Archive for the ‘elections’ Category

Success in America’s Major Cities

SuccessInAmericasMajorCities  <– PDF version

An examination of the economic situation in our major cities proves that you can’t argue with success.  The success I’m referring to is the political success the Democratic Party has had in winning municipal elections and controlling the economic future of our major cities, mostly in the Northeastern states.  The economic policies that have been implemented over the past two generations are laughable; the disasters are evident to anyone with even a teaspoon of common sense.  But the Democratic Party parties on in these places, continuing the same economic policies that turned industrial giants into pathetic basket cases.  Here is a list of major U. S. cities, and the durations over which the Democratic Party has been in control:

Baltimore, MD:  Continuous Democratic Party control since 1967 (48 years)

Boston, MA:  Continuous Democratic Party control since 1930 (85 years)

Buffalo, NY:  Continuous Democratic Party control since 1966 (49 years)

Chicago, IL:  Continuous Democratic Party control since 1931 (84 years)

Cincinnati, OH: Continuous Democratic Party control since 1984 (31 years)

Cleveland, OH: Continuous Democratic Party control since 1990 (25 years)

Detroit, MI: Continuous Democratic Party control since 1962 (53 years)

Erie, PA: Continuous Democratic Party control since 1966 (49 years)

Newark, NJ: Continuous Democratic Party control since 1962 (53 years)

Pittsburgh, PA: Continuous Democratic Party control since 1934 (81 years)

Philadelphia, PA: Continuous Democratic Party control since 1952 (63 years)

St. Louis, MO: Continuous Democratic Party control since 1949 (66 years)

Washington, DC: Continuous Democratic Party control since 1961 (54 years)

Our largest city, New York, requires a little explanation.  It has been ruled by Democrats continuously since 1970, with the exception of the Giuliani and Bloomberg administrations.  Both of these men were elected as Republicans, but in fact Bloomberg is as hard-core a Marxist as you will find anywhere (now that he made his fortune).  It is fair to say then, that except for the eight years of Giuliani, New York has been run by Democrats for 37 of the last 45 years.

With this list of enormous successes, we can now say for sure what the benefits of socialism amount to: a) High taxes on nearly everything; b) Stringent regulation on nearly everything; c) Reduction of business opportunities; d) Scarcity of work; e) Poor public services; f) Dangerous streets; and above all, g) An arrogant, incompetent, entrenched oligarchy at the top, living the high life.

Posted in Economics, elections, progressive | No Comments »

Senator Harry Reid and Other People’s Taxes

SenHarryReidAndOtherPeoplesTaxes   <  PDF version

During the Presidential campaign of 2012, when former Governor Mitt Romney was running against President Barack “I lied, period” Obama, Senator Harry Reid (D-NV), then the Majority Leader of the U. S. Senate, made a speech on the Senate floor 31 Jul 2012 in which he announced, based on confidential sources, that Romney had not paid income taxes for over ten years.  Reid said, “Let him [Romney] prove that he has paid taxes, because he hasn’t”.

In an interview with CNN’s Dana Bash on 30 Mar 2015, Reid was asked about those comments and admitted that he knew they were false when he said it.  Reid’s justification to Bash was, “Romney didn’t win, did he?”

This is known as “good old-fashioned Democratic hardball politics”.  But it is more than the blatant hypocrisy or more evidence of the high level of partisanship or the “anything to win is justified” attitude that is most damaging to political discourse in America.  The most damaging thing to America is that this episode is one more piece of evidence reinforcing the opinion that “all politicians are lying about everything all the time”.  The Republicans have done similar things, although not quite as blatantly. If that’s the kind of America the two main political parties want, by all means they shall have it.  But we the people better not hear any whimpering from politicians or their hacks about the public’s general lack of trust in government; or more accurately, the public’s active level of suspicion and distrust in everything said and done by any elected official.

The politicians and their hacks will have created it, lock, stock, and barrel.  And they will enjoy it.

