theConstitution of the United States; By Abel P. Upshur, 1886

PREFACE BY THE AUTHOR.


The book to which the following pages relate has been for several years before the public. It has been reviewed by some of the principal periodicals of the country, and recommended in the strongest terms to public favor. I have no disposition to detract from its merits as a valuable compendium of historical facts, or as presenting just views of the Constitution in many respects. My attention has been directed to its political principles alone, and my sole purpose has been to inquire into the correctness of those principles, so far as they relate to the true nature and character of our Federal Government,


It may well excite surprise, that so elaborate a work as this of Judge Story, and one so well calculated to influence public opinion, should have remained so long unnoticed by those who do not concur in the author's views. No one can regret this circumstance, more than I do; for I would willingly have devolved upon abler hands the task which I now have undertaken. I offer no apology for the manner in which that task has been performed. It is enough for me to say, that the reader, howsoever favorable his opinion of this essay may be will not be more sensible of its imperfections than I am. I know that the actual practice of the Federal Government for many years past, and the strong tendencies of public opinion in favor of federal power, forbid me to hope for a favorable reception, except from the very few who still cherish the principles which I have endeavored to reestablish.


The following essay was prepared about three years ago, with a view to its publication in one of our periodical reviews. Circumstances, which it is unnecessary to mention, prevented this from being done, and the work was laid aside and forgotten. My attention has been again called to it within a few weeks past, and I am now induced to give it to the public, under the hope that it may not be without its influence in directing the attention of those, who have not yet lost all interest in the subject, to the true principles of our constitution of government.


I do not claim the merit of originality. My conclusions are drawn from the authentic information of history, and from a train of reasoning, which will occur to every mind, on the facts which history discloses. My object will be answered, if even the few by whom these pages will probably be read shall be induced to re-examine, with a sincere desire after truth, the great principles upon which political parties in our country were once divided, but which there is much reason to fear are no longer respected, even if they be not wholly forgotten.


I do not offer this essay as a commentary on the Federal Constitution. Having proposed to myself but a single object, I have endeavored to compress my matter within as small a compass as possible, consistent with a due regard to clearness, and a proper reference to authorities, where authorities are relied on.

Thursday, September 22, 2011

How Obama Won His US Senate Office

How Obama Won His US Senate Office; by Robert Wenzel; Economic Policy Journal


At Political Theatre, Lew Rockwell mentions my comment to him about Tim Geithner's father funding President Obama's mother. The facts are there and it should be broadly understood, but what also should be understood is that it appears Obama had his political career cleared for him right from the start. ...

Read the whole article here
.

US Senate defeats expanding Obama trade powers

US Senate defeats expanding Obama trade powers; AFP


The US Senate on Tuesday rejected a Republican push to expand President Barack Obama's powers to negotiate trade deals, amid a broader fight over accords with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea.

With those three deals edging towards approval in the divided US Congress, lawmakers beat back Republican Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell's drive to give Obama "Trade Promotion Authority" (TPA) in a mostly party-line 45-55 vote.

"Without TPA, the US will likely never agree to another deal again. The unions will make sure of it," charged McConnell. "We can't miss more opportunities to compete in foreign markets with US-made products."

TPA, formerly known as "fast-track," enabled the US president to negotiate a trade deal then submit it for approval by the US Congress in a straight up-or-down vote with no amendments before it lapsed in 2007.

McConnell, who has said Republicans' top goal is defeating Obama in the November 2012 election, tied his initiative to stubbornly high US unemployment of over nine percent -- which threatens the president's bid for a new term.

"With 14 million Americans out of work and thousands of Americans looking for opportunities to sell American-made goods around the world, we can't afford to wait," said the Republican leader.

Obama has not sought TPA, and has held off submitting free trade pacts with Colombia, Panama, and South Korea until the congress approves Trade Adjustment Assistance (TAA) -- aid for workers displaced by overseas competition. ...


Read the rest here.

Wednesday, September 21, 2011

Lieberman Lays Ground Work to Deem Any Group or Individual Violent Extremists

S.1546 - Department of Homeland Security Authorization Act of 2011; Sen Joseph Lieberman (CT-I)

Here's the little gem found inside S.1546:

SEC. 213. COUNTERING HOMEGROWN TERRORISM.


(a) Findings- Congress finds the following:


(1) The Final Report of the National Commission on Terrorist Attacks Upon the United States (commonly know as, and in this section referred to as, the ‘9/11 Commission Report’) states that ‘our strategy must match our means to two ends: dismantling the al Qaeda network and prevailing in the longer term over the ideology that gives rise to Islamist terrorism.’.


