Thursday, April 29, 2010

Barack's Bullshit Bingo

[Thanks, Mom!]

Here is something to help make Obama's speeches more interesting. Just print out this page, distribute it to your friends, and go listen... 
 







Rules for Bull ...  Bingo 


1. Before Barrack Obama's next televised speech, pr
int your "Bullshit Bingo"


2. Check off the appropriate block when you hear one of those words/phrases.

 3. When you get five blocks horizontally, vertically, or diagonally, stand up and shout "BULLSHIT!"

Testimonials from past satisfied "Bullshit Bingo" players: 
"I had been listening to the speech for only five minutes when I won." - Jack W., Boston

"My attention span during speeches has improved dramatically." - David D.,   Florida

"What a gas! Speeches will never be the same for me after my first win." - Bill R., New York City

“The atmosphere was tense in the last speech as 14 of us waited for the fifth box." - Ben G., Denver

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Remember in November

A great poster ... and a great mantra to continually repeat during these next months towards elections.  Genius!!!!  [HT: American Power]

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Obama Video: "Taxman Obama vs Rx"

Awesome editing job!

Liberal Journalist Gives Tea Partiers A Fair Shake

What a shock!  A liberal journalist from the Washington Post actually left Mount Olympus and descended to the hoi poloi and boogied down with some Tea Party folks ... and found their "irreverant spirit" to be "endearing."  And -- brace yourself! -- not the radical racist wackos that the MSM paints tea partiers.

Here's Robert McCartney's story:
'Tea partiers' more wacky mavericks than extremist threat"

By Robert McCartney
Sunday, April 18, 2010; C01

I went to the "tea party" rally at the Washington Monument on Thursday to check out just how reactionary and potentially violent the movement truly was.


Answer: Not very.

Based on what I saw and heard, tea party members are not seething, ready-to-explode racists, as some liberal commentators have caricatured them.

Some are extremists and bigots, sure. The crowd was almost entirely white. I differ strenuously with the protesters on about 95 percent of the issues.

Nevertheless, on the whole, they struck me as passionate conservatives dedicated to working within the system rather than dangerous militia types or a revival of the Ku Klux Klan. 

Although shrinking government is their primary goal, many conceded that the country should keep Medicare and even Social Security. None was clamoring for civil disobedience, much less armed revolt. 

"Someone said in the Revolutionary War, they fired bullets. This time, we're firing politicians," said Clinton Lee, 28, a wedding photographer from Tampa wearing a Thomas Jefferson T-shirt.

The rally, estimated in the tens of thousands, also displayed a wacky, irreverent spirit that I found endearing. I can't help but smile when paunchy small-business owners aged 50 and older don three-cornered hats and hoist rattlesnake flags in exercising their First Amendment right to peaceably assemble.

Buttons proclaimed "IRS: I Represent Satan" and "Obama: He makes you long for Jimmy Carter."


The mix of kookiness and mistrust of authority reminded me of anti-Vietnam War demonstrations in which I participated four decades ago in the same spot. (Participants were appalled when I made the comparison. They hastened to say they weren't modern-day hippies.)

At the protest, I mostly ignored the speakers so I could probe what the participants wanted and how they viewed the world. I interviewed 19, picked at random, in three hours.

I found that I agreed heartily with the tea partiers on what is perhaps their single biggest concern: that America's swelling government debt seriously threatens our long-term prosperity.
...

Commentators on MSNBC and elsewhere have called the movement racist and likened it to the Klan. Such criticisms gained strength after two African American congressmen said demonstrators shouted racial epithets at them at the Capitol a month ago. A New York Times poll found that 52 percent of tea party supporters believed that too much has been made of blacks' problems.

Perhaps people were concealing their true views, but I didn't see evidence of racism at Thursday's rally. A sign read: "Not prejudiced. Not racist. Not violent. Not disenfranchised. Not silent anymore."
...

Although united in their hostility to big government, the protesters were ideologically varied.

At one end of the spectrum, a purist libertarian wanted to abolish public schools. At the other, a 24-year-old Internet marketing company owner with a spiked mohawk hairstyle strongly opposed the health-care bill but noted, "I love Medicare. That takes care of my grandparents."...
Wow!  Someone from the press who actually ventured out and gave the movement a fair assessment, rather than clamoring in insane paranoia that the Tea Party movement must be racist.  As P.J. Gladnick of Newsbusters summarized the experiment:
Can one even imagine Chris Matthews or Keith Olbermann attending a tea party event without becoming confrontational or belligerent? McCartney went in with an open mind and, as a result, came away with an overall positive view of the participants. 
I wonder if Olbermann, Matthews and such will ever grow one and come on down and party with the Tea Partiers.  The events really are quite nice, family-oriented events ... well, until the Leftist thugs and union plants show up.

White Supremacist Wishes To Air Campaign Ads

It was a bit shocking to read today that Missouri's Attorney General Chris Koster has filed a request with the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) for it to determine if a white supremacist candidate may air campaign ads in his bid for a U.S. Senate seat.  Here's the story from the AP via KSDK Newschannel 5:

Koster asks whether supremacist can air ads

KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) -- The Federal Communications Commission is being asked to decide whether a white supremacist who is a fringe candidate in Missouri's U.S. Senate race should be able to air campaign commercials.

