Sunday, January 31

Hang on. Help is on the way...

We'll be there as fast as we can...
~ Little River Band.


Plans for Airlift of Injured Haitians on Hold
By JOSEPH BERGER

The White House said Sunday it was working on a plan to resume a U.S. military airlift of Haitians seriously injured in the earthquake — some with devastating burns, head and spinal chord trauma, amputations and other wounds — to American hospitals. The humanitarian effort was suspended five days ago following complaints from the state of Florida that its hospitals were overwhelmed.

Thomas F. Vietor, a spokesman for the White House, said he hoped a plan for the critically injured could be announced within a matter of hours, but declined to comment further.

Break-your-heart thank you note...

With love, from Haiti:

By Philippe Clérié,
Port-au-Prince

As I write this, it has been 10 days since the earthquake of Port-au-Prince. The international response has been nothing short of phenomenal. The search-and-rescue operation is beginning to wind down now, and the teams carrying that out will soon be sent home. I cannot claim to write in the name of the Haitian people; that’s President René Préval’s job and privilege, even if he sometimes does not seem to understand that. But I do want to thank the people of the Washington region, and all the world, for their help and care during this catastrophe.

I have spent the past few days serving as a guide and interpreter for a rescue task force from Fairfax County. I have seen their dedication and their eagerness to go looking for survivors. I have seen their persistence when searching, their insistence on following every possible lead in an effort to save lives, despite all the frustrations, particularly with transportation problems and the horrendous traffic jams. I want to thank all the team members for their dedication and their courage. I thank Fairfax County and the governor of Virginia for allowing them to come, the president of the United States for asking them to come, and the people of the United States for being so generous.

The Fairfax rescuers were considerate, patient, caring. When we were idle, waiting for an assignment, there always were several people who would ask me if I needed anything. Water? A meal? And there were those moments when they would come up to thank me. All I did, really, was say: “Turn right,” “Turn left” and “Go straight” at the proper time. And yet they would thank me for helping. It was horribly embarrassing, considering all that they were doing. What I did was the least I could do. Literally. That was the only thing I was qualified for. And that hurt, because I so wished I could do more.

I hope more Haitians will come forward and in turn be generous with their thanks. Every single individual who left his or her normal life to come to Haiti deserves every bit of thanks we can give. It feels like it’s about the only thing we have left to give.

Thank you, Fairfax.

Better to be liked, or respected?

President Obama obviously chooses to be liked, rather than respected, for his job performance during troubling times. So much going on this weekend: leadership needed re. those Haiti flights; disturbing news out of China. The economy, stupid.

But Mr. Likeable had time to joke about where his career will be going in 3, or maybe 7 years. He is who he is, so I can't be upset at somebody who got in way over his head, and now is just trying to stay sane on the job.

Nope, nothing against him. But 10 lashes with a wet noodle for all you adults who should have known better. Elevating an untested, inexperienced politician for the top job in the land (especially coming after 8 years when you think we might have learned a thing or two...) just to make history by electing a biracial man as The First Black President. Shame on those who voted for him out of a likeability feeling ("he reminds me of my son") instead of evaluating from his past how fit he was for the presidential job.

How long will it take now for another Black President (especially a non-light-skinned one, since the liberals are finally copping to their own prejudices in terms of diversity comfortableness) to be elected -- even an obviously more qualified and experienced black person?

The trouble is: as voters, our job is to research and evaluate the candidates' promises before we put them in the job. A 4-year tenure (mabye 8?) is an awfully long time to flounder under a leader who's obviously in it for himself, and who will turn up on top himself no matter where he leads (or neglects to lead) the country in that time.

PR-wise, this president was supposed to be savvy. But I wonder. After Scott Brown's victory, the next appearance I saw him, the President was tie-less. That's a little thing sure. Not many men around me wear a tie regularly, but they're not presidential caliber either; I think Obama was trying to up his popularity via the everyday guy likeability factor.

But Mister? For better or worse, you're the President now. The President of the United States. Please, in public on business, would it kill you to step up to the position and put on a tie, like it's serious and all?

And I'm sure there will be plenty of time later to call ballgames, and participate publicly in the fun stuff, the extras that come with being president. But let's take care of business first -- the country's business that you as top dog are leading? Please, don't take those bailed-out CEOs as examples to emulate, in walking away prosperous yourself while everybody counting on you not to decimate their own futures is sorely disappointed and left holding the bag.

Thanks, and as always, good luck Mr. President. Yes you can. Can try at least, and stop the nonsense "retirement" talk when, for better or worse, there are still 3 years left on your earlier commitment...

Shortly after the second half began, the president was seated between CBS announcers Verne Lundquist and Clark Kellogg. Obama, an avid fan of the sport who often plays pickup games, seemed to impress the pair.

After Obama niftily described a spin move and basket by one player, Kellogg told him he could handle the job of announcing.

"After retirement, I'm coming after your job, Clark," Obama replied. "I'm just letting you know. So you either have three more years or seven more years," he said, referring to the possibility that he might be re-elected to a second term.

Saturday, January 30

What is up with Andrew Young?

Not Atlanta's former mayor. The fella who wrote one of those "book" exposés, detailing his work on the John Edwards campaign.

Sorry, but something smells funny to me. Did he love John himself? What kind of man goes to those extents to cover for another? Cleaning up after affairs, alleging you were the baby daddy? Scoring poopy diapers for DNA?

Edwards always seemed a bit ... off to me. And until I learned of their meeting in law school, like Bill and Hill, I could never see those two (John and Elizabeth) together.

Andrew Young might be cashing in here, but the more I learn about the situation, the more I wonder about him. Putting together an obviously destroyed sex tape, just to have the goods on the boss? Hmmm... that sounds petty, like a scorned girlfriend more than a caring employee.

Just a thought.

"It's great to be alive."

Seems Tim Tebow isn't the first pro-life football player to openly express his views. Check out this 1989 anti-abortion video featuring New York Giants players.

Remember kids...

Only 28 days 'til the American Birkebeiner.

Strap on those skiis, pull out your cowbells, and come join the crowd! Weekend athletes are welcome, to race or just learn more.

About the Birkie: Celebrating its 37th year, the American Birkebeiner (1-800-USA-BRKE; www.birkie.com), February 25-27, 2010, is the largest and most prestigious cross country ski marathon in North America. Spanning more than 50 kilometers from Cable to Hayward, the Birkie is part of the Worldloppet series of 15 international races, and part of the lives of citizen skiers from around the world. Sponsors of Birkie include Subaru, Becker Law, Johnson Bank, Swiss Miss, Salomon, Hammer Energy, Sawyer County Record and other businesses throughout the region and country. Find out more at http://www.birkie.com or call 715/634-5025.

More follow up.

A good reminder: bigger is not better when you need to be swift, targeted, and flexible in working with what you've got to help where you can. Bigger, for the most part = ... s l o w e r.

By SHAILA DEWAN and LIZ ROBBINS

MIAMI — Days after the United States military suspended medical evacuations of critically injured earthquake victims from Haiti, officials in Washington continued to search for ways to resume the flights on Saturday, including looking to states beyond Florida, which has taken in most of the patients.

The military flights — usually C-130s carrying Haitians with spinal cord injuries, burns and other serious wounds — ended on Wednesday and even as officials worked through the weekend to get them started again, there was confusion over why the flights were halted in the first place.

“There has been no policy position from anyone to suspend evacuee flights,” said Tommy Vietor, a White House spokesman. “This situation arose as we started to run out of room.”

Florida officials, including the governor, offered other reasons.

John Cherry, the external affairs director of Florida’s Division of Emergency Management, said that the state was willing to take the patients, but that the flights stopped after Gov. Charlie Crist asked the federal government to coordinate flight plans and to ensure that the state would eventually be reimbursed for assisting the federal effort.

“There’s a lack of coordinated response from the federal government on this,” Mr. Cherry said in a telephone interview on Saturday. “We don’t know who’s in charge. They take it up their chain and it seems like things are going to a black hole. We’re saying, ‘let’s coordinate.’


Tick tock... tick tock... Time really is of the essence in situations like this. Where is the leadership to get those flights started up again, if indeed America finds we can still afford to help?

Blame game.

Following up, it seems it's politicking and poor communication led to the stoppage of the military transports bearing needy Haitians to hospitals here:

South Florida hospital spokespeople strongly denied Saturday that their facilities are refusing to take more trauma patients from Haiti, leaving them to die at field hospitals in the earthquake-ravaged country.

