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A New DREAM Act

December 9, 2010 By Joan of Snark

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It finally occurred to me how we can handle the problem of illegal immigrants (criminals) in this country.  This should satisfy those who tearfully claim that the allegiance of their “innocent children” is to America by letting them prove it.

When they reach the age of 18, draft every single “innocent child” whose criminal parents brought them here or popped them out here in order to take advantage of the American taxpayer and now wish to jump the line ahead of those following the legal process to become a naturalized citizen.  Their military enlistment would be no less than 4 years of active duty followed immediately by 4 more years of service in the National Guard.  No exceptions.

Take this newly-formed group of soldiers and send them to Mexico to the Mexican government clean out the drug cartels and assist them with restoring order to the country.  (As the most powerful nation on Earth, don’t we owe it to our southern neighbors to help them?)  These soldiers may also be used to secure the border and their experience would give them opportunity to later work for the DEA to help clean out the drug dealers here in the United States.

Upon completion of their enlistment, they may be given one moving van with which to pack up their criminal parents and relatives here and move them back to their native home.  Upon completion of this removal, they may then go through finalization steps for citizenship; however, they will never be allowed to sponsor anyone for entry into the United States.

Those who do not complete their 8 years of military service or complete the removal of their criminal family members within 30 days of completing their military service would be promptly deported.

This would serve to make Mexico the land the peace-loving and honest Mexican citizens want and would reduce the costs to the United States of going through several million deportation hearings and removals, as well as save billions in the hidden costs of fighting the increased crime and the medical care and welfare payments we are now providing to criminals.  It would also remove the incentives for others with criminal intent to enter the country illegally and well as slow the flow of illegal drugs and more criminals into the United States.

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Filed Under: Do Something! Tagged With: amnesty, DREAM Act, illegal immigrants, Mexican drug wars

For Thee But Not For Me

December 8, 2010 By Joan of Snark

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From the HHS website, here’s the latest list of exemptions from Obamacare’s annual limits requirements.  More paybacks to unions, of course, and the kind of information that won’t make the evening news.

Approved Applications for Waiver of the Annual Limits Requirements of the PHS Act Section 2711 as of December 3, 2010

