Sunday, March 3, 2013

The Sunday 'Report;' 03/03/2013; Part 2

What the National Pamphleteers don't report:
Keystone XL-Little Environmental Impact
by Juliet Eilperin; Steven Mufsin,
washingtonpost.com
March 1, 2013
The State Department released a draft environmental impact assessment of the controversial Keystone XL pipeline Friday, suggesting that the project would have little impact on climate change.
Canada’s oil sands will be developed even if President Obama denies a permit to the pipeline connecting the region to Gulf Coast refineries, the analysis said. Such a move also would not alter U.S. oil consumption, the report added.
The lengthy assessment did not give environmentalists the answer they had hoped for in the debate over the project’s climate impact. Opponents say a presidential rejection of the project would send a powerful message to the world about the importance of moving away from fossil fuels and make it more difficult for Canada to export its energy-intensive oil.
But the detailed environmental report — almost 2,000 pages long — also questions one of the strongest arguments for the pipeline, by suggesting that America can meet its energy needs without it. The growth in rail transport of oil from western Canada and the Bakken formation on the Great Plains and other pipelines, the analysis says, could meet the country’s energy needs for the next decade, even if Keystone XL is never built.
In a news conference Friday, Kerri-Ann Jones, assistant secretary of state for oceans and international environmental and scientific affairs, said the department had not made any final conclusions about the project. “We feel that we need to have a public debate,” Jones said.
The president is not likely to make a decision [....]
http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/keystone-xl-pipeline-will-not-have-huge-impact-on-climate-draft-analysis-says/2013/03/01/715491b0-82a5-11e2-b99e-6baf4ebe42df_print.html

Roddin' @ Random-1969 Camaro Z/28
Automotive Archeology-Monk's Z-28
by Ryan Brutt,
hotrod.com
February 1, 2013
I’m working on a huge find that you’ll read about in the next issue, but this time it’s just a quick little discovery. There was a story circulating in my club about a local guy who had an original ’69 Camaro Z/28 tucked in his garage for more than a decade, but all anyone knew was the guy was known as “Monk.” I looked around for a year and never found the guy. Then, at a club party, the topic turned to my barn-find expeditions. One guy spoke up, mentioning that he had a ’69 Z/28 that had been sitting for a decade or two. It was the elusive Monk! He purchased the car in the late ’70s with the non-original motor but the original transmission. He discovered the hard way that someone had replaced most of the valvesprings when the one original spring let loose, dropping the valve through the piston. He [....]
http://www.hotrod.com/feature_stories/hrdp_1301_roddin_at_random_1969_chevy_camaro_z28/#ixzz2MTzziilu

All Senators are equal, but their classes aren't
Why 2014's map is most favorable to the Republicans, and why it might not matter
by Kyle Kondik, Political Analyst-U.Va Center for Politics
centerforpolitics.org
February 28, 2013
Make no mistake — this year’s Senate elections are being waged on Republican turf. But that’s not uncommon.
A third of all Senate seats are on the ballot every other November, which means that two-thirds of the Senate remains the same even after a federal election (special elections prompted by vacancies can create a bit more turnover). This is in stark contrast to the House, where every member is up for reelection every two years. The Senate “classes” predate the popular election of senators, which was enacted through the ratification of the 17th Amendment in 1913.
As we’ve noted before, Democrats have to defend 21 Senate seats this cycle to the Republicans’ 14, and compounding their problems is that in the past four elections, the Democratic presidential candidate received an average of just 46.6% of the two-party presidential vote in the 33 states that have a Class 2 Senate seat, which are the ones up for election this year (the special elections coming up in Hawaii and South Carolina next year are not included because those seats are typically contested as part of different Senate classes).
That’s the most Republican-tilting of the three Senate classes. Class 1, the Senate map from last year, is the most Democratic: The Democratic candidate won an average of 50.7% of the two-party vote over the past four presidential elections in the 33 states that had Senate races last year. Meanwhile, the Democratic candidate won 48.2% of the two-party vote in 2010’s 34-state Senate map (Class 3), which makes it, on paper, the most purple map of the three.
Wait a second, though [....]
http://www.centerforpolitics.org/crystalball/

Michelle obama too good to talk to the common people
by 'Bungalow Bill,'
bungalowbillscw.blogspot.com
February 28, 2013
About 1:00 today, I sat in the parking lot of Subway at Sunshine and Kansas Expressway looking up at the rumble in the sky. That airplane is larger than those that normally land at Springfield Branson National Airport. Then I remembered as I saw the powder blue belly and the US flag on the plane noting this would serve as Air Force One if the tyrant was on board. Rather it was his wife coming to shop at a Walmart today.
It wasn't a Walmart though. During the past month Springfield, Missouri, has been in a heated debate about the addition of another Walmart Neighborhood Market on Campbell Street (the fifth). Coincidentally, Michelle Obama's visit to Springfield was at one of these Walmart Neighborhood Markets with its puke colored yellow walls. I, as well as some friends of mine don't feel it was by coincidence at all.
Anyway, Michelle Obama came to Springfield today to [....]