The Kansas City Star reported that Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster filed the request with the FCC on Friday. He was joined by the Missouri Broadcasters Association and a radio station chain in mid-Missouri.

The question Koster wants decided is whether Glenn Miller is a "bona fide" write-in candidate for the Senate in Missouri. Miller has been buying radio spots to air anti-Semitic views goading white people to "take our country back."

The Federal Communications Commission requires broadcasters to give qualified federal candidates access to airtime. Federal law says the stations can't censor or edit the ads.

What a "free speech" dilemma!  Such an abhorrent message this Miller whacko preaches, and yet our Constitution protects such ugliness and hatred.  I read several readers' comments following the article, most saying that they hated the guy's message but believed in the protection of free speech. 

After reading this, I did some checking around on "candidate" Miller.  His website, which laughably has the address of "www.whty.org", shows pictures of Klansmen in different parades at some event and asks for donations to help in his campaign run.   He has a nauseatingly hate-filled, cliché list of media and Hollywood producers, most of whom are Jewish.  And, get this: for those who blast FoxNews for being too conservative, Miller complains that "... Fox News Channel has been a key outlet pushing the Jewish neoconservative agenda that lies behind the Iraq War and which animates both the administration of George W. Bush and the "new conservatism" that embraces aggressive Zionism and multiracialism."  He describes FoxNews owner Rupert Murdoch as "an ardent Zionist and backer of the neocons."

But, here's my take-away from this disgusting creep: How much do you want to bet that this racist nut will be somehow linked with the Tea Party movement?  Jim Hoft of GatewayPundit has been detailing appearances and disruptions by Leftist plants at various April 15th Tea Party events, most of them pretending to be white supremacist in order to bring negativity to the Tea Party movement.  Check these out:

Come to St. Louis Where Nazi Infiltrators Get Punked

Racist Leftist Infiltrators Drive from Tea Party Rallies (includes stories from around the country)

Socialist Infiltrators Hand Out Fake Tea Party Literature at NY Protest

Tuesday, April 13, 2010

Tea Party Opponents to Infiltrate The Movement

So much for free thought!  This is from KSDK Channel 5 News via the AP (emphasis added) --

Foes of tea party movement plan to infiltrate rallies

By VALERIE BAUMAN, Associated Press Writer

ALBANY, NY (AP) -- Opponents of the fiscally conservative tea party movement say they plan to infiltrate and dismantle the political group by trying to make its members appear to be racist, homophobic and moronic. [NOTE: We've seen the mainstream media employing the same tactics, haven't we?]

Jason Levin, creator of www.crashtheteaparty.org, said Monday the group has 65 leaders in major cities across the country who are trying to recruit members to infiltrate tea party events for April 15 -- tax filing day, when tea party groups across the country are planning to gather and protest high taxes.

Click here to view photos from the Tea Party rally in St. Charles
 
"Every time we have someone on camera saying that Barack Obama isn't an American citizen, we want someone sitting next to him saying, 'That's right, he's an alien from outer space!"' Levin said.

Tea party members said the backlash comes from ignorance.

"They can't actually debate our message and that's their problem," said Bob MacGuffie, a Connecticut organizer for Right Principles, a tea party group that also has members in New York and New Jersey.

The tea party movement generally unites on the fiscally conservative principles of small government, lower taxes and less spending. Beyond that the ideology of the people involved tends to vary dramatically.

Levin says they want to exaggerate the group's least appealing qualities, further distance the tea party from mainstream America and damage the public's opinion of them. 

"Do I think every member of the tea party is a homophobe, racist or a moron? No, absolutely not," Levin said. "Do I think most of them are homophobes, racists or morons? Absolutely."

The site manifesto says they want to dismantle the Tea Party by nonviolent means. "We have already sat quietly in their meetings, and observed their rallies," the site said.

Another tea party organizer said the attempt to destroy the movement was evidence its message is resonating. 

"We've been ignored, we've been ridiculed. Well, now they're coming after us," said Judy Pepenella, a co-coordinator for the New York State Tea Party. "Ghandi's quote is one we understand: 'First they ignore you, then they ridicule you, then they fight you, then you win."'
I have always noticed and said that no one from the opposition is coming back with any intelligent, reasoned response to the questions and concerns of the Tea Partiers.  This is evidence that the Left "ain't got bupkiss."  Personal attacks are always resorted to when no rational counterargument can be made.  "Oh, yeah!  Well, yo' mamma!"

The Left continues to employ distractions rather than face the issues head on.

