Ladies Logic

Wednesday, January 31, 2007

HE'S RUNNING!!!!!

An un-named DFL official has told the press that Al Franken IS running for Senate in 2008 KTLK-FM is reporting. Good news for DFL and good news for the Republican Party. Hopefully Ron Carey (Chairman of the MNGOP) will put half as much time and money and effort into Senator Coleman's campaign as he did Governor Pawlenty's campaign. He can not afford to lose both Senate seats. His hold on the chair is tenuous as it is.

Let the games begin!

More nanny government

You just can't make this up. An legislator in California now wants to make incandescent light bulbs illegal!

"A California lawmaker wants to make his state the first to ban incandescent lightbulbs as part of California's groundbreaking initiatives to reduce energy use and greenhouse gases blamed for global warming.
The "How Many Legislators Does it Take to Change a Lightbulb Act" would ban incandescent lightbulbs by 2012 in favor of energy-saving compact fluorescent lightbulbs."

It should probably be more accurately called the "How Many Legislators Does it Take to Strip You of Your Property Rights Act".

How are they going to enforce this law? Are they going to station police at the state line to search every car that comes into the state to make sure that they are not carrying incandescent bulbs? Are they going to search your garbage to see if they can find evidence of incandescent bulb usage? Are they going to demand that all homes (new and existing) have outlets that will only work with fluoroescent bulbs? Are they going to pay homeowners for these retrofits or will it be one more unfunded government mandate.

Don't get me wrong. I use compact fluoroescent lights (CFLs) in every light fixtures in my house that will hold them. The light produced by CFLs is brighter and cleaner, CFLs last much longer and they cost less to operate. However, this is insane.

This is the frustrating thing about most legislators. They love to propose (and pass) this kind of "feel good" legislation with no idea how to implement the changes or how it will impact their constituents. They just know that it felt good to "do something" about a problem - even if doing something makes the problem bigger.

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Tuesday, January 30, 2007

Driving questions.

As a parent, this story haunts me.

"Gladys Reyes, a student at Heritage Middle School, was hit just before 6 p.m. Sunday as she was crossing a street with another 11-year-old girl near Robert St. and Wentworth Ave.The 11-year-old witness told police that the van came up from behind them, hit Reyes, and continued driving, dragging Reyes down the street. "

The driver of the van was driving on a suspended license...no word on if he was drunk or not.

"The man driving a van that hit an 11-year-old girl and dragged her almost 500 feet has been charged with two felony counts of Criminal Vehicular Operations in Dakota County. Bail has been set at $100,000 for Mauricio Sanchez, 33, of St. Paul."

Now, I heard on the radio that Gladys had her arm amputated because it was so badly damaged. One local radio station called the police station and the county prosecutors office to see if they could get any information on the immigration status of the driver. Both Minneapolis and St. Paul are so-called "sanctuary cities" which means that police can not ask illegal immigrants, who broke our laws coming into the country to begin with, who are charged with a crime what their immigration status is. And few in this state seem to think that there is anything wrong with this!

It seems that the politicians in Minneapolis and St. Paul are more interested in taking away a private property owners rights than they are in enforcing the laws of this country and the city. Is this really what the citizens of these two cities want? Do they want smoking bans or 11 year old girls protected from people who are driving illegally? The answer to this question effects those of us living in the surrounding counties. We deserve to know the answer Minneapolis. It is our childrens lives that are at stake.

A couple of quick hits

I have written at length about these issues, so rather than rehash old information - I thought I would just pass the links on.

NHS cash crisis deprives thousands of treatment for blindness This is what government run health care looks like people. Do you want this for your family?

Democrat leaders run afoul of ethics law - Remind me again whose culture of corruption it was?

I thought this was "settled science"? Just in time for all of the University of Minnesota and UN global warming reports to come out we have all these people who say that it is not settled science.

Oh me, oh my.....what ever will we do? How about we do a little more research before we go making any drastic changes? Just for once...

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Fighting the smoking bans.

I'm turning this post over to a local logical lady - Sue Jeffers.

"The debate is over. The science is clear. Secondhand smoke is not a mere annoyance but a serious health hazard that causes premature death and disease in children and nonsmoking adults." — Surgeon General Richard Carmona

June, 2006.

Sorry, ex-Surgeon General Carmona, the debate is not over.

This report is not a "new study," nor is there any new science in this report. It is a review of a lot of studies done in the past, many of which have been shown to be deeply or even fatally flawed.

In more than 700 pages, there is nothing that indicates any harm will come from low levels of exposure similar to what you would find in any well-ventilated bar/restaurant.

The report states "there is no safe level of secondhand smoke." That doesn't make it true.

The American Cancer Society and the California Environmental Protection Agency conducted air-quality tests at several smoking venues that prove the Surgeon General flat-out wrong.

There is a big difference between smell and health hazard. By telling consumers there is no safe level of exposure to tobacco, the anti-smoking advocates have lost the argument.

The basic rule of toxicology is the dose makes the poison. A message stating that anything that is harmful at a high dose can be lethal at a low dose is simply not true.

Updates needed

We must objectively define a public health risk that requires government intervention before we ban use of a legal product. We must honestly talk about facts and science.

Not one study of secondhand smoke has shown statistical scientific significance of any threat from the low levels of smoke one would normally find today in any ventilated bar or restaurant and the epidemiological standard test of minimum relative risk.

Faulty science, exaggerated claims and even outright lies are used in an ultimate goal to prohibit legal use of tobacco on public and private property.

Bad science leads to bad public policy. Unethical statistics, such as those cited in the report, often are used to politically motivate enacting bad legislation. Many smoke-haters no longer believe they need to be constrained by obstacles such as science, integrity, ethics or respect for individual choice in their quest to eliminate tobacco in public and private.

ClearWay Minnesota recently stopped trying to claim just 30 minutes of exposure to secondhand smoke damaged the lining of the arteries and would lead to heart disease.

In fact, any changes are transient and reversible and cannot lead to heart disease in healthy adults. Caught in the lie, to their credit, they removed the billboards and the TV and radio ads.
Unfortunately, they'll never put the same resources into undoing the damage they caused as they put into spreading the fears and divisions in the first place.

It's a choice

Anti-smoking advocates often cite the "rights" of nonsmoking customers and employees vs. the fundamental issue of the rights of private property owners' ability to regulate legal activities on their property.

While public safety is an important role of government, we cannot allow an arbitrary definition of public health to create policy.

Inspectors and food-safety experts protect us from unseen, unknown risks we cannot reasonably protect ourselves from, such as contagious diseases or bad spinach.

A person can choose not to enter an establishment that offers smoking and nonsmoking choices.
Political decisions affecting the lives and livelihoods of thousands of Minnesotans need to be based on truth, not on exaggerations or lies.

With truth and science, there will be no need to be "fair" to all and ban smoking statewide. With more than 80 percent of Minnesota's workplaces smoke free, no one is forced to work in or patronize a smoking establishment.

We must determine whether the end justifies the means. Are exaggerated scare tactics OK in the name of public health? How far should government go in the name of "public health?"

If smoking bans are justified on private property, what will be next?

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Time and Choices

My inbox has been innundated with information about the herd of Republicans that are running for (or considering running for) President in 2008. I'm getting emails from people who say "Candidate X is the only one who can win." and others from people who say "I would never vote for a candidate who does not support _____ (insert single issue here). While I would be lying if I said that I didn't have a candidate that I am supporting (albeit tepidly), I am certainly not out there trying to convince people why they should vote for Candidate Y just yet. Here is why.

Issues - there are a multitude of single issue candidates out there. Rep. Tom Tancredo (R-Co) is an excellent example. Rep. Tancredo is a Pat Buchanan closed borders kind of guy. If you give him a platform he will tell you all the reasons why we must close the borders and deport all the illegal aliens that are currently in the US. However, ask him to talk about defecit reduction or fighting the global war on terror.....As far as I have seen so far, there is no well rounded (issues wise) candidate who has thrown their name in the ring.