http://bungalowbillscw.blogspot.com/2013/02/michelle-obama-too-good-to-talk-to.html

The Rise of a new Nigerian Militant Group
by Matthew Bey; Sim Tak,
STRATfor.com
February 21, 2013
In the past week, 14 foreigners have been kidnapped in northern Nigeria and Cameroon in two separate attacks. No group has claimed responsibility for the second attack, which occurred Feb. 19 in Cameroon, but the location is adjacent to Boko Haram's core territory in northeast Nigeria. Ansaru, a splinter group of Boko Haram, claimed responsibility for the first attack and could be responsible for the second since, unlike Boko Haram, it has a history of kidnapping foreign nationals. If Boko Haram conducted the second attack, it would signal a significant shift in the group's targets and tactics.
As Stratfor noted, Boko Haram's capabilities in 2012 were limited to soft targets near the group's base of operations in northeastern Nigeria. Ansaru has emerged over the past year and appears to have surpassed Boko Haram in its range of tactics and targets. Ansaru has relied on armed attacks and kidnappings rather than suicide bombings. Ansaru's targets have included foreigners and those involved with the intervention in Mali, while Boko Haram's targets have been Nigerian.
Nearly all of the Ansaru attacks [....]
The Rise of a New Nigerian Militant Group | Stratfor

College creates plenty of debt, little skill
Staff Report,
exposeobama.com
February 25, 2013
Our children’s opportunities to learn based on technological advances has been more than offset by the loss of appreciation of literature and the humanities – including history,theology,philosophy and even economics. Our old friend Jon T. Barton,a classical violinist wrote an 800 page 2 volume work called “The Bible in Western Literature.” He co-authored with attorney John Whitehead a 1981 book,“Schools on Fire” – a prophetic work warning of the now deplorable and unnecessarily expensive condition of American education.
I met a young man recently with a degree in “Environmental Studies” from screwball UCal/Santa Cruz,home of the Banana Slugs. His student loan is $90,000 and he still can’t get a job. His girlfriend has a degree in Psychology and is only $60,000 in debt and can’t get a job either. In a two class society,only the wealthy and their satraps will be able to get a college education.
My Grandson’s Saudi ex-roommate at [....]
http://www.exposeobama.com/2013/02/25/college-creates-plenty-of-debt-but-not-much-skill/

China Tests Japanese and U.S. Patience
by Roger Baker,
STRATfor.com
February 26, 2013
Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has warned Beijing that Tokyo is losing patience with China's assertive maritime behavior in the East and South China seas, suggesting China consider the economic and military consequences of its actions. His warning followed similar statements from Washington that its patience with China is wearing thin, in this case over continued Chinese cyberespionage and the likelihood that Beijing is developing and testing cybersabotage and cyberwarfare capabilities. Together, the warnings are meant to signal to China that the thus-far relatively passive response to China's military actions may be nearing an end.
In an interview The Washington Post published just prior to Abe's meeting with U.S. President Barack Obama in Washington, Abe said China's actions around the disputed Senkaku/Diaoyu islands and its overall increasing military assertiveness have already resulted in a major increase in funding for the Japan Self-Defense Forces and coast guard. He also reiterated the centrality of the Japan-U.S. alliance for Asian security and warned that China could lose Japanese and other foreign investment if it continued to use "coercion or intimidation" toward its neighbors along the East and South China seas.
Abe's interview came amid warnings on Chinese cyberactivity from Washington. Though not mentioning China by name in his 2013 State of the Union address, Obama said, "We know foreign countries and companies swipe our corporate secrets. Now our enemies are also seeking the ability to sabotage our power grid, our financial institutions, our air traffic control systems." Obama's comments, and [....]
 China Tests Japanese and U.S. Patience | Stratfor

America's Number One Terrorist
Author Unknown,
exposeobama.com
February 26, 2013
My father served in the Korean War. And he served in the Vietnam war. His time in Vietnam overlapped with my first of two combat tours in Vietnam.