Monday, April 12, 2010

Day of Silence Sparks Outrage Among Some Parents

This Friday, my school will be participating in the 15th annual Day of Silence when students show their support of students who are bullied for their sexual orientation.  This observance, however, has generated an outcry from some parents, who are calling for parents to pull their children out of school.  They argue that GLSEN -- the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network -- has an agenda that family groups argue is indoctrination that forces a pro-gay agenda in schools.  Here's the story from FoxNews (emphasis added):

Gay Day of Silence a Waste of Tax Dollars, Critics Say

Thousands of public schools are planning to allow students affiliated with a gay and lesbian advocacy group to sponsor an anti-bullying "Day of Silence" on Friday, but family organizations say the demonstration is a disruptive waste of taxpayer dollars and are calling for families to pull their kids out of school.
GLSEN — the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network — is organizing the 15th annual Day of Silence for April 16, encouraging students to remain mute during classes to call attention to verbal and physical abuse of gay students.

GLSEN says students at more than 5,000 middle and high schools are expected to participate, and over 30,000 people have joined a Facebook group promoting the effort. Many sport T-shirts or hand out literature promoting alliances between gay and straight students.

But family advocacy groups warn that GLSEN is using the day to try to indoctrinate kids and force a pro-gay agenda into schools — something they want kept out of class entirely.

"I think that we shouldn't be exploiting public education for this," said Laurie Higgins, director of school advocacy for the Illinois Family Institute. "There are better ways to use taxpayer money. We send our kids there to learn the subject matter, not ... to be unwillingly exposed to political protest during instructional time."

Critics say the anti-bullying message could have been spread after hours and off-campus, but GLSEN's choice of venue shows the group's intent for the schools.

"Obviously this is intended to make an impact on the educational environment — otherwise they wouldn't be doing it at school," said Bryan Fischer, director of issues analysis at the American Family Institute. "The only impact it could possibly have would be to interfere with class."

Higgins and Fischer are calling on parents to withdraw their children from classes that participate in the Day of Silence, a move Higgins compared to "civil disobedience" after years of being ignored by school officials.

"This is definitely a last-resort option," she told FoxNews.com, "but school administrators have not listened to parents and teachers. Teachers who object to this are afraid to say anything, afraid of personal and professional repercussions."

But GLSEN says feedback from schools has been positive and that teachers are still in command of their classrooms, no matter how many students choose to take part.

GLSEN distributes materials online outlining what students may do during class to support the Day of Silence, and it urges them to contact teachers and administrators before Friday to avoid running afoul of speech laws.

Lunch period is one thing, but during actual classes students "do not have the right to refuse to speak — instructional time is instructional time," said Eliza Byard, GLSEN's executive director. Supreme Court decisions have denied free speech to students inside classrooms — and that precludes any right to silence.

Byard said the Day of Silence has resonated with so many students over the years because it is a peaceful and non-disruptive way for them to make a difference.

The day began as the creation of a college student at the University of Virginia and has spread to thousands of institutions since 1996. GLSEN, which took over organizing the event in 2001, provides organizing instructions to students — even teaching how to create press conferences promoting the Day of Silence.

But GLSEN says urgent action is still needed to address the dangers gay and lesbian students face on a daily basis. A survey conducted by the group in 2007 found that 86 percent of homosexual students reported being harassed at school, and that more than 60 percent felt unsafe because of their sexual orientation.

"The national picture still doesn't look good and the national numbers still remain unacceptably high," Byard told FoxNews.com.
...
My school has had a GLSEN "club" for years with this event taking places annually ... perhaps for all of the 15 years.  From the beginning of our participation in Day of Silence, teachers have been assured and students have been informed that the kids are not excused from participating in class.  It has been my experience that,  except for one case, the students who get involved are really good kids that believe they are making a difference and are taking part in an anti-bullying campaign and not just trying to get out of class responsibilities. 

Honestly, I am a bit uncomfortable with the notion of having a GSLEN club at school, and yet this event to me is perhaps no different than any other civil rights activity that supports the "underdog" and confronts injustice.  With the recent bullying cases that have made the news, any efforts by students to end any form of bullying is necessary and should be welcomed.  Perhaps the family groups who are upset about the event should look at it as a student-driven effort to end bullying, especially against a group where it remains "OK" to discriminate and abuse members of the gay community.

Nebraska Passes Abortion Law That Requires Screening

Nebraska has passed new legislation that will surely bring much debate and challenge on the abortion front.  From The Mercury News (emphasis added):

New pre-abortion requirements passed in Neb.


LINCOLN, Neb.—Nebraska could become the first state to require doctors to screen women for possible mental and physical problems before performing abortions under a bill that received final approval from the nonpartisan Legislature on Monday. 
Republican Gov. Dave Heineman's office said Monday he will sign the bill Tuesday, along with another groundbreaking abortion measure lawmakers are expected to pass then. That bill would ban abortions after 20 weeks based on the assertion that fetuses feel pain. 


Both bills are likely to be challenged in court. Abortion rights activists describe the measure passed Monday as a drastic shift in abortion policy that would block abortions by scaring doctors who might perform them. They say the second bill is aimed at blocking late-term abortions in one of the few states where there's a doctor willing to perform them.


Abortion foes defend both bills. They say the one passed Monday could help prevent post-abortion medical problems and brings pre-abortion screenings in line with what is done before other types of medical procedures.