*All Applicants Listed have had 1 or more plans/policies approved

  Applicant Application
Received
Plan
Effective
Date
Number
of
Enrollees
Application
Completed by
Applicant
Waiver
Approved
1 Advantage Benefits Company, LLC 11/12/2010 12/1/2010 57 11/12/2010 11/23/2010
2 Altisource Portfolio Solutions 10/21/2010 1/1/2011 200 11/15/2010 11/23/2010
3 American Heritage Life Insurance Company 10/15/2010 12/1/10-9/1/11 69,945 11/18/2010 11/23/2010
4 Americare Properties, Inc. 11/12/2010 1/1/2011 547 11/8/2010 11/23/2010
5 AMN Healthcare 10/12/2010 1/1/2011 3,440 11/8/2010 11/23/2010
6 APWU Health Plan Conversion Plan 10/20/2010 1/1/2011 518 11/15/2010 11/23/2010
7 ATCO Rubber Products, Inc 10/21/2010 1/1/2011 185 11/12/2010 11/23/2010
8 Baylor County Hospital District 10/20/2010 10/20/2010 208 11/12/1010 11/23/2010
9 Bricklayers Local 1 of MD, VA and DC 11/6/2010 1/1/2011 1,985 11/17/2010 11/23/2010
10 Catholic Charities of the Diocese of Ogdensburg 10/28/2010 1/1/2011 30 11/17/2010 11/23/2010
11 First Acceptance Corporation 11/9/2010 7/1/2011 864 11/18/2010 11/23/2010
12 Fruhauf Uniform Direct Labor 10/18/2010 1/1/2011 159 11/12/2010 11/23/2010
13 Grower’s Transport LLC 10/26/2010 12/1/2010 25 11/15/2010 11/23/2010
14 Hoosier Stamping and Manufacturing Corp. 10/20/2010 1/1/2011 14 10/20/2010 11/23/2010
15 Ingomar Packing Company, LLC 11/10/2010 1/1/2011 150 11/19/2010 11/23/2010
16 International Brotherhood of Trade Unions Health and Welfare Fund – Local 713 10/28/2010 1/1/2011 861 11/15/2010 11/23/2010
17 Local 1102 Amalgamated Welfare Fund 10/29/2010 1/1/2011 1,384 10/29/2010 11/23/2010
18 Local 1102 Health & Benefit Fund 10/29/2010 1/1/2011 4,642 10/29/2010 11/23/2010
19 Local 1102 Welfare Fund– Lerner Employees 10/29/2010 1/1/2011 245 10/29/2010 11/23/2010
20 Local 338 Affiliated Benefit Funds 11/10/2010 1/1/2011 18,209 11/19/2010 11/23/2010
21 Mission Linen Supply 11/5/2010 1/1/2011 541 11/17/2010 11/23/2010
22 NFI Industries 10/26/2010 1/1/2011 945 11/18/2010 11/23/2010
23 Operating Engineers Local 835 Health and Welfare Fund 10/20/2010 1/1/2011 576 11/16/2010 11/23/2010
24 Opportunity Resources, Inc. Health and Welfare Plan 11/2/2010 12/1/2010 27 11/2/2010 11/23/2010
25 Orscheln Industries 10/19/2010 1/1/2011 547 11/8/2010 11/23/2010
26 Pearson Candy Company 10/27/2010 1/1/2011 204 11/12/2010 11/23/2010
27 Retail, Wholesale & Dept. Store Union Local 1034 Welfare Fund 10/20/2010 1/1/2011 483 11/16/2010 11/23/2010
28 Sensient Technologies Corp. 10/28/2010 1/1/2011 94 11/17/2010 11/23/2010
29 Service Employees International Union Local 1 Cleveland Welfare Fund 10/20/2010 1/1/2011 520 11/15/2010 11/23/2010
30 SFN Group 11/9/2010 5/1/2011 1,420 11/9/2010 11/23/2010
31 Southern CA Pipe Trades
Trust Fund
10/12/2010 1/1/2011 12,700 11/2/2010 11/23/2010
32 Sun Healthcare Group, Inc. 10/21/2010 1/1/2011 2,200 11/15/2010 11/23/2010
33 Teamsters Local 522 Welfare Fund Roofers Division 11/12/2010 1/1/2011 270 11/12/2010 11/23/2010
34 Telesis Management
Corporation
10/28/2010 1/1/2011 148 11/16/2010 11/23/2010
35 Texas Carpenters and Millwrights Health and Welfare Fund 10/28/2010 1/1/2011 4729 10/28/2010 11/23/2010
36 The Mentor Network 10/21/2010 1/1/2011 6,843 11/16/2010 11/23/2010
37 The Wada
Farms, Inc.
11/10/2010 1/1/2011 130 11/19/2010 11/23/2010
38 The Wilks Group, Inc. dba Ashley Furniture Homestore 11/12/2010 12/1/2010 8 11/8/2010 11/23/2010
39 Trans-System, Inc. 10/19/2010 12/1/2010 232 11/8/2010 11/23/2010
40 United Food and Commercial Workers Local 1445 New Hampshire 10/27/2010 1/1/2011 148 11/9/2010 11/23/2010
41 Varsity Contractors, Inc. 11/8/2010 1/1/2011 198 11/8/2010 11/23/2010
42 Waffle House 10/20/2010 6/1/2011 3,947 11/12/2010 11/23/2010
43 Western
Express, Inc.
11/5/2010 1/1/2011 1,287 11/5/2010 11/23/2010
44 Amalgamated National Health Fund 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 24,739 11/9/2010 11/15/2010
45 Cocopah Nurseries, Inc. 10/26/2010 1/1/2011 75 11/15/2010 11/15/2010
46 FirstCarolinaCare Insurance Company on behalf of Longworth Industries 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 36 10/8/2010 11/15/2010
47 Fresh Express 10/18/2010 1/1/2011 2,033 11/7/2010 11/15/2010
48 Greencroft Communities 9/28/2010 1/1/2011 150 11/9/2010 11/15/2010
49 Independent Group Home Living Program, Inc. 10/26/2010 1/1/2011 39 11/9/2010 11/15/2010
50 Meijer Health Benefits Plan/Primary Care Option 10/25/2010 1/1/2011 7,436 10/25/2010 11/15/2010
51 Moore’s Retread & Tire of the Ark-La-Tex, Inc. 10/20/2010 11/1/2010 66 11/5/2010 11/15/2010
52 Payroll Solutions 9/27/2010 1/1/2011 382 11/9/2010 11/15/2010
53 Plumbers and Pipefitters Local No. 630 Welfare Fund 10/18/2010 1/1/2011 1,166 11/8/2010 11/15/2010
54 Seco Packing 10/21/2010 1/1/2011 104 10/21/2010 11/15/2010
55 Transcorr 10/15/2010 1/1/2011 578 11/8/2010 11/15/2010
56 United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 1000 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 3,855 11/12/2010 11/15/2010
57 Western Growers Assurance Trust 9/30/2010 7/1/2011 18,858 11/8/2010 11/15/2010
58 1199SEIU Greater New York Benefit Fund 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 4,544 10/8/2010 11/5/2010
59 A. Duda & Sons, Inc. 10/14/2010 1/1/2011 62 11/4/2010 11/5/2010
60 Adecco Group, Inc. 10/12/2010 1/1/2011 5,760 11/2/2010 11/5/2010
61 Biomedic Corporation 10/12/2010 12/1/2010 202 11/2/2010 11/5/2010
62 Buffets, Inc. 10/14/2010 1/1/2011 2,483 11/4/2010 11/5/2010
63 Carington Health System 10/18/2010 1/1/2011 3,327 11/4/2010 11/5/2010
64 Cleveland Bakers Teamsters 9/27/2010 1/1/2011 1,000 10/29/2010 11/5/2010
65 Club Chef LLC 9/30/2010 1/1/2011 282 10/26/2010 11/5/2010