And when I came “home” after my last tour,I could not legally buy a beer or vote because I was not yet old enough.
And I could not get a “real” job because I was labelled as a “drug-crazed baby killer”. Someone interviewing me for a job actually asked me about how many babies I had killed. So I reenlisted in the military until such time as it was possible for me to slip back into the mainstream workforce unnoticed.
And I raised a family,started and ran my own business for a couple of decades,hired and fired people,and always tried to do “the right thing”…which had a tendency of getting me fired from time to time. But on the upside,that provided the incentive to start my own business.
And despite the way I and my brethren Vietnam Vets were treated,I have always insisted on flying the American Flag in front of my home.
And when I [....]
http://www.exposeobama.com/2013/02/26/americas-number-one-terrorist/

Taliban Attacks not down after all
by Robert Burns,
bigstory.ap.org
February 26, 2013
The American-led military coalition in Afghanistan backed off Tuesday from its claim that Taliban attacks dropped off in 2012, tacitly acknowledging a hole in its widely repeated argument that violence is easing and that the insurgency is in steep decline.
In response to Associated Press inquiries about its latest series of statistics on security in Afghanistan, the coalition command in Kabul said it had erred in reporting a 7 percent decline in attacks. In fact there was no decline at all, officials said.
Defense Secretary Leon Panetta, who is among the senior officials who had publicly repeated the assertion of an encouraging drop-off in Taliban attacks last year, was disturbed to learn [....]
http://bigstory.ap.org/article/ap-newsbreak-drop-taliban-attacks-incorrect?utm_source=Newsletter&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=Heritage%2BHotsheet

In WFB's Footsteps
Bill Buckley died five years ago, but his presence in the lives of his friends is everlasting.
by Larry Perelman,
nationalreview.com
February 
“A few days passed, and young Hans Castorp had now spent seven months up here, whereas Joachim, who already had five months to his credit when his cousin first arrived, could now look back on twelve months, one round year — round in the cosmic sense, as well, for in the time since the small, sturdy locomotive had dropped him off up here, the earth had returned to its starting point, having completed one orbit around the sun.”
—Thomas Mann, The Magic Mountain
This is one of my favorite passages from this extraordinary novel. I feel it’s appropriate to the occasion, as we have now all completed five orbits around the sun since Bill Buckley died on February 27, 2008. Things are unequivocally different for us all.  Four years ago, on the first anniversary of Bill’s death, Christopher Buckley wrote a remembrance in which he stated, “Jews observe a formal period of one year’s mourning for a parent, called an avelut. We aren’t Jewish, but I get, and like, the idea, even though I don’t suppose the mourning ever really ends, until one’s own time comes.” I wrote to Christo to reiterate my condolences. He replied: “Dear Larry, Thanks so much. Yes, hard to believe that almost a year ago you were about to put on a concert at Wallacks Point. I have his appointments diary beside me as I type, and the last entry in it, in his impenetrable [....]
http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/341650/wfb-s-footsteps-larry-perelman

American Recessional
Declining U.S. influence may be inevitable, but the world won't be better off.
by Victor Davis Hanson,
nationalreview.com
February 28, 2013
Republicans and Democrats are blaming one another for impending cuts to the defense budget brought about by sequestration. But with serial annual deficits of $1 trillion–plus and an aggregate debt nearing $17 trillion, the United States — like the insolvent Rome and exhausted Great Britain of the past — was bound to reexamine its expensive overseas commitments and strategic profile.
The president’s nomination of Chuck Hagel for defense secretary was a sort of Zen-like way of having a Republican combat veteran orchestrate a reduced military. In fact, Barack Obama has nurtured a broad and diverse constituency for his neo-isolationist vision. Budget hawks concede that defense must suffer its fair share of cuts. Libertarians want their republic back and hate [....]
http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/341745/american-recessional-victor-davis-hanson

[An ad for:] obamaKare Survival Guide
The obamaCare Survival Guide:  We read the law so you don't have to
At over 2,700 pages — with an additional 13,000 pages of regulations — the ObamaCare law is longer than the Bible, with many more rules. Rules that will, in the words of the president, "fundamentally transform" healthcare in America.
What no one explains is if the transformation will be a good one or a bad one. And that's why the ObamaCare Survival Guide is so important to you right now. It explains the impact ObamaCare will have on you today and in the future.
And what you don't know, can hurt you. For example, can you answer these vital questions?
  1. Do you know how the implementation of ObamaCare will affect your
    relationship with your doctor?
  2. What will happen to your health insurance?
https://www.newsmaxstore.com/nm_mag/obamacare_law.cfm?s=al&promo_code=12982-1

The NRA is unveiling a new Pro-Gun Contributor
by Jonathon Seidl,
theblaze.com
March 1, 2013
The media is going to have a hard time stereotyping the National Rifle Association (NRA) after the organization just announced its latest contributor to NRA News. TheBlaze was tipped off to the announcement and introduction of the man who calls himself an “urban gun enthusiast,” Colion Noir.
Noir — a young, enthusiastic gun supporter that wears baseball hats and t-shirts — has somewhat of a cult following on social media. His Facebook page, which has over 25,000 likes, is riddled with fans and comments and he has 174 videos on YouTube where he breaks down the latest gun arguments in simple-to-understand terms, reviews gun-related equipment, and even shows off at the range.
“Just A normal guys perspective of concealed carry, guns, 2nd Amendment and the Law,” his profile says. And on Friday morning, he’ll officially [....]
 