Conservatism - most of the candidates who are officially in are not exactly paragons of conservatism. Senator Chuck Hagel is my example here. If you take a look at his voting record in the Senate you will see that his record is all over the place. This so-called libertarian has a 100% voting record on pro-life issues, but a paltry 78% with the National Taxpayers Union. A 60% voting record with the ACLU and a 100% record with the American Coalition for Ethanol. His partnership with Senator John McCain in the "Gang of 14" in blocking President Bush's judicial nominees along with his recalcitrance on the Global War on Terror has conservative voters positively apoplectic.

Constitutional rights - three words...Senator John McCain. Is there any better example of a legislator who is hell bent on taking away the citizens rights?

Sue Jeffers sent me a link to a review of a conservative women's forum that took place recently.

"Conservative Republican women leaders from around the nation declared over the weekend that they are not happy with any of the current "Tier 1" Republican presidential candidates, and vowed to stop progress of the likes of John McCain, Rudy Guiliani, Newt Gingrich and Mitt Romney.
Conservative icon Phyllis Schlafly (pictured right), who hosted the weekend Eagle Forum state presidents' pow-wow in St. Louis, said that conservatives need to engage now to eliminate leading unacceptable candidates to clear the field for true conservatives to emerge in the next couple of months."

I have to agree with Ms. Schlafly (and I suspect Sue) that our "perfect" candidate is not on our radar yet - something that I have tried to tell those who are pushing Candidate X and Candidate Y. However, he (or she) had better get on the radar soon. Ms. Schlafly, being the wise woman that she is stated:

"Whoever reaches the $100 million mark first will be declared the GOP primary winner way before we get to Minneapolis next August," she said. "

Rather than settling, we conservatives need to get active and push for a truly conservative candidate to run for President. We certainly have a few conservatives out there who would excite the base and the middle the way President Reagan did. We need to find him/her NOW before it is too late.

Monday, January 29, 2007

Between a rock and...

The Logical Husband and I have been talking about politics (among other things) lately. One of the things we were talking about was the state of the Republican Party today. Which is an appropriate topic given that we do tend to lean more toward the Republican Party at this juncture.

We have noticed that both parties (but again speaking of that which we know - the Republicans) seemed to only be interested in one thing out of it's supporters....money! The only thing they seem to be paying attention to lately is money. It is up to Republican (and Democrat) supporters to get the parties to listen to them in the only way we can. We must hit them in the wallet. When we get those fundraising calls, letters and emails we need to politely but firmly tell them "not one minute, not one dime to Republicans who act like Demcrats". It's that simple.

We only have 12 months to get the Party's attention. So to all you Republicans out there, I have a challenge.....tell the Party that you will not give them one dime of our money, one minute of our time to elect candidates that do not reflect the Party platform. Maybe then the National and State Parties will get a clue that their base is not happy.

Saturday, January 27, 2007

Enviromentalists "care".

Mary Katherine Ham is another one of those "logical ladies" that I read with great frequency. She has a flair with the subjects that she writes about that is captivating. Besides her written blog and column, she does a weekly video blog. This week she combines her column with her video blog to highlight another of my favorite subjects and my favorite groups....radical environmentalists.

"In Rosia Montana, Romania, George grew up in a one-bedroom apartment with seven other family members. Two thirds of the people in his village have no running water. They venture outside in brutal negative temperatures just to use the bathroom. Many of them, George included, hope a planned gold mine will bring jobs and a taste of modernity to a town long-ago abandoned by state-owned mines and gainful employment.
Almost 500 miles away, from her home in the prosperous, modern capital city of Bucharest, Belgian environmentalist Francoise Heidebroek says of Rosia Montana's poverty, "It is part of the charm of Rosia Montana and this lifestyle. You know, people will use their horse and cart instead of using a car. They are proud to have a horse."

Gee Francoise - if life in Rosia Montana is soooo quaint and sooo charming, why aren't you living there? If the life of poverty that these people are trapped in is so preferable why are you hiding out in modern Belgium. Better yet, why not trade with one of these families. I'm sure they would love to have your apartment, your food, your job, your money.....why not give it all away and live with the horse?

You must watch the video to fully grasp the hypocricy of these environmental activists. The filmmaker (for the film "Mine your own business") even asked the environmentalists who were protesting his film why they didn't give up their lifestyles (in New York City) to go live the lifestyle that the subjects of his film lived. The answers will astound you.

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Why?

An anonymous commenter to this post asked me why I didn't write about "domestic violence". I answered that I had posted about a form of domestic violence when I wrote about slavery being alive and well in 21st Century America. That didn't satisfy my anonymous friend. Apparently, in his/her eyes, only violence that is visited on a woman by her spouse or significant other is worthy of comment. Well aside from the fact that this is my blog and I do write about things that interest me, I spent some time pondering anonymous' comment. Why don't I write about violence against women that comes from their husband/significant other. I realized why finally. There are plenty of voices speaking out against domestice violence against women. There are shelters and advocacy groups galore. Some I have even donated clothing, money or cell phones to - some I helped with my professional advise. There are laws galore on the books and there are groups to help women get out of abusive relationships. There are voices for these women and adding one more voice to the mix would just add to the noise.

However, women who suffer from the abuses that I write about have no voices. Whether it is the women that are in sexual slavery or women who are tortured to hide their womanhood or women who are told that they are responsible for being raped simply because they were born women or women who have their genitals sliced off with a razor...these women have no voice in America and they deserve to have their cries of anguish heard.

So Anonymous, if you want to read something written about domestic violence - get your own blog! It's cheap and it's easy. Go ahead and add to the noise - if that is your desire. Me - I intend to continue to raise my voice for women who have no advocate for it is my desire to bring peoples attention to the sufferings of these women and thus maybe, in some small way, help to bring an end to the oppression that these women suffer.

And that is, I thought, the whole goal of the "feminist movement" - to bring equality to all women - not just a select few. However, I will thow this one in just for anonymous.

More on ethanol

Much has been said about the "promise" of ethanol, including a couple of posts here. Today, The Wall Street Journal turned their learned eyes toward the subject and their findings are nothing new to some of us.

"A bit of sobriety would go a long way in discussing this moonshine of the energy world, however. Cellulosic ethanol--which is derived from plants like switchgrass--will require a big technological breakthrough to have any impact on the fuel supply. That leaves corn- and sugar-based ethanol, which have been around long enough to understand their significant limitations. What we have here is a classic political stampede rooted more in hope and self-interest than science or logic."

First the Journal talks about the subsidies that the ethanol industry receives - subsidies that the industry can not survive without.

"Ostensibly, the great virtue of ethanol is that it represents a "sustainable," environmentally friendly source of energy--a source that is literally homegrown rather than imported from such unstable places as Nigeria or Iran.
That's one reason why, as Jerry Taylor and Peter Van Doren note in the Milken Institute Review, federal and state subsidies for ethanol ran to about $6 billion last year, equivalent to roughly half its wholesale market price. Ethanol gets a 51-cent a gallon domestic subsidy, and there's another 54-cent a gallon tariff applied at the border against imported ethanol. Without those subsidies, hardly anyone would make the stuff, much less buy it--despite recent high oil prices.
That's also why the percentage of the U.S. corn crop devoted to ethanol has risen to 20% from 3% in just five years, or about 8.6 million acres of farmland. Reaching the President's target of 35 billion gallons of renewable and alternative fuels by 2017 would, at present corn yields, require the entire U.S. corn harvest."

Jason Lewis has (in his shows this week) also been talking about the subject and those of you who listen to his show already know what comes next.

"No wonder, then, that the price of corn rose nearly 80% in 2006 alone. (See the chart nearby.) Corn growers and their Congressmen love this, and naturally they are planting as much as they can. Look for a cornfield in your neighborhood soon. Yet for those of us who like our corn flakes in the morning, the higher price isn't such good news. It's even worse for cattle, poultry and hog farmers trying to adjust to suddenly exorbitant prices for feed corn--to pick just one industry example. The price of corn is making America's meat-packing industries, which are major exporters, less competitive.
In Mexico, the price of corn tortillas--the dietary staple of the country's poorest--has risen by about 30% in recent months, leading to widespread protests and price controls. In China, the government has put a halt to ethanol-plant construction for the threat it poses to the country's food security. Thus is a Beltway fad translated into Third World woes."

