While railing about all of the benefits American taxpayers give to business, warren conveniently forgot that business and business owners both pay taxes, and pay much more in percentage and overall contribution than workers. It could fairly be said the workers should be thanking businesses for their jobs, roads, and security.
Thursday, September 22, 2011
Are we conservatives, or are we RHINOs?
Ignoring the faulty conclusion the left leaning LAtimes draws (the only choice it to lean farther left, mwah ha ha!) the republican establishment are left with a choice to side with conservatives or liberals. Time to show your stripes ladies and gentlemen. You can prove yourselves RHINOs, and suffer the consequences in the next election, or act like actual conservatives and earn the support of the voters.
It’s time to eschew Peters and Eshoo, two more liberals we can’t afford to fund.
http://www.usatoday.com/news/washington/story/2011-09-21/disaster-aid-government-shutdown/50487302/1
"While the government has a responsibility to fund disaster response in places that were devastated by Hurricane Irene or other natural disasters, it is unconscionable to use funds designed to create jobs in manufacturing states to pay for it," Reps. Gary Peters, D-Mich., and Anna Eshoo, D-Calif.
Why are taxpayers on the hook for people who decide to live in hurricane or earthquake zones? Those people should be paying the insurance premium based on their risky lifestyle, not stealing from taxpayers in what amounts to risk subsidies.
Why are taxpayers gouged for “green jobs” that it is abundantly clear are not sustainable, and as demonstrated by our job loss, not even real jobs? The market should make these decisions, and in fact has done so, while the bureaucracy throws money away fighting reality.
It’s time to eschew Peters and Eshoo, two more liberals driving jobs out of America with excessive taxes, driving up our cost of living with subsidies to their voter base, driving up our debt with their tax and spend lunacy.
Wednesday, September 21, 2011
Obama Losing It: George Washington's Cool With His Tax Hikes
How else to explain his attempt to persuade us that he and our first President are like brothers? He’s just a habitual liar, you say? Well, I guess there’s that.
During his televised address in the Rose Garden yesterday, Obama actually justified his blowout government spending palooza by quoting none other than George Washington.
Said the Messiah, “It’s always more popular to promise the moon and leave the bill for after the next election or the election after that. That’s been true since our founding. George Washington grappled with this problem. He said, ‘Towards the payment of debts, there must be revenue, that to have revenue there must be taxes, [and] no taxes can be devised which are not more or less inconvenient and unpleasant.’ He understood that dealing with the debt is—these are his words—‘always a choice of difficulties.’ ”
For Obama to pull the “Hey, George Washington loved taxes too” card is almost comical. Almost, because there’s really nothing funny about the nation’s President being this unlearned about American history. Clearly Washington and his compatriots understood that taxation was needed to fund programs, but to justify the level of taxation that Obama and his minions advocate today to feed the ever-growing beast that is our federal government falls squarely outside of the structural limits of what was intended.
Don’t believe me? Just read a little something—something called the U.S. Constitution—to see exactly what the government was designed to do. A scandalous loan to Solyndra isn’t an enumerated power, FYI.
While the fact remains that while Americans are growing weary of BHO’s infatuation with green jobs and shovel-ready projects, do they have the stomach for the large-scale cuts that are needed in order to mitigate a national debt exploding past $14 trillion, and actually restore constitutional fidelity to Washington, D.C?
A lot of departments and agencies would have to get axed or severely restructured.
That depends, says freshman Sen. Mike Lee. “I don’t think the public necessarily has an appetite for saying let's slash this department and that one,” he told HUMAN EVENTS. “The American people understand that there are good people in every department of government.”
He went on to say that Americans do understand that the government can’t support every area of life. Something’s gotta give.
“So the question isn’t, ‘Do we want to slash entire departments just for the sake of doing it?’ It’s, ‘What do we need to cut in order protect those things that only the federal government can do?’ ”
Here’s the last installment of our exclusive interview with the Utah senator, where he also gives the skinny on what you can expect in the Senate these next few months.
Gird your loins, people!
In other news, Obama says that his huge tax hike on job producers is basic arithmetic. 'Do the math,' he implored Congress. But can he? How about releasing those college transcripts, champ.
Friday, September 16, 2011
The UN, a waste of 7 Billion per year.