What's Next for Ben Carson?
by Mark Davis,
townhall.com
March 1, 2013
For a man unknown to most of America a month ago, Dr. Ben Carson is suddenly everywhere.The Johns Hopkins pediatric neurosurgeon is now a viral phenomenon, with a half-hour National Prayer Breakfast speech that has found its way to millions of inboxes. 
That address, covering topics from personal responsibility to education to taxes to health care, landed him on a smattering of political shows in the days following, as questions sprang forth:
Why did he address such specifics with President Obama seated two chairs away?
Does he envision running for office himself?
What is the meaning of his sudden popularity?
All good questions. And this week, over lunch, he answered them.
It’s a world of connections, and I am very fortunate to be close to James and Betty Robison, whose “Life Today” evangelical broadcasts reach millions of viewers over religious and secular stations alike from their Texas headquarters.
James was kind enough to invite me to the Thursday taping of an interview with Dr. Carson, which will air in a few weeks. His answers during that taping and at a private lunch thereafter might be [....]
http://townhall.com/columnists/markdavis/2013/03/01/whats-next-for-ben-carson-n1523287/page/full/
Part 3 MAY follow....

allvoices

allvoices

The Sunday 'Report;' 03/03/2013 Part 1

What the National Pamphleteers don't Report:
Behind Bars Again
by Willis Eschenbach,
wattsupwiththat.com
February 24, 2013
    I’ve written about my time in the US Army, and about spending time behind bars getting out of the Army, in my story called It’s Not About Me. In that story, I discussed a bit of my view on the Vietnam war, the view echoed by many who have studied it since—that it was the wrong war, in the wrong place, at the wrong time. My experience was that the Vietnam war damaged every single person it touched, on both sides of the Pacific, and more than anyone it damaged some of the veterans who’d actually done the fighting. I know, I spent months in the nuthouse assisting the physically crippled and the memory damaged, my friends were the shell-shocked refuse of the carnage. It’s not my wish to refight the war or what I did regarding the war, just to tell my story about it, so please, let’s not turn this into a referendum on some imaginary “right” response to the Vietnam War—there weren’t any of those, just levels of wrong responses, plus pain and suffering enough for all.
mymummie small
Christina Dorothea Dyer Greene, and looking at that lovely old granny, you’d never guess she’d once put a voodoo death curse on a man … another story I should tell sometime.
A couple years after I got out of the nuthouse and the Army, I went to live with the Captain’s Daughter, my beloved grandmother we called “My-mummie” whom I’ve written about before. It was a [....]
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/02/24/behind-bars-again/

It's Not About Me
by Willis Eschenbach,
wattsupwiththat.com
February 28, 2013
One response to Christopher Booker graciously mentioning my work in the Telegraph is the predictable increase in the usual personal attacks on me, as opposed to attacking my ideas and claims. People are rehashing Tim Lambert calling me a liar because he disagreed with my methods, as though that meant something about me rather than simply revealing something about Tim. They point out that I am an amateur scientist (as though that were other than a badge of honor). I’m told that I’m out of my depth. I am constantly assured that I am not qualified to offer a scientific opinion on climate, because of my lack of academic qualifications (BA in Psychology), and because of the shortness of my scientific publications list. The supply of reasons given to try to convince people to ignore my work is seemingly endless. To hear people tell it, I’m not fit to kiss the boots of a true scientist.
My point is that none of that matters. Either my scientific claims are correct, or they are not. It’s not about me. Period. End of story.

When I was younger, for decades I was a Zen Buddhist. There is an important saying that Zen is not the moon, it is just the finger pointing at the moon. Complaints, arguments, and discussions about the finger miss the point – the subject of importance, the subject worthy of discussion, is the moon.
That’s the ultimate [....]
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2011/02/28/its-not-about-me/

Old Bill Rises from the Dead
by Willis Eschenbach,
wattsupwiththat.com
March 1, 2013
I’ve written about a South Pacific reprobate I called “Old Bill” before in my tale called Modern Piracy. He was a con man of the highest order. As a friend remarked, most con men tell a story so good you believe it without question. Bill’s problem was that he told a story so artfully that even he believed it without question. I’d thought I was done with him after that, but nothing works like that in the islands.
Most good South Pacific stories start in some Yacht Club bar, and this was no exception. Back in the 1980s, I’d just finished up a two-country, four-week consulting job for the Peace Corps that had taken me to various adventures, first in PNG and then in Tonga. So I stopped off in Fiji to [....]
http://wattsupwiththat.com/2013/03/01/old-bill-rises-from-the-dead/