So, in order to satisfy the environmentalists, we are starving the poor in undeveloped countries...what's up with that (more on this subject coming)? But it will help control global warming, right???

"As for the environmental impact, well, where do we begin? As an oxygenate, ethanol increases the level of nitrous oxides in the atmosphere and thus causes smog. The scientific literature is also divided about whether the energy inputs required to produce ethanol actually exceed its energy output. It takes fertilizer to grow the corn, and fuel to ship and process it, and so forth. Even the most optimistic estimate says ethanol's net energy output is a marginal improvement of only 1.3 to one. For purposes of comparison, energy outputs from gasoline exceed inputs by an estimated 10 to one.
And because corn-based ethanol is less efficient than ordinary gasoline, using it to fuel cars means you need more gas to drive the same number of miles. This is not exactly a route to "independence" from Mideast, Venezuelan or any other tainted source of oil. Ethanol also cannot be shipped using existing pipelines (being alcohol, it eats the seals), so it must be trucked or sent by barge or train to its thousand-and-one destinations, at least until separate pipelines are built.
Even some environmentalists cry foul. Steve Sanderson, president of the Wildlife Conservation Society, tells us that intensive, subsidized sugar farming in Brazil--where the use of ethanol is most widespread--has displaced small tenant farmers, many of whom have taken to cutting down and farming land in the Amazon rain forest.
In the U.S., there is now talk of taking the roughly 40 million acres currently tied up in the Agriculture Department's conservation reserve and security programs and putting them into production for ethanol-related plants. "The land at risk under this ethanol program is land that's shown by the USDA to have had great results for the restoration of wildlife," Mr. Sanderson says, pointing especially to the grasslands of eastern Montana and the Dakotas. Hello ethanol, goodbye bison.
But what about global warming, where ethanol, as a non-fossil fuel, is supposed to make a positive contribution? Actually, it barely makes a dent. Australian researcher Robert Niven finds that the use of ethanol in gasoline--the standard way in which ethanol is currently used--reduces greenhouse gas emissions by no more than 5%. As Messrs. Taylor and Van Doren observe, "employing ethanol to reduce greenhouse gases is fantastically inefficient," costing as much as 16 times the optimal abatement cost for removing a ton of carbon from the atmosphere."

Ok - so we are adding more pollution and contributing to the destruction of the Amazon rainforest without making a dent in global warming. Are we really sure we want to go down this particular road?

The Journal, to their credit, gets to what is really driving the push for ethanol - and it is not concern for the environment.

"It's true that scientific advances will probably improve and perhaps even transform the utility of ethanol. Genetic modification will likely improve corn yields. And the President insists we are on the verge of breakthroughs in cellulosic technology, though experts tell us the technical hurdles are still huge. We'd be as happy as anyone if DuPont researchers finally discover the enzyme that can efficiently break down plants into starch, but betting billions of tax dollars and millions of acres of farmland on this hope strikes us as bad policy. If cellulose is going to be an energy miracle--an agricultural cold fusion--far better to let the market figure that out.
Not that any of these facts are likely to make much difference in the current Washington debate. The corn and sugar lobbies have their roots deep in both parties, and now they have the mantra of "energy independence" to invoke, however illusory it is. If anything, Congress may add to Mr. Bush's ethanol mandate requests.
So here comes Big Corn. Make that Very, Very Big Corn. Sooner or later, our experience with this huge public gamble may make us yearn for the efficiency, capacity, lower cost and--yes--superior environmental record of "Big Oil." (emphasis mine)

Grab your wallets people. In the name of "energy independence" big government is going to be sticking their hands out. Spend, spend, spend....that is what government wants to do...WITH YOUR MONEY!

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Friday, January 26, 2007

Two Americas?

The next time you hear John Edwards bemoaning how unfair the "two Americas" can be think about this:

"RALEIGH - Presidential candidate John Edwards and his family recently moved into what county tax officials say is the most valuable home in Orange County. The house, which includes a recreational building attached to the main living quarters, also is probably the largest in the county.
The Edwards residential property will likely have the highest tax value in the county,- Orange County Tax Assessor John Smith told Carolina Journal. He estimated that the tax value will exceed $6 million when the facility is completed." (emphasis mine)

Remember - this is the man who stood in the ruins of the 9th Ward of New Orleans and spoke about how "we" should do better for the people who are suffering. Here is a hint for you Mr. Edwards. Why not spend some of that $6million on housing for the poor. After all, that is exactly what you tell me to do every time you say that I should "pay more taxes" to take care of others. Instead of raking in millions of dollars in your law firm, why not work for free? After all, that is what you are demanding of me? That I work in order to give all my money to others, instead of using it to take care of my family.

The only reason why I really give a rip about how the former Senator spends his money is because he stands on the stump telling folks like me that we don't give enough of our meager resources to help others. I give 10% every week to the church (for missions) and 30% every week to the state and federal government for their use. I don't think it is out of line for someone who makes less than $75,000 a year to keep 60% of their income to pay their bills and feed their own children. If someone like Senator Edwards wants to do more, he should do so WITH HIS OWN MONEY. Taking someone elses money to spend on something you want is simply robbery.

(H/T MKH)

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Wednesday, January 24, 2007

Today it was my turn

to write to Senator Coleman...

Senator Coleman,

In the days since President Bush announced his so-called “troop surge”, I am sure that you have heard from many of your constituents. Many, like my husband Perry, were more than a little upset at the way you responded to the announcement. I too was upset with your initial response but I choose not to make any comment on it because I knew that there would be much more information coming out about the “surge” in the following days – what with General Petraeus’ confirmation hearing and the State of the Union speech at hand. It is with those two things behind us that I now choose to comment.

In his testimony before the Senate Armed Services Committee, General Petraeus spoke of how it would be impossible for him to carry out his mission in Iraq without additional troops. In your remarks on the Senate floor (of 1/11) you indicated that stabilizing the country was of great importance. General Petraeus testified that the additional troop’s objective would be “to achieve sufficient security to provide the space and time for the Iraqi government to come to grips with the tough decisions its members must make to enable Iraq to move forward,” a goal that you claim (in your floor remarks) you support. You also stated (in your floor remarks) that the al-Maliki government needed to put resources up against the Sunni insurgents (such as the Mahdi Army in Baghdad) something that he has done in advance of our additional troops coming into Baghdad.

Given all that has taken place between the time that you made your floor remarks (on January 11) and today, do you still stand in opposition to the President sending reinforcements to our troops in theater? If so, in light of General Petraeus’ testimony, how can you justify that stance given what you told my husband in your email to him of January 12 where you said “…I do not believe politicians should set troop levels. Troop levels should be set by our military leaders including our commanders on the ground.” It seems to me that your actions belie your words. Which is it Senator? Do the Generals in theater set troop levels or do the politicians safely behind the lines in DC set troop levels?

Please understand that in 18 short months, your re-election campaign will be coming to me for support. As BPOU (Basic political Operating Unit) Chair for our Senate District (in a very, very Republican County) your campaign staff knows that I will be the one to go to for volunteers and fundraising and phone banks and all of the other things it takes to run a state wide election. As BPOU chair, I can tell you that now that some of your stands on issues like this have hurt your support with the base. We all know that the reason we lost in 2006 was because the base simply did not show up. They didn’t help, they didn’t donate dollars, they didn’t vote! Campaigns need to be mindful that the base is where your volunteers and donors come from. Many of them said in 2006, not one minute – not one dime to candidates who do not follow Republican principles and they are screaming it now. While I do understand that you represent all Minnesotans, know this – you will not be re-elected without support from your base. The Republican base was important to your win in 2000 and they are crucial to your
reelection in 2006.

Now is the time. We need to let Senators, like Senator Coleman, be painfully aware of one simple phrase....NOT ONE MINUTE - NOT ONE PENNY until they support the troops and the President. Let Senator Coleman know that reinforcements are a necessary thing. Call him at 202/224-5641.

Hypocrisy abounds.