66 Columbia Sussex Mgmt, LLC 10/7/2010 1/1/2011 629 11/1/2010 11/5/2010
67 CRST International Inc. 10/19/2010 1/1/2011 1,600 11/4/2010 11/5/2010
68 Darr Equipment, Co. 10/5/2010 1/1/2011 105 10/26/2010 11/5/2010
69 DC Cement Masons Welfare Fund 10/22/2010 11/1/2010 225 11/3/2010 11/5/2010
70 Deaconess Long Term Care 10/14/2010 1/1/2011 194 11/3/2010 11/5/2010
71 Diamond Comic Distributors, Inc. 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 37 11/2/2010 11/5/2010
72 ECOM Atlantic, Inc. 10/1/2010 1/1/2011 81 10/1/2010 11/5/2010
73 FW Walton, Inc. 10/15/2010 12/1/2010 38 11/2/2010 11/5/2010
74 G4S Secure Solutions 10/11/2010 11/1/2010 7602 11/3/2010 11/5/2010
75 GC Services, L.P. & First Community Bancshares, Inc. 10/15/2010 1/1/2011 1936 10/15/2010 11/5/2010
76 Guardsmark, LLC 10/4/2010 2/1/2011 8,086 10/29/2010 11/5/2010
77 Indiana Teamsters Health Benefits Fund 9/29/2010 1/1/2010 500 11/1/2010 11/5/2010
78 Knox County Association for Retarded Citizens 10/6/2010 1/1/2011 96 10/25/2010 11/5/2010
79 Laundry and Dry Cleaning Workers Local No. 52 10/6/2010 No contractual Policies in effect for medical benefits 1,547 10/21/2010 11/5/2010
80 Mars Super Markets, Inc. 10/8/2010 7/1/2011 174 10/29/2010 11/5/2010
81 MPS Group, Inc. 10/12/2010 1/1/2011 2,253 11/2/2010 11/5/2010
82 Nexion Health 10/21/2010 11/1/2011 1449 11/3/2010 11/5/2010
83 Noodles & Company 10/1/2010 1/1/2011 159 10/29/2010 11/5/2010
84 Pharmaca Integrative Pharmacy 10/15/2010 1/1/2011 50 11/4/2010 11/5/2010
85 Quality Integrated Services, Inc. 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 354 11/3/2010 11/5/2010
86 RE Rabalais Constructors, LTD 10/13/2010 12/1/2010 70 11/1/2010 11/5/2010
87 RREMC LLC 10/12/2010 1/1/2011 62 11/4/2010 11/5/2010
88 Security Forces Inc. 10/12/2010 1/1/2010 225 11/1/2010 11/5/2010
89 Shirkey Nursing 9/30/2010 1/1/2011 205 10/26/2010 11/5/2010
90 Social Service Employees Union Local 371 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 34,000 10/29/2010 11/5/2010
91 Spindle, Cooling, & Warehouse 10/5/2010 11/1/2010 89 10/27/2010 11/5/2010
92 Strauss Discount Auto 10/14/2010 1/1/2011 401 11/4/2010 11/5/2010
93 Sunburst Hospitality 9/30/2010 1/1/2010 197 11/5/2010 11/5/2010
94 Susser Holding Corp 10/6/2010 1/1/2011 4,245 10/6/2010 11/5/2010
95 Telescope Casual Furniture 9/27/2010 10/1/2010 32 11/1/2010 11/5/2010
96 Teletech Holdings, Inc. 10/15/2010 1/1/2011 1,083 11/4/2010 11/5/2010
97 The Brinkman Corporation 9/29/2010 1/1/2011 163 9/29/2010 11/5/2010
98 The LDF Companies 10/7/2010 1/1/2011 210 10/30/210 11/5/2010
99 United Food and Commercial Workers Union (Mount Laurel, NJ) 10/21/2010 11/1/2010 4100 10/25/2010 11/5/2010
100 United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 1459 10/14/2010 1/1/2011 1,400 10/14/2010 11/5/2010
101 Universal Orlando 10/15/2010 4/1/2011 668 11/3/2010 11/5/2010
102 Valley Services, Inc. 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 927 10/29/2010 11/5/2010
103 United Food and Commercial Workers and Participating Employers Interstate Health and Welfare Fund 10/15/2010 5/1/2011 9,780 10/28/2010 11/4/2010
104 Protocol Marketing Group 10/4/2010 1/1/2011 454 10/25/2010 11/1/2010
105 Sasnak 9/29/2010 1/1/2011 813 9/29/2010 11/1/2010
106 Star Tek 10/1/2010 1/1/2011 1,423 10/26/2010 11/1/2010
107 Adventist Care Centers 10/1/2010 1/1/2011 725 10/26/2010 10/29/2010
108 B.E.S.T of NY 10/7/2010 1/1/2011 1,200 10/27/2010 10/29/2010
109 Boskovich Farms, Inc 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 165 10/28/2010 10/29/2010
110 Café Enterprises, Inc. 10/7/2010 2/1/2011 306 10/7/2010 10/29/2010
111 Capital District Physicians 9/22/2010 Varies 23,314 10/20/2010 10/29/2010
112 FleetPride, Inc. 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 263 10/8/2010 10/29/2010
113 Gallegos Corp 9/29/2010 1/1/2011 86 10/28/2010 10/29/2010
114 Hensley Industries, Inc. 10/5/2010 1/1/2011 357 10/28/2010 10/29/2010
115 Jeffords Steel and Engineering 10/4/2010 1/1/2011 112 10/28/2010 10/29/2010
116 Laborers’ International Union of North America Local Union No. 616 Health and Welfare Plan 10/19/2010 11/1/2010 188 10/19/2010 10/29/2010
117 O.K. Industries 10/4/2010 1/1/2011 1,238 10/28/2010 10/29/2010
118 Service Employees Benefit Fund 10/12/2010 11/1/2010 1,297 10/29/2010 10/29/2010
119 Sun Pacific Farming Coop 10/6/2010 12/1/2010 1,109 10/6/2010 10/29/2010
120 SunWorld International, LLC 10/5/2010 1/1/2011 686 10/25/2010 10/29/2010
121 UFCW Allied Trade Health & Welfare Trust 10/5/2010 1-Dec 68 10/25/2010 10/29/2010
122 United Food and Commercial Workers Union Local 1995 10/12/2010 11/1/2010 2,779 10/27/2010 10/29/2010
123 HCR Manor Care 10/5/2010 1/1/2011 2,666 10/26/2010 10/28/2010
124 IBEW No.915 9/28/2010 1/1/2011 930 10/15/2010 10/28/2010
125 Integra BMS for Culp, Inc. 10/4/2010 1/1/2011 34 10/25/2010 10/28/2010
126 New England Health Care 9/27/2010 1/1/2011 7,454 10/26/2010 10/28/2010
127 Wiliamson-Dickie Manufacturing Company 10/5/2010 1/1/2011 100 10/5/2010 10/28/2010
128 Aegis Insurance 10/6/2010 11/1/2010 67 10/25/2010 10/26/2010
129 Alliance One Tobacco 9/30/2010 1/1/2011 138 10/21/2010 10/26/2010
130 Asbestos Workers Local 53 Welfare Fund 9/29/2010 1/1/2011 2 10/21/2010 10/26/2010
131 Assurant Health (2nd Application) 9/29/2010 1/1/2011 19,024 10/21/2010 10/26/2010
132 Captain Elliot’s Party Boats 10/12/2010 11/1/2010 10 10/25/2010 10/26/2010
133 Carlson Restaurants 9/22/2010 1/1/2011 3,381 10/21/2010 10/26/2010
134 CH Guenther & Son 9/24/2010 1/1/2011 300 10/21/2010 10/26/2010
135 CKM Industries dba Miller Environmental 10/5/2010 11/1/2010 34 10/25/2010 10/26/2010
136 CWVEBA 10/14/2010 10/1/2010 4,500 10/18/2010 10/26/2010