The bill requires a doctor or other health professional to screen women to determine whether they were pressured into having abortions. Doctors also must assess whether women have risk factors that could lead to mental or physical problems after an abortion. 


The bill is unusual, however, in spelling out what doctors must look for. They include any risk factors cited in peer-reviewed journals indexed by two major medical and scientific listing services during the year before a planned abortion. The risks could be "physical, psychological, emotional, demographic, or situational," according to the bill. 
...

Doctors would have to tell patients whether they had any of the risk factors cited in the journals, but they could perform abortions even if risk factors existed. 

If a screening was not done, a woman could file a civil suit. Doctors would not face criminal charges, nor would they lose their medical licenses.

Abortion opponents acknowledge that it could reduce the number of abortions in the state, which numbered 2,551 last year. 

Planned Parenthood of Heartland will "figure out a way to make this work" and continue providing abortions, spokeswoman Julie Stauch said. But doctors at some hospitals might stop, she said.

Women already undergo an extensive screening for medical problems that might be complicated by an abortion and the procedure isn't performed if the risks are too great, Planned Parenthood officials said. With the new requirements, women could be overwhelmed by a flood of possibly irrelevant information, Stauch said.

She likened it to being handed an enormous list of options by a doctor after being told you might have cancer.

"Does it make your decision easier or harder? And does it make it harder for valid reasons?" she said.

Sunday, April 11, 2010

Russian Soccer Fans Cheer Christ's Resurrection at Easter Day Match

The Gospel is surely making its way throughout the world and even (re)-infiltrating former Communist strongholds.  First, there was the post I made at my faith blog Only A Mustard Seed about China's demand being so great for the Bible that publishers cannot keep up.  Now, there's this great YouTube clip of Russian soccer fans at an Easter Day match:



From Interfax --

Fans greet each other on Easter at soccer match in Moscow

Moscow, April 5, Interfax - Fans greeted each other on Easter at a Sunday evening soccer match at Moscow Lokomotiv stadium.

At the beginning of the second half of the match thousands of fans of Dynamo team started chanting "Christ is Risen!", an Interfax correspondent reports.

Thousands of fans of Lokomotiv teeam on the opposite side of the stadium responded by chanting "Truly He is Risen!"

The exchange took place several times.

The correspondent who has attended soccer matches for almost 50 years says it was the occurrence of this kind in the history of Russian soccer.
[I'm not sure if that last line should read "the first occurrence of its kind."]  

April 15th: TEA PARTYYYYY!!!!!!!!

I just read this over at GatewayPundit ...
Saturday, April 10, 2010, 12:05 AM
Jim Hoft
**** St. Louis Tax Day Tea Party Event ****

Last year thousands turned out at the St. Louis Tax Day Tea Party…



A view of the St. Louis Tax Day Tea Party in 2009. According to hench.net St. Louis had the fifth largest Tax Day protest in the country last year. Over half a million Americans attended tea party events across the country on Tax Day.

This year we want to build on that success.

What: St. Louis Tax Day Tea Party Event

When: April 15th 6:30 PM to 7:30 PM

Where: Memorial Park in downtown Clayton at the corner of Central and Carondelet next to the courts building.

Who: The St. Louis Tea Party

Speakers: Bill Hennessy, Dana Loesch, Gina Loudon, Jim Hoft, Fred Sauer, John Burns. (More to be announced)

Please pass this on and promote this event.
Thanks.
SPREAD THE WORD!!!!

Arab "Idol" Contestant Publicly Criticizes Extremist Clerics

I wonder if this brave lady is still alive ...  From FoxNews via The New York Post (emphasis added):

Brave 'Arab Idol' Finalist Blasts Clerics on Popular Show

A burqa-clad contestant on the Arabic version of "American Idol" landed in the finals after bravely blasting hard-line Muslim clerics on live television, sparking outrage among religious conservatives in the Middle East.

Unlike the wildly popular Fox show, contestants in the Middle Eastern version recite traditional and original poetry rather than sing.

While most regale the audience with odes to the beauty of Bedouin life and glory of their rulers, Hissa Hilal stunned audiences last week by attacking Muslim religious leaders as "vicious in voice, barbaric, angry and blind," and guilty of "preying like a wolf" on people seeking peace.

She specifically blasted fatwas -- declarations by imams that often incite violence -- as a side of the extremism that is "creeping into our society."

"I have seen the evil in the eyes of fatwas, at a time when the permitted is being twisted into the forbidden," Hilal recited, speaking with only a hint of her eyes visible through her black veil.

Naturally, her verse has inspired numerous death threats on Islamic militant Web sites.
But her brave words clearly tapped a nerve, as she was wildly cheered by the audience and voted into the competition's final round.

"My poetry has always been provocative," said Hilal, a housewife and mother of four from Saudi Arabia. "It's a way to express myself and give voice to Arab women, silenced by those who have hijacked our culture and our religion."

Her poem was specifically seen as a direct assault on a prominent Saudi cleric who issued a fatwa against those who call for the mingling of men and women. More broadly, Hilal was also seen as attacking all the hard-line religious leaders who have widespread influence throughout the Middle East.