I don't know if any of you have been following this trial or not. I have because I have always been an advocate of animal welfare (as opposed to animal "rights"). I was flat out floored by this statement - made by one of the defense attorneys.

"Hirschkop said the pair dumped the animals because they had other stops to make and the animals often started to smell before they got back to Norfolk, where PETA has facilities for cremating animals.
"They never should have done it," he said. "But this is not the crime of the century."

Now let me get this straight...2 people employed by an organization that equates the raising of farm animals for food with the Nazi Holocaust are charged with the slaughter of 31 adoptable dogs and he says "this is not the crime of the century"? Riiiiggghhhttt...so it's ok to kill the animals because you are doing it, but no one else can. I see....

This is why I rag on groups like PETA and ALF and the fringes of the environmental rights movement and the womens movement. The more they believe in their cause as a religion - as a "higher purpose" the more hypocritical they are. A little common sense and logic would do these folks a world of good. Granted I seriously doubt that will ever happen.

Oversold?

Mitch brings us a story on how the whole global warming thing may have been "over-hyped"?

"Ask a global warming enthusiast (term used advisedly) about their pet topic. They chortle with glee - and will not brook any disagreement about the theory’s supposed empirical underpinning. The more ignorant the enthusiast about current events in general, the more blinkered they are about politics, the more certain they are that global warming is here to save them and their millenarian socialist worldview.
But now, some climatologists are starting to think that global warming has been “oversold”:"

NOOOOO REALLY??????

One of the things that I have long stressed about this issue is that there is still much we don't know about the "global environment" and that is it silly to make scientific claims based on less than 100 years of charted weather on a planet that is hundreds of thousands of years old. It is only logical that we don't know everything there is to know about the planet yet and that given that there was an even warmer period of time (back before there were internal combustion engines and all the other things that are supposedly causing global warming now) a thousand years ago should be proof to any thinking person that there is more research that needs to be done. Now finally, the "scientific community" is starting to realize it.

""Some of us are wondering if we have created a monster," says Kevin Vranes, a climate scientist at the University of Colorado.
Vranes, who is not considered a global warming skeptic by his peers, came to this conclusion after attending an American Geophysical Union meeting last month. Vranes says he detected "tension" among scientists, notably because projections of the future climate carry uncertainties — a point that hasn't been fully communicated to the public.
The science of climate change often is expressed publicly in unambiguous terms."

And whose fault do you suppose that might be?

"Scientists have substantial evidence to support the view that humans are warming the planet — as carbon dioxide levels rise, glaciers melt and global temperatures rise. Yet, for predicting the future climate, scientists must rely upon sophisticated — but not perfect — computer models. "

The very same computer models that tell us what tomorrow's weather is going to bring are the same computer models that they use to tell us about global warming - and we all know how accurate those weather forecasts are, don't we?????

"Much of the public debate, however, has dealt in absolutes. The poster for Al Gore's global warming movie, An Inconvenient Truth, depicts a hurricane blowing out of a smokestack. Katrina's devastation is a major theme in the film.
Judith Curry, an atmospheric scientist at the Georgia Institute of Technology, has published several research papers arguing that a link between a warmer climate and hurricane activity exists, but she admits uncertainty remains." (emphasis mine)

Does this mean we can finally put to rest the cannard that the scientific community knows exactly what is causing global warming? Does this mean we can finally go back to the table and have a sensible, logical discussion on the depths of this "problem"?

The final quote of the story says it all.

"The case for action on climate science, both for energy policy and adaptation, is overwhelming," Roger Pielke (environmental scientist at the University of Colorado) says. "But if we oversell the science, our credibility is at stake."

Monday, January 22, 2007

A bad case of Republicanism

The Logical Husband has long said that Republican politicians have a PR problem. They have mostly great ideas, but they simply do not know how to explain their views and ideas to the American people. He calls it "a case of Republicanism". The latest case of this disorder, in his view, is the "troop surge".

The Logical Husband was in the Army when we first got married and he is looking at the surge from a strict tactical point of view. First and foremost, we are reinforcing the troops in Baghdad, so why not call it what it is...REINFORCEMENTS???

He has a point (he usually does). If tactically, we are reinforcing the troops in theater then why are we not calling it what it is? Because the media (and the Democrats) know that they can not come across as not supporting reinforcements for the troops on the ground. To do so would be political suicide and they know it.

Maybe the President should take a hint for an old Army Specialist. Call a spade a spade Mr. President - or in this case call reinforcements reinforcements!

What, me worry?

A lot of folks wonder why so many on the right are so wound up about the "threat" of radical Islam. A couple of things that have come out of the UK in the last few weeks just might explain why everyone should be concerned about radical Islam.

"An undercover investigation has revealed disturbing evidence of Islamic extremism at a number of Britain's leading mosques and Muslim institutions, including an organisation praised by the Prime Minister.
Secret video footage reveals Muslim preachers exhorting followers to prepare for jihad, to hit girls for not wearing the hijab, and to create a 'state within a state'. Many of the preachers are linked to the Wahhabi strain of Islam practised in Saudi Arabia, which funds a number of Britain's leading Islamic institutions."

The television series in question can be viewed here.

"A forthcoming Channel 4 Dispatches programme paints an alarming picture of how preachers in some of Britain's most moderate mosques are urging followers to reject British laws in favour of those of Islam. "

One has to realize that this kind of preaching, which is also taking place in Australia, is no doubt happening here in the US.

"Leaders of the mosques have expressed concern at the preachers' activities, saying they were unaware such views were being disseminated."

They were "unaware" of the views being preached in the name of Allah???? Where these leaders not paying attention to the sermon? Are they preaching in a foreign language? How can you NOT know what is being taught in your house of worship? Do they really think anyone would by this cockeyed excuse?

You need to read the article and then view the television series. It is eyeopening and it is horrifying and it is why we are in the fight of our lives right now. Those who take the Alfred E. Neuman approach to radical Islam need to wake up to the reality of what we are up against right here and right now.

Only in Cali...

So the California Legislature is expecting a bill that will outlaw spanking.

"SACRAMENTO, Calif. -- California parents could face jail and a fine for spanking their young children under legislation a state lawmaker has promised to introduce next week. Democratic Assemblywoman Sally Lieber said such a law is needed because spanking victimizes helpless children and breeds violence in society. "

I will cede that the Assemblywoman may have a point, however, the example she uses to justify the breach of privacy is ludicrious.

"I think it's pretty hard to argue you need to beat a child," Lieber said. "Is it OK to whip a 1-year-old or a 6-month-old or a newborn?"

Well DUH....what parent in their right mind would whip a newborn to 6 month old! I mean really. Then again, I guess you can expect that logic from someone who does not have children.

Seriously, anyone who has ever had children know that you don't spank infants. Period - end of discussion. However, toddlers and up to age 4 (which is the age limit which the Assemblywoman would make it illegal to spank) sometimes do need a single swift smack on the bottom, but it should only be done with an open hand and never, ever on a bare bottom! Any parent will also tell you that whether that punishment works or not does depend on the child. The Junior Logician (bless his heart) has always been a good child. However, we did have an instance where a single swat to the rear was needed to break the cycle of a toddler tantrum. On the other hand, his mother.....well let's just say that I was a little more hard headed as a youngster and leave it at that. My parents never abused me, but they did use a punishment designed to "get my attention" and that is what a spanking is sometimes needed to do. To get the child's attention back on you - the parent - and off of his/her misbehavior. A judicious parent knows that once that (getting the child's attention) has been accomplished, punishment should stop. And spanking should never, ever be done in anger.

I understand that Assemblywoman Lieber thinks she is doing the right thing, but in her rush to do the "right thing" she is doing all the wrong things. Taking an infant or toddler away from the parents for this reason is wrong and will do more harm to the child. It will also overload an already strained child welfare system that can not keep kids out of truly abusive situations (ever state in the union has cases like these). Making up a new form of abuse will not help the situation at all. Lastly, she is intruding on the rights of parents everywhere. This is horrible legislation. If this legislation is passed, what will be next - big government telling you that you will go to jail if you let your kids eat Hoho's or visit a relative who smokes? For the sake of common sense, this legislation needs to never see the light of day.