Morning Gold and Silver Report
by Geoffrey Varner
APMEX.com
March 1, 2013
    Gold bugs and novices alike are looking at the recent five month decline in the Gold price, wondering if the historic decade-long bull run is finally over. While there is no crystal ball to read the future, we can look at factors contributing to the more than 10 years of bullish prices. Some of these factors, such as central bank monetary policy, currency fluctuations, asset relocation and geopolitical unrest have been mostly constant in how they affect the demand for gold.
Jan Skoyles, head of research at The Real Asset Co., a precious-metals investment platform provider, said, “…the bullish drivers of Gold haven’t changed at all for several years.”
She goes on to say that the [....]
http://www.apmex.com/Commentaries/1805/Morning-Gold-Silver-Market-Report-3-01-2013.aspx

Gilded Class Warriors
Liberal grandees attack the rich while enjoying their lifestyle.
by Victor Davis Hanson,
nationalreview.com
February 21, 2013
In his first term, president obama was criticized fror trash-talking the 1-percenters while enjoying the aristocracy of Marth's Vineyard and the nation's most exclusive golf courses.  Obama never quite squared his accusations that “millionaires and billionaires” had not paid their fair share with his own obvious enjoyment of the perks of “corporate jet owners,” “fat cat bankers,” and Las Vegas junketeers.
Now, that paradox has continued right off the bat in the second term. In the State of the Union, Obama once more went after “the few” and “the wealthiest and the most powerful,” whom he blasted as the “well-off and the well-connected” and the “billionaires with high-powered accountants.”
Like clockwork, the president then [....]
http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/341143/gilded-class-warriors-victor-davis-hanson

Shepards and Sheep
by Dr Thomas Sowell,
creators.com
February 26, 2013
John Stuart Mill's classic essay "On Liberty" gives reasons why some people should not be taking over other people's decisions about their own lives. But Professor Cass Sunstein of Harvard has given reasons to the contrary. He cites research showing "that people make a lot of mistakes, and that those mistakes can prove extremely damaging."
Professor Sunstein is undoubtedly correct that "people make a lot of mistakes." Most of us can look back over our own lives and see many mistakes, including some that were very damaging.
What Cass Sunstein does not tell us is what sort of creatures, other than people, are going to override our mistaken decisions for us. That is the key flaw in the theory and agenda of the left.
Implicit in the wide range of efforts on the left to get government to take over more of our decisions for us is the assumption that there is some superior class of people who are either wiser or nobler than the rest of us.
Yes, we all make mistakes. But do governments not make bigger and more catastrophic mistakes?
Think about the First World War, from which [....]
http://www.creators.com/opinion/thomas-sowell/shepherds-and-sheep.html

John Kerry Invents Country of Kyrzakhstan
by Jonathon Earle,
telegraph.co.uk
February 25, 2013
In an embarrassing slip of the tongue, Mr Kerry last week praised US diplomats working to secure "democratic institutions" in the Central Asian country, which does not exist.
The newly minted diplomat was referring to Kyrgyzstan, a poor, landlocked nation of 5.5 million, which he appeared to confuse with its resource-rich neighbour to the north, Kazakhstan.
The State Department kindly omitted the error in the official transcript of Wednesday's speech, which Mr Kerry delivered on the eve of his first foreign trip as secretary of state.
Mr Kerry's flub was all the more awkward, because [....]
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/worldnews/us-politics/9892297/John-Kerry-invents-country-of-Kyrzakhstan.html

Strike Down Section 5
The Voting Rights Act is a victim of it's own success
by Hans A. von Spakovsky
nationalreview.com
February 27, 2013
Representative John Lewis certainly deserves the nation’s thanks for the fight he led during the civil-rights movement. But his latest commentary in the Washington Post, about the Shelby County case and the Voting Rights Act, shows that he is living in the past. The South has changed since he marched from Selma to Montgomery nearly 50 years ago.
Even the article’s headline is deceptive: “Why we still need the Voting Rights Act.” The entire VRA is not at issue in the Shelby case. The justices will be hearing arguments on Wednesday about the continued constitutionality of Section 5 only.
Section 5 was an emergency provision that was supposed to terminate after five years and that covered only certain jurisdictions (nine states and parts of seven others). Covered jurisdictions such as Shelby County, Ala., are basically in federal receivership — they cannot [....]
http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/341659/strike-down-section-5-hans-von-spakovsky?utm_source=Newsletter&utm_medium=Email&utm_campaign=Heritage%2BHotsheet