"Killing a human being is so easy for them, it is always an option," she said.

Hilal said she is concerned by the threats, but "not enough to send me into hiding."

She worries more whether her newfound fame might turn her life upside-down -- facing a fate like that of "Britain's Got Talent" songbird Susan Boyle, who melted down under the spotlight.

"I worry how I will be perceived after the show is over, when judgment is passed and people begin to talk about my performance and ideas," she said. "I worry the lights of fame will affect my simple and quiet existence."

Poetry is hugely popular in Middle Eastern countries, with prominent poets rising to rock-star levels of fame.

On the show, which is called "The Million's Poet" and is broadcast from Abu Dhabi across the entire region, contestants are rated by their voice, style of recitation and the subject matter.

The judges gave Hilal top marks for her impassioned performance and tackling a controversial topic. Their opinions, coupled with voting from people in the audience and through text messages by viewers, landed her in the final round.

"Hissa Hilal is a courageous poet," said judge Sultan al-Amimi, who manages Abu Dhabi's Poetry Academy. "She expressed her opinion against the kind of fatwas that affect people's lives and raised an alarm against these ad hoc fatwas coming from certain scholars who are inciting extremism."
What a brave lady!  May the Lord protect her!

Haiti: UN Spends $10 Million to House Relief Workers on Cruise Ships

More U.N. zaniness ... and here's the kicker: some of it is going to a company linked to Hugo Chavez.  From FoxNews (emphasis added):

With Haiti in Ruins, Some U.N. Relief Workers Live Large on 'Love Boat'

The U.N. is spending over $10 million to house some of its Haiti relief workers on a pair of chartered cruise ships -- one of which has been dubbed the "Love Boat" by U.N. staff -- and some of the funds are going to a company closely linked to the government of Venezuelan strongman Hugo Chavez.

For the United Nations World Food Program, it was a moment of satisfaction: the U.N.'s flagship relief agency announced on its Web site on March 19 that two gleaming passenger ships had docked in ravaged Port au Prince harbor.

What the Web site announcement did not disclose was that the vessels were intended to house not homeless Haitian refugees, but employees of the U.N. itself. Nor did it publicize the cost of leasing the ships: $112,500 a day. Nor did it mention that one of the vessels is owned by a company closely linked to the government of Venezuelan strongman President Hugo Chavez.

Another thing not mentioned: Even U.N. staffers regularly refer to one of the ships as "the Love Boat."

Then the WFP apparently had second thoughts about the whole announcement.

A slideshow photo essay had shown the two vessels, the Ola Esmeralda and the Sea Voyager, at berths near the earthquake-shattered Haitian capital. Then the photos and the story disappeared, not only from the home page but apparently from the WFP's public news story Web archive. The official explanation from a WFP spokesman: "Photos, text and video material are regularly being added and removed from WFP's Web site as stories are refreshed, restructured and replaced."

For whatever reason, WFP had decided that less was more when it came to publicizing the presence of the two vessels.

But that did not change the fact of their presence. And even while deep-sixing its previous publicity, the use of the ships as accommodation for many of the U.N.'s international staff was passionately defended in a telephone interview with Fox News by Edmond Mulet, head of the Haiti peacekeeping contingent, known by its acronym MINUSTAH, and also Special Representative in Haiti of U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon. (Ban's Special Envoy to Haiti is former President Bill Clinton.)

"It is the least we could do for them," Mulet, a former Guatemalan diplomat, told Fox News about the U.N. staffers. "They are working 14, 16 hours a day. The place was pulverized. Living conditions are really appalling."

In a city where much of the housing was destroyed by the earthquake, U.N. staffers' amenities aboard the two passenger ships include laundry service, catered food, hot showers and beds with fresh linens for subsidized rates of $40 per day for WFP staffers, and half that for officials of MINUSTAH.

Accommodation aboard the two ships could best be described as comfortable if not luxurious — and far better than conditions a few hundred yards from their moorings, where hundreds of relief workers, some 9,000 U.N. peacekeepers and police, and huge numbers of Haiti's 9.5 million people are sleeping in tents or on bare floors — or worse — after the devastating Jan. 12 earthquake.

Mulet says the use of the shipboard cabins by U.N. personnel is "strictly voluntary," and many decide not to use them. "Not all the cabins are full," he declares. (Mulet himself says he lives in the U.N.'s major military camp with the predominately Brazilian peacekeeping forces.)
...

Additionally, the ships are used as reception areas for visiting dignitaries, including, recently, Brazilian President Luiz Inacio ("Lula") da Silva.

The mass of Haitian civilians, however, are not among those invited to stay. "I think they understand," says Mulet. "They have gone through the same trauma themselves. They know we are there to provide shelter for them."

Mulet compares the situation to what occurs when "oxygen masks come down in a falling plane. The first thing you do is put them on yourself."

"You have to be in good shape in order to help the Haitians."
...
The WFP is renting the 286-foot, 5,000-ton Sea Voyager (capacity: about 220 passengers) for $35,000 per day, plus a whopping additional $5,000 daily for fuel. Total for 90 days: $3,600,000.

