Tuesday, December 22, 2009

Crap & Trade- Dead man walking


Opinion 1.0


After the Copenhagen Climate Change Summit last week in Denmark, it appears that not much is moving forward for the climate change advocates. President Obama made a rock-star appearance at the end of summit to make a lackluster speech of platitudes and nothing of importance. The gigantic nemesis shadowing the whole summit was the exposure of the damning emails and documents hacked from the East Anglia Climate Research Unit. There is so much doubt now along with dwindling support on both sides of the Atlantic ocean and across the world. Many countries are demanding investigations into this blatant conspiracy in which, is probably one of the largest scams of the scientific community ever. East Anglia's Phil Jones has stepped down and Penn State University is investigating Professor Michael Mann. Al Gore is out there making incorrect statements and looking like a total fraud. Opponents are having a field day with incriminating evidence, feeling vindicated after years of being shunned in the climate community. Christopher Monckton, Patrick Michaels, Climate Depot and others are exposing more and more deceiving and malicious information perpetrated by advocates of climate change. How do the climate change advocates counter this disturbing leaks of sensitive information? Everyone knows how the main stream media ignored this story for weeks and only Fox news, the internet news agencies and bloggers ran with this paramount story. Now, everybody is reporting on this daily. Who would of thunk it? I read an article estimating that climate change reform would cost the world's economies about $40 trillion. That would help the world's economies. I think we need to move towards alternative enegy sources, however, as in most cases, the government wants to totally overhaul energy and mess it up like how they are on the path with healthcare reform. I feel we are a bit egotistical believing that we can have this much devastating impact on our earth. I say this because scientists have proclaimed that one erupting volcano creates more pollution than the whole country for twenty years. Now, I don't know if this is true or not, but, I understand that our earth has dealt with ice ages, earthquakes, fires and so on, and earth has repaired itself for millions of years. One other point is carbon dioxide. We exhale carbon dioxide. Is the EPA going to charge every American carbon credits for breathing? Is the EPA going to tax all living plants since they feed on carbon dioxide? I realize this sounds rediculous, that is my point. our government and world governments are trying so hard to rule every aspect of our lives, its a sin. I'm waiting for President Obama to announce a new program called "Cash for Caulkers." I will caulk my whole house and increase the indoor air pollution in my home. Cha-ching! Obama said caulking and insulating is "sexy." I can't wait to see an article in Maxim on caulking. We have 10% unemployment and our President is hawking caulk. Lord save us. How come France gets 90% of their energy from nuclear and the U.S. only gets about 15%? I do not believe our government wants to ween us off foreign oil dependency. They know we have an ample supply of oil, oil shale, natural gas and clean coal technologies at our disposal. Harvest these resources and fund alternative energy technologies. That would fund the clean energy technology research and create hundreds of thousands of jobs and pull us out of this lagging recession. Sidenote: The GDP was downgraded for the second time to 2.2%, all government growth. If a private company made this type of mistake stating numbers, Obama and his sycophants would have them investigated yesterday. Who will investigate the Fed? Call your representatives, voice your opinion.

Larry Murphy on Copenhagen:
 

Physicist Piers Corbyn on the Alex Jones Show:


Gov. Paterson, Mayor Bloomberg and other NY pols: Health care bill is prescription for disaster


BY Erin Einhorn and Kenneth Lovett In Albany and Michael Mcauliff In Washington

DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITERS

Tuesday, December 22nd 2009, 4:00 AM

Farrall/GettyNY pols fear the proposed health care plan would blow a $1 billion hole in the state's budget.
Drew/APGov. Paterson and Mayor Bloomberg both have major concerns about the Senate health care proposal. Take our PollHealthy or unhealthy?
Would the national health care reform bill be good for New Yorkers?

Yes, we need universal healthcare

No, it will cost us too much

I'm waiting to learn more about the bill's costs

Related NewsArticlesHealth care reform bill: Numbers for New York State are sickeningSenate votes along party lines as health care bill passes huge testLupica: Nelson, Lieberman do number on health billColo.