Military planes stopped flying the injured to Florida on Wednesday, after Gov. Charlie Crist wrote to Kathleen Sebelius, secretary of Health and Human Services, asking the federal government for help covering millions of dollars in care that hospitals around the state are providing, the New York Times reported in Saturday's editions.

Crist pointed out that Florida hospitals were ``at capacity.'

Friday, Maj. James Lowe, deputy chief of public affairs for the United States Transportation Command, told the Times that ``the places they were being taken, without being specific, were not willing to continue to receive those patients without a different arrangement being worked out by the government to pay for the care.'

Not so, said Dr. William O'Neill, executive dean of clinical affairs at the University of Miami's Miller School of Medicine.
...
He estimated that the treatment for about 50 patients brought to Ryder Trauma center would range from $50,000-$100,000, and called the dustup between the state and the feds ``a little bit of a power contest... to see who will blink first.'

In an e-mail to members on Friday, Jaime S. Caldwell, vice president of the South Florida Hospital and Healthcare Association, seemed to blame Crist.

``We are beginning to hear that hospitals are being identified as the reason for the Governor's decision to discontinue the medical flights from Haiti. And, the reason being given is that hospital's wanted to know how they were going to get paid,' Caldwell wrote.

``I have been active in this effort since the beginning. At no time have I heard any hospital in Southeast Florida say that they wouldn't take a Haitian earthquake survivor because of financial reasons. On the contrary. At every point along the way the healthcare industry has been advised to rigorously document their expenses associated with the care provided to these unfortunate patients and that efforts were underway to determine financial responsibility.

``At no time did any hospital say, `Don't send any more to us because we aren't getting paid!' '
...
Saturday, during a Tampa street-festival breakfast, Crist said that the intent of his letter to HHS was to say that ``we need help from our federal friends. Florida, because of its proximity to Haiti, is really bearing the brunt of this, and we're happy to do that, but if our sister states and the federal government could help -- that was the intent.'

It was not, he continued, ``to stop anything. We're humanitarians.'

Pants on the floor. Healthcare at the door.

Charles Blow joins the current cool crowd in explaining that Americans aren't rejecting the proposed health care reform on the merits, just that they don't properly understand it.

According to a survey released this week by the Pew Research Center for the People and the Press, only 1 person in 4 knew that 60 votes are needed in the Senate to break a filibuster and only 1 in 3 knew that no Senate Republicans voted for the health care bill.

And, according to an NBC News/Wall Street Journal survey released this week, while slightly more Americans blamed Republicans than Democrats for the political impasse in Washington, the percentage of people with negative feelings about the Republicans was the same as it was for the Democrats.

The message that voters take away is not nuanced: Democrats in control. Bill complicated. Republicans oppose. Politicians bicker. Progress stalls. Democrats failing.

Obama has to accept that today’s information environment is broad and shallow, and we now communicate in headline phrases, acerbic humor and ad hominem attacks. Sad but true.

We subsist on Twitter twaddle — a never-ending stream of ideas and idiocy, where emotions are rendered in anagrams and thoughts are amputated at 140 characters.

The most trusted “newsman” may well be a comedian (Jon Stewart), and stars of the “most trusted news network” (Fox) may well be a comedian’s dream.

The president must communicate within the environment he inhabits, not the one he envisions. The next time he gives a speech, someone should tap him on the ankle and say, “Mr. President, we’re down here.”*


I don't know. People are just communicating their thoughts in smaller, bite-sized portions. And they want to pay for what they choose to consume, not pick up the bill for others. Especially those others making health and lifestyle choices that people reject themselves and would not choose to pay for. Is that not clear enough for you?

Here, let me try to break it down in the style Blow is criticizing**:

Supersize Me. Subsidize me. Pro choice built on medical privacy? Individual health. Not one size fits all. C'mon brother, get on the ball. Heed the call -- it's time to stall. Cuz...

Public don't want this, please don't diss: We're thinking with our wallets, can't pay with just a kiss! Spend today no questions asked; cover everyone, nevermind their past. Medical history don't mean squat; surely everybody gets to keep all the medical care they got!

Rationing, see that's the thing. Up the customers, docs opt out: less care going around, more budgets shot. What about tomorrow? Don't ya's care? I hear the Chinese have learned to share: one child each, that's all we can afford. Would they honor our choices if they became our financial overlords?

Money really is at the root of it all; if you can't pay for these bills, better learn to stall... Nevermind "buy now, fix tomorrow". Take care of your health; save some sorrow. There's a better plan, to cover some not all. Don't force unconstitutional "choices" on those just starting to play ball...

Reform the system. Change the game. Pretending on the numbers: that's just lame.

I hope you can see: it's privacy. Pro choice in health care; baby that's me! Lots of ways to pay for those in need. Charities abound. Brother, please heed. Society's gone small, in many ways -- why grow the budget in these tight days?

Immigration reform first -- that makes sense. Invisible people here won't be stopped by a fence. They have needs, this plan doesn't address: medical bills unpaid and left. Care for people, help where you can. But don't bite off more than's chewable: that's no plan.

Who will pay? Spell it out. Will it really contain costs, or was somebody just paid at the front end to hype that shot? Tort reform? Maybe next year? Really controlling costs? For that we'd cheer!!!

----------------------------------
* [S]omeone should tap him on the ankle and say, “Mr. President, we’re down here". Please stop pissing on our heads and telling us it's raining. (?)

**Apologies in advance to the cultural purists. Remember these guys from way back in 1985?
We are the Bears Shufflin' Crew
Shufflin' on down, doin' it for you.
We're so bad we know we're good.
Blowin' your mind like we knew we would.
You know we're just struttin' for fun
Struttin' our stuff for everyone.
We're not here to start no trouble.
We're just here to do the Super Bowl Shuffle.

Walter Payton
Well, they call me Sweetness,
And I like to dance.
Runnin' the ball is like makin' romance.
We've had the goal since training camp
To give Chicago a Super Bowl Champ.
And we're not doin' this
Because we're greedy.
The Bears are doin' it to feed the needy.
We didn't come here to look for trouble,
We just came here to do
The Super Bowl Shuffle.

Willie Gault
This is Speedy Willie, and I'm world class.
I like runnin' but i love to get the pass.
I practice all day and dance all night,
I got to get ready for the Sunday fight.
Now I'm as smooth as a chocolate swirl,
I dance a little funky, so watch me girl.
There's not one here that does it like me,
My Super Bowl Shuffle will set you free.

Mike Singletary
I'm Samurai Mike I stop'em cold.
Part of the defense, big and bold,
I've been jammin' for quite a while,
Doin' what's right and settin' the style,
Give me a chance, I'll rock you good,
Nobody messin' in my neighborhood.
I didn't come here lookin' for trouble,
I just came to do The Super Bowl Shuffle

(Repeat Chorus)

Jim McMahon
I'm the punky QB, known as McMahon.
When I hit the turf, I've got no plan.
I just throw my body all over the field.
I can't dance, but I can throw the pill.
I motivate the cats, I like to tease.
I play so cool, I aim to please.
That's why you all got here on the double
To catch me doin' the Super Bowl Shuffle.

Otis Wilson
I'm mama's boy Otis, one of a kind.
The ladies all love me
For my body and my mind.
I'm slick on the floor as I can be
But ain't no sucker gonna get past me.
Some guys are jealous
Of my style and class,
That's why some end up on their -,
I didn't come here lookin' for trouble,
I just get down to The Super Bowl Shuffle.

Steve Fuller
They say Jimbo is our man.
If Jimmy can't do it, I sure can.
This is Steve, and it's no wonder
I run like lightnin', pass like thunder.
So bring on Atlanta, bring on Dallas,
This is for Mike and Papa Bear Halas.
I'm not here to feathers ruffle,
I just came here to do
The Super Bowl Shuffle.

Mike Richardson
I'm L.A. Mike, and I play it cool.
They don't sneak by me 'cause I'm no fool.
I fly on the field and get on down.
Everybody knows I don't mess around.
I can break'em, shake'em,
Any time of day.
I like to steal it and make 'em pay,
So please don't try to beat my hustle
'Cause I'm just here to do
The Super Bowl Shuffle.

(Repeat Chorus)

Richard Dent
The sackman's comin', I'm your man Dent.
if the quarterback's slow,
He's gonna get bent.
We stop the run, we stop the pass,
I like to dump guys on their -.
We love to play for the world's best fans,
You better start makin'
Your Super Bowl plans.
But don't get ready or go to any trouble
Unless you practice
The Super Bowl Shuffle.