Sunday, January 21, 2007

It's finally next year!

Wait until next year. That is the plaintive cry of long suffering Chicago sports fans. Whether it is the lovable losers of Wrigley Field, the Bulls or the Bears we always seem to end the season saying "wait until next year...". Well next year is finally here. After a 21 year wait, my beloved Chicago Bears are going to the Super Bowl! In spite of a season long quarterback controversy the Bears have pulled it off - beating the Saints by a final score of 39-14.

In a way, I am sad to see the Saint's storybook season come to an end. Whether it was Drew Brees (coming off of rotater cuff surgery) or rookie Reggie Bush's outstanding season, the Saint's have overcome unbelievable odds to be in the NFC Championship game today. I have no doubts they will be a force to be reconned with next season. However, the Bears played outstanding ball today - I never expected Rex Grossman to play this well today. I hope he manages to keep it up. And then there is Brian Urlacher and the defense. What else can you say?

To my dear friend Mary (in New Orleans), will I have that King Cake in time for the Super Bowl? I hope so...

ON TO MIAMI!!!!!

Bear down, Chicago Bears!
Make every play clear the way to victory!
Bear down, Chicago Bears!
Put up a fight with a might so fearlessly!
We’ll never forget the way you thrilled the nation – with your T formation . . .
Bear down, Chicago Bears
and let them know why you’re wearing the crown –
You’re the pride and joy of Illinois
Chicago Bears, bear down!

Well we knew this was coming

The Supreme Court is the next stop of a landmark First Amendment case.

"The Supreme Court agreed Friday to referee a challenge to limits on pre-election ads, a key provision of the landmark campaign finance law that the court upheld in 2003.
The justices will hear an appeal of a lower court decision that relaxed restrictions on mentioning candidates by name in issue ads run by corporations, labor unions and other special interest groups near the climax of a campaign."

The case in question is, of course, the case involving the ads that Wisconsin Right to Life ran taking Senators Herb Kohl and Russ Feingold to task for their votes in support of abortion. Because Senator Feingold was running for re-election that year, Wisconsin Right to Life ran afoul of the newly enacted Bipartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act (aka the McCain/Feingold assualt on free speech act).

It is this citizen's fervent prayer that the Supreme Court takes the opportunity to do what President Bush should have done - striking down this odious piece of "legislation". The fact that the case coming before the court (a consolidation of two cases) lists Senator (and Presidental want-to-be) John McCain as a plaintiff on the case tells you just how little regard the Senior Senator from Arizona has for the people of this country. That is going to be one of the many reasons why the Senators quest for the Presidency will end (in 2008) the same way it did in 2000 - with loss after loss in the Primaries.

The silence of the feminists

Rush Limbaugh is often accused of "hate speech" and one of the justifications for that claim is his tendency to call the leaders of the feminist movement "feminazis". However, that term does have some justification due the the leaders politicization of the movement. If they truly cared about liberating oppressed women, they would be more concerned about stories like this, rather than abortion rights or pay equality.

"Gulbar
Gulbar was admitted to a local hospital in Badghis province in Northern Afghanistan in November 2005. She has been burnt by her husband.
According to her mother, she married a man 3 years ago but he was very cruel person and was torturing her on daily bases. Finally Gulbar run away to her mother's house. The next day her husband came and asked her to return home otherwise he will kill her, she refused to go with him, when he found her alone in the house, throw petrol on her body, set her on fire and he himself escaped.
The neighbors hear her voice and rush to help, when they control the fire, almost 40% of her body was burnt."

The sad thing is, no charges will be filed...

"She has been in the hospital for past 40 days but no file has been cased against her heartless husband. Police and other authorities, who are mostly former commanders, turn a blind eye on these cases."

Nor will they ever be filed.

"A doctor in the hospital where she is hospitalized told that they receive many women patients who either have committed self-burning or have been burnt by their husbands but due to none existence of better facilities their treatment is also not possible there. He believed that forced marriage and lack of legal support to these victims is the main cause of all such sad incidents."

If Gulbar's story isn't bad enough, consider the story of Salehah.

"Seyyed Abdul-Rahman, a former resident of Ghazni and an aviation engineer, who works for the Intelligence Ministry in Kabul, had an argument with his wife, Salehah, on October 25, 1999. During the argument, he poured gasoline over her body and set her on fire. When neighbors find out about the fight, they enter his house and see Salehah's burned body, with her hands and legs tied up. They immediately take her to the hospital. At the hospital Salehah tells the doctors and neighbors that her husband tied her up, after he beat her up, and set fire to her. She died two days later at the hospital. Her husband seized the opportunity caused by the confusion and ran away with his two sons before her burial. He has not been hear-of yet. Since he was employed by the Taliban Intelligence, it is suspected that he is being sheltered by them. " (emphasis mine)

Bound, beaten and burned....such is the life of a woman under the auspices of Sharia law.

Thus Rush's "feminazi" description is, in many ways, appropos. For the leadership of the movement cares more about forcing THEIR lifestyle on one group of people, while totally ignoring the plight of women in other areas.

If the feminist movement wanted to get the description shelved, maybe they could start by supporting what President Bush is doing to free oppressed women in Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq and Iran. However, they won't, thus ensuring the continuance of the term.

Friday, January 19, 2007

The Perfect Storm

Last week was one of those weeks where the perfect storm was brewing. Work was busy, the home life busier and then one night (of course while I was in the middle of making supper) I got two fundraising calls from the GOP - one from the RNC and the other from Senator Coleman's campaign (this was before Senator Coleman spoke about his opposition to the troop surge). The final straw came in the form of a fundraising letter from Governor Pawlenty. Now I have expressed my displeasure of the Governor and some of his recent pronouncements in this forum, but for some reason I decided to take my complaints to the man himself. I said that I was not going to give one more minute of my time or one more penny of my money to any Republican office holder who acted more like a Democrat than a Republican. I wrote what many others before me have written - how disappointed we are in politicians who only have use for us when the politician is up for re-election or fundraising. I wrote that we, the hard working volunteers are tired of being ignored in between elections - tired of being ignored unless it was fundraising time again. What I got in response was a form email thanking me for contacting his office and yet another fund raising email.

Sigh...I suppose I should have known better, but I had hoped that the Governor was different. I guess I was wrong again.

Politics makes strange bedfellows

I wonder if Senator Klobuchar's friends over at Emily's List appreciated this vote? You see, our esteemed Junior Senator voted against an amendment to S.1 (the Ethics Reform bill) that would have exempted grass roots groups like Emily's List and MoveOn.org and the American Family Council being classified as lobbyists. Even the ACLU (H/T Mitch) was for passage of Amendment 20. You know you are in deep when you are a Democrat and even the ACLU is lined up against you.

One would wonder why the Senate would attempt such a flagrant slam on free speech, until (that is) one remembers that the Senate gave us the McCain Feingold BiPartisan Campaign Finance Reform Act (aka the Incumbent Protection Act).

Real ethics reform is going to minimize the influence of PACs and lobbyists and it is going to increase the influence of grass roots organizations and your constituents. I hope the Senate figures that out soon. Otherwise we are lost as a nation.

Attention Governors Pawlenty and Schwarzenneger!

Do you really want to subject your states to health care like Canada's?

"Adolfo Flora had a simple choice. He could either die of liver cancer within six months or spend $450,000 for treatment overseas."

A simple choice indeed.

"This week's ruling was a blow for the 57-year-old retired high school teacher, who contracted hepatitis C from a tainted blood transfusion and was diagnosed with liver cancer in 1999. He spent $450,000 for a transplant in England after being denied the life-saving help in Ontario. " (emphasis mine)

He contracted Hepatitis C from a blood transfusion that he got from GOVERNMENT RUN HEALTH CARE!!! Now that same government tells him that he can not get life saving treatment....ok.

Now you can not be for tell someone that his only choice in health care is the government run "universal" health care and then turn around and tell him that the very life-saving medical treatments that you need are "not covered". That takes the "universal" out of universal - something that I have been arguing all along.