If every cabin were full, the average daily cost to the U.N. for the fully-loaded Sea Voyager would be about $181.81 per passenger — minus the $40 or $20 paid by each U.N. staffer who stays in a cabin.

The 480-foot, 11,000-ton Ola Esmeralda — which now operates directly under the administrative auspices of MINUSTAH — is renting for $72,500 per day, all costs included.

Total for 90 days: $6,525,000. Average cost per passenger per day (the vessel accommodates 470 plus crew): about $154.25, minus the staff contributions.
...
If this hasn't yet made you spit out your coffee, there's plenty more to be read of the original article here.

Saturday, April 10, 2010

Obamaconomy: No Money Left for the Grandkids

[Thanks for this little gem, Mom!]
John G. Is 63 years old and owns a small business. He's a life-long Republican and sees his dream of retiring next year has all but evaporated. With the stock market crashing and new taxes coming his way, John assumes now that he will work to his dying day.
 
John has a granddaughter. Ashley is a recent college grad. She drives a flashy hybrid car, wears all the latest fashions, and loves to go out to nightclubs and restaurants. Ashley campaigned hard for Barack Obama. After the election she made sure her grandfather (and all other Republican family members) received a big I told-you-so earful on how the world is going to be a much better place now that her party is taking over.
 
Having lost both roommates, Ashley recently ran short of cash and cannot pay the rent (again) on her 3 bedroom townhouse... Like she has done many times in the past, she e-mailed her grandfather asking for some financial help.
 
Here is his reply:


Sweetheart, I received your request for assistance.
 
Ashley, you know I love you dearly and I 'm sympathetic to your financial plight. Unfortunately, times have changed. With the election of President Obama, your grandmother and I have had to set forth a bold new economic plan of our own...."The Ashley Economic Empowerment Plan." Let me explain.
 
Your grandmother and I are life-long, wage-earning tax payers. We have lived a comfortable life, as you know, but we have never had the fancier things like European vacations, luxury cars, etc.. We have worked hard and were looking forward to retiring soon. But the plan has changed. Your president is raising our personal and business taxes significantly. He says it is so he can give our hard earned money to other people. Do you know what this means, Ashley? It means less for us, and we must cut back on many business and personal expenses.
 
You know the wonderful receptionist who worked in my office for more than 23 years? The one who always gave you candy when you came over to visit? I had to let her go last week. I can't afford to pay her salary and all of the government mandated taxes that go with having employees. Your grandmother will now work 4 days a week to answer phones, take orders and handle the books. We will be closed on Fridays and will lose even more income to the Wal-Mart.
 
I'm also very sorry to report that your cousin Frank will no longer be working summers in the warehouse. I called him at school this morning. He already knows about it and he's upset because he will have to give up skydiving and his yearly trip to Greenland to survey the polar bears.
 
That's just the business side of things. Some personal economic effects of Obama's new taxation policies include none other than you You know very well that over the years your grandmother and I have given you thousands of dollars in cash, tuition assistance, food, housing, clothing, gifts, etc., etc. But by your vote, you have chosen to help others -- not at your expense -- but at our expense.
 
If you need money now sweetheart, I recommend you call 202-456-1111. That is the direct phone number for the White House... You can also contact the White House here: http://www.whitehouse.gov/CONTACT/ .
 
You yourself told me how foolish it is to vote Republican.. You said Mr Obama is going to be the People's President, and is going to help every American live a better life. Based on everything you've told me, along with all the promises we heard during the campaign, I'm sure Mr. Obama will be happy to transfer some stimulus money into your bank account. Have him call me for the account number which I memorized years ago..
 
Perhaps you can now understand what I've been saying all my life: those who vote for a president should consider the impact on the nation as a whole, and not be just concerned with what they can get for themselves. What Obama supporters don't seem to realize is all of the money he is redistributing to illegal aliens and non-taxpaying Americans (the so-called "less fortunate") comes from tax-paying families.
 
Remember how you told me, "Only the richest of the rich will be aff ected"? Well guess what, honey? Because we own a business, your grandmother and I are now considered to be the richest of the rich. On paper, it might look that way, but in the real world, we are far from it.
 
As you said while campaigning for Obama, some people will have to carry more of the burden so all of America can prosper... You understand what that means, right? It means that raising taxes on productive people results in them having less money; less money for everything, including granddaughters.
 
I'm sorry, Ashley, but the well has run dry.. The free lunches are over.. I have no money to give you now. So, congratulations on your choice for "change." For future reference, I encourage you to try and add up the total value of the gifts and cash you have received from us, just since you went off to college, and compare it to what you expect to get from Mr. Obama over the next 4 (or 8) years. I have not kept track of it, Ashley. It has all truly been the gift of our hearts.
 
Remember, we love you dearly....but from now on you'll need to call the number mentioned above. Your "Savior" has the money we would have given to you. Just try and get it from him.
 
Good luck, sweetheart.