Gary Fencik
It's Gary here, and I'm Mr.Clean.
They call me "hit man,"
Don't know what they mean.
They throw it long and watch me run,
I'm on my man, one-on-one.
Buddy's guys cover it down to the bone,
That's why they call us the 46 zone.
Come on everybody let's scream and yell,
We're goin' to do the Shuffle,
Then ring your bell.

William Perry
You're lookin' at the Fridge,
I'm the rookie.
I may be large, but I'm no dumb cookie.
You've seen me hit, you've seen me run,
When I kick and pass, we'll have more fun.
I can dance, you will see
The others, they all learn from me.
I don't come here lookin' for trouble,
I just came here to do
The Super Bowl Shuffle.


ADDED:
Here's another song on a quiet Sunday before the SuperBowl.

US sells to Taiwan; China to Pakistan.

Anybody forsee problems in the offing?*

JING (Reuters) — China threatened to impose sanctions on American arms contractors and cut cooperation with Washington unless it cancels a $6.4 billion arms sale to Taiwan, in an unprecedented move signaling Beijing’s growing global power.
...
“I think the price the United States pays will be heavier than the U.S. may have anticipated,” said Liu Jiangyong, professor of international security at Beijing’s Tsinghua University.

“The U.S. view that arms sales to Taiwan are just a momentary squall could be out-of-date,” he said. “Now longer-term cooperation could also be damaged.”

The Obama administration told the Congress on Friday of the proposed sales, which include Black Hawk helicopters, Patriot “Advanced Capability-3” anti-missile missiles and two refurbished Osprey-class mine-hunting ships.


And I thought we were trying to work with China on the Iran sanctions thing? Did we really need the money so bad right now, that selling weapons and picking a fight with China seemed to be in America's best interests?

Why rattle the cage? or, Why rattle the cage now, when the beast inside seems so strong comparable to our own country's finances?
-----------------
*Yes, they did:
(Dec.15) In the past week, Chinese officials and news organizations have expressed anger over reports that the Obama administration could notify Congress shortly of such arms sales. Notification is the final step in the process. American officials here say China could break off military-to-military contacts with the United States once notification is made. When the Pentagon announced in October 2008, under the Bush administration, that it was selling Taiwan $6.5 billion worth of weapons, China froze the military ties and did not resume the contacts until after Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton visited Beijing in February.


Let's hope the administration hasn't underplayed and underthought this one, like with Scott Brown's victory? Surprise sometimes swamps the best-intended plans...

Still following the news out of Haiti?

By SHAILA DEWAN

MIAMI — The United States has suspended its medical evacuations of critically injured Haitian earthquake victims until a dispute over who will pay for their care is settled, military officials said Friday.

The military flights, usually C-130s carrying Haitians with spinal cord injuries, burns and other serious wounds, ended on Wednesday after Gov. Charlie Crist of Florida formally asked the federal government to shoulder some of the cost of the care.

Hospitals in Florida have treated more than 500 earthquake victims so far, the military said, including an infant who was pulled out of the rubble with a fractured skull and ribs. Other states have taken patients, too, and those flights have been suspended as well, the officials said.
..
It was not clear on Friday who exactly was responsible for the interruption of flights, or the chain of events that led to the decision. Sterling Ivey, a spokesman for Mr. Crist, said the governor’s request for federal help might have caused “confusion.”

“Florida stands ready to assist our neighbors in Haiti, but we need a plan of action and reimbursement for the care we are providing,” Mr. Ivey said.

Mr. Crist’s request did not indicate how much the medical care was costing the State of Florida, but the number and complexity of the cases could put the total in the millions of dollars. The expenditure comes at a time when the state is suffering economically and Mr. Crist, a Republican, is locked in a tough primary battle for the Senate seat that had been held by Mel Martinez.
...
The Health and Human Services spokeswoman, Gretchen Michael, who works for the assistant secretary for preparedness and response, said the agency was reviewing Mr. Crist’s request for financial assistance. The request would involve activating the National Disaster Medical System, which is usually used in domestic disasters and which pays for victims’ care.

Some of the patients being airlifted from Haiti are American citizens and some are insured or eligible for insurance. But Haitians who are not legal residents of the United States can qualify for Medicaid only if they are given so-called humanitarian parole — in which someone is allowed into the United States temporarily because of an emergency — by United States Citizenship and Immigration Services.

Only 34 people have been given humanitarian parole for medical reasons, said Matthew Chandler, a spokesman for the Department of Homeland Security. The National Disaster Medical System, if activated, would cover the costs of caring for patients regardless of their legal status.

Some hospitals have made their own arrangements to accommodate victims of the earthquake, which occurred on Jan. 12. Jackson Health System, the public hospital system in Miami, treated 117 patients, 6 of whom were still in critical condition, said Jennifer Piedra, a spokeswoman. The system has established the Haiti’s Children Fund to cover the costs of treating pediatric earthquake victims.

...

Federal officials could not provide the total number of earthquake patients airlifted to the United States, but Florida seemed to have received the bulk of them.

In his letter, Mr. Crist outlined his state’s efforts to support the rescue effort, helping both the healthy and the sick streaming into the state. “Florida’s health care system is quickly reaching saturation,” he wrote.


I understand it's much better to try and fix Haiti in Haiti, not in American enclaves. But c'mon. Many patients will need advanced medical help. This is more a lack of organization and thinking, than a lack of funds surely. Why not ask hospitals throughout the country to "adopt" a high-needs Haitian patient, and process them locally for any federal benefits should they meet immigration categories, and better yet ... let the hospital charity care help cover the patient's costs.

Me? I can see community fundraisers, school competitive penny drives, church dinner fundraisers, even hospital employee bake sales to help a Haitian family locally. The American spirit of giving: people eat that stuff up.

I have to agree with Gail Collins, this morning discussing the country's wasted generosity impulses after 9-11. People like to help. People want to help. People don't like to be told it's all about money, and quickly turn off when they don't see their dollars donated doing much good. A personal one-to-one approach is more satisfying -- bring the most critically injured Haitians here, but don't dump them all in Florida. Like the Hmongs, and Vietnamese boat people, America's churches and local communities will step up and absorb newcomers, help them assimilate even (especially?) in extreme climes. (Think coat/boot donation drives.)

Sometimes instead of registering like on a gift registry, you have to take the help offered, and ask people truly to step up to the plate, not just impersonally sign a check, or publicly "challenge" their friends and neighbors to do likewise. Feels good for a minute maybe, but it kinda feeds into the bureacratic mess when everybody forgets it takes human compassion, planning, and thinking to accompany the money needed to get the job done, get the lives saved already.

Hope somebody in government is working a Saturday trying to resolve this one... Bad PR, at the very least.

Friday, January 29

Catch and release...

Riviera Beach style!

By BILL DIPAOLO
Palm Beach Post Staff Writer

RIVIERA BEACH — Ocean Reef Park is closed today after two fisherman caught a 9-foot-9-inch hammerhead shark on the north end of the public beach.

The fishermen, who were not identified, were fishing from shore. They released the shark before it was weighed, said Palm Beach County Lifeguard Don May.

Sharks have been gathering along the beach in the annual chase of baitfish. Lemon, bull and hammerheads often come close to shore, May said.


Picture at link.

Change kept a-rollin' all term long?

Nevermind the Obama-Alito faux theatrics,
Linda Greenhouse drops a nice line* in this essay examining where the Roberts court will go next, now that it's over the initial impulse to hold back and not make waves:

Three years ago, after Chief Justice John G. Roberts Jr. led the Supreme Court to the brink of overturning a few precedents but then blinked, a frustrated Justice Antonin Scalia accused the chief justice of “faux judicial restraint.”

It was foreseeable then that something would have to give: either the faux or the restraint. Now we know. Goodbye to restraint.
...
But while I’m unsure of the decision’s impact on the political system, I have no doubt about its impact on the Supreme Court itself: the Roberts court has lost its virginity.*

The question now is what the Roberts majority’s next target will be — where will the court’s raging judicial hormones lead it next, now that it has experienced the joy of overturning?
...
In more genteel times, the court waited, like a girl at the senior prom, to be asked to dance. It contented itself with answering the questions posed by the parties, and didn’t order them to make more sweeping arguments. The first 19 pages of Justice Kennedy’s opinion [in Citizens United] – and nearly all of the concurring opinion that Chief Justice Roberts filed – explain defensively why the court sped past every available off-ramp on its way to its desired destination in this case
...
The majority’s decision in Citizens United sheds retrospective light on that shameless performance in the Voting Rights Act case. There is an unresolved debate over whether the court’s punt was an exercise in judicial restraint by Chief Justice Roberts, who wrote the opinion, or whether, to the contrary, it resulted from his failure to round up sufficient votes to declare the challenged section of the act unconstitutional – the path the court seemed to be on when the case was argued. Citizens United fortifies my belief that a failure of nerve, and not ambition, led to the result in the voting rights case.