Flora's lawyer has the telling comment though.

"The implications of this decision are far-reaching and can affect many throughout the province in life-threatening situations, said Flora's lawyer, Mark Freiman.
"It restricts the government's obligations in terms of providing heath care, especially life-saving health care," said Freiman, a former Deputy Attorney General of Ontario and expert on the Charter. "If the decision is upheld, it's not likely that people in a similar situation can require the government to assist them with providing life saving medical treatment.
"When government takes it upon itself to monopolize the provision of necessary medical care it has the responsibility to provide life-saving medical treatment." (emphasis mine)

Think long and hard about this folks. Do we really want a government run monopoly that has the power of life and death over us or our children? Those of you who personally don't like or trust this administration - would you want them to have the power over the health care that you might receive? Those of you who are pro-choice...suppose your worst nightmare comes true and the House, the Senate and the White House are all pro-life. I thought the whole purpose of Roe v. Wade was to get the government out of a woman's health care decisions. Universal health care puts the government squarely where you do not want them. Are you really happy with that idea?

Wednesday, January 17, 2007

Big government is getting fatter.

Hold on to your wallets again Minnesota - the cost of government is going up again!

"Expense checks for state legislators are on the way up after bipartisan votes Wednesday to raise daily allowances and lodging reimbursements, regarded by some as a pay increase in disguise.
The maximum daily allowances for meals and incidental costs for state senators jumped from $66 to $96, a 45 percent increase. In the House, the rate climbed to $77. Both chambers also sweetened housing reimbursement programs for members who have to uproot themselves during the session.
"We're all entitled to a little cost-of-living allowance now and again," said Rep. Ron Erhardt, R-Edina." (emphasis mine)

You are WHAT Representative Erhardt????? Entitled????? When do the voters get their cost of living allowance?????

Now I certainly understand a per diem for those representatives who live in outstate Minnesota and who need to rent an apartment for session, but you get to go home and sleep in your own bed and see your family every night Representative Erhardt! You do not have to travel further than any normal commuter who lives in the 7 county metro! We certainly don't get milage and paid meals and a housing allowance just because we work for a living!

Thank goodness for common sense legislators like Representative Mark Buesgens of Jordan.

"Rep. Mark Buesgens, R-Jordan, argued the boost stretches the constitutional bar. "I don't believe we should be backdooring" a pay increase, he said. "If $77 a day is what's needed for food," Buesgens added, "that's some awful rich eating."

I would agree wholeheartedly Rep. Buesgens. That is awfully rich eating especially for Minneapolis.

The legislature needs to start living within their means like the people that they represent do. Then maybe they will actually start representing us as opposed to "ruling" over us.

What is good for the gander...

Is it good for the goose? Only if the goose is not our elected legislators apparently. Whether it is the Speakers Lobby in violation of indoor clean air laws (kudos to Speaker Pelosi for making the House live under the same laws the average Joe has to suffer with) or working a 40 hour week some of these legislators seem to think that they deserve special treatment. Guess what guys - you don't!

This is the kind of thing that the voters need to be aware of. If your representative is one that thinks he/she is deserving special treatment, why don't you give them a call and remind them just who they work for.

The worm turns

Well, well, well. An anti-smoking advocate takes his counterparts to task for abandoning sound science? (H/T Swiftee)

"CDC Defends Surgeon General's Statement that Brief Exposure to Secondhand Smoke Causes Lung Cancer
Rather than correcting the misrepresentation of science by the Surgeon General in his press release announcing the publication of the 2006 report on secondhand smoke, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) is apparently defending the Surgeon General's statement.Here's the story:In June 2006, the U.S. Surgeon General released a comprehensive report on the health effects of secondhand smoke which concluded that chronic exposure to tobacco smoke causes heart disease and lung cancer in nonsmokers.However, in the press release accompanying the report, the Surgeon General claimed that: "Even brief exposure to secondhand smoke has immediate adverse effects on the cardiovascular system and increases risk for heart disease and lung cancer, the report says."On June 28, I wrote on this blog that the Surgeon General had misrepresented the findings of the report, since the report mentioned nothing about brief secondhand smoke exposure causing heart disease and lung cancer. Further, I noted that the statement in the press release flies in the face of common medical sense, since we know that heart disease takes many years of exposure to develop, even in an active smoker. So how could a brief exposure to secondhand smoke cause heart disease in a nonsmoker?Moreover, there is absolutely no scientific evidence that a brief exposure to secondhand smoke causes lung cancer in nonsmokers."

What do you know? There is a little honesty left to be had in the smoking argument. ALA Bob (frequent MOB commenter Bob Moffit of ALAMN) are you paying attention?

"It truly appears that CDC is indeed defending the statement that brief secondhand smoke exposure causes lung cancer in nonsmokers.And they are doing it based on the possibility that a small amount of exposure could potentially damage a single cell.By this reasoning, any exposure to any carcinogen could be said to increase the risk of cancer. By this reasoning, the CDC should also be warning the public that:
A single chest X-ray causes cancer.
Being in the sun for thirty seconds causes cancer.
Breathing in diesel fumes for ten seconds causes cancer.
Eating peanut butter causes cancer.
Eating a single char-broiled burger causes cancer.
Drinking a sip of chlorinated water causes cancer. In fact, just the process of living every day could be said to cause cancer, since there is always damage being done to our cells that could potentially trigger cancer. The body has defense mechanisms that repair this damage constantly. This is the reason why it takes more than a single exposure to cause cancer. The exposure has to overwhelm the body's ability to repair the damage."

Sanity and common sense - something that has been sorely lacking in this discussion. What a breath of fresh air. Sadly, not everyone appreciates the authors thoughtful take on the issue.

"After Sunday's InsideBayArea.com and Contra Costa Times articles exposed the weakness of anti-smoking groups' argument that complete outdoor smoking bans are necessary because even a brief exposure to secondhand smoke can cause heart disease or cancer, it appears that their arguments in support of Calabasas and Belmont-type (complete) outdoor smoking bans are rapidly deteriorating.On an international list-serve discussion forum regarding secondhand smoke, one advocate argued that despite the lack of evidence that complete outdoor smoking bans are necessary to avert a substantial public health hazard, they are still justified because government also routinely bans outdoor behavior that is considered "intrusive, corruptive of minors, or offensive." The advocate wrote: "Some examples of these banned or heavily restricted activities include touching another person without their permission, nudity, overt sex, urinating, defecating, spitting, playing loud music, drinking alcohol, smoking marijuana, injecting heroin, snorting cocaine, etc."Another advocate argued that these complete outdoor smoking bans are justified because outdoor levels of smoke can be quite high.Another advocate addressed neither the science issue nor the offensiveness of public smoking issue, resorting instead to the old ad hominem attack: "I suggest the only credibility we are supposed to have lost is caused by Siegel and Chapman." [Dr. Simon Chapman was quoted in the article as also opposing most broad outdoor smoking bans because they are not justified based on scientific evidence of a severe and unavoidable public health hazard.]The title of this particular discussion forum message had nothing to do with the substantive topic at hand. Instead, it was simply: "Michael Siegel, again."

One of the (many) things that bothers me about this whole discussion is that no one discusses it from any level other than the emotional level. When the anti-smoking zealots (like ALA Bob) argue for it, the argument comes from the heart, not the head. At least when those who are opposed to smoking bans (like Sue Jeffers) argue the issue it is an argument based on the Constitution and the rule of law. I would rather discuss this issue with someone like Mr. Siegel, who is using fact and logic as the basis of his conclusions than I would someone like ALA Bob. With Mr. Siegel, you at least get an honest, well thought out argument. I don't necessarily agree with all of Mr. Siegel's conclusions, but it is so very nice to see someone who is willing to look at the science behind smoking regulation as opposed to the emotion of smoking bans. It's a pity that those who share his desire can't do the same.

Tuesday, January 16, 2007

Controlling troop movement

The next time someone tells you what the Congress is going to do about the war, be sure to point them to this Washington Post article.