States of Conservatism
Beyond the Beltway, the right is thriving
by John Hood,
nationalreview.com
February 25, 2013
Inauguration Day 2013 was a moment of jubilation for conservatives. After four years of lackluster economic growth and a series of personal and policy mistakes, the incumbent chief executive, a history-making Democrat, was replaced by a conservative with an attractive policy agenda and a skillful campaign team. In a concise, hopeful inaugural address, the newly elected Republican leader of the executive branch promised to focus the administration’s attention and resources on job creation and economic growth in the short run, while setting the stage for long-term solutions to the government’s fiscal woes.
I’m describing the inauguration of Pat McCrory, North Carolina’s first Republican governor in 20 years. His election to replace retiring one-term Democrat Bev Perdue, the state’s first female governor, was one of the few bright spots for the GOP last November, so McCrory got more national attention than the incoming governor of the nation’s tenth-largest state would normally have received.
In general, however, Republican success in [....]
https://www.nationalreview.com/nrd/articles/340059/states-conservatism

The Big o Goes for the Big Zero Again
by John Ransom,
townhall.com
February 28, 2013
As the president resumes his “It’s-not-my-fault” presidency-cum-campaign, I’d like to point out to everyone that it’s been 1,401 days since the Democrat-Controlled Senate passed a budget.
I say this because when the Mayan financial calendar runs out on the country this Friday, we’ll be awash in illegal immigrants, downed airliners, out-of-work teachers, Russian missile strikes, Chinese hackers and Aryan Nation terrorists.
And, oh, come on now: We all know that the only real terrorists the White House is worried about are the white supremacists at places like the Family Research Council.
There’s nothing so dangerous to America today as an organization that advances “faith, family and freedom in public policy and the culture from a Christian worldview.”
Except, perhaps, [....]
http://finance.townhall.com/columnists/johnransom/2013/02/28/the-big-o-goes-for-the-big-zero-again-n1522247

Fire:  The Overlooked Threat
by Scott Stewart,
STRATfor.com
February 28, 2013
People sometimes obsess over the potential threat posed by terrorist attacks that use things such as chemical weapons, electromagnetic pulses or dirty bombs. Yet they tend to discount the less exciting but very real threat posed by fire, even though fire kills thousands of people every year. The World Health Organization estimates that 195,000 people die each year from fire, while according to the Global Terrorism Database an average of 7,258 people die annually from terrorism, and that includes deaths in conflict zones such as Afghanistan and Iraq.
There are also instances in which fire is used as a weapon in a terrorist attack. U.S. Ambassador Christopher Stevens and embassy communications officer Sean Smith, the two diplomats killed in the attack on the U.S. office in Benghazi on Sept. 11, 2012, did not die from gunfire or even rocket-propelled grenade strikes but from smoke inhalation. This fact was not lost on the U.S. Department of State Accountability Review Board that investigated the Benghazi attack. In an interview published by [....]
Fire: The Overlooked Threat | Stratfor

Sheriff Debunks Gun Magazine 'fallacies' in Viral Video
by Billy Hallowell,
theblaze.com
March1, 2013
A video featuring Sheriff Ken Campbell of Boone County, Ind., is capturing the attention of gun enthusiasts who have consistently argued that capping magazine sizes will do very little to save American lives. In a 14-minute instructional and debunk clip, Campbell narrates why a ban on high-capacity magazine sizes is ineffective, showcasing — through examples — the idea’s purported deficiencies. In an interview with TheBlaze, he explained the video’s purpose and detailed his views on the current gun control debate.
When asked whether capping magazine sizes would saves lives, Campbell was forthright in sharing his views with TheBlaze.
“I think it’s a great fallacy to believe that it would,” he said candidly. “You’ve got a standard capacity versus a 10 round. From a citizen standpoint…all we’re doing is making it more difficult for [people] to defend themselves against bad guys.”
The sheriff also took aim at recent comments uttered by Vice President Joe Biden. While Campbell said he respects the politician, Biden’s statements about shotguns were simply silly, [....]
 
Rotten to the Core:
obama's War on Acedemic Standards (Part 1)
 
Rotten to the Core (Part 2):
Readin,' Writin' and Destructionism
 
Rotten to the Core, Part III:
Lessons from Texas and the Growing Grassroots Revolt
by Michelle Malkin,
townhall.com
March 1, 2013
Texas is a right-minded red state, where patriotism is still a virtue and political correctness is out of vogue. So how on earth have left-wing educators in public classrooms been allowed to instruct Lone Star students to dress in Islamic garb, call the 9/11 jihadists "freedom fighters" and treat the Boston Tea Party participants as "terrorists"?
Here's the dirty little secret: Despite the best efforts of vigilant parents, teachers and administrators committed to academic excellence, progressive activists reign supreme in government schools.
That's because curriculum is king. The liberal monopoly on the modern textbook/curricular market remains unchallenged after a half-century. He who controls the textbooks, teaching guides and tests controls the academic agenda.
That is how the propagandistic outfitting of students in Islamic garb came to pass in the unlikely setting of the conservative Lumberton, Texas, school district. As Fox News reporter Todd Starnes noted this week, a 32-year veteran of the high school led a world [....]
http://townhall.com/columnists/michellemalkin/2013/03/01/rotten-to-the-core-part-iii-lessons-from-texas-and-the-growing-grassroots-revolt-n1523233/page/full/
Part 2 MAY follow....