137 Darden Restaurants 9/30/2010 1/1/2011 34,000 10/21/2010 10/26/2010
138 Duarte Nursery 9/23/2010 1/1/2011 283 10/19/2010 10/26/2010
139 Employees Security Fund 9/29/2010 1/1/2011 22 9/29/2010 10/26/2010
140 Florida Trowel Trades 9/27/2010 1/1/2011 297 10/21/2010 10/26/2010
141 Ingles Markets 9/30/2010 1/1/2011 917 10/25/2010 10/26/2010
142 Meijer 10/1/2010 1/1/2011 4,873 10/1/2010 10/26/2010
143 O’Reilly Auto Parts 9/23/2010 1/1/2011 9,722 9/23/2010 10/26/2010
144 Plumbers & Pipefitters Local 123 Welfare Fund 9/30/2010 1/1/2011 534 10/21/2010 10/26/2010
145 Sun Belt 9/28/2010 10/1/2010 114 10/20/2010 10/26/2010
146 UFCW Local 227 10/12/2010 11/1/2010 1,125 10/12/2010 10/26/2010
147 Uncle Julio’s 9/30/2010 11/1/2010 115 10/25/2010 10/26/2010
148 United Group 9/24/2010 1/1/2011 177 10/19/2010 10/26/2010
149 US Imaging 10/11/2010 11/1/2010 148 10/25/2010 10/26/2010
150 Vino Farms 10/8/2010 11/1/2010 152 10/21/2010 10/26/2010
151 Advanta 9/20/2010 9/1/2011 52 9/20/2010 10/21/2010
152 Agricare 9/23/2010 11/1/2010 437 9/23/2010 10/21/2010
153 Alaska Seafood 9/23/2010 1/1/2010 262 10/15/2010 10/21/2010
154 American Fidelity 9/22/2010 10/23/2010 9,358 10/14/2010 10/21/2010
155 Convergys 9/20/2010 1/1/2011 1,400 9/20/2010 10/21/2010
156 Darensberries 9/28/2010 10/1/2010 1,450 9/28/2010 10/21/2010
157 Gowan Company 9/23/2010 1/1/2011 225 9/27/2010 10/21/2010
158 Greystar 9/23/2010 1/1/2011 1,747 10/13/2010 10/21/2010
159 Macayo Restaurants 9/22/2010 12/1/2010 46 10/18/2010 10/21/2010
160 Periodical Services 9/27/2010 1/1/2011 464 9/27/2010 10/21/2010
161 UniFirst 9/23/2010 9/1/2011 2,659 10/14/2010 10/21/2010
162 Universal Forest Products 9/23/2011 5/1/2010 1,738 10/19/2010 10/21/2010
163 UFCW Maximus Local 455 10/4/2010 1/1/2011 59 10/18/2010 10/18/2010
164 AHS 9/22/2010 1/1/2011 400 10/12/2010 10/14/2010
165 GuideStone Financial Resources 9/21/2010 1/1/2011 354 9/21/2010 10/14/2010
166 Local 25 SEIU 9/29/2010 10/1/2010 31,000 10/7/2010 10/14/2010
167 MAUSER Corp. 9/21/2010 1/1/2011 47 9/24/2010 10/14/2010
168 Preferred Care, Inc. 9/15/2010 1/1/2011 918 9/15/2010 10/14/2010
169 Ruby Tuesday 10/8/2010 1/1/2011 3,219 10/8/2010 10/14/2010
170 The Dixie Group, Inc. 8/27/2010 6/19/2010 269 10/12/2010 10/14/2010
171 UFCW Local 1262 9/20/2010 10/1/2010 5,390 9/20/2010 10/14/2010
172 Whelan Security Company 9/23/2010 1/1/2011 287 10/12/2010 10/14/2010
173 AMF Bowling Worldwide 9/14/2010 1/1/2011 295 10/7/2010 10/12/2010
174 Assisted Living Concepts 9/17/2010 1/1/2011 1,174 9/17/2010 10/12/2010
175 Case & Associates 9/17/2010 1/1/2011 87 9/17/2010 10/12/2010
176 GPM Investments 9/17/2010 1/1/2011 275 9/17/2010 10/12/2010
177 Grace Living Centers 9/14/2010 10/1/2010 534 9/14/2010 10/12/2010
178 Mountaire 9/17/2010 1/1/2011 2,074 9/17/2010 10/12/2010
179 Swift Spinning 9/16/2010 1/1/2011 240 9/16/2010 10/12/2010
180 Belmont Village 9/10/2010 1/1/2011 785 10/4/2010 10/8/2010
181 Caliber Services 9/13/2010 1/1/2011 606 9/13/2010 10/8/2010
182 Cracker Barrel 9/9/2010 1/1/2011 16,823 9/17/2010 10/8/2010
183 DISH Network 9/13/2010 3/1/2011 3,597 9/23/2010 10/8/2010
184 Groendyke Transport,  Inc 9/2/2010 1/1/2011 1,322 9/2/2010 10/8/2010
185 Pocono Medical Center 9/24/2010 1/1/2011 3,298 9/24/2010 10/8/2010
186 Regis Corporation 9/10/2010 3/1/2011 3,617 10/1/2010 10/8/2010
187 The Pictsweet Co. 9/13/2010 1/1/2010 694 9/13/2010 10/8/2010
188 Diversified Interiors 9/28/2010 10/1/2010 300 9/28/2010 10/1/2010
189 Local 802 Musicians Health Fund 9/29/2010 10/1/2010 1,801 9/29/2010 10/1/2010
190 Medical Card System 9/20/2010 10/1/2010 6,635 9/23/2010 10/1/2010
191 The Buccaneer 9/22/2010 10/1/2010 125 9/28/2010 10/1/2010
192 CIGNA 9/17/2010 9/26/2010 265,000 9/30/2010 9/30/2010
193 Greater Metropolitan Hotel 9/16/2010 10/1/2010 1,200 9/24/2010 9/30/2010
194 Local 17 Hospitality Benefit Fund 9/16/2010 10/1/2010 881 9/24/2010 9/30/2010
195 GS-ILA 9/15/2010 10/1/2010 298 9/15/2010 9/28/2010
196 Allied 9/13/2010 10/1/2010 127 9/13/2010 9/27/2010
197 Harden Healthcare 9/9/2010 1/1/2011 874 9/29/2010 9/27/2010
198 Health and Welfare Benefit System 9/16/2010 10/1/2010 41 9/16/2010 9/27/2010
199 Health Connector 9/20/2010 10/1/2010 3,544 9/24/2010 9/27/2010
200 I.U.P.A.T 9/16/2010 10/1/2010 875 9/23/2010 9/27/2010
201 Sanderson Plumbing Products, Inc. 9/22/2010 10/1/2010 326 9/22/2010 9/27/2010
202 Transport Workers 9/20/2010 10/1/2010 107 9/23/2010 9/27/2010
203 UFT Welfare Fund 9/16/2010 10/1/2010 351,000 9/27/2010 9/27/2010
204 Aegis 9/16/2010 10/1/2010 162 9/21/2010 9/24/2010
205 Aetna 9/16/2010 10/1/2010 209,423 9/16/2010 9/24/2010
206 Allflex 9/20/2010 10/1/2010 34 9/22/2010 9/24/2010
207 Baptist Retirement 9/10/2010 10/1/2010 127 9/17/2010 9/24/2010
208 BCS Insurance 9/13/2010 9/24/2010 115,000 9/22/2010 9/24/2010
209 Cryogenic 9/20/2010 10/1/2010 19 9/20/2010 9/24/2010
210 Fowler Packing Co. 9/8/2010 10/1/2010 39 9/17/2010 9/24/2010
211 Guy C. Lee Mfg. 9/15/2010 10/1/2010 312 9/15/2010 9/24/2010
212 HealthPort 9/17/2010 10/1/2010 608 9/17/2010 9/24/2010
213 Jack in the Box 9/17/2010 10/1/2010 1,130 9/21/2010 9/24/2010
214 Maritime Association 9/17/2010 10/1/2010 500 9/21/2010 9/24/2010
215 Maverick County 9/21/2010 10/1/2010 1 9/23/2010 9/24/2010
216 Metro Paving Fund 9/20/2010 10/1/2010 550 9/20/2010 9/24/2010
217 PMPS-ILA 9/19/2010 10/1/2010 15 9/23/2010 9/24/2010
218 PS-ILA 9/19/2010 10/1/2010 8 9/23/2010 9/24/2010
219 QK/DRD (Denny’s) 9/16/2010 10/1/2010 65 9/22/2010 9/24/2010
220 Reliance Standard 9/14/2010 10/1/2010 varies 9/14/2010 9/24/2010
221 Tri-Pak 9/20/2010 10/1/2010 26 9/20/2010 9/24/2010
222 UABT 9/17/2010 10/1/2010 17,347 9/17/2010 9/24/2010
  Total Enrollees     1,507,418    