Which brings me back to the question of what’s next. I don’t believe it’s Roe v. Wade...

A target that does bear watching is the heavily freighted civil rights issue that the court raised and then skirted last June in the New Haven firefighters case, Ricci v. DeStefano....

The original Title VII, in 1964, prohibited “disparate treatment” on the basis of race. In 1991, Congress amended the law to prohibit employment policies that have a “disparate impact” as well.
...
The decision avoided a tricky question: suppose the racially disparate impact of a municipal employment policy is so grave that the Civil Rights Act requires a remedy that itself takes race into account – in other words, a remedy for disparate impact that requires disparate treatment.

The court’s current majority has made clear that for the government to count individuals by race for almost any purpose is a violation of constitutional magnitude. So how could a statute that could require such an outcome be constitutional? In the New Haven case, Justice Kennedy left it to Justice Scalia to observe sarcastically in a concurring opinion that the court’s resolution of the firefighter dispute “merely postpones the evil day on which the court will have to confront the question” of the Civil Rights Act’s constitutionality.

Finding the law unconstitutional would be an astonishing step, all the more so because the Civil Rights Act’s current form is a Congressional response to a series of Supreme Court decisions in the late 1980’s that gave the law a reading that Congress thought was too narrow. The 1991 amendment codified a unanimous opinion of the Burger court, which in 1971 interpreted the original Civil Rights Act to bar employment policies that had a racially disparate impact, such as education requirements that were unrelated to the actual job.

--------------------
*Anytime you can sexx up honest judicial system analysis with a relevant modern analogy, my hat's off to ya.

Maybe more people will understand her thinking here, what that little public display, and the decision(s) behind it, could potentially point to... Change kept a-rollin' all term long?

Thursday, January 28

Listen to the audio track on this one -- veddy scary.

And I don't mean the cat and bear facing off.

In advance of Valentine's Day...

write your own jokes:

A city is at odds with a Jackson County's man's plans to host a Valentine’s Day swingers party. He's advertising it as a "complete 'sexual freedom' hotel takeover." But, the police chief and mayor say his event is not welcome in Stevens Point.

Thursday (1/28), the hotel's front desk told us the swingers party is off. But, the man throwing it says he’s still planning to have it. He's the same man who owns Camp NCN, a sexual freedom campground, just outside Black River Falls.

Long, snowy winters don't bring in much money at Marvin Thomann’s "No Clothing Necessary" camp. That’s why he says he turned to hotel takeovers.

"There are lot of people who need a place to go where they feel safe and no one will hassle them," Thomann says.

For his latest takeover in Stevens Point, his website advertises a hot tub "that can accommodate lots of naked bodies” and a prize for the "couple who has the most sex outside the privacy of their room."

"The city of Stevens Point does not want itself associated with these types of organizations or these types of activities. It's that simple," says Mayor Andrew Halverson.

Halverson says he has full faith in the city's ordinances to stop the party. The city's police chief told our sister station in Wausau the event violates an ordinance dealing with "sexually oriented business." He says that's because the Royale Inn is with in 750 feet of two places that serve alcohol. Chief Kevin Ruder says the hotel could face thousands of dollars in fines or face being shut down.

"If they choose to follow through with the event through it occurring then they are also understanding that they will be held liable with citations or possibly injunctions on their business," Ruder says.

But, Thomann says his party is private and doesn't fall under the ordinance. He says he'll sue if the chief doesn't back off the hotel.

"It's time to let people know it is a freedom of choice lifestyle,” Thomann says.

Thomann gave WEAU 13 News a copy of the letter his attorney sent to the police chief. It says the hotel takeover is protected by constitutional rights. The letter gives the chief until February 1 to reply or threatens a peremptory lawsuit.

Thomann says he'll lose $15,000 if he can't host his party. Last Valentine’s Day, 225 couples were at his event at a Madison hotel.

Subsidize me.

Ezra Klein, the young expert on all things healthcare, economy and politics, advises on how he sees ... his industry ... competing in the coming years. And then he promptly runs up the white flag.

I remain one of the few who think that government subsidies of some sort will be required to sustain the media.
...
The new book "The Death and Life of American Journalism" makes the same argument at greater length. The question is how to structure the subsidies such that they're sufficiently indirect. Subsidizing postage didn't feel like subsidizing reporting, somehow. Maybe newspapers will be like churches, and get special tax treatment?

Heh. I think the journalists of old would laugh at the moxie of these newcomers. Nothing like climbing into bed with your sources and subjects -- and asking to be paid for it even.

Ezra has a lot of company -- these young New journalists content to feed off the corporate model, but absolutely bound to the old ways so far as I can see.

Where is the Change again, the drive to compete?

Honestly, maybe we need a bit less educated expertise, and a bit more gumption to ask the hard questions and get the job done. Of course, you'd have to want that job in the first place, not just a public relations position with the power to influence the bailout entitlement mentality that seems so contagious these days.

Say anybody know, do they offer a vaccine for that?

From AIG to Conan O'Brien, remember: there's no shame in being bailed out when your product tanks. In some circles, you get props just for pulling off the bluff that you had something of value to offer, and cashing in on the contract early.

No matter how the game plays out, something tells me you'll craft a very successful career for yourself, Ezra. Kinda like the showy QBs who run up their individual stats, yet never seem to compile a winning team record.

And don't worry: the Union will survive. With or without a subsidized media, content to cuddle with the power players, and with no aspirations to independence, period. There will always be those that will rise to write, you can bet on it.

If J.D. Salinger dies in the forest...

and nobody finds any missing works, do you still cover his death?

By Associated Press

J.D. Salinger, the legendary author, youth hero and fugitive from fame whose “The Catcher in the Rye” shocked and inspired a world he increasingly shunned, has died. He was 91.

Salinger died of natural causes at his home on Wednesday, the author’s son said in a statement from Salinger’s literary representative. He had lived for decades in self-imposed isolation in the small, remote house in Cornish, N.H.

If you could see tomorrow...

(it's happenin')
the way it looks to us, today...
You'd say, "Incredible!"
"Ford, that's incredible."
In-cred-i-ble.


Remember that early 80's Ford commercial -- catchy, not yet on YouTube?

It was during the image rebuilding period, I think, when the company woke up and realized they were competing with Honda/Japan. Years before the "At Ford, Quality ... is Job 1." ads.

Anyway, here's a bit of bright news to start our days, for Ford fans and independents alike.

Wednesday, January 27

"Not true."

When writing the speeches, doesn't the speechwriter consider that the Supreme Court is sitting there listening?

Supreme Court justices can be stubborn too, y'know.

To call upon the Congress to countermand (somehow) by statute a constitutional decision, indeed a decision applying the First Amendment? What can this possibly accomplish besides alienating Justice Kennedy who wrote the opinion being attacked?

Git er done.

Know your role.

Stubborn talk -- I like it.

(Coaching Little League in January?? Coaching swim teams!)

A government that matches our decency. Love it. Even Nancy and Joe look good sitting back there, humble and older -- looking their age in a good way.

Come together people: We ALL hated the bank bailout! Can I get an Amen here??

Does Joe Biden have dentures? Too much smiling is not humble now.

*Hoping he doesn't simplify the "Tax Bad Bankers" theme too much*

Cutting taxes... Haven't done mine for last year yet. Hope they're cut -- never know where I fit in with all these family benefits that don't apply...

Sit down Nancy.

More to spend on gas... keeping gas station workers employed. Eh. We had to pay more for gas, that's no extra.

Blah blah blah. Cops firefighters American jobs tax cuts. Got ya clapping for the Recovery Act now. Hehe. All that government spending money you fiscal conservative say you don't like, want or need... Butcher baker candlestick maker. Example example detail detail Single Mom raising two kids! Boilerplate insert here...

Real quiet now. Losing the crowd... (Sometimes when you play em for cheap applause like that early, it gets quieter, more than if you would have left it natural to begin with, without the artificial emotional encouragement...)