allvoices

allvoices

Saturday, March 2, 2013

"Clown Prince" Weekly Blather; March 2nd

A Patriotic Response to the "Clown Prince;" 03/03/2013
barackingham Palace,
District of Corruption
March 2, 2013
    On Friday, I met with leaders of both parties in Congress to try and find a way forward in light of the severe budget cuts – known in Washington as “the sequester” – that have already started to inflict pain on communities across the country.  These cuts are not smart. They will hurt our economy and cost us jobs. And Congress can turn them off at any time – as soon as both sides are willing to compromise.  As a nation, we’ve already fought back from the worst economic crisis of our lifetimes, and we’ll get through this, too. But at a time when our businesses are finally gaining some traction, hiring new workers, bringing jobs back to America – the last thing Washington should do is to get in their way. That’s what these cuts to education, research, and defense will do. It’s unnecessary. And at a time when too many of our friends and neighbors are still looking for work, it’s inexcusable.
    Now, it’s important to understand that, while not everyone will feel the pain of these cuts right away, the pain will be real. Many middle-class families will have their lives disrupted in a significant way.  Beginning this week, businesses that work with the military will have to lay folks off. Communities near military bases will take a serious blow. Hundreds of thousands of Americans who serve their country – Border Patrol agents, FBI agents, civilians who work for the Defense Department – will see their wages cut and their hours reduced.  This will cause a ripple effect across the economy. Businesses will suffer because customers will have less money to spend. The longer these cuts remain in place, the greater the damage. Economists estimate they could eventually cost us more than 750,000 jobs and slow our economy by over one-half of one percent.
[What I'm not telling you:  Well, folks.... I held my breath and those evil republicRATics "let me turn blue" over my silly obstinance with the very sequestration plan completely and singularly of my design!!  Late last evening--after a final day of whinin', pissin' 'n' moanin,'--I signed the order officially installing MY sequestration plan as law!!  My final day of demeaning all opposition to obamunism proved to be of little consequence in this latest kerfuffle.
    Most economists--obamunist or logical--agree that the country desparately needs spending cuts; needs a budget system that's been revamped in favor of the taxpayer!  The country--both obamunist and republicRAT--must legislate the concept of baseline budgeting into oblivion!!  This is the plan inwhich each budget-year begins at the previous budget PLUS a pre-determined percentage increase.  As an example:  The Ag Department 2012 budget was $100 Billion.  The same department's budget will be that $100 Billion PLUS $8 Billion (the result of that guaranteed 8 [or whatever] percent automatic gain.  This is primarily an obamunist action:  If I don't get the ENTIRE automatic increase; say--in the above example, only a 4% increase--then I'll scream about draconian budget cuts, even though the department budget is increasing by 4%.  obamunists are never happy with budget cuts--or, for that matter--even reasonable increases.
    If it really is true, that we're working our way out of the obama
Depression, why-the-hell would anyone EXCEPT MY obamUNISTS even consider tax increases to continue to take more-and-more monies out of the economy?!?  The federal government is the last entity that should have any additional funds at all!!  The less money available for the federal government to piss away; the more in private hands to be used to fuel the economy.  We--here at barackingham Palace--adhere to the "Ronaldus-Magnus" axiom on the government's view of the economy:
 