Congresswoman, feminists lash out at health bill abortion restrictionsSenate to vote on $626 billion defense spending billObama says nation on 'cusp' of making health care reform a realityHealth care bill snowed in by political shenanigansThe Senate health reform bill is packed with lumps of coal for New York's Christmas stocking.

Gov. Paterson, Mayor Bloomberg and other officials warned the Senate plan would:

- Force the city to close 100 health clinics.
- Blow a $1 billion hole in the state's budget.
- Threaten struggling hospitals, nursing homes and other facilities.

"It is really a disgrace and we've got to make sure that we fight before the bill is finally passed," Bloomberg fumed.
New York ended up on the short end as Senate brokers showered cash on states whose senators were among the last holdouts before Democratic leaders locked up the 60 needed votes.
New York's best hope now is emergency surgery to undo the shafting before the bill becomes final.
A health care overhaul passed by the House last month is more generous to the city and state, and negotiations over the differences start in January.
Under the Senate plan, the biggest rewards go the states that, unlike New York, have been Scrooges to the poor in need of medical care.
"We are in a sense being punished for our own charity," Paterson said Monday.
Paterson was also bitter that states like Massachusetts and Vermont, which were also generous, got last-minute deals that erase their extra costs.
But even more galling is that a place like Nebraska will have the feds pick up 100% of its Medicaid costs, while New York will continue to cover half on its own.
The bonanza for the Cornhusker State was part of the price to get the 60th vote, conservative Democrat Ben Nelson.
One of the biggest whacks the state faces is a $5.5 billion cut over 10 years in federal help taking care of sick people who can't pay.
Bloomberg believes that part of the Senate bill would cost the city $540 million.
"It would require us to close all of the 100 health clinics and a bunch of the ambulatory care things that we provide, overnight, cause the money would disappear," he said.
"We've already had some 40 nursing homes and 23 hospitals close in New York State in four years," said Dan Sisto, head of the Health Care Association of New York State.
New York House members have begun to map their push to undo the damage, starting with a letter to the Democratic leadership.
"New Yorkers will more than pay their share for increasing health coverage around the country," says the letter, which Bronx Rep. Eliot Engel wrote and expects to send today, signed by 24 members. "Yet New York will receive far less than the national average in federal relief."
Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), one of the key architects of the Senate bill, insists that on balance, New York will do well.
"The Senate bill is good for New York in ways that the House bill isn't," said Schumer spokesman Brian Fallon.
He noted that Medicare Advantage funding - cut for most states - is preserved for 800,000 New York patients, and the state would get more generous support for its children's health insurance program.
Schumer also helped prevent $3 billion in cuts that were proposed for the state's teaching hospitals, most of which are in New York City.
"The House bill is better in some ways," he admitted. But Fallon said Schumer pledges to try to fix what ails the Senate version when both chambers hold a conference. "We will try to get the best out of both bills for New York."
Paterson's budget aides say the House bill would actually save the state roughly $4 billion a year.
But some insiders have hinted the House may have to accept much of the Senate's bill to keep the fragile coalition still working to pass it from fracturing.
mmcauliff@nydailynews

Five Reasons It Might Not Pass


Obamacare still may not be inevitable.

By Rich Lowry & Robert Costa

Harry Reid got his 60. Ben Nelson resorted to the typical Washington expedient in such situations and bought into a few window-dressing compromises, in exchange for an enormous Medicaid benefit to his state. The Cornhusker Kickback joins the Louisiana Purchase as the latest evidence that there’s nothing like a hundred million or so in federal dollars to alleviate a senator’s deeply held concerns about the substance of Obamacare. Nelson’s sellout is a gigantic step toward the passage of the bill, but it’s not over yet. Here are five obstacles that still stand between Reid-Pelosi and a White House signing ceremony:

1. Public Revulsion. The bill was already under water in every major public-opinion poll, and opposed by a margin of almost 2 to 1 in the latest CNN poll. The latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll put its support at freezing, 32 percent. A few ticks downward and the bill will be in the 20s.

Is anything that has happened recently likely to change the trajectory? The Reid bill just got even longer, and the new version includes more tax increases. Even by the standards of the United States Congress, the process has been hide-the-children ugly: massive payoffs to the on-the-fence senators and a heedless, late-night rush to pass something, anything. The Democrats have shown no inclination to let public opinion hold them back, but the stiff headwind makes everything a little harder and reduces an already-small margin for error.