Oh -- jobs. Got some ideas for a few (needed) small businesses of my own... Will he talk deregulation, making it easier to enter the marketplace, with less restrictions... taxes, requirements, parities, etc. etc. ? That's what we need... Not lending money on dumb risks, but making it easier for the little players to start up, without so much (lended or not) capital required to meet all the regulations and requirements enacted on employers today.

8:30 half hour in...

Visiting around the country. Examples, detail. (*Will he introduce America's Heroes section soon? Reagan did that so well.*)

REPEAL NAFTA -- Bring the Jobs back home. (Wait -- did I hear that right? *cue Ross Perot entrance*

Bleh -- sour note. "I want a jobs bill on my desk! ..." Yeah, and I want a pony. (Hint: when being forceful, that's when you go with the "I" talk -- like I will, not I want. Look at how well that's worked for you, waiting around for others to deliver it up to you.)

Waiting... Waiting... Waiting... China be kicking our ass. Others too. More emphasis on math and science. Not us. And today of all days: Never Forget. And always move forward.

More "I want a bill delivered" talk. Lots of applause. God -- do we never learn?

More green jobs talk. Solar panels. Home installation. Yadda yadda. Talking about science and innovation, but not inspiring it via action.

DRILL BABY DRILL ! Suprisingly big applause. The Repub.s woke up?

Clean energy. Nuclear. Laugh about the climate change fudged facts. Talking about winning again, but not much of a game plan.

Speaking of, if we're gonna sell some things, we gotta start making some things again. More money for jobs! *clap clap they go* Sending more food overseas, lots of farmers finding more foreign markets. Product gets canned and labeled with foreign info right here at home. More open markets.

Smarter Americans. More degrees. Buying knowledge. Big factory like schools. Big big big. Conform reform. Somebody in school will inspire your kid to succeed in science and math. We -- parents government -- our role is just to keep talking the game... Diplomas, degrees not so much anymore. Overrated, devalued. But pumping money into pursuing, making college affordable for everyone!

Only 10% to be paid back in student loans if you wait 10 or 20 years... because nobody should have to think first, and pay according to their previous gambles and contracts! You professors and administrators -- I'm looking at you -- you gotta cut expenses too. Yadda yadda. That went nowhere...

HEALTH CARE...
Now, let's clear things up. My belt -- didn't want this fight, but fight I will.
45 minutes in... Poor dying Americans with no coverage.

*checking out here for a bit. 8:45. Read my previous posts if you care to hear my opinion of the constitutionality of requiring healthy Americans to purchase a government regulated product to keep other private industries afloat *

Back:
Middle class tax cuts. Not for investment fund managers, oil companies, rich folks.

More Medicare Medicaid bills up ahead. Come together to pay our bills. Specific set of solutions -- I want it on my desk again. *Wondering what color pony I'd pick*

Gotta get the job done. Can't leave it to the kids, just the bills to them. Laughing at the freeze taking place ... next year. "That's how budgeting works." More guffaws!

Whup -- the tone toughens when he realizes they're laughing at him. "The problem is: that's what we did for 8 years." *clap clap clap*

Folks: we can't afford to do all this again! Let's try common sense. *Laugh in the crowd* Deficit of trust. Deep doubts about how Washington works. (Nope -- it's what we see that we don't like. No doubt.)

*laughing and under mumbles at the disclosure lobby rule effectiveness* Separation of powers. Supreme Court / last week / flood gates / spend in our elections. (Hello -- can you say, First Amendment? Congress doesn't get to say what's Constitutional. The good law folks had caught that one years ago...)

Earmark reform. *makes me think piglets with tags* "So the American people can see how their money's being spent!!" Reform first, cost cuts first please. Or that could get ugly.

Dumb beliefs. Embarrassment. "You lose, I win." Come together people talk. I don't think it's gonna fly, because he's not addressing that at the root of "the game" is honest, substantive disagreement, and addressing it vocally is what's going to be needed to find solution and peace.

Reminding you: the Dems are in power, and we're not running for the hills. *thinking myself at home: the luckiest Haitians, I suspect, will be those who gave up on the initial aid efforts and took to their hills themselves*

We're here ... to serve. *loud, boastful clapping* Let's show the American people we can do it together. Meetings, that what he proposes. Meetings, meetings ... more meetings.

Turning now to .... Security. Not interested in blame, relitigating the past. Committed to our country to its defense. *Trouble is, some people are good at playing defense, others suck at it. The good ones don't trust the others to make those big decisions. Let's not paper over that.*

Terrorists, working together, homeland security, since I've taken office... Airline intelligence. Prohibited torture. Over hill over dale, we're there. Capturing and killing Terrorists. Increasing troops. Training others to take the lead -- JULY 2011 We're coming home.

*Did y'all get that one everybody? *

Men and women. Afghans -- we're there for them. Leaving Iraq to its people. End this war. That's what I'm doing. End of this August.

*putting dates in calendar, with others I'm sure* Promote regional peace and prosperity ... helping them. But make no mistake: War is Over. Our People Coming Home. (Good luck to the people there.) Let's all be there for the troops -- supporting them when they come home. *Big Clap and Stand line*

Veterans spending up. *Yeah! comes the cheer* Building big VA hospitals. Joining First Lady and Bidens ... here comes the America's Heroes part.

Whoa -- "prosecute" 2 wars? That's a bit lawyerly to kick off the military / foreign policy part, and yes, he is stumbling a bit here. *clapping at Never letting the Arms fall into the Hands of Terrorists.* Sanctions. International Community More United. Iran More Isolated. Promise .. They ... Too... Will Face ... Sanctions.

That's the leadership we're providing, in case you were wondering. More stumbling a bit here... Connecting to climate change, HIV AIDS, bioterrorism. Benefits at home to foreign policy actions abroad. *Dead Silence in the Room *

10,000 Americans working in / with Haiti to rebuild. *Back on their Feet clapping again* Poor kids around the world -- insert examples here -- we're standing with them. Always.

We got big ideas, we Americans do. Abroad... and at home. No matter how you look: Yes You Can. Renewing promises. Civil rights. Employment discrimination. Hate crimes. Yadda Yadda..

THIS YEAR... I will do the right thing and repeal DADT.

Crack down on equal pay laws: women get equal pay for equal days work. *Daddy, what's equal?*

Secure borders. Enforce laws. Enrich nation. *Back into the Clap Mode*

"In the end, it's our ideals, our values..." that forged this nation. Every day, we meet responsiblities to families, employers, neighbors, labor, generous in spirit. *Highlights of DNC speech -- not red values, or blue values, not Republican or Democratic, American values*

Big quiet. Like we're in church, taking in the homily.

Doubts. Tearing down. Silly Arguments. Turn away. No wonder there's so much cynicism out there. Disappointment. Change we can believe in, I sold you. They don't know anymore if I can deliver. Remember this: Not easy this change thing. Not gonna do it alone. Noisy messy this democracy thing. Stirring passion, controversy. That's how it is.

Play it safe? Keep quiet the truths? Keep poll numbers high, or look out for the next generations? 50, 100, 200 years ago -- them early American was stubborn, dammit! Keep the dream alive. For your children, grandchildren. Setbacks shouldn't stop us. *crying? Patrick Kennedy on camera*

The spirit lives on. No fail. No woman no cry. We are strong, we are resilient, we are Americans. We live. A boy's allowance goes to Haiti. Awww... Rescuers pulling folks from the rubble, and chants of ... USA USA! (Ugh -- other nations were rescuing too. That's the last time to be nationalistic, time to subsume actually.)

More quiet, then ... LOUD SHOUTING *clapping* and it's over.

It's not time to make a change...

just relax -- take it easy.
You're still young;
that's your fault.
There's so much you have to know...

WASHINGTON (Reuters) - President Barack Obama will call for the repeal of the military's "don't ask, don't tell" policy toward homosexuals in his State of the Union address on Wednesday, an Obama administration official said.


I can't keep it in.
Can't keep it in.
I gotta let it out...
Why walk alone?
Why worry when it's warm over here...
You got so much to say;
say what you mean;
mean what you're thinking...
and think anything!

Weight of the text, tempered by reason.