"If it moves, tax it. If it keeps moving, regulate it. And if it stops moving, subsidize it."The only way the federal budget will ever come under control is to remove "BASELINE BUDGETING" from the process!!  Certainly, political logic--from either party--has not worked; is not even evident!!] 
    Here’s the thing: none of this is necessary. It’s happening because Republicans in Congress chose this outcome over closing a single wasteful tax loophole that helps reduce the deficit. Just this week, they decided that protecting special interest tax breaks for the well-off and well-connected is more important than protecting our military and middle-class families from these cuts.  I still believe we can and must replace these cuts with a balanced approach – one that combines smart spending cuts with entitlement reform and changes to our tax code that make it more fair for families and businesses without raising anyone’s tax rates. That’s how we can reduce our deficit without laying off workers, or forcing parents and students to pay the price. I don’t think that’s too much to ask. It’s the kind of approach I’ve proposed for two years now. A majority of the American people agree with me on this approach – including a majority of Republicans. We just need Republicans in Congress to catch up with their own party and the rest of the country. 
    Now, I know there are Republicans in Congress who would actually rather see tax loopholes closed than let these cuts go through. And I know there are Democrats who’d rather do smart entitlement reform than let these cuts go through. There’s a caucus of common sense. And I’m going to keep reaching out to them to fix this for good.  Because the American people are weary of perpetual partisanship and brinksmanship. This is America, and in America, we don’t careen from one manufactured crisis to another. We make smart choices. We plan. We prioritize. So I’m going to push through this paralysis and keep fighting for the real challenges facing middle-class families. I’m going to keep pushing for high-quality preschool for every family that wants it, and make sure the minimum wage becomes a wage you can live on. I’m going to keep pushing to fix our immigration system, repair our transportation system, and keep our children safe from gun violence.  That’s the work you elected me to do. That’s what I’m focused on every single day.
[What I'm not telling you:  Oh, but it is necessary!  Every obamunist has the ultimate goal of economically destroying whatever country he rules!!  To that end, this MANUFACTURED financial, economic crisis is but one method we adhere to!  We use these crises to cause civil unrest among the welfareRAT class of--as Rush Limbaugh's labelled them--'low-information' voters.  The obamunists are famous for denegrating every class of American  citizen on their way to economic, financial, medical, personal control of every facet of 'the individual!'  
    I don't intend to re-hash every point I repeated from my teleprompter!  Quite frankly.... I have golf games to  play; airplane rides to take to said golf games!! 
Suffice it to say: 
"There's much more pissin'n'moanin' to come!!"
BUT.... wouldn't it be kinda-cool if I cancelled the federal 'credit card' for Secretary John Forbes-Heinz-Kerry's "Air Force Twenty-Seven" or whatever it is, while he's in one of those third-world rathole, terrorist-muslim countries?!?  Whad'da'hoot that'd be!!
OH..... about that 'gun violence' thingie:  Did ya see how many rednecks showed up in Albany to protest New York's SAFE Act which all-but outlaws semi-automatic handguns with their inclusion of a severely restricted magazine capacity (ONLY 7 rounds!!).  It's been reported (probably minimized by the kuu-mow {Cuomo} media) that upwards of 12,000 Bibles, Pick-ups and American Flags showed up to protest!!  Soon will come the class-actions!!Much as I'm wont to do; Young Andy Cuomo (kuu-mow) was 'missing in action!!']

allvoices

allvoices

Friday, March 1, 2013

This'n'That; March First #2; Stupid is....

Forrest Gump Got It Right:
    Maxine Waters is living proof
Stupid is as stupid does!
Rep Waters said that if sequestration is not corrected by a republicRATic cave-in, the country would loose 170 MILLION jobs!!
Even Mr Gump would know that on any given day, the United States has but 135-to-143 MILLION jobs.
No kiddin'!!
Folks.... ya can't make this shit up!!
Comments, anyone?
Til Nex'Time....

allvoices

allvoices

This'n'That; March First #1; Caught....

"Clown Prince" Caught in a Lie, AGAIN!!
    ....but unlike previous obama 'catches' over the past five years, Bob Woodward "ain't lettin' go of this bone!!"  The referenced 'catch' was made in the last Woodward book: "The Price of Politics" inwhich
Mr Woodward--prior to the election--revealed that the entire 'sequestration' plan came from the regime's thought-control camp and as such FULL responsibility is laid directly at "Clown Prince" obama's feet!!
I say: "It's 'bout dam time!!"
"This f*cker been lyin' all his life; ain't nobody said squat!!"
Comments, anyone?
Til Nex'Time....
Reference "Lie-Barry:"
http://www.theblaze.com/blog/2013/02/27/obama-administration-caught-in-a-lie-heres-how-the-media-report-it/
http://reason.com/reasontv/2013/02/26/5-sequester-facts-to-know-before-committ
From here, down:  The articles are chronologically reversed.
http://www.theblaze.com/blog/2013/02/26/obama-sequester-leadership-washington-post/
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/27/what-the-hell-is-going-on-here-woodward-escalates-his-war-with-the-white-house/
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/27/bob-woodward-very-senior-white-house-official-warned-me-id-regret-attacking-obama-over-the-sequester/
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/28/you-will-regret-the-full-threat-email-a-top-white-house-official-sent-bob-woodward/
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/28/woodward-isnt-alone-former-clinton-adviser-and-obama-supporter-claims-white-house-threatened-over-his-articles-too/
http://www.theblaze.com/blog/2013/02/28/huffpost-on-woodward-drama-king/
http://www.theblaze.com/blog/2013/02/28/axelrod-woodward-white-house-emails/
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/28/three-reasons-bob-woodward-wont-regret-his-white-house-scoop/
http://www.theblaze.com/stories/2013/02/28/bob-woodward-responds-to-controversy-over-email-from-white-house-official-not-the-way-to-operate-in-a-white-house/
{More from the book that started the 'reveal'}
http://communities.washingtontimes.com/neighborhood/common-sense/2013/feb/28/sequester-lies-backfire-obama-character-assassinat/

allvoices

allvoices