Love, Grandpa 
We are now only beginning to see the repercussions of the naively idealistic dreamers who voted for Mr. Hope-N-Change.  I wonder how many young Americans are like Ashley ...

Wednesday, April 7, 2010

Tea Party: A Growing Movement, Including Among Blacks

I was pleasantly surprised to read that the Tea Party is gathering momentum and going mainstream with the American Public.   Check this out (emphasis added):
Tea Party Going Mainstream? Polls Suggest Movement Gaining in Popularity

Tea Partiers have been dismissed as a fringe, but two new polls suggest the conservative movement might be going mainstream.

A Rasmussen poll released Monday found more Americans identify with the Tea Party groups than with President Obama. 

According to the survey, 48 percent of voters said the average Tea Party activist is more aligned with their views on major issues than the president. Forty-four percent said Obama's views are closer to theirs.

That came on top of a USA Today/Gallup poll that found more than a quarter of Americans affiliate themselves with the Tea Party movement. 

The poll of 1,033 adults, conducted March 26-28, found 28 percent of people call themselves Tea Party supporters, while 26 percent call themselves opponents.

The survey also found that Tea Party supporters are not disproportionately dominated by any one demographic group. The characteristics of Tea Party supporters -- in age, education, income and race -- roughly follow the characteristics of the nation as a whole. 

The Gallup poll had a margin of error of 4 percentage points.

The Rasmussen poll of 1,000 likely voters was taken April 2-3. It had a margin of error of 3 percentage points.
Now, I'm sure one could argue that FoxNews continually portrays the Tea Party movement in a positive light, especially compared to the rest of the MSM's representations of the adherents. But, the two polls by Rasmussen and Gallup are impressive.

Black Tea Party activists, unfortunately, are met with prejudice by the Black community, frequently being labeled as "sell-outs", "traitors", and "Uncle Toms".  Some have even been asked "How could you not support the brother?"

Here's the story from the AP via FoxNews about the difficulties Blacks face due to their involvement in the Tea Party movement (emphasis added): 
Black Tea Party Activists Called "Traitors" 

Black conservatives are really taking heat for their involvement in the mostly white tea party movement — and for having the audacity to oppose the policies of the nation's first black president.

ALBANY, N.Y. – They've been called Oreos, traitors and Uncle Toms, and are used to having to defend their values. Now black conservatives are really taking heat for their involvement in the mostly white tea party movement — and for having the audacity to oppose the policies of the nation's first black president.

"I've been told I hate myself. I've been called an Uncle Tom. I've been told I'm a spook at the door," said Timothy F. Johnson, chairman of the Frederick Douglass Foundation, a group of black conservatives who support free market principles and limited government.

"Black Republicans find themselves always having to prove who they are. Because the assumption is the Republican Party is for whites and the Democratic Party is for blacks," he said.

Johnson and other black conservatives say they were drawn to the tea party movement because of what they consider its commonsense fiscal values of controlled spending, less taxes and smaller government. The fact that they're black — or that most tea partyers are white — should have nothing to do with it, they say.

"You have to be honest and true to yourself. What am I supposed to do, vote Democratic just to be popular? Just to fit in?" asked Clifton Bazar, a 45-year-old New Jersey freelance photographer and conservative blogger.

Opponents have branded the tea party as a group of racists hiding behind economic concerns — and reports that some tea partyers were lobbing racist slurs at black congressmen during last month's heated health care vote give them ammunition.

But these black conservatives don't consider racism representative of the movement as a whole — or race a reason to support it.
...

Black conservatives don't want to have to apologize for their divergent views.

"I've gotten the statement, 'How can you not support the brother?'" said David Webb, an organizer of New York City's Tea Party 365, Inc. movement and a conservative radio personality.
...
Among the 37 black Republicans running for U.S. House and Senate seats in November is Charles Lollar of Maryland's 5th District.

A tea party supporter running against House Majority Leader Steny Hoyer, D-Md., Lollar says he's finding support in unexpected places.

The 38-year-old U.S. Marine Corps reservist recently walked into a bar in southern Maryland decorated with a Confederate flag. It gave his wife Rosha pause.

"I said, 'You know what, honey? Many, many of our Southern citizens came together under that flag for the purpose of keeping their family and their state together,'" Lollar recalled. "The flag is not what you're to fear. It's the stupidity behind the flag that is a problem. I don't think we'll find that in here. Let's go ahead in."

Once inside, they were treated to a pig roast, a motorcycle rally — and presented with $5,000 in contributions for his campaign.
...
I'm sure Liberals have their panties in a wad over Blacks not conforming to the Liberal idea of how Blacks should live their lives and how they should think politically.

There's a survey from The Hill that shows that 4 in 10 Tea Partiers are Democrats or Independents!  This means that the Tea Party Movement is even beginning to cross ideological divides:
Four in 10 Tea Party members are either Democrats or Independents, according to a new national survey.

The findings provide one of the most detailed portraits to date of the grassroots movement that started last year. 

The national breakdown of the Tea Party composition is 57 percent Republican, 28 percent Independent and 13 percent Democratic, according to three national polls by the Winston Group, a Republican-leaning firm that conducted the surveys on behalf of an education advocacy group. 