Posted in Congress, elections | No Comments »

On Richard Nixon

OnRichardNixon   <– PDF version

It was 40 years ago this week (9 Aug 1974) that Republican President Richard M. “I am not a crook” Nixon resigned his office because he was discovered to be a crook.  He had willingly and knowingly covered up a burglary of the Democratic Party offices at the Watergate office building in Washington, committed by his supporters, some of whom worked in his campaign or his administration.  Nixon had waged a long internal battle to save himself from disgrace, but in the end the facts came out about his knowledge of the burglary and his abuse of power in covering it up.  We will probably never know if the burglary itself was his idea.  Many people in his own Republican party, understanding enough about history to know that honest government is always preferable to raw power, assisted in Nixon’s decline.  Nixon himself knew by then that he was about to be impeached, and would probably be removed from office, so he resigned in order to prevent a drawn-out political turmoil to the exclusion of other important issues (the Vietnam War being one of them).

So Nixon said good-bye and retired with full benefits to his mansion in San Clemente.  He was subsequently given a full pardon by his successor, President Gerald R. Ford, ostensibly to avoid seeing his old buddy have to stand trial for abuse of power and other crimes.  It was the worst mistake Ford ever made because it set the precedent by which future Presidents knew they could get away with anything.

Nixon was a crook.  He knew he was a crook, everyone else knew he was a crook, there was no means left by which he could talk his way out of it, and few in Congress or the courts were willing to tolerate any more of his corruption.  But let’s give old Tricky Dick some credit here: at least he retained some semblance of integrity such that deep down, he recognized that the American people deserved better than him.  Therefore, he did what was right by resigning.

We do not have that sentiment in politics any more.  The respective political parties have become so ideologically motivated towards the acquisition of power by any means that they will defend their crooks no matter what.  There is no limit to the crimes and abuses of power that will be tolerated so long as they expand their powers and associated privileges.  We have suffered with recent Democratic President William J. Clinton who even now cracks a smile whenever he is reminded of the massacre at Waco, the IRS targeting of his enemies, and the undermining of American elections with Chinese money (not to mention his personal victims).  Our current Democratic President, Barack H. Obama, regarded as the messiah by some of his supporters, has violated his oath of limited powers per the Constitution too many times to count, has once more encouraged and tolerated IRS abuse of his political enemies, and has implemented socialism at home and weakness abroad.

Unlike Nixon, who believed the American people deserved better, these two moral midgets believe the American people are not good enough for them.  I suspect the Republicans are no better.  So it will continue until “we the people” start demanding better, and start ignoring the slick political advertising extolling the alleged virtues of those who love power for its own sake.  In that spirit, I have three recommendations for elections:

1.  Regard every word by every candidate as being submitted to you, the citizen, as under penalty of perjury.

2.  Never vote for anyone who has committed perjury per #1.

3.  Only vote for those who have demonstrated a willingness to limit themselves to the enumerated powers granted to their offices under the appropriate local charters or state and federal constitutions.

 

 

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Posted in Congress, elections, government powers, U. S. Constitution | No Comments »

A Review of the IRS Phony Scandal

AReviewOfTheIRSPhonyScandal  <– PDF version

We have all heard the reports about how the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) selectively targeted social welfare organizations by delaying their applications for 501(c)(4) tax-exempt status over the course of two federal election cycles (2010 and 2012).  Singling out certain groups was important to the current administration, since the 21 Jan 2010 Citizens United ruling by the Supreme Court prohibited limitations on political spending by nonprofit groups.  After that ruling, a great many “Tea Party” and other pro-freedom groups applied for tax-exempt status, to enable them to raise funds and use part of those to inform the public about issues of importance in the upcoming elections.

The method of identifying which groups were to be delayed or denied was based on their names (“Tea Party”, 9/12″), or their views on the Bill or Rights or Constitution, or their views on the federal budget and spending in general.  The ever-efficient IRS even created a spreadsheet called “Be On the Look Out for” (BOLO) as a way to establish targeting keywords that would trigger “closer scrutiny”.  None of the 501 applications were denied outright during the period from March 2010 to April of 2012.  Instead, the IRS non-profit review offices delayed approval of applications in several creative ways:

a.  By demanding information that could not exist (“What books are your members reading”);

b.  By asking whether any of their members intended to run for elective office;

c.  By demanding a list of donors, the amounts donated, and how the donations were spent;

d.  By demanding copies of all web pages, blog posts, and brochures ever used by the organization;

e.  By demanding copies of all emails sent or received by organization members.