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Filed Under: Truth In Reporting Tagged With: health care reform, Hypocritical Politicians, Obamacare, unions vs. private sector

Compensating Unemployment

December 8, 2010 By Joan of Snark

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Sometimes you come across something so good, there is nothing to do but print it in its entirety.  So to that end, herein lies the true moral argument against unemployment compensation.

 

“When you demand I work for you because you exist
and in return I get to keep what you do not take,
I sense a wannabe master in my midst.”

 

 According to the media, extended unemployment compensation may be coming to a permanent end.
The Republican political leadership does not want to extend compensation for unemployment short of
finding a way to do so without increasing the deficit. So the proposition of compensating
unemployment is not wrong, it is conditional. Democrats, on the other hand, teach that the
unemployed should be compensated because they need money, because their unemployment is no
fault of their own, and because compensating unemployment stimulates economic growth and creates
jobs. These politicians tell us these things so we believe them and reelect them. Neither perspective,
however, is principled or honest. Since we elect these people, they are considered our representatives.
So if they are unprincipled and dishonest, is it because we are unprincipled and dishonest or have we
just been deceived by them?

In all fairness, I should disclose a bias or two about this notion of indefinite compensation for
unemployment. I was raised in a household with a father who repeatedly stressed, “The man that does
not work ought not eat.” He became a Christian shortly after my birth. He started reading his Bible and
he happened upon this statement in 2 Thessalonians 3. He was persuaded by the truth of it and insisted
that my sisters and I work. Having made that admission, one does not need to read the Bible to figure
the relevance of personal contribution for coexistence. As the writer of the second letter to the
Thessalonians acknowledged, none should be a burden.

As voters, we have contrived a social system that allows everyone to be a burden; no one is responsible
for his own unless he wishes. His willingness for personal responsibility, however, does not exclude him
from the burden of those who cannot or will not assume responsibility for themselves and their own.
He simply manifests himself as one apt for freedom. He would be numbered among those who believe
that personal freedom is intrinsically linked to personal responsibility. There is no God-given right to
disassociate personal choices from personal consequences. There is no God-ordained public
responsibility for private choices. No one deserves anything because they need it. One can only deserve
what he earns. Need does not give money value nor is the value of money in the paper. The only
reason money has value is because of those who produce products and provide services; without them,
there would not be anything to buy. To the extent that one believes money is necessary and should be
had, one must either earn it, be gifted it, steal it, win it, or find it. For the money to be gifted, stolen,
won, or found, it must first be earned by someone. Hence, one is greater. Without the one, the others
cannot exist.

To use government to compensate unemployment, we must first violate those who earn their keep. We
must hold our interests, our significance, our life, our freedom in higher esteem than theirs, not because
we have added more value, but because we exist. We appeal to liberty to help ourselves to the fruit of
their labor and consider it justice because they earned it and we voted for it. Such delusions of grandeur
are not only degenerate, they, along with a host of other fantasies, are unconstitutional. This may go
unacknowledged by today’s Republican leadership, but it is a predominant offense to me. My ancestors
left enough stories of slavery for me to know it when I hear it proposed. When you demand I work for
you because you exist and in return I get to keep what you do not take, I sense a wannabe master in my
midst.

Again, I am not certain whether society has regressed to such foolishness because politicians told us that
our need, misfortune, and failure warranted compensation or whether they went about teaching that
because we required it of them. Nevertheless, I am certain that the only value associated with need is
motivation; specifically, it is motivation to change and adapt to acquire more control of one’s life.
Among those who believe in liberty and justice for all, our personal lives are the only ones we should be
living to control so that we do ourselves well instead of perpetuating our own demise.

There was a time in America when the man that did not work did not eat. He sought work to stay alive
and he usually found it. Today, that is not so because his freedom to negotiate with employers has been
impeded on several fronts, two of which are unionism and minimum wages. Michigan’s forced unionism
law prevents the unemployed from offering his services for less than the unions demand. The nation’s
minimum wage law restricts him from offering to work for less than $7.25 per hour. I do not figure it
matters much to the many dishonest and covetous among us, but to those who wish to live an
honorable life these impediments are most troublesome. It was not until last year that the President
and his Congress of merry men made it illegal to pay a person less than $7.25 per hour. So if a risk
analysis of a prospective employee does not warrant such expense, that person will remain
unemployed. Accordingly, more of us will remain unemployed. Democrats, like President Obama, Harry
Reid, Nancy Pelosi, Debbie Stabenow, Carl Levin, John Conyers, and Gary Peters understand this and
they expect for the unemployed to vote for them. Under the auspice of doing good, i.e. raising the
minimum wage, they have removed the option of self-preservation for an honorable, contributory life
and permanently unemployed a larger segment of the population.

While I am convinced that increasing minimum wage is a death sentence to many unemployed who do
not have money saved or a supportive social network, Democrats insist that the unemployed should be
compensated because they do not have jobs. This is not because of some intrinsic value or becoming
attribute of unemployment, it is so they can keep their political job and compensate us for our vote.
That process is commonly referred to as a kickback. And yes, it is unconstitutional for elected
representatives, including President Obama and a host of other presidents of times past, to support
such perks upon vowing to uphold the U.S. Constitution. This may or may not matter to you. I suppose
it depends on whether you believe we should simply be compensated for our existence, whether you
believe one’s disadvantage entitles him to another’s fortune, or whether you believe in liberty and
justice for all, as most of us Americans pledge.
 

We all know there is no public value gained by a person’s unemployment, yet we, the public, choose to
compensate it. Politicians tell us that our unemployment is no fault of our own. Who actually believes
that? How is it that our unemployment is no fault of our own? We chose our employer as our employer
chose us. We chose to remain with that employer until we were laid off. We chose the skill-sets and
the attitude that got us employed. If little got us employed, there was little to keep us employed. Why
are some still employed, while we are not? Could it be that they made different choices? Who voted
for the politicians that raised minimum wage and strengthened unions so that manufacturers flee the
country? If I believed politicians, I would have never become who I am. Am I the only one that fears
judgment by God? My unemployment does not give me a right to another’s income. My desire for a job
does not give me a right to a job. This is reality; it humbles me. Who, under God, considers himself
exempt from the simple commands against covetousness and theft? There can be no peace among a
people who believe they have an unearned right to the person or property of another.

If making false claims of value and innocence for unemployment fell short, politicians also claim using
government to compensate unemployment stimulates economic growth and creates jobs. One could
address this as one would claims of public good associated with minimum wages. If raising minimum
wage is such a public good, why not raise it to $10, $20, or $30 per hour? Doing so, as noted above,
would increase our unemployable population. We all may think we are worth more, but our challenge is
to identify someone who is willing to pay us what we think we are worth. In this same sense, if
compensating unemployment stimulates economic growth and creates jobs, why combat it? Why don’t
we increase the compensation for unemployment? Some of us could sit back and get paid for existing
while the others work to finance our leisure. Of course, increasing unemployment compensation would
only motivate more people to seek payment for unemployment in the same sense that compensating
poverty increases the population of people wishing to be compensated for poverty. Despite political
claims, neither increasing nor extending unemployment compensation perpetuates economic growth or
creates jobs. That is a ridiculous, bold-faced lie. It may be the lie that we demand of our politicians, but
it is a lie. Economic growth is stimulated only by productivity, not sloth.

As Americans, we have ventured so far from the founding principles of America that our Constitution
borders upon irrelevance. We do not know it and we possess little or no understanding of what we
should be as a nation. While America was founded to be different from all other countries, we now
aspire to be as the others. To whom should they appeal for hope?

Since we all can vote, we are both citizens and leaders. As leaders we have made a lot of bad choices
making for more bad citizens. If it is possible to deserve the unearned, if one has an unearned right to
another’s person or property, why is theft, murder, and rape criminalized? If your success entitles me to
your income, if my desire requires your sacrifice, what has become of your God-given right to life,
liberty, and pursuit of happiness? Does just any law make right or are there underlying principles to
which we, as Americans, are subject in forming our legislation? The idea of public compensation for
unemployment may sound good, just like a minimum wage and compensation for poverty sounds good,
but the social and public consequences of the policies are worsening. They will continue to worsen until
we change our ways and our expectations. You, I, we only deserve what we have earned and we do not
deserve until we have earned. Regardless of our personal income or a politician’s claim, we, through
our federal government, do not have a right to tell others how to use their earnings. Until we accept
and embrace the truth, I am convinced that America can forget the blessings of God regardless of its
prayers, its origin, or its currency. Personal freedom devoid of personal responsibility ensures our
national peril.