Two-thirds of the group call themselves conservative, 26 are moderate and 8 percent say they are liberal. 

The Winston Group conducted three national telephone surveys of 1,000 registered voters between December and February. Of those polled, 17 percent – more than 500 people -- said they were “part of the Tea Party movement.”

“It’s a good sample size,” said David Winston, the polling firm’s director. “It will certainly give us an initial base to follow where these folks are.”

The group is united around two issues – the economy/jobs and reducing the deficit. They believe that cutting spending is the key to job creation and favor tax cuts as the best way to stimulate the economy. That said 61 percent of Tea Party members believe infrastructure spending creates jobs. Moreover, given the choice Tea Party members favor 63-32 reducing unemployment to 5 percent over balancing the budget.
...

The group also vehemently dislikes President Barack Obama – even more so than those who called themselves Republicans in the survey. Over 80 percent of Tea Party members disapprove of the job he’s doing as president, whereas 77 percent of Republican respondents said they disapprove of Obama. The Tea Party members are also strongly opposed to the Democrats’ healthcare plan, with 82 percent saying they oppose it --  only 48 percent of respondents overall were opposed.

Tea Party members are more likely to be male, slightly older and middle income. Almost half the members of the group reported getting their news about national issues from Fox News, 10 percent of respondents said that talk radio is one of their top two sources, which is seven-points higher than the average voter.
I'm sure the Lefties won't like that FoxNews thing .... Party on, Tea Partiers! 

Monday, April 5, 2010

Renovation Rampage!!!!!

Sorry I've been AWOL lately.  I've started on renovating my house ... well, hiring people to do it.  So, things are just crazy!!!  Hopefully, those of you who actually take the time to read my random ramblings won't abandon me.  I invite you to peruse my older stuff and check back occasionally for when I've started posting again. 

By the way, bamboo flooring is BEAUTIFUL!!!!!  The carpenter is about half-way done.  Then, I hope to get new siding and windows.  New bathrooms would be nice, too, but the siding will probably eat up the rest of my home equity loan.  I first had to start with some not-so-sexy things: getting the leaky basement and roof repaired.

Thursday, April 1, 2010

NSRC: "Democrats' Rainbows & Unicorns"

The National Senatorial Republican Committee (NSRC) had this video on their website today ... just in time for April Fool's Day ...



NRSC Launches New Web Ad: “Democrats’ Rainbows & Unicorns”

Thursday, April 01, 2010 @ 10:04 AM

As voters mark April Fools’ Day, the National Republican Senatorial Committee (NRSC) launched a new Web ad entitled “Democrats’ Rainbows & Unicorns,” highlighting President Barack Obama’s ill-fated “hoaxes” on taxpayers and broken campaign promises, which have led to runaway government spending, skyrocketing unemployment, and a bureaucratic takeover of America’s health care.

The NRSC’s new Web ad warns voters not to be fooled by the empty promises from President Obama and the Democrats in Congress, who continue to push their unpopular and deeply flawed spending agenda in Washington at taxpayers’ expense.

Tax Party Drafts Platform in Time for Tax Day

This is exciting news ... from FoxNews (emphasis added):

Tea Partiers Draft 'Contract From America' to Tackle Country's Problems

Echoing the Republican Revolution of 1994, Tea Party activists are crafting a document that expresses the beliefs, values and ideas on how to solve the country's biggest problems.

Tea Party activists, echoing the Republicans who took control of Congress in 1994, are crafting a document that expresses their beliefs, values and ideas on how to solve the country's biggest problems.

The Tea Party Movement will unveil the full "Contract from America" on April 15, Tax Day. But on Thursday, Tea Partiers released the top three planks of the platform, which were determined by an online vote.

The top priority, chosen by 80.7 percent of respondents, is to protect the Constitution. This would require each bill to identify the specific provision of the Constitution that gives Congress the power to do what the bill does.

The second priority, selected by 70.8 percent, is to reject President Obama's climate change legislation, otherwise known as "cap and trade."

The third priority is demand a balanced budget – chosen by 69.9 percent. This calls for starting a constitutional amendment process to require a balanced budget with a two-thirds majority needed for any tax hike.

The priorities were chosen from a list of 21 issues that included "stop the tax hikes," "commit to real government transparency," "no more bailouts," and "stop the pork."

Clearly, the Tea Party Movement is hoping to capitalize on its success of mobilizing disaffected Americans who are fed up with government spending, bailouts and Obama's policies.

In 1994, Newt Gingrich released the "Contract with America," a document that detailed the actions Republicans would take if they regained control of Congress. After elections that year, Republicans saw a net gain of 54 seats in the House, giving them control of the chamber for the first time in 40 years.
Gee, I don't see any mention of adopting racist views or suggesting donning white gowns with pointy hoods.  I guess this will horribly disappoint the Left and the MSM ... but I'm sure they'll generate some B.S. about the contract.  (I do recall Gingrich's "Contract with America" ... the Left back then poked fun at it, calling it the "contract ON America.")