U.N. Reform Advocate Questions What U.S. Is Getting for Its $7B Contribution
Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, chairwoman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, addresses a press conference on Capitol Hill on Tuesday to discuss the U.N. Transparency, Accountability, and Reform Act. Standing with her is Rep. Allen West (R-Fla.). (Photo courtesy House Foreign Affairs Committee)
As she prepares to mark up her bill in committee, Ros-Lehtinen (R-Fla.) faces mounting opposition from the Obama administration and advocacy groups supportive of deeper U.S. engagement with the U.N.
The U.N. Transparency, Accountability, and Reform Act (H.R. 2829) also lacks the support of a single House Democrat. The number of co-sponsors has climbed from 57 on Aug. 30 – the day the bill was introduced – to 74 as of Tuesday; all 74 are Republicans.
The bill seeks to change the way the U.N. is funded, allowing the U.S. and other member states to fund only those activities and agencies deemed efficient and in the national interest.
It also contains a raft of provisions targeting areas such as the Palestinian bid for U.N. recognition; the roles played at U.N. agencies by countries like Iran, Syria and Saudi Arabia; and linking reforms to support for any new or expanded peacekeeping missions.
Addressing a press conference on Capitol Hill in front of pictures of Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad shaking hands with U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi addressing the world body, Ros-Lehtinen made an appeal to “get back to the founding principles of the U.N.”
“Let’s not make it a staging ground for pariah states,” she said.
Flanked by Republican colleagues, Ros-Lehtinen defended the initiative against administration criticism, including the charge by a senior State Department official last week that it was “backwards.”
“Some call our bill ‘backwards’ but I don’t think it's backwards to demand transparency, accountability, and reform,” she said. “I do think the adjective ‘backwards’ too often applies to what we’re paying for at the U.N.”
American taxpayers provide 22 percent of the U.N.’s regular budget and 27 percent of the peacekeeping budget, and additional billions of dollars in “voluntary” contributions to miscellaneous U.N. agencies. The total U.S. contribution in fiscal year 2010 was $7.69 billion.
“What did U.S. taxpayers get in return for all of that money?” Ros-Lehtinen asked. “We got a U.N. that is increasingly non-transparent, unaccountable, ineffective, biased against the U.S., Israel, and other free democracies.”
Illegal Amnesty, courtesy Obama.
Gutierrez: 'I Want to Thank' Obama for Bypassing Congress to Cancel Deportation of Illegals
Title 8 Section 1325 of the U.S. Code makes it a federal crime to be in the United States illegally. Nevertheless, the Obama administration in August directed federal immigration officials to use "prosecutorial discretion" in deciding which illegal aliens to detain and deport.
“We had a president of the United States that recently was speaking at National Council of La Raza who said during his speech, ‘There are those who simply wish me to bypass Congress when it comes to immigration,’ and many in the audience clapped, saying, ‘Yup, bypass Congress…’” Gutierrez told the Congressional Hispanic Caucus Institute (CHCI) conference on Monday.
“He (Obama) said, ‘But I can’t bypass Congress,’ and people in the audience said, ‘Yes you can,’ and you want to know something? They were right -- he could and he did, and I want to thank the President of the United States, and I want to thank all of those that work at the White House for issuing new guidance when it comes to deportations,” Gutierrez added.
(Obama in July told the National Council of La Raza that although the idea of bypassing Congress and changing U.S. immigration laws on his own was “very tempting,” his hands were tied because “that is not how our system works.”)
Obama Whitehouse says it’s still not their fault
‘White House spokesman Jay Carney attributed Turner's win in New York's 9th congressional district to local factors that do not apply nationally. "Special elections are often unique, and their outcomes don't tell you very much about future regularly scheduled elections" ‘
Fair enough on one special election, but the liberals have been soundly beaten in how many special elections now? Even the liberal medias polls, which anyone of us can remember repeated instances of being biased 5-10% toward the left as compared to the actual results, show Obama in freefall.
$528M loan to solar company failed, and cost jobs.
Another failed Obama jobs initiative. This one cost the taxpayers $528 million AND 1100 jobs. Oh, and this is yet another Obama screw-up that isn’t Bush’s fault… Bush said no only 6 months earlier. As usual the whole problem is the liberal philosophy of government micromanaging all aspects of the economy. No government ever has done so successfully, and none ever will. Only free markets can succeed.
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