"Just as there are constraints on the president's constitutional authority as commander in chief, there are limits on Congress's ability to direct presidential action. In particular, Congress cannot use its power of the purse to micromanage the president's execution of his office. Indeed, although the prosecution of the Iraq war looms large in today's political discourse, the consequences of substantive decisions related to the war are dwarfed by the imperatives of protecting the integrity of the core rules governing interactions between the executive and legislative branches, which are rooted in our distinctive constitutional fabric."

Oh sure, the Senior Senator from Massachuesettes may SAY that the Legislative branch will bring our troops home or otherwise decide troop movement, but the Constitution says something else entirely.

"This constitutional fabric features two coordinate political branches, with unique responsibilities and independent legitimacies. Thus, even if one assumes that, as critics allege, the November election results were a call for disengaging from Iraq, efforts by some congressional Democrats to chastise the president through a resolution of "no confidence" in his Iraq policy have no place in our constitutional culture. The Framers did not establish a parliamentary system." (emphasis mine)

That is not to say that there is nothing that the Legislative Branch can do.

"This does not mean, of course, that Congress is powerless. It could -- if the leadership mustered veto-proof majorities -- immediately cut off funding for U.S. operations in Iraq. Alternatively, Congress could refuse to pass new appropriations once the current ones expire. The refusal to pay for particular policies -- whether in war or peace -- has been the most important check on executive power in the Anglo-American political tradition, dating to the British Parliament's ancient insistence on the right to seek redress of grievances before voting supplies (i.e., money) to the monarch."

However, removing the funding (for the war) is not a guarantee that the troops would come home. Plus, removing funding for the basics that our soldiers need (food, clothing, ammunition, body armor) is political suicide. The American people may have soured on the war, but they are not going to stand by while the troops are left with inadequate body armour - as the Bush Administration saw early on in the war effort!

The Legislature also has judicial precedent going against it.

"To maintain the integrity of this original design, the Supreme Court has long ruled, in such cases as United States v. Klein (1872) and United States v. Lovett (1946), that Congress cannot attach unconstitutional conditions to otherwise proper legislation, including spending bills. As explained by Professor Walter Dellinger -- President Bill Clinton's chief constitutional lawyer at the Justice Department -- "[b]road as Congress' spending power undoubtedly is, it is clear that Congress may not deploy it to accomplish unconstitutional ends." This includes restricting the president's authority as commander in chief to direct the movement of U.S. armed forces. In that regard, Dellinger quoted Justice Robert Jackson -- who said while serving as President Franklin Roosevelt's attorney general: "The President's responsibility as Commander-in-Chief embraces the authority to command and direct the armed forces in their immediate movements and operations, designed to protect the security and effectuate the defense of the United States." (emphasis again mine)

So the anti-war crowd can scream all it wants, demand all it wants, and protest all it wants but in the end there is nothing that Amy Klobuchar or Keith Ellison (or RT Ryback for that matter) can do to bring our troops home. While it may make a good sound byte and it may make you feel good to here them say they can and will do something, the Constitution trumps whatever their plans may be.

Monday, January 15, 2007

Purity

I have been getting a lot of emails in recent days from purists. They are the folks that say "Candidate X is not conservative because they are against ______" or "I will only vote for Candidate Y because they are pro ______".

Now I certainly understand the concept of having principles and sticking with them. However, this country is about more than just abortion or illegal immigration or whatever. There are a multitude of issues that our leaders are going to need to deal with. They have to be able to move the global war on terror forward, they have to be able to deal with a Russian state that is devolving back to it's Communist past, they need to deal with how to keep the economy moving, then need to deal with Iran and North Korea, they need to deal with our border and what to do with illegal immigration, they need to appoint judges....the list goes on and on and on. To rule candidates out because they may be squishy on abortion (which is already settled law there is nothing the President can do about it) or the 2nd Amendment (a biggie for me btw but it is also settled law - nothing short of a Constitutional Amendment is going to change that) is suicide for the country.


We, as voters, need to start putting COUNTRY ahead of individual issues. If we don't, we are going to continue to be stuck with the rancor that we currently see in public discourse. The country and our children deserve better.

Oh now this is a surprise...

NOT - Hehehe AAA is going to go into an appoplectic rant over this announcement!

"Gov. Tim Governor Pawlenty says he's co-chairing a committee that will explore the possible presidential candidacy of U.S. Sen. John McCain. "

Yeah - big surprise there. Governor Pawlenty has been firmly attached to Senator McCain at the hip for quite some time. The Senator made a couple of campaign appearances for the Governor last fall.

"Pawlenty tells Fox News this morning that McCain is a once-in-a-generation leader who can bring the country together. "

Oh he's a once-in-a-generation leader all right...I think there was a line in "24" last night that summed him up best. Something about willing to shred the Constitution if the situation warranted it...

"The Republican governor has been mentioned as a possible GO-P (sic) vice presidential candidate. But he tells Fox that he's "very happy being the governor of Minnesota."

Yeah he's happy being Governor....until a better offer comes along. You don't have to be a political insider to know that the Governor has higher ambitions. He has spent the better part of the last 2 years working toward a DC goal. It's never been a big secret.

Oh well, if the Governor steps aside to run for VP, that means we get Lt. Governor Molnau to finish the term. Heaven knows she has enough on her plate as it is, but being a farmers wife, she's used to it.

Friday, January 12, 2007

It didn't take long

for the Logical Husband to get his form letter back from Senator Coleman

"Dear Mr. __________ :
Thank you for contacting me concerning Operation Iraqi Freedom.
I understand the public anxiety over the war, and I share many of the frustrations with the pace of progress in Iraq . While we continue to have success militarily, our overall strategy to defuse the sectarian violence and improve the political process is insufficient. It is clear that we must chart a new, specific path in Iraq . We should hold Iraqi political leaders accountable for meeting specific benchmarks for success. We must put more pressure on the Iraqis to defend their own country, to move our troops away from the front lines, and ultimately return home.
In December of 2006, I traveled to Iraq for a second time, and met with Minnesota soldiers, military commanders, and Iraqi leaders to get a candid, firsthand assessment of the situation on the ground. During my meetings, I emphasized the need for Iraqis to move quickly to solve the sectarian violence. Our investment in Iraq cannot be open-ended. The Iraqi police and Army need to assume more responsibility for security throughout the country and especially in Baghdad . Iraq 's political leaders also need to provide a political environment that will foster greater opportunity for reconciliation between its sectarian factions.
Concerning the level of U.S. troops in Iraq , I do not believe politicians should set troop levels. Troop levels should be set by our military leaders including our commanders on the ground. At this time, I would not support any kind of significant increase in troops in Baghdad . Given the sectarian strife and delays in the Iraqi political process, I think a troop surge would only create more targets and place more American troops in the crosshairs of Iraqi sectarian battles. Some military commanders have suggested a surge could be worthwhile in areas outside Baghdad , such as in Fallujah , and I am willing to take a look at that proposal.
At the same time, I think our country's military forces are stretched too thin and I do support an increase in the size of our overall military. America 's all-volunteer military is the best in the world and I will remain committed to lessening the burden for our service people, particularly the Guard and reserve, as they do their work in Iraq .
However, there is no doubt in my mind that the safety of Americans from terror is tied to what happens in Iraq. Leaders of al Qaeda have made very clear that Iraq is central to their efforts to destabilize America and the world. Osama bin Laden himself has said that "the most serious issue today for the whole world is this Third World War that is raging in Iraq." Bin Laden has called Baghdad the capital of a new radical Islamic Caliphate he would like to create, stretching from Spain to Indonesia . On September 11, we learned the consequences of ignoring dangerous developments in the Middle East . It is for this reason that we cannot afford to abandon our efforts in Iraq .
My time in Iraq gave me another opportunity to reflect upon the tremendous courage, skill, commitment and patriotism of our soldiers. These are extraordinary citizens that have a great sense of confidence in what they're doing, a willingness to sacrifice -and sacrifice they have. Minnesota and America have much to be proud of, and I was truly humbled by the things I heard and witnessed from our soldiers in Iraq .
Thank you once again for taking the time to contact me. I value your advice. If I may be of further assistance to you in the future, please do not hesitate to contact me again.
Sincerely,
Norm Coleman
United States Senate

Well you have one thing right, Senator. Politicians should NOT set troop levels. However, where you are wrong Senator is that President Bush is not just any politician. He is COMMANDER IN CHIEF! He has the input of many sources, most especially our generals on the ground in the theatre. In addition, he has the input of "experts" like the Iraq Survey Group, which called for a surge in troops. The Pentagon also called for more troops earlier last year. That hardly sounds like "politicians" setting troop levels to me.