If you're familiar with the idea of the Constitution as a Living Document -- not a musty, crumbling bit of finality to be pulled out in checking ye olde answers -- then you might like this post from Ross Douthat who thinks some bright modern minds just might be missing the rich complexities of a living, vs. a literal, Bible interpretation:

So is it reasonable to believe that the Gospel passages quoted above “speak more clearly” than, say, the story of Sodom and Gomorrah to the question of whether Christians should interpret the events in Haiti as God’s punishment for some (spurious) 18th-century sin? I think it is. So do many theologians, ancient as well as modern, Protestant as well as Catholic, And the fact that Richard Dawkins and Pat Robertson both disagree tells us something, important, I think, about the symbiosis between the new atheism and fundamentalism — how deeply the new atheists are invested in the idea that a mad literalism is the truest form of any faith, and how completely they depend on outbursts from fools and fanatics to confirm their view that religion must, of necessity, be cruel, literal-minded, and above all, stupid.
...
It’s true that there are plenty of stories in the Bible — including Sodom and the Flood — that line up more closely with what Dawkins wants to call the “true Christianity” of Pat Robertson’s remarks. But — and this is important — the Christian religion is not identical to the Bible. It’s a faith based on the Bible, as read in the light of reason and (or so Christians believe) under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. Catholics emphasize the Church’s authority to interpret scripture, while Protestants emphasize the individual believer’s authority — but both reject the fundamentalist conceit that no interpretation is necessary, and that every passage is equally transparent and every story carries equal weight.

More American.

Alexandria Sage of Reuters continues to report on the legal proceedings inside the San Francisco courtroom:

The final defense witness, David Blankenhorn of the conservative think tank Institute for American Values, began his testimony by asserting that the best environment for children is a marriage between a man and a woman.

"The optimal environment for children is if they're raised from birth by their own natural mother, who is married to their own natural father," the author told the court, citing the "weight of evidence" by scholars on the subject.

But under persistent and at time contentious cross-examination from veteran litigator David Boies, who helped launch the legal challenge to Proposition 8, Blankenhorn seemed to concede some points to gay marriage advocates.

"I believe that adopting same-sex marriage would be likely to improve the well-being of gay and lesbian households and their children," said Blankenhorn, who remained composed and deliberate in his answers.

'MORE AMERICAN'

He also said he believed the legal recognition of same-sex marriage in the United States would make the country "more American," without explaining further.

His testimony elicited sounds of surprise from the courtroom, where a number of gay couples were in attendance.

During the past two weeks, witnesses seeking to overturn Prop 8 have testified that same-sex couples can be good parents, that their health and wealth stands to improve when married -- benefiting the public at large -- and that gay men and lesbians have historically been persecuted.


MEANWHILE, down in Florida...

Baby Makes Three:
With the blessing of her large extended family, Vanessa Alenier took custody of an infant relative who had been seized by child welfare workers. She moved him into a yellow nursery with a blond wood crib, a blue-striped carpet and a mobile.

When she asked the state to for permission to adopt him, the application included a simple question.

Are you gay?

Alenier, 34, said she did not want to begin her journey as a parent with a lie. So she told the truth -- despite Florida's 33-year-old law banning gay men and lesbians from adopting.

Earlier this month -- as a Miami appeals court determines the constitutionality of the embattled adoption ban -- a judge quietly approved the 1-year-old's adoption. The decision by Miami-Dade Circuit Judge Maria Sampedro-Iglesia is the third finalized adoption by a gay couple within the last year.

Tuesday, January 26

Monday, January 25

Sunday, January 24

Winter Coral.





Saturday, January 23


Charles Bibbs.
"It happens a lot."

Friday, January 22




Thursday, January 21

Pinewood Derby tips.

For Moms & Dads of Scouts: If u have any Pinewood Derby tips, I am all ears! Our son's 1st race is in 9 days. Panicking!

Not a scout parent myself, but if the rules are still the same from when my brothers competed, here's my Dad's simple design that the kids can build themselves, with tools and supervision...

1) Hollow out the inside of the woodblock/car with a drill.

2) Sand/carve down a good chunk of the outside wood to craft an aerodynamic tube shape.

3) Attach the wheels.

3) Get yourself some small ball bearings, or b.b. shot.

4) Fasten a screw into the wood at the back of the hollowed-out hole inside.

5) Experiment with a postal scale, or small kitchen scale, to see how many b.b.'s you can insert into the car, keeping it right under the weight limit.

6) At "weigh in" on race day using the Scout scales, add or subtract b.b.'s as needed to keep the car just under weight limit. The screw and design makes it easy for you to do this right there, without having to whittle off any extra weight. (There's no advantage to having your car weigh light, even if it is less blocky and seems more aerodynamic carved into a more efficient shape.)

Your car will not only look sharp at the top of the ramp -- like a real racer, but chances are it will win, with the weight distributed up front and much of the extra wood gone. Only down side, there's less body to paint, and many Scouts really get more into the car color and style than the design. Good luck!

1414.

I'm going to follow Nina's lead here, and post only a photo or two per day in the coming months*. Through, St. Patrick's Day, say...
It only seems right, as she was one who inspired me to begin blogging here. So today, I give you ... : Bologna! (But delicious and nutritious, I assure you.)

p.s. Does the lack of copy mean no more encouraging messages? If so, let me go out on a note of ... only 2 months until Spring! (R.I.P. Ruth.)

--------------

*Hopefully, the camera can keep up.

Wednesday, January 20

New Democrats shouldn't forsake the Old.

If you believe some of the blogs, the Democrats lost Massachusetts, and Obama’s approval is plummeting nationwide, because he alienated his left-wing base.

Perhaps that does account for an absence of turnout among young voters in the Virginia gubernatorial or Massachusetts Senate races, but the polls have not shown growing dissatisfaction among young, minority, or liberal voters--the three voting blocs that accounted for Obama’s strongest support in 2008.

Where he has lost ground--and where the Democrats have lost ground--is primarily among white working and middle-class voters and senior citizens.

Summer days.


May '07 (Summer ... late spring, whatever.)


Waiting on a friend.

Young Ezra reacts.

[T]he reaction congressional Democrats have had to Coakley's loss has been much more shattering. It has been a betrayal.

The fundamental pact between a political party and its supporters is that the two groups believe the same thing and pledge to work on it together. And the Democratic base feels that it has held to its side of the bargain. It elected a Democratic majority and a Democratic president. It swallowed tough compromises on the issues it cared about most. It swallowed concessions to politicians it didn't like and industry groups it loathed. But it persisted. Because these things are important. That's why those voters believe in them. That's why they're Democrats.

But the party looks ready to abandon them because Brown won a special election in Massachusetts -- even though Democrats can pass the bill after Brown is seated. What that says is crucial: Whereas the base thought it was making these hard compromises and getting up early to knock on doors because these issues are important, the party thought all that was happening because, well, it's hard to say. It was electorally convenient? People need something to do? Ted Kennedy wanted it done?

If Democrats let go of health care, there is no doubt that a demoralized Democratic base will stay home in November. And that's as it should be. If the Democratic Party won't uphold its end of the bargain, there's no reason its base should pretend the deal is still on.

Maybe it was just a short-term fling, and the voters really aren't that into you?

Seriously though,
stop "swallowing", start paring back your pricetags, and proceed cautiously if you want to make the sale, any sale? Baby steps before you enter the country in a marathon run.

And start sitting down with people outside your comfort zone, and listening instead of advising, in order to lead cooperatively?

That Christmas Eve maneuver was tricky, and it was rightly viewed that way -- along with the last-minute deal to secure Sen. Nelson's vote. That might be good game-playing, the way it's done now and in the past, but people really did want change in Washington.

Remember?

If it was your money...

Think, like buying a car:

Still, Democrats are floating the idea of a two-step process – passing the Senate bill in the House in step one, then passing a second “clean-up” bill to fix the things in the Senate bill that House members don’t like. The Senate then would have to pass the clean-up bill in a reconciliation process – meaning it would only need 51 votes.

But the deep resistance to the Senate bill among many House members shows that even this legislative tactic would be difficult to pull off.

Rep. Stephen Lynch (D-Mass.) was skeptical of the two-step scenario. “I've heard that theory but I don't know if it works," he said.

"The problem is this we are spending almost a trillion dollars and folks are telling me I should vote yes and we will fix it later. You wouldn't buy a car for a trillion dollars and say yeah, it doesn't run but we will fix it later."

Starting back fresh.

Sometimes, this is what happens when there's work to do, and you see fit to take off on a long Hawaiian holiday your first year on the job.

Properly explained, the rest of the family surely would understand the job sacrifices, if next year they're stuck in the White House, out doing day trips to D.C. museums or staying home reading, playing Wii while Dad has to work.

Somehow, I think it sends the wrong message when things are bad and there's a job to do, that the president takes off to Hawaii for family vacation. Plenty of time for relaxing when the work's done and all that. Perception, and no -- it's coming from a place of practicality, not jealousy.