(Marc Goodson, December 6, 2010)  

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Filed Under: Truth In Reporting Tagged With: Hypocritical Politicians, Marc Goodson, unemployment benefits, unemployment compensation

Crybaby Barbie’s Warning About Evil Rich Parents

December 4, 2010 By Joan of Snark

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At least according to Barbara (“call me Senator”) Boxer, rich parents are evil.  After both of this morning’s tax increase smackdown votes on the Senate floor, crybaby Barbie took to the podium to deliver what was, I’m sure, in her mind at least, a chiding lecture on the failure of that august body to do right by the poor, hapless American people.  (The same people who voted to replace Democrats in Congress in numbers not seen since 1938 but who’s counting?)  In it she sternly told us that if the “wealthy”* were allowed to continue to keep the money they earned by not increasing taxes on them right now, all they’d do with it is “put it into a trust fund for their children”.

Apparently only the “little people” are entitled to look out for their children’s future.  In progressive liberal la-la land it is the responsibility of the rich to look out for everyone else’s children by contributing more and more of their income to overpay some federal bureaucrat to pass it out as entitlements to the vaguely-defined victim…errr..prospective Democrat voter-du-joeur.

Last time I checked it was neither a sin nor against the law to work hard and accumulate large sums of money.  And if people like Crybaby Barbie find having a stash so wrong, it isn’t against the law for them to write a big, fat check to the IRS, either.

But they don’t, do they?

Wealthy:  A squishy, shapeshifting line drawn between those whose income reaches $250,000 or $1 million a year and those whose icome does not; its exact location dependent solely upon the level of desperation felt by a Democrat on any given day.

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Filed Under: Stoopid People Tagged With: Barbara Boxer, Bush tax cuts, Hypocritical Politicians, progressive liberals

Defining Liberalism

December 4, 2010 By Joan of Snark

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Liberalism was recently found to have a strong genetic component.  One definition used was a propensity towards having an “openness” of mind.  The problem as demonstrated in real life, however, is being so open-minded your brains fall out.

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Filed Under: Truth In Reporting Tagged With: genetics, hypocritical politicans, liberalism

Quote Of The Day

December 3, 2010 By Joan of Snark

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In response to Senator Jim DeMint’s well-thought-out piece on the START treaty at the NRO:

“Why ask the State Department for the negotiation records? Can’t you just get them from Julian Assange?”

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Filed Under: Truth In Reporting Tagged With: Jim DeMint, NRO, START, WikiLeaks

Renaming The Rose

December 1, 2010 By Joan of Snark

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In the oh-so-politically-correct world of self-perceived elites, the incessant background humming that President Pantywaist suffers from narcissistic personality disorder must somewhow be squelched.

How better than to simply declare it is no longer considered a psychiatric disorder and to pull it from the manual?

Poof! 

Now if you call Obama’s obsession with his own little bubble-world “narcissistic”, you can be called incorrect at best or stupid at worst by those who earn their keep by labeling others.

Priceless.

But redefining the psychiatric reference manual still can’t undo the truth.  President Walking Eagle has earned his nickname.  And narcissism by any other name is still as annoying.  Not to mention dangerous.

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Filed Under: Truth In Reporting Tagged With: narcissistic personality disorder, obama hypocrisy, political correctness, psychiatric disorders

Mike Pence: The Presidency and the Constitution

November 25, 2010 By Joan of Snark

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The following is adapted from a speech delivered on the Hillsdale College campus on September 20, 2010. 

 The presidency is the most visible thread that runs through the tapestry of the American government. More often than not, for good or for ill, it sets the tone for the other branches and spurs the expectations of the people. Its powers are vast and consequential, its requirements impossible for mortals to fulfill without humility and insistent attention to its purpose as set forth in the Constitution of the United States. 

Isn’t it amazing, given the great and momentous nature of the office, that those who seek it seldom pause to consider what they are seeking? Rather, unconstrained by principle or reflection, there is a mad rush toward something that, once its powers are seized, the new president can wield as an instrument with which to transform the nation and the people according to his highest aspirations. 

But, other than in a crisis of the house divided, the presidency is neither fit nor intended to be such an instrument. When it is made that, the country sustains a wound, and cries out justly and indignantly. And what the nation says is the theme of this address. What it says—informed by its long history, impelled by the laws of nature and nature’s God—is that we as a people are not to be ruled and not to be commanded. It says that the president should never forget this; that he has not risen above us, but is merely one of us, chosen by ballot, dismissed after his term, tasked not to transform and work his will upon us, but to bear the weight of decision and to carry out faithfully the design laid down in the Constitution in accordance with the Declaration of Independence. 

* * * 

The presidency must adhere to its definition as expressed in the Constitution, and to conduct defined over time and by tradition. While the powers of the office have enlarged, along with those of the legislature and the judiciary, the framework of the government was intended to restrict abuses common to classical empires and to the regal states of the 18th century. 

Without proper adherence to the role contemplated in the Constitution for the presidency, the checks and balances in the constitutional plan become weakened. This has been most obvious in recent years when the three branches of government have been subject to the tutelage of a single party. Under either party, presidents have often forgotten that they are intended to restrain the Congress at times, and that the Congress is independent of their desires. And thus fused in unholy unity, the political class has raged forward in a drunken expansion of powers and prerogatives, mistakenly assuming that to exercise power is by default to do good. 

 Even the simplest among us knows that this is not so. Power is an instrument of fatal consequence. It is confined no more readily than quicksilver, and escapes good intentions as easily as air flows through mesh. Therefore, those who are entrusted with it must educate themselves in self-restraint. A republic is about limitation, and for good reason, because we are mortal and our actions are imperfect. 

The tragedy of presidential decision is that even with the best choice, some, perhaps many, will be left behind, and some, perhaps many, may die. Because of this, a true statesman lives continuously with what Churchill called “stress of soul.” He may give to Paul, but only because he robs Peter. And that is why you must always be wary of a president who seems to float upon his own greatness. For all greatness is tempered by mortality, every soul is equal, and distinctions among men cannot be owned; they are on loan from God, who takes them back and evens accounts at the end. 

It is a tragedy indeed that new generations taking office attribute failures in governance to insufficient power, and seek more of it. In the judiciary, this has seldom been better expressed than by Justice Thurgood Marshall, who said: “You do what you think is right and let the law catch up.” In the Congress, it presents itself in massive legislation, acts and codes thousands of pages long and so monstrously over-complicated that no human being can read through them—much less understand them, much less apply them justly to a people that increasingly feel like they are no longer being asked, but rather told. Our nation finds itself in the position of a dog whose duty it is not to ask why—because the “why” is too elevated for his nature—but simply to obey. 