One subset of public opinion will be particularly important: Nebraska. If Nelson is perceived to have made a career-defining choice that will end his designation as a conservative Democrat and a pro-lifer, and if he takes an immediate dive in the polls, it will cast a pall over other Blue Dogs inclined to play ball. In that case, the various payoffs on offer won’t seem worth the larger cost of supporting the bill. It’s too early to tell exactly how it’s going to play in Nebraska, but Nebraska Right to Life has been appropriately excoriating about Nelson’s betrayal.

Democrats have set out to disprove Lincoln’s adage that without public sentiment nothing can succeed. They may yet succeed, but sailing into the teeth of such a howling headwind of public opinion won’t be easy.

2. The Stupak Dozen. Nelson cut a deal so far short of the Stupak language in the House that the National Right to Life Committee is going to score the cloture vote on the bill as a vote to subsidize abortion on demand. That won’t matter to anyone in the Senate, but it could have a major effect in the House. After her initial 220–215 victory, Pelosi can afford to lose only two net votes. Bart Stupak has declared the Nelson language unacceptable and vows to oppose the final bill if it doesn’t include the restrictions contained in his amendment. As John McCormack points out, earlier in the year Stupak was part of a bloc of Democrats who wrote a letter to Pelosi saying they’d stand against “any health-care-reform proposal unless it explicitly excludes abortion from the scope of any government-defined or -subsidized health-insurance plan.” Eleven of those signatories voted for the House bill.

Then there’s Joseph Cao, the Louisiana Republican who voted for the bill at the last moment during the first House vote but has said he would vote against the bill — even if doing so might cost him his seat — if it funds abortion. Surely, not all of the Stupak Dozen have that level of commitment. The full weight of the Democratic establishment will come crashing down on them if they threaten the bill. Still, it would take only two or three of them to upset the entire effort. One option would be simply to give them what they want. But will Barbara Boxer stand for the Stupak language in the Senate? This has been a devilish dilemma for the Democrats from the beginning, and it hasn’t gotten any easier as the stakes have gotten higher.

3. Who Pays? As a practical matter, it should be relatively easy to find a compromise on revenue sources. That doesn’t involve a hot-button cultural issue or a matter of deep principle like abortion. But the differences in financing between the Senate and the House bills are vast. The Senate relies on a so-called Cadillac tax on pricey insurance plans, the House on a surtax on the wealthy. The Senate long ago declared the surtax anathema, and the House is just as dismissive of the Cadillac tax. The unions hate the Cadillac tax, since they enjoy such plans themselves, the fruit of collective bargaining. If the House gives in, it will create even more unrest on the Left. If the Senate gives in, it could upset the fragile deal for 60. If this disagreement over financing doesn’t represent as dire a threat to the future of the bill as the other factors we are cataloguing, it’s still a stumbling block.

4. Feeling Blue. “Blue Dog Democrat” is understandably becoming a term of derision, denoting a willingness to object only enough to be noticed before caving in to the Democratic leadership. Yet the Blue Dogs still have to be a worry for supporters of the bill. When Obamacare first passed the House, 28 Blue Dog Democrats, more than half of their 52-member coalition, were on board. This is a pool that surely includes some very nervous votes. As Michael Barone points out, nearly 70 percent of the Blue Dogs represent districts that voted for John McCain. A vote for this bill must look even more like a potentially career-ending decision now than it did the first time around.


Keep an eye especially on the Pennsylvanians. Rep. Patrick Murphy already has four GOP opponents in his suburban Philadelphia district. After supporting round one of Obamacare, the auto bailouts, TARP, and the stimulus, Murphy may be looking for a way back toward the center. Reps. Kathy Dahlkemper and Christopher Carney, both elected in the 2006 anti-Bush sweep, represent blue-collar districts in the Keystone State in which Obama failed to reach 50 percent last year. You can bet that trio is watching the polls. Other Blue Dogs are simply getting out. In the past month, Reps. Bart Gordon (D., Tenn.), Dennis Moore (D., Kan.), and John Tanner (D., Tenn.) have all announced their retirements.