Some of my kids swam everyday over the winter break, some came here and there, and some were gone. If it was family vacations or travel, understandable. The breaks from the mandatory school calendar need to be seized when they can. And this is a club sport, young kids. Still... Guess which group has improved most in dropping times these past two meets?

It's great to carve out family time. But the travel part sends the wrong message when so many are understandably contenting themselves with less this year.

Fiscal Conservatism is a Big Tent.

by Freeman Hunt:

You want a big tent? It's fiscal conservatism. The people are overwhelmingly in favor of it.

You offer that, you follow through on it, and you get the Republicans, the moderates, and a sizable chunk of disaffected Democrats.

Everything else is beside the point right now. You lose the fiscal conservative fight now and allow the United States to head deeper into Statism, and it's over. If the government controls healthcare, it will "[redefine] the relationship between the citizen and the state in a way that hands all the advantages to statists."

You can kiss freedom goodbye in the longterm.

So instead of utterly failing our future generations, leaving them to toil under the yoke of an obscenely powerful government, we should make our stand now. Embrace fiscal conservatism. Leave the rest to federalism.

It's easy. It's a no-brainer. It's even Constitutional. People are sick of the spending, sick of the debt, sick of the bailouts, sick of the handouts, sick of the back room deals, sick of the taxpayer funded bribes, sick of the bureaucrats. They want unyielding, unapologetic fiscal conservatism.

Fiscal conservatism is the big tent.

Aftershock.

The NYT sums up morning-after reaction, outside the academies and professional liberal institutions:

“Maybe not everyone in their party is willing to put their heads down and bully through as if nothing has happened after losing elections in Virginia, New Jersey, and perhaps Massachusetts,” writes Betsy Newmark.
...
“Some Democrats want to push through their same health care plan that people are rejecting. You have Dick Durbin, the number two Democrat in the Senate, openly discussing the ‘nuclear option’ - pushing through the Senate bill in the House and then trying to adjust things through reconciliation.”

Newmark points to Joe Lieberman and to Senator Evan Bayh’s comments that “There’s going to be a tendency on the part of our people to be in denial about all this … [but] if you lose Massachusetts and that’s not a wake-up call, there’s no hope of waking up.”
...
Ramesh Ponnuru of the Corner doesn’t think much of those inmates’ first instincts: “There are a lot of signs that the Ds are going to go on an anti-Wall Street jag to try to save themselves. If their political assumptions are correct, shouldn’t the bank tax—which Brown opposed—have worked better for Coakley?”

Of all the Democrats who voted for Brown, the most unlikely may have been Ray Flynn, the former Democratic mayor of Boston. He explained his reasoning to Ben Smith of the Politico:
“People feel like their vote is being taken granted with this powerful, one party state, and with one-party government in Washington. People want a little coalition, and a little respect… I don’t know how you regroup from something like this. There are going to be a lot of problems in the Democratic party from here on out.”

Listening skills. or, "Can you hear em now?"

Professor Ilya Somin on the Volokh blog thinks American voters are unsophisticated and Congress should still ram through an unpopular "reform" bill:

I either overestimated Obama’s political skills or underestimated the structural obstacles he would have to overcome; probably it was some combination of both errors. His window of opportunity for major left-liberal policy changes is closing faster than I expected. Probably faster than Obama himself expected too.

At the same time, I don’t think I was totally wrong. Obama has already secured an enormous increase in government spending with last year’s $800 billion “stimulus” bill, putting in place policies that will greatly expand federal expenditures for years to come.

Despite Scott Brown’s victory, the Democrats still have several options for pushing the health care bill through Congress.* For example, they can get the House to pass the version already enacted by the Senate, thereby cutting Brown out of the process.

Meanwhile, several other important expansions of government are making their way through Congress, and have attracted much less popular opposition than the health care bill. One example is the Consumer Financial Protection Agency, which would vastly expand federal regulation of financial products.

Some of these are highly technical in nature, and could pass in part because most voters won’t notice or understand them.

*I dunno Ilya** ... I 'spect they's just might be a bit smartter than ya give em credit for! Counting to 5, and counting other people's money, is for the professors; doesn't mean regular voters can't tally the totals...

Personally, I think these advisor/consultant/professor types need to work more on listening skills. Because whether out of ignorance or arrogance, anybody counseling that the politicians ignore the message the American people are sending fails this basic lesson.

** If Hollywood ever remakes Carol & Ted & Bob & Alice, I'm gonna suggest they call the new bedfellows Oprah & Ezra & Ilya & Uma. No particular reason, I just like how it sounds ...

How to save a life.

Some 90 people have been pulled from the rubble by the 52 rescue teams from around the world, and untold numbers of others by Haitians digging through collapsed buildings.

Racing against time, they hoped for a repeat miracle like that of an elderly woman pulled out on Tuesday from the rubble around the National Cathedral.

"I felt her grab my hand and squeeze. I felt as if God were squeezing my hand," said an emotional Javier Vazquez, the rescue crew member from Mexico who reached her.

Get on board -- BUMP

The Ezra opens his eyes*...

(T)he short-term danger of a Scott Brown victory is not Scott Brown in the Senate, or even 41 Republicans in the Senate. It's Democrats freaking out and abandoning the House bill. But on the merits, this is just absurd. If health-care reform was a good idea last week, it's a good idea next week -- and just as feasible.


But... what if it wasn't a good idea last week either, and you were just flogging it with others who have since come to their senses?

That's what the American people are trying to tell youse elites:
America didn’t vote for Obama for some massive extension of federal programs, but rather because they believed he would turnaround the economy and lead us out of Iraq and Afghanistan.

They don't want to lock into another massive entitlement program when we've got such problems ahead with the ones we've already committed to. And putting national healthcare reform before immigration reform is pretty much pointless for solving the coverage problems.

The "independent" research supporting the need for this bill that everyone was basing the facts on, at best, appears to be compromised because Gruber, the independent adviser that Klein and Krugman cited again and again, turns out wasn't so independent afterall. Even if you think Gruber might have come up with the same analysis if he hadn't been paid to produce those particular results, the study is now tainted. A second opinion (or third or fourth) is necessary to separate the independent economic analysis from the advocating economists more interested in playing political games than remaining independent.

If the healthcare fix is the only way to save the insurance industries, and will pay for itself, fine. Prove your case, and make it to the American people. Convince us to voluntarily sign a contract and participate. Trying to sneak in a bad bill now in order to pass ... something!, will only show contempt for the will of the American people. If the Massachusetts seat was a referendum on national healthcare, listen to the results.

And next time around, don't be so afraid of hurting someone's feelings or being called "uncivil" just because under the First Amendement you can call a spade a spade; you can question the "expertise" of the well-educated kiddos with not a drop of real-world experience under their belts, save for failed startups or graduate degree grades; and you can loudly and strenuously call BULLSHIT when what the elite experts are dishing up is pretty much ... crap. If enough voters think you're forcing them to eat a crap sandwich, I'd work on your recipe first, before putting it on the menu.

Whatever happens today in Massachusetts, or in the coming weeks on the floors of the Congress, Americans will remain vigilant. We won't accept -- unquestioned -- the experts cramming another unfunded mandate onto the pocketbooks of regular Americans in uncertain economic times, all because ... thousands of people are dying because of lack of health insurance and we've got to do something (anything!) to keep a bad bill afloat.

Sometimes doing nothing is actually the best option, rather than dragging other people into an unhealthy pool. If you're of a conservative mindset and accept the consequences of your individual choices in life, you get this. If you're just starting out, and think fulfilling your political wishlist is kinda like opening a wedding gift registry -- signing up for shiny new products that somebody else is going to over-pay for -- what can I tell ya?** Life'll teach ya that resources aren't infinite, and good wishes don't translate into lifesaving actions without a lot of hard dirty work accompanying a strong will.

I've never been much a chanter at hockey games ("Bulllll - shit!"... "OVER -- rated!! OVER -- rated!!") but I can see where the crowd noise gets people into the game and lets them express approval or frustration with the action on the ice. Passing legislation is the same as putting "the biscuit in the basket!" -- scoring an honest goal -- but in athletics it's a bit cleaner: every eyeball can see what's going on, and who's scoring ... or not.