The tone of this letter is clear - Senator Coleman has bitten into the Senate's mistaken viewpoint that they know better than the Pentagon, than the generals and than the Commander in Chief and thus the feeling that they should be running the war. Wrong answer guys.....

The thing that saddens me the most though is the whole form letter thing. At least Senator Paul Wellstone took the time (more likely staff time) to send back personal letters addressing individual points of his critics correspondence. I admire him greatly for that. Rep. John Kline (MN 2nd CD) does the same. It's a pity Senator Coleman can't figure it out.

Dear Senator Coleman.

I am turning this post over to the Logical Husband who, like AAA, is a little concerened about Senator Coleman's response to President Bush's call for increased troops in Iraq.

Senator Coleman,

I wish to comment on your remarks yesterday after President Bush's speech where he indicated that he would be following the recommendations of the Iraq Study Group - sending an additional 24,000 troops into Iraq. Understand I personally do not support the war, but I thought you understood loyalty and committment. You act as if you are not only leaving the sinking ship but you are pushing the women and children out of the lifeboats to be the first off the ship. Somehow, it makes sense to you that with less troops on the ground we can train their troops faster. My brother-in-law was a trainer over there. I don't think he would buy your logic here.
If you are determined to pull your support from the President then I hope that you understand why I am pulling my support for your re-election. If you could have let the fever pitch die down a little and then conceded the point that it may be time to pull our troops out, I could have had a little patience. Your recent comments only seem to point in one direction. That you don't want to be associated with your party's leaders and you are more concerned about the Democratic voters back home after the last election. I figured you would have been politically savvy enough to figure out what Ken Mehlman did. That the Democrats did not beat us in November - we beat ourselves. The more so-called Republican politicans acted like Democrats, the more our base stayed home. My wife busted her behind trying to get our local 72 Hour Get Out the Vote phone bank staffed and get the necessary calls made going into election day. Call after call she made to what once were "reliable" Republican volunteers who told her "not while they are acting like Democrats! Not one penny, not one minute of my time will I spend on them". Wake up Senator! The base abandoned the MNGOP and the more that you are running toward the left the longer it will take for you to get them back. You only have two very short years.
If you were more concerned about the mission of our troops you might be more beleivable. For the last two months you have embarassed me as a republican voter. If the recommendations of the Iraq study group to add more troops and position of your party is uncomfortable for you perhaps it is time for you to go back to your roots and jump back to the Democratic Party. I fear it will be a short jump.

Wednesday, January 10, 2007

Baseball geekdom

I LOVE BASEBALL. It is one of those things that has always been a part of my life. I am a die hard Chicago Cubs fan and, since moving to Minnesota, I have learned to love the Minnesota Twins. Ron Gardenhire is a classy coach and he runs an equally classy outfit. Needless to say, as a fan I am always anxious to see who makes it to the Baseball Hall of Fame each year. Much has been made over the announcement of this years class, not so much be who is getting in but who was left out.

"Cal Ripken Jr. was the ironman who played in 2,632 consecutive games. Tony Gwynn was the hitting machine who won eight batting titles.
Both were elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in near-unanimous votes Tuesday, but their achievement was overshadowed by the voters' rejection of Mark McGwire, a slugger who seemed like a modern-day Paul Bunyan before he fell into disrepute because of suspected steroid use."

During the season of 1998, Mark McGuire of the St. Louis Cardinals and Sammy Sosa of my beloved Cubbies were locked in a battle for the home run hitting title. Being as they played on cross state rivals (and my mothers two personal favorite teams) made the chase all the sweeter. They would see-saw back and forth and in the end McGuire just edge out Sosa. Given that this came on the heels of some disasterous seasons (thank you Bud Selig!) the race gave the league just the boost in attendance that it so badly needed. However toward the end of the season, the whispers started - whispers that McGuire and Sosa were augmenting their natural ability with steroids.

People are saying that this first ballot set-back is a "rejection" of McGuire and precursor of what Sammy Sosa and Barry Bonds can expect when it's their turn. There is one minor problem with that theory. It is a very rare and talented player that makes the Hall on their first year of eligibility - players like Bob Feller the winningest pitcher in Cleveland Indian history and Roberto Clemente the stellar Pittsburgh Pirates right fielder. While McGuire was a special player (he won the Golden Glove in 1990) he is simply not special enough to qualify for first year inclusion.

Tony Gwynn, ever the classy player, said that he hoped that someday McGuire would make the hall - that he deserved it and he does.

Paul, over at Powerline, made an interesting comment - one that I think bears scrutiny.

"Meanwhile, baseball's sportswriters, including those who didn't vote for McGwire, simply missed the steroid story that was starring them in the face during the 1990s. So the case can be made that no baseball reporter who was active during that time should be inducted into the writer's wing (yes, there is one) of the Hall of Fame."

The Baseball Writers Association of America has always maintained a "wink, wink, nudge, nudge - say no more" relationship with the players. There was much that went unreported from locker rooms and planes and hotels across the country - going back to the time of Ty Cobb and Babe Ruth. Ty Cobb was a noted womanizer, although the press of the day never reported that or Ruth's hard partying life off of the field. Any writer who looked the other way, during McGuire's playing days, and now wants to hold McGuire to a standard that was not in existance (steroids were not illegal at the time McGuire and Sosa played) at the time should not be inducted themselves into the Hall of Fame. After all, what's good for the goose...

You can't ride this bus.

Imagine you send your child out the door to get on the bus to go to school. Now imagine you are at work later when your child calls you from said school and you are told that you have to come get the child because the bus will not drive them home. That is exactly what one St. Paul mother faced recently.

"Rachel Armstrong sent her kids to pick up the bus as usual Monday, but after the driver let the kids on, he told them he would not pick them up again. He even said he wouldn't take them home that afternoon.
Armstrong left work early Tuesday, forced to pick up her kids from Phalen Lake Elementary School."

So why, do you suppose, the bus driver said that. Were the kids disobeying rules? Fighting? No their offense was much worse.

"Her twin girls, 10, and her son, 8, were kicked off their regular school bus. They were told by the bus driver the route is for non-English speaking students only."

Excuse me????? The school district explains.

"However, the district points out, that particular bus route serves one of three language academies. The one at Phalen Lake is for Hmong students learning English.
The academies all have separate bus routes to keep its students together."

OK - I suppose I can understand that. It would be a safety issue, assuming that the driver speaks Hmong that is.

However, there are a couple of questions that the "paid professional" journalists didn't ask that could be very telling in this story. First, if Mrs. Armstrong lived outside of the Phalen Lake school boundaries, how did she (and her kids) know about that bus in the first place? As the parent of a school aged child who does ride the bus, I can tell you what takes place at the beginning of the school year. In addition to the letters you get telling you who your childs teacher is and what the class hours are, you get a letter from the school district (if they run their own buses) or the bus operator telling you what bus your child rides, what time it picks them up and where! Did Mrs. Armstrong get such a letter from Phalen Lake Elementary? It would seem that she had, otherwise how would she have known where the bus stop was? Also, if you are a bus driver and three kids who are not supposed to be on your bus get on the bus, do you wait until January before you say something, or do you question it sometime in the first week or two of the school year. Remember - these kids have been riding this bus since September. If they were on the bus and they didn't belong there someone would have said something sooner, don't you think?

I think that there is a lot more to this story than was presented here last night. Will KSTP's reporters push for the "rest of the story" or will they just accept it at face value. Time will tell, but I'm not holding my breath for more. After all, if they answer the questions, well then the story just won't be as sensational and if it's not sensational then were is the news?