(2) The President released a document in August 2011, entitled ‘Empowering Local Partners to Prevent Violent Extremism in the United States’, which set forth a framework for countering violent extremism in the United States.


(b) Designation of Official- Not later than 30 days after the date of enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall designate an official of the Department to coordinate efforts to counter violent extremism in the United States, particularly the ideology that gives rise to Islamist terrorism as identified in the 9/11 Commission Report.


(c) Notice- Not later than 15 days after the date on which the Secretary designates an official under subsection (b), the Secretary shall submit to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate and the Committee on Homeland Security of the House of Representatives a written notification of the designation.


(d) Report- Not later than 90 days after the date on which the Secretary designates an official under subsection (b), official designated shall submit to the Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs of the Senate and the Committee on Homeland Security of the House of Representatives a report detailing--


(1) the strategy and activities of the Department to counter violent extremism in the United States, particularly the ideology that gives rise to Islamist terrorism as identified in the 9/11 Commission Report;


(2) which offices of the Department have significant responsibilities for countering violent extremism in the United States, particularly the ideology that gives rise to Islamist terrorism as identified in the 9/11 Commission Report;


(3) the number of employees of the Department employees whose time is fully or partially dedicated and the amount of funding dedicated by the Department to countering violent extremism in the United States, particularly the ideology that gives rise to Islamist terrorism as identified in the 9/11 Commission Report;


(4) the type of Department-sponsored activities and training for States and local governments, including products and activities associated with State and major urban area fusion centers, for countering violent extremism in the United States, particularly the ideology that gives rise to Islamist terrorism as identified in the 9/11 Commission Report;


(5) the metrics used to measure the effectiveness of programs or activities of the Department or sponsored by the Department aimed to counter violent extremism in the United States, particularly the ideology that gives rise to Islamist terrorism as identified in the 9/11 Commission Report; and


(6) the work of the Department to ensure that its activities to counter violent extremism in the United States, particularly the ideology that gives rise to Islamist terrorism as identified in the 9/11 Commission report, are in compliance with civil rights and civil liberties under applicable law.


Comment: While they use their old straw man straight out of the godawful 9/11 Commission Report, the Mooselum, the clause will give DHS the unfettered ability to deem any group or individual a violent extremist. This where Orwell and 1984 meet 2011.

Friday, September 16, 2011

Senate Saves the James Webb Space Telescope!

Senate Saves the James Webb Space Telescope! Universe Today

Don't worry boys and girls, the Senate saved the $12 billion super duper JAMES WEBB SPACE TELESCOPE, wow we wow wow! Can you say MORE DEBT?


U.S. Constitution is the only thing standing between freedom, tyranny

U.S. Constitution is the only thing standing between freedom, tyranny; by Ed Riffle; San Jose Mercury News

From a local letter to the editor:

If the United States of America had stayed with the original intent of our founding documents, what would our country look like today? My guess is that we would look quite different than we do. We have strayed a long way from the republic envisioned by our founders and have ignored their warnings about a federal government powerful enough to restrict the freedom its citizens or more correctly, the citizens of each of its states. Which brings me to the biggest of the differences between what we have today and what our founders intended; our founders saw the individual states as having the governments that would interact with the citizens, not the federal government.


Das Uber Congress Meets in First Secret Meeting

Super Committee Announces Next Public Meeting; Roll Call
















...The announcement from Rep. Jeb Hensarling (R-Texas) and Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.) came on a day when the panel held its first full private, closed-door session. In an early morning breakfast, the bipartisan, bicameral group of 12 lawmakers got to know each other over eggs and discussed the basics of their task: to find $1.2 trillion to $1.5 trillion in savings over the next 10 years, and do it by Thanksgiving.


Comment: No matter how they spin it, it's still unconstitutional and an egregious slap in the face of every American.

Thursday, September 15, 2011

Things Are Going to Get Much Worse, Society Is Breaking Down

Investigate 9/11 link in Sarasota, Fla. lawmaker says

Investigate 9/11 link in Sarasota, Fla. lawmaker says; The Miami Herald

Former U.S. Sen. Bob Graham, the Florida Democrat who chaired the congressional Joint Inquiry into the deadly hijackings, said he was never told about the case, while the FBI, in a statement released Friday, said the agency did indeed tell Congress and the 911 Commission.


“With respect to recent reports about the Sarasota area, there is no new information related to the 9/11 hijackers,’’ said the FBI, adding the case was found not to be related to the 9/11 events. “All of the documentation pertaining to the 9/11 investigation was made available to the 9/11 Commission and the [joint inquiry].”


But Graham says questions still abound over the bizarre events that occurred at the three-bedroom home owned by Saudi financier Esam Ghazzawi, whose daughter and son-in-law and two young children resided there.