You might say, these past month, the Dems have been on the powerplay. Forcing Republicans to skate their game short-handed, but they've done particularly well playing defense, killing off any scoring opportunities. Today, we're counting down the seconds left with the Dems having the man-advantage in the game, and tomorrow, if predictions are correct, the Republicans will be playing as close to full-strength as they've been since the November 2008 election. Now's when you really want to watch the puck going from end to end: the passing, the hits, the dekes, the cross checks, the passion of the play.

Until we can figure out a way to lessen the the impact of paid lobbyists, analysts, and advocating pundits on our corrupted Congressional system, I think the American people are saying, "Leave us be. Let us take care of our own needs; those of you who feel blessed by the current system and so inclined, feel free to continue contributing to your pet causes and spending your extra money to save lives as you see fit. Freedom to choose, that's all we ask."

Let's play an honest game, one where in the end, we can all be satisfied at the conclusion of the play. Heck, is it too much to hope for a decent handshake between opponents even, once the hard-fought battle on the ice is played out?

Say what you will about skills of the wonky experts; perhaps a bit of competitive physical play might have done them some good in other areas too. A little heart-pumping, hard-breathing effort against an equally determined opponent. Grows muscles, expands lung functions. (Athletics works wonders at curing asthmatics, I hear.) I just don't understand this mentality that thinks you've got the game all won, so much that you don't think you have to lace up the skates and face your opponents under the well-established rules of play.

Maybe we could get that famous Bruin Curt Schilling to explain it to us? Or at least recruit Caroline Kennedy -- a known name -- to make a play for the legacy seat.

--------------

* Lyric sampler here.

** Canadian naturalist Farley Mowat writes in his autobiography of the great deal of freedom his mother and father gave him as a child, growing up in Canada.
Considering the limitations imposed on 10- or 12-year-olds today, our parents accorded us an enormous degree of freedom. Nobody seemed overly concerned about where we might go or what we might be doing. Years later I asked my father whether he and Helen had worried about our tendencies to wander far afield.

"Certainly we worried. The way a mother cat does about a kitten that wanders off after a chipmunk. But we felt that keeping you in a nice safe cage would leave you with only the vaguest and perhaps the wrongest ideas of what life was really about. Chances have to be took even by the young."

Amen, amen, and amen again. I certainly don't want my choices dictated by the those who have rarely ventured far, in their educations and professions, from their own safe cages, yet who would presume to know the world well enough to advise others how to sally forth and stay safe. Until they change their advice another day, citing imperfect knowledge, of course.

Tuesday, January 19

Brooks & Sullivan.

Not a country duo, just the new country duel:

Sullivan:

More conservative than Nixon or Clinton('s earlier healthcare proposals) - and yet it's a threat to the meaning of America. This is claptrap. Hooey. Hysteria. And wrong. If the Democrats give into this FNC/RNC campaign to smear Obama as something he is not, they will miss the only chance of real, imperfect but meaningful reform. They will have blinked after being psyched out.

Pass the Senate bill and then defend it loudly, strongly, proudly. And call the opponents' bluff.


Brooks:
Many Democrats, as always, are caught in their insular liberal information loop. They think the polls are bad simply because the economy is bad. They tell each other health care is unpopular because the people aren’t sophisticated enough to understand it. Some believe they can still pass health care even if their candidate, Martha Coakley, loses the Senate race in Massachusetts on Tuesday.

That, of course, would be political suicide. It would be the act of a party so arrogant, elitist and contemptuous of popular wisdom that it would not deserve to govern. Marie Antoinette would applaud, but voters would rage.

The American people are not always right, but their basic sense of equilibrium is worthy of the profoundest respect.



Brooks ain't no Springsteen, but he's at least on tune here.

Pressure...

Pushing down on me
Pressing down on you...
No man ask for.
Under pressure - that brings a building down
Splits a family in two
Puts people on streets...


It's the terror of knowing
What this world is about
Watching some good friends
Screaming 'Let me out'
Pray tomorrow - gets me higher
Pressure on people; People on streets

Turned away from it all like a blind man
Sat on a fence but it don't work
Keep coming up with love word
but it's so slashed and torn...
Why - why - why ?
Love love love love love!
Insanity laughs under pressure we're breaking

Can't we give ourselves one more chance
Why can't we give love that one more chance
Why can't we give love give love give love give love
give love give love give love give love give love

'Cause love's such an old fashioned word
And love dares you to care for
The people on the edge of the night
And love dares you to change our way of
Caring about our-selves...

This is ourselves...
Under Pressure.


ADDED: Freddie at Wembley '86. Never forget.

Oh dear.

Here's what another economist blogger Megan McCardle with the Atlantic has to contribute:

Republicans want Brown seated ASAP, if he wins. Democrats, naturally, would like to stretch out the process as long as reasonably possible. I think that if Scott Brown wins tomorrow (sic), we'll be hearing a lot of back and forth on these precedents. My summary: the folks in power tend to do whatever they want. Which is usually okay, because it just doesn't matter that much.


Oooooo-k, then. My understanding is that Megan's engaged to somebody who works in the CBO, so presumably she's in this economic analysis stuff for the short term. Hence the copy above.

Somehow, I think we were all better off when they were just content to play cheerleaders.

1401.

Seems should "the Kennedy seat" turn over,
Krugman is determined to shove the castor oil down America's throats, advocating House passage of the Senate's bill. Why? Because no matter how loudly Americans holler and protest, he's convinced he knows best. So much for patients' rights.

It's Krauthammer, not Krugman, that is the professional medical doctor, right? And the professional doctor isn't recommending the extreme castor oil solution, right? I guess Krugman is just extreeeeemely confident in his economic buck-passing skills, enough to prescribe a one-size-fits-all solution to the out-of-conrol healthcare costs at the root of the nation's medical-bill ills:

It sounds as if House Democrats — or at least their leadership — are prepared to pass the Senate bill if, as expected, they lose today’s special election.

That’s a shame: the House was in the process of making the bill better. But as Ezra Klein says, they should do what’s necessary — not as a matter of political advantage, although it’s probably better for them even in that sense, but because it’s the right thing to do. Imperfect as it is, the Senate bill would save tens of thousands of lives, save many Americans from financial catastrophe, and partially redeem us from the shame of being the only advanced nation without some kind of universal care.


And again with a sloppy pass, stroking young Ezra ...

American politicians:
"Gee, I wasn't convinced that we should override the will of the American people because that New York Times writer Paul Krugman says so, but now he's quoting that kid the WaPo picked up to pound out copy on these economic issues too. Hell, everybody knows Ezra Klein's the next Alan Greenspan in terms of financial wizardry. And besides, the insurance and pharmaceutical companies are breathing down our necks, wanting what they've paid for: To hell with Haiti. Get this thing done, today already!"

I've not only seen sausage being made; I've even made it. If Congress takes these two jokers' advice, and sticks with the original game plan as far as this generic prescription for all of us, we gonna get sicker as a nation.

First, do no harm. And tell the paid lobbyists that their money wasn't all for naught; consider it a Congressional bailout, just don't spend it all in one place cuz I think those future campaign costs to keep your seats are gonna escalate greatly in price, coming inflation or no.

Who will own Haiti? Who? Who?

Personally, I'd be more worried about an unowned Haiti.

Sullivan temporarily drops his fascination with the Trig birther movement, and the up-to-the-minute-Iran-revolution coverage to opine off-the-top-of-his-head on the deaths occurring on an unimaginable scope right now in Haiti:

And Haiti is about as unreformable a place as Afghanistan. Owning it would be an act of insanity. Yes, we need to help provide immediate aid. But no: there is no way we can or should try to remake another failed country.

If not us, who? If not now, when?

Can you imagine if we had sat on our hands during the Holocaust, consciously, just waiting for the troubles to die off alone over there? Never forget. And never get so paralyzed by politics, so addicted to talk and inactivity that you can't appreciate the power of accomplishment.

Inactivity is an easy excuse, when everybody's afraid of making mistakes. But comparing our forays into Iraq and Afghanistan -- our wars there -- to undertaking a massive humanitarian and nation-building program in Haiti where there is essentially a government/power vacuum right now ...

America along with the other leading developed nations can lead the people to recreate their country on a major scale, and there's nobody going to be shooting us down for doing that. Our money invested wisely there can make a difference, perhaps even save us millions in other related expenses in years to come.

If we don't, who will?

This is no time for short-term thinking, when money spent efficiently today at this opportune time of total destruction could pay back for years and years to come (and I don't mean cheap tourist resorts either) ... unlike in our Mideast foreign wars, where worldwide America seems to be garnering more enemies than goodwill.

Something about having to justify killing so many natives ... in order to help save them.