Don’t count on the Blue Dogs, though, since most of them are experts at folding under pressure.

5. The Left. Progressives are pained, at what should be their very moment of triumph. The Senate dashed their dreams of the public option. Without it, many on the left are abandoning ship. “This is the real sticking point,” said Howard Dean last Sunday. “There hasn’t been much fight from the White House on that.” It was always unlikely, no matter how much Bernie Sanders grumbled, that left-wing senators would block the deal. It’s easier to imagine a firebrand or two in the House doing it. No fewer than 60 liberals in the House imprudently made a pledge to oppose a bill without a public option. Almost all of them can be expected to eat it. But what if one or two don’t? Public-option scold Rep. Anthony Weiner (D., N.Y.) is continuing to pressure Obama to move further left. “What we’re saying is now’s your moment, big guy, you’re the Mariano Rivera of this situation,” he said to MSNBC last week. “You’re going to come in at the end, and there’s still a chance to do it.” That’s not going to happen, but perhaps a few of Weiner’s colleagues are ideologically besotted enough to lash out at the president’s “betrayal” when he doesn’t “come in” the way they hope he will.

All of this means that Democrats shouldn’t be celebrating until they have the bill on Obama’s desk. But make no mistake: The momentum for the bill that Reid had to fake a week or so ago is now real, at least within Congress. Early next year, the question may shift from whether Democrats can pass the bill, to whether Republican can make the sort of gains in 2010 and 2012 necessary to repeal it.

Rich Lowry is the editor of National Review. Robert Costa is the William F. Buckley Jr. Fellow at the National Review Institute.


Daft statement of the day:

"It's not if healthcare passes, it's when healthcare passes."

Barack Hussein Obama

Kill Bill Vol. III:

Opposition to Senate Healthcare Bill: Call your Senators!

"We the people" must stop the Obamacare Proposals: I am formally asking (pleading) with you to muster up the initiative and enthusiasm to fight the healthcare bill that will emerge in the end of the year. First, there are 2 bills (proposals) that will somehow be merged into one bill. Liberals are adamant about some form of "Public Option." (Government Run Option) I think the democrats believe they can push this bill through while we are sleeping. The democrats have blocked many bills that would allow the final bill to be posted on the internet 72 hours prior to a vote. Why? you know why. We must oppose this more than we did over the summer. Let them know, we are not against healthcare reform, just not a total makeover. Call and email your representatives. I have emailed and called mine so many times, they are referring to me by my first name. Write an old fashioned letter, it has a lot of importance. Attend your local tea parties and townhalls to voice your opinions and make a overwhelming presence. Below, is a little list how you can get involved. It is our civic duty. "It is our Country."

http://www.congress.org/
http://www.joinpatientsfirst.com/
http://www.freedomworks.org/
http://www.resistnet.com/
http://www.teapartypatriots.com/
http://www.teaparty.org/
http://www.taxpayer.org/
http://www.taxpayer.net/
info@cmpi.org
http://www.fairtax.org/
http://www.conservativeamericansunited.org/

CALL YOUR SENATORS! EMAIL YOUR SENATORS! CALL YOUR SENATORS! EMAIL YOUR SENATORS!



I will be making a conscious effort to wish everyone

a Merry Christmas this year ...
My way of saying that I am celebrating
the birth Of Jesus Christ.
So, I am asking my email buddies,
if you agree with me,
to please do the same..
And if you'll pass this on to
your email buddies, and so on...
maybe we can prevent one more
American tradition from being lost in the sea of
"Political Correctness".






Quote du jour:
"Santa Claus wears a Red Suit, He must be a communist. And a beard and long hair, Must be a pacifist. What's in that pipe that he's smoking? "
Arlo Guthrie (1947-)


References:
http://www.hotair.com/
http://www.weeklystandard.com/
http://www.nro.com/
Rich Lowry
Robert Costa
http://www.quotationspage.com/
http://www.thehill.com/
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/
mmcauliff@nydailynews
http://www.youtube.com/
Duke Misnik





















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