Graham disputed the FBI’s statement that the agency informed the Congress, saying it was “BS” that he and congressional investigators were told about the Sarasota events.


Read the full article here
.

S.1000 - Energy Savings and Industrial Competitiveness Act of 2011

S.1000 - Energy Savings and Industrial Competitiveness Act of 2011; Senator Jeanne Shaheen D-NH

Co-Sponsers: Sen. Chris Coons [D, DE]; Sen. Mary Landrieu [D, LA]; Sen. Robert Portman [R, OH]
Energy Savings and Industrial Competitiveness Act of 2011: A bill to promote energy savings in residential and commercial buildings and industry, and for other purposes.


Comment
: S.1000 – Energy Savings and Industrial Competitiveness Act of 2011 or the “energy savings plan” is a marvel of Byzantine bureaucracy; 280 pages of more regulations and spending. This bill should be squarely rejected.

Hasn’t congress screwed up enough of the economy through their meddling in miniscule matters, which should be left to the citizen to decide what they’ll purchase (low flush toilets come to mind). Do we really need more regulations about hairdriers, dishwashers, home construction, HVAC, etc? Do we need more studies conducted by the legions of bureaucrats that make six figure salaries in DC while 90 percent of America struggles? Absolutely not.

Why are we focused on saving energy when we should be focused on energy production. Congress is spending all this time making sure we squeeze a nano-watt of electricity out of a refrigerator yet we are building too few if any new power plants to replace the aged and inefficient ones we have today. Yet around the world developing nations like China and India are building new ones every day. Isn't this backwards?

Why is Congress walking in lock step with the EPA and preventing more coal exploration and the building of coal burning plants, yet helped the Obama Administration funnel billions into the scam "green" company Solyndra?

Folks, this isn't going to provide a savings for anyone; all it will do is drive the cost of new home construction and appliances up, while ignoring the real need, energy production. Write your congress-critter today and tell them to vote no on this industrial strangulation act.

Wednesday, September 14, 2011

The Tea Party's Cut Cap and Balance Corundum

My problem is with the initiative known as “Cut, Cap and Balance.” As a sentiment and driving virtue, I can respect it. But the mechanics, the insistence of capping it off with a constitutional amendment, strikes me as where the Tea Party formally becomes lost in its birthing pangs militancy. To a movement that counts constitutional fidelity as a paramount virtue, advancing the ideal of reining in government in such a way has to be considered far more thoughtfully than what it has been thus far.

Comment
: A practical continuation of exploring the double-edged sword of Constitutional amendments as policy, agenda and eventual institution.

Tuesday, September 13, 2011

Editorial: Kyl Should Rethink Supercommittee Threat

Kyl Should Rethink Supercommittee Threat; The Atlantic

You can read the rest of this editorial, which implicitly endorses DAS UBER CONGRESS, yet reading between the lines it becomes clear that DAS UBER CONGRESS is as much of pawn for the banking sector as it is for the military defense complex, and in fact it may be the real reason Boehner, McConnell, Obama, Reid and Harkins (along with other unseen conspirators) crafted this very unconstitutional act.

Senator Jon Kyl made news this week by telegraphing in advance the tantrums he would throw -- including resignation from his responsibilities as a member of the so-called "supercommittee" - if the Congressional group pushes for more defense cuts.


It's unclear whether Kyl will tolerate the $350 billion in cuts slated for the next ten years already called for by President Obama -- or whether he is talking about cuts above this amount.

Read the rest here.

Comment: The US Senate was created to provide a tremendous "check and balance" to thwart the domination of a majority, the House, Executive and Judicial Branch, and special interest. With the enactment of the 17th Amendment we can clearly see how the majority has been used to enlarge the power and scope of Executive Branch and special interest. Now with DAS UBER CONGRESS's foundation being laid firmly, and without even the slightest peep of denouncement from the remnants of our media or the American public, the conditions are being laid for a fascist government. Actually, the truth is since World War II we have moved steadily toward this state and DAS UBER CONGRESS is only part of the continued advancement, albeit a major one.

Saturday, September 10, 2011

Senate Approves $500 Billion Increase in Borrowing Authority

Senate Approves $500 Billion Increase in Borrowing Authority; WSJ; Washington Wire

The U.S. Senate, in an unusual procedure, cleared the way Thursday for the U.S. to lift its borrowing authority by $500 billion to $15.19 trillion, enough to keep the support federal government borrowing through late January or early February.


The action came under an unusual legislative procedure spelled out under the August agreement to raise the U.S. debt ceiling and avoid a U.S. credit default. In a 52-45 vote, the Senate blocked an attempt by Republicans to slow down the process that will result in the $500 billion debt-ceiling increase.