America is not a dog, and does not require a “because-I-said-so” jurisprudence; or legislators who knit laws of such insulting complexity that they are heavier than chains; or a president who acts like, speaks like, and is received as a king. 

The president is not our teacher, our tutor, our guide or ruler. He does not command us; we command him. We serve neither him nor his vision. It is not his job or his prerogative to redefine custom, law, and beliefs; to appropriate industries; to seize the country, as it were, by the shoulders or by the throat so as to impose by force of theatrical charisma his justice upon 300 million others. It is neither his job nor his prerogative to shift the power of decision away from them, and to him and the acolytes of his choosing. 

Is my characterization of unprecedented presumption incorrect? Listen to the words of the leader of President Obama’s transition team and perhaps his next chief-of-staff: “It’s important that President-Elect Obama is prepared to really take power and begin to rule day one.” Or, more recently, the latest presidential appointment to avoid confirmation by the Senate—the new head of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau—who wrote last Friday: “President Obama understands the importance of leveling the playing field again.” 

“Take power. . .rule. . .leveling.” Though it is the model now, this has never been and should never again be the model of the presidency or the character of the American president. No one can say this too strongly, and no one can say it enough until it is remedied. We are not subjects; we are citizens. We fought a war so that we do not have to treat even kings like kings, and—if I may remind you—we won that war. Since then, the principle of royalty has, in this country, been inoperative. Who is better suited or more required to exemplify this conviction, in word and deed, than the President of the United States? 

* * * 

The powers of the presidency are extraordinary and necessarily great, and great presidents treat them sparingly. For example, it is not the president’s job to manipulate the nation’s youth for the sake of his agenda or his party. They are a potent political force when massed by the social network to which they are permanently attached. But if the president has their true interests at heart he will neither flatter them nor let them adore him, for in flattery is condescension and in adoration is direction, and youth is neither seasoned nor tested enough to direct a nation. Nor should it be the president’s business to presume to direct them. It is difficult enough to do right by one’s own children. No one can be the father of a whole continent’s youth. 

Is the president, therefore, expected to turn away from this and other easy advantage? Yes. Like Harry Truman, who went to bed before the result on election night, he must know when to withdraw, to hold back, and to forgo attention, publicity, or advantage. 

There is no finer, more moving, or more profound understanding of the nature of the presidency and the command of humility placed upon it than that expressed by President Coolidge. He, like Lincoln, lost a child while he was president, a son of sixteen. “The day I became president,” Coolidge wrote, “he had just started to work in a tobacco field. When one of his fellow laborers said to him, ‘If my father was president I would not work in a tobacco field,’ Calvin replied, ‘If my father were your father you would.’” His admiration for the boy was obvious. 

 Young Calvin contracted blood poisoning from an incident on the South Lawn of the White House. Coolidge wrote, “What might have happened to him under other circumstances we do not know, but if I had not been president. . . .” And then he continued, 

 In his suffering he was asking me to make him well. I could not. When he went, the power and glory of the Presidency went with him. 

A sensibility such as this, and not power, is the source of presidential dignity, and must be restored. It depends entirely upon character, self-discipline, and an understanding of the fundamental principles that underlie not only the republic, but life itself. It communicates that the president feels the gravity of his office and is willing to sacrifice himself; that his eye is not upon his own prospects but on the storm of history, through which he must navigate with the specific powers accorded to him and the limitations placed on those powers both by man and by God. 

The modern presidency has drifted far from the great strength and illumination of its source: the Constitution as given life by the Declaration of Independence, the greatest political document ever written. The Constitution—terse, sober, and specific—does not, except by implication, address the president’s demeanor. But this we can read in the best qualities of the founding generation, which we would do well to imitate. In the Capitol Rotunda are heroic paintings of the signing of the Declaration of Independence, the victory at Saratoga, the victory at Yorktown, and—something seldom seen in history—a general, the leader of an armed rebellion, resigning his commission and surrendering his army to a new democracy. Upon hearing from Benjamin West that George Washington, having won the war and been urged by some to use the army to make himself king, would instead return to his farm, King George III said: “If he does that, he will be the greatest man in the world.” He did, and he was. 

To aspire to such virtue and self-restraint would in a sense be difficult, but in another sense it should be easy—difficult because it would be demanding and ideal, and easy because it is the right thing to do and the rewards are immediately self-evident. 

A president who slights the Constitution is like a rider who hates his horse: he will be thrown, and the nation along with him.  The president solemnly swears to preserve, protect, and defend the Constitution. He does not solemnly swear to ignore, overlook, supplement, or reinterpret it. Other than in a crisis of existence, such as the Civil War, amendment should be the sole means of circumventing the Constitution. For if a president joins the powers of his office to his own willful interpretation, he steps away from a government of laws and toward a government of men. 

Is the Constitution a fluctuating and inconstant document, a collection of suggestions whose purpose is to stimulate debate in a future to which the Founders were necessarily blind? Progressives tell us that even the Framers themselves could not reach agreement in its regard. But they did agree upon it. And they wrote it down. And they signed it. And they lived by it. Its words are unchanging and unchangeable except, again, by amendment. There is no allowance for a president to override it according to his supposed superior conception. Why is this good? It is good because the sun will burn out, the Ohio River will flow backwards, and the cow will jump over the moon 10,000 times before any modern president’s conception is superior to that of the Founders of this nation. 

Would it be such a great surprise that a good part of the political strife of our times is because one president after another, rather than keeping faith with it, argues with the document he is supposed to live by? This discontent will only be calmed by returning the presidency to the nation’s first principles. The Constitution and the Declaration should be on a president’s mind all the time, as the prism through which the light of all question of governance passes. Though we have—sometimes gradually, sometimes radically—moved away from this, we can move back to it. And who better than the president to restore this wholesome devotion to limited government? 

* * * 

And as the president returns to the consistent application of the principles in the Constitution, he will also ensure fiscal responsibility and prosperity. Who is better suited, with his executive and veto powers, to carry over the duty of self-restraint and discipline to the idea of fiscal solvency? When the president restrains government spending, leaving room for the American people to enjoy the fruits of their labor, growth is inevitable. As Senator Robert Taft wrote: “Liberty has been the key to our progress in the past and is the key to our progress in the future.… If we can preserve liberty in all its essentials, there is no limit to the future of the American people.” 

Whereas the president must be cautious, dutiful, and deferential at home, his character must change abroad. Were he to ask for a primer on how to act in relation to other states, which no holder of the office has needed to this point, and were that primer to be written by the American people, whether of 1776 or 2010, you can be confident that it would contain the following instructions: 

You do not bow to kings. Outside our shores, the President of the United States of America bows to no man. When in foreign lands, you do not criticize your own country. You do not argue the case against the United States, but the case for it. You do not apologize to the enemies of the United States. Should you be confused, a country, people, or region that harbors, shelters, supports, encourages, or cheers attacks upon our country or the slaughter of our friends and families are enemies of the United States. And, to repeat, you do not apologize to them.   