The IRS Tax Exempt review division also illegally leaked donor lists of some organizations to their opponents, audited those who had donated to the “Tea Party” groups, and in some cases, urged other government entities (FBI, ATF, OSHA) to illegally investigate or harass the applicants.  Finally complaints about the abuse of power at the IRS became so distracting that the Treasury Department Inspector General was forced to look into it.  He released a report [1] detailing the basics of the IRS activities, along with a list of nine recommendations.  In summary, he concluded:

The IRS used inappropriate criteria that identified for review Tea Party and other organizations applying for tax-exempt status based upon their names or policy positions instead of indications of potential political campaign intervention.  Ineffective management: 1) allowed inappropriate criteria to be developed and stay in place for more than 18 months, 2) resulted in substantial delays in processing certain applications, and 3) allowed unnecessary information request to be issued.

President Richard “I am not a crook” Nixon was nearly impeached for merely asking the IRS to attack his opponents.  President Bill “Perjurer in Chief” Clinton successfully used the IRS to harass his opponents. It appears that the current administration has done the same thing, and when caught, has responded to this series of events by denial, obfuscation, and changing the subject, same as usual. Numerous IRS officials delayed informing Congress of what they knew as the internal investigation proceeded.  One of them, Deputy Commissioner for Enforcement and Services Steven T. Miller, falsely stated on 15 May 2012 that the abuses were the work of two rogue agents in Cincinnati; but as it turned out, was being orchestrated from Washington the whole time, probably by Lois G. Lerner, Director of IRS Tax Exempt and Government Entities Division.  We will probably never know who Lois Lerner was taking orders from, whether it was the President, his staff, the Department of Justice, the Treasury Department, or the upper echelon of the Democratic party. In August of 2012, Congress issued a subpoena for all emails to and from Lois G. Lerner for the period 1 Jan 2009 to 2 Aug 2013.  After 18 months, on 13 Jun 2014, the IRS finally admitted that it would not comply with the subpoena because Lerner’s computer hard drive crashed on 13 Jun 2011, and the emails prior to that date are irretrievably lost.  Three days later, the IRS admitted that it also no longer had subpoenaed emails from six other IRS employees in Lerner’s division because their hard drives also crashed.  Meanwhile, Attorney General Eric Holder has refused to open an investigation into the abuse of power.

We the People have a right to evaluate the conduct of our government agencies.  To do so, we need only review the statements made by the principals involved.  On 14 May 2013, President Barack “I lied, period” Obama called the reports of IRS abuse “intolerable and inexcusable”.  Lois G. Lerner testified under oath before Congress on 22 May 2013:

My professional career has been devoted to fulfilling responsibilities of the agencies for which I have worked, and I am very proud of the work I have done in government.  I have not done anything wrong. I have not broken any laws, I have not violated any IRS rules or regulations, and I have not provided false information to this or any other congressional committee.

On 24 Jul 2013, the president said the entire episode was nothing more than a “phony scandal”; on 2 Feb 2014, he told interviewer Bill O’Reilly that there “was not a smidgen of corruption” at the IRS.

There is only one conclusion.  Lois Lerner faithfully fulfilled her responsibilities to implement administration policies, and did therefore nothing wrong.  It is a “phony scandal” because the correct intended policy was actually enacted by the IRS; the corruption is intolerable and inexcusable only because Lois Lerner and her accomplices were dumb enough to get caught.  Fortunately, they were able to get the most damaging evidence destroyed in time (remember, this started in March of 2010).

They’re all Lerner’s now.  We do not need a special prosecutor to establish it.  When IRS Commissioner Douglas H. Shulman-Lerner told Congress on 22 May 2012 that “there is absolutely no targeting”, he was correct because the IRS was not singling out certain disapproved non-Democratic groups, it was harassing and delaying applications from all of them.  When current IRS Commissioner John Koskinen-Lerner said on 26 Jun 2014 that a special prosecutor would be “a monumental waste of taxpayer money”; he is correct because it will not be able to find anything.  All the other Lerner’s, their supporters, and the usual Democratic minions in the media will run out the clock until Obama pardons them on his last day in office.

Another successful operation.

[1]        Michael E. McKenney, Acting Deputy Inspector General for Audit, U. S. Treasury Department, “Inappropriate Criteria Were Used to Identify Tax-Exempt Applications for Review”, Reference Number 2013-10-053, 14 May 2013

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Posted in elections, government powers | No Comments »