The increase stems from a deal between Congress and the White House, finalized last month, that spells out how the borrowing limit would be increased by $500 billion. Under the process, lawmakers in both the House and Senate must vote on a resolution of disapproval against the increase in the borrowing limit. President Barack Obama would then have to veto the resolution of disapproval, and Congress would then vote to try and override that veto.


The complicated procedure, designed by Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R., Ky.), would allow an increase of the borrowing limit while allowing most Republicans to vote against such an increase.


There was a twist in this scenario Thursday evening, however. Democrats held firm, rejecting the resolution of disapproval, thereby speeding the process and increasing the borrowing limit immediately.


Only Sen. Ben Nelson (D., Neb.) broke from his party to vote with the Republicans in trying to move forward with the measure.


The next increase in the borrowing limit, likely in the first quarter of next year, will be dependent on the ability of a panel of 12 lawmakers to reach a deal that cuts at least $1.2 trillion from federal budget deficits over the next decade.


Note: see the summary here.

Thursday, September 08, 2011

Senator Demands Answers On Government Anthrax Investigation Mystery

Senator Demands Answers On Government Anthrax Investigation Mystery; Infowars.com

A ranking Republican Senator has written to the Justice Department demanding to know why it quickly retracted court papers that called into serious question a key pillar of the criminal case against Bruce Ivins, the FBI’s prime suspect in the 2001 anthrax mail attacks.

Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa, who has long questioned the legitimacy of the FBI’s findings in the case, wrote Attorney General Eric Holder and FBI Director Robert Mueller this week, regarding a filing by Justice Department civil lawyers in July that noted that the Army’s biodefense center at Fort Detrick, Md., “did not have the specialized equipment in a containment laboratory that would be required to prepare the dried spore preparations that were used in the letters.”

In other words, the filing noted that Ivins’ lab, often referred to as the “hot suite”, did not contain the equipment needed to turn liquid anthrax into the refined powder that ended up being mailed to members of the Senate and reporters in the fall of 2001.

Ivins, who was found dead in 2008 from an apparent suicide at the same time the government was about to indict him, was identified by the FBI’s “Amerithrax Task Force” as the lone perpetrator of the attacks that killed five people and infected 17 others in the weeks immediately following 9/11.

The FBI based it’s entire case against Ivins on the fact that the microbiologist had access to the necessary equipment in the government lab at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases where he worked.


Read the rest here.

Comment: This event is one of the many "mysteries" surrounding 9/11 and as with most of 9/11 remains shrouded. I'm not always a fan of Sen Grassley, but I do applaud his efforts to get to the bottom of a very serious issue.

Tuesday, September 06, 2011

The Trouble With Harry.

It is no leap in logic that the House has always been inherently the most democratic aspect of any of the three branches of federal government. Its modest length of term, number of members based on a formula of districts structured on population, and the simple fact that it is the only body or office that was decided by direct election from its very conception make this indisputable. So, political sensibilities and attempts to dismiss it as hyperbolic posturing aside, what are we really saying with our indictment that the House’s makeup and attitudes contribute to our problems?



Comment:
This is an op-ed piece simply asking how democracy can be an answer to the belief of a "broken system" if it is practiced in an unprincipled, unquestioned fashion.

Friday, September 02, 2011

PAUL: EPA regulations violate constitutional rights

PAUL: EPA regulations violate constitutional rights: The Washington Times

Since its creation in 1970, the Environmental Protection Agency has done more harm than good. EPA regulations cost more than 5 percent of our annual gross domestic product - the equivalent of the costs of defense and homeland security combined. Since EPA regulations have expanded, unemployment in America has increased by 33 percent. This abuse of power by the implementation of regulations infringes upon our basic constitutional rights.

There have been too frequent reports of individual rights being violated by abusive and power-hungry EPA bureaucrats. These regulations have hampered landowners’ ability to manage their private property as they please and have impaired job creation. Americans are suffering from the overreach of regulatory agencies such as the EPA.

In Pennsylvania, take the story of John Pozsgai, an immigrant from Hungary, who worked as a mechanic and eventually saved enough money to purchase the land bordering his home in Morrisville, Pa. This land was an old auto junkyard, and Mr. Pozsgai, taking pride in his home, proceeded to clean up this landfill by removing 7,000 old tires and rusted-out automobiles. However, the EPA did not view this effort as a clean-up but rather a violation of the Clean Water Act. You see, Mr. Pozsgai’s property was a wetland, ambiguously defined by the EPA as any property that has some sort of connection to a wetland. That connection to a wetland was a small drainage ditch located on the edge of his property. ...

Read the rest and see the embedded URLs here.