Closely related to this, and perhaps the least ambiguous of the president’s complex responsibilities, is his duty as commander-in-chief of the military. In this regard there is a very simple rule, unknown to some presidents regardless of party: If, after careful determination, intense stress of soul, and the deepest prayer, you go to war, then, having gone to war, you go to war to win. You do not cast away American lives, or those of the innocent noncombatant enemy, upon a theory, a gambit, or a notion. And if the politics of your own election or of your party intrude upon your decisions for even an instant—there are no words for this. 

More commonplace, but hardly less important, are other expectations of the president in this regard. He must not stint on the equipment and provisioning of the armed forces, and if he errs it must be not on the side of scarcity but of surplus. And he must be the guardian of his troops, taking every step to avoid the loss of even a single life. 

The American soldier is as precious as the closest of your kin—because he is your kin, and for his sake the president must, in effect, say to the Congress and to the people: “I am the Commander-in-Chief. It is my sacred duty to defend the United States, and to give our soldiers what they need to complete the mission and come home safe, whatever the cost.” 

If, in fulfilling this duty, the president wavers, he will have betrayed his office, for this is not a policy, it is probity. It is written on the blood-soaked ground of Saratoga, Yorktown, Antietam, Cold Harbor, the Marne, Guadalcanal, the Pointe du Hoc, the Chosin Reservoir, Khe Sanh, Iraq, Afghanistan, and a thousand other places in our history, in lessons repeated over and over again. 

* * * 

The presidency, a great and complex subject upon which I have only touched, has become symbolic of overreaching. There are many truths that we have been frightened to tell or face. If we run from them, they will catch us with our backs turned and pull us down. Better that we should not flee but rather stop and look them in the eye. 

 What might our forebears say to us, knowing what they knew, and having done what they did? I have no doubt that they would tell us to channel our passions, speak the truth and do what is right, slowly and with resolution; to work calmly, steadily and without animus or fear; to be like a rock in the tide, let the water tumble about us, and be firm and unashamed in our love of country. 

 I see us like those in Philadelphia in 1776. Danger all around, but a fresh chapter, ready to begin, uncorrupted, with great possibilities and—inexplicably, perhaps miraculously—the way is clearing ahead. I have never doubted that Providence can appear in history like the sun emerging from behind the clouds, if only as a reward for adherence to first principles. As Winston Churchill said in a speech to Congress on December 26, 1941: “He must indeed have a blind soul who cannot see that some great purpose and design is being worked out here below, of which we have the honor to be the faithful servants.” 

?As Americans, we inherit what Lincoln in his First Inaugural called “the mystic chords of memory stretching from every patriot grave.” They bind us to the great and the humble, the known and the unknown of Americans past—and if I hear them clearly, what they say is that although we may have strayed, we have not strayed too far to return, for we are their descendants. We can still astound the world with justice, reason and strength. I know this is true, but even if it was not we could not in decency stand down, if only for our debt to history. We owe a debt to those who came before, who did great things, and suffered more than we suffer, and gave more than we give, and pledged their lives, their fortunes, and their sacred honor for us, whom they did not know. For we “drink from wells we did not dig” and are “warmed by fires we did not build,” and so we must be faithful in our time as they were in theirs. 

 Many great generations are gone, but by the character and memory of their existence they forbid us to despair of the republic. I see them crossing the prairies in the sun and wind. I see their faces looking out from steel mills and coal mines, and immigrant ships crawling into the harbors at dawn. I see them at war, at work and at peace. I see them, long departed, looking into the camera, with hopeful and sad eyes. And I see them embracing their children, who became us. They are our family and our blood, and we cannot desert them. In spirit, all of them come down to all of us, in a connection that, out of love, we cannot betray. 

 They are silent now and forever, but from the eternal silence of every patriot grave there is yet an echo that says, “It is not too late; keep faith with us, keep faith with God, and do not, do not ever despair of the republic.” 

MIKE PENCE
U.S. Representative, Indiana’s 6th Congressional District 

  Mike Pence graduated from Hanover College in 1981 and earned his J.D. from Indiana University School of Law in 1986. After running for Congress in 1988 and 1990, he was named president of the Indiana Policy Review Commission, a state think tank based in Fort Wayne, Indiana, in 1991. He was first elected to Congress from Indiana’s 6th District in 2000 and was most recently elected to a fifth term in 2008. That same year he was elected to serve as House Republican Conference Chairman. During the 109th Congress, he also served as chairman of the House Republican Study Committee, the largest caucus in the House of Representatives.

   

“Reprinted by permission from Imprimis, a publication of Hillsdale College.”   

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Why The Super-Rich Say To Raise Their Taxes

November 22, 2010 By Joan of Snark

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Uber-wealthy Warren Buffet is going public with his admonition that the “rich” should pay more in taxes.

“If anything, taxes for the lower and middle class and maybe even the upper middle class should even probably be cut further,” Buffett said in an interview with ABC’s “This Week With Christiane Amanpour” that is scheduled to air on Nov. 28. “But I think that people at the high end — people like myself — should be paying a lot more in taxes. We have it better than we’ve ever had it.”

This is music to a progressive liberal’s ears.

But despite the seeming altruism of this kind of statement, it’s ain’t gonna happen any time soon.  Why?  Because Warren Buffet and every other mega-wealthy American knows something the rest of us don’t.

The second richest man in America (third richest in the world) and others in that rarified sanctum reserved for the mega-rich tie up their money in non-taxable trust funds.  In fact, 90% of Buffet’s money is in the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Asset Trust.  The rest of the money Buffet lives on comes from capital gains and is therefore taxed at the capital gains tax rate.  Translation for those of us who are more financially feeble-minded:  Buffet’s income is NOT taxed as regular (“earned”) income.

So why not just raise the tax rate on capital gains?  It’s a good and logical question but no one in their right mind is going to jack the tax rate on capital gains too high because doing this would hit the middle-income folks who are dependent on the income from their IRAs and 401ks.

So in what is perhaps the most hilarious of hypocrisies, even if “income” tax was raised to to 90%, Mr. Noble Buffet would still only pay capital gains tax, not “earned income” tax.

Huge difference, dear readers.  And the little lefty drones don’t have a clue.

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Filed Under: Truth In Reporting Tagged With: higher income tax, higher taxes, income tax, tax the rich, Warren Buffet

Gun Butt Cover

November 21, 2010 By Joan of Snark

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His Transparency is feeling the cold breeze sneaking in through the open back of his hospital gown and, besides the doubling-down cram-through brawls that await us during this lame-duck session, he’s finally decided to nominate Chicago brown-noser Andrew Traver to permanently lead the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF).

In the astute words of Bob Owens, President Walking Eagle has nominated a pedophile to run the local PTA.  While he’s allegedly a “nice enough guy”, he’s anti-gun and an incompetent middle-level leader.  Certainly not the type one would choose to clean up the corruption in any organization. 

But if the Senate is stupid enough to confirm his nomination, he’ll help close that flapping gown by taking the blame for pushing the progressive liberal anti-gun agenda.

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Filed Under: Eroding Freedoms Tagged With: 2nd Amendment, Andrew Travers, anti-gun, ATF, Hypocritical Politicians

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