Disclaimer: Some postings contain other author's material. All such material is used here for fair use and discussion purposes.

Friday, May 31, 2013

Scouts, be prepared for a celebration in the future - Leonard Pitts - My commentary

Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes. My comments in bold.
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(Mr. Pitts is a Nobel prize winner for commentary. As such, we should expect flawless logic, devastating arguments, and soaring rhetoric. I dissected one of his previous columns here. He disappoints once again.)

Hold your applause. As milestones go, this one is disappointing.

It is, at best, half a milestone. Or a down payment on a milestone. If you are of a more cynical bent, you might even call it an effort to forestall a milestone.

Whatever you call it, last week’s decision by the Boy Scouts of America to allow openly gay Scouts, but not openly gay Scout leaders, to join, is unlikely to please or appease either side of the gay rights struggle. (True, but it is worth noting that if the Boy Scouts had not only approved of gay scouts, but also validated gay scout leaders, made donations to gay advocacy groups, and made the scouts a gay-only organization, the gay-rights leaders would not be satisfied even then. These people are not, and have never been, about equal treatment and fairness. Their agenda is to completely dismantle the traditional moral structure and root out any vestiges of opposition, whether public, private, or religious.) 

Predictably, that shrinking coterie of individuals for whom homosexuality and Satanism are synonymous greeted the decision with howls of anger and pain. Matt Barber, an attorney and blogger, accused the Scouts of having “betrayed its own constituency, mission, oath and laws.” (Note the characterization, followed by jumping to a quote from the opposition, which implies that Mr. Barber made such a comparison. He did not. In fact, I doubt that Mr. Pitts can locate a single "individual" of national prominence that has made the claim that homosexuality and satanism are synonymous. 

But what about Mr. Barber's statement? Is it egregious in any way? Is it outrageous, insulting, a misrepresentation? No, not in any way at all. Mr. Barber's statement is a reasoned, accurate assessment of the organization's action.John Stemberger, an Eagle Scout and anti-gay activist, predicted the Scouts will “probably be destroyed” by this decision.

For the record, the Girl Scouts have no policy limiting lesbian involvement. (Neither did the boy scouts ask about sexual orientation from their members.) 

Indeed, according to its website, Girl Scouts of the USA has embraced diversity and inclusion from the beginning, and it doesn’t seem to have hurt that group any: It has 3.2 million members and recently celebrated its 101st anniversary. (That is an open question. Historical membership in the girl scouts has been higher than it is now, both in real numbers and adjusting for population growth. After the girl scouts declared themselves a feminist organization in the 70s membership dropped and was flat into the late 80s.) 

So Stemberger’s prediction that the boys are doomed for doing what the girls have done for years seems nonsensical at best. (This is why I question Mr. Pitts' rhetorical skills. Boy scouts have stood their ground on their founding principles just as the girl scouts have stood on theirs. The girl scouts have not revised their position, so their members are apparently comfortable with it. The boy scouts, however, have made a substantial change that completely revises the foundation of their organization. Their existing membership base is now faced with a decision as to whether the change is acceptable. 

However, Mr. Sternberger didn't go far enough. The boy scouts, by abandoning their foundational formative philosophy, has already been destroyed. This organization, going forward, is a different organization with a completely different mission. This is not to say that the replacement organization won't flourish. It may well do so. However, it is nonsense to suggest that tearing down the old house and building a different one is going to be good for the house. That house is gone.)

But again, there is little reason this should be celebrated by the rest of us, either. The Boy Scouts’ decision to split the difference — allow gay boys, ban gay men — does not exactly smell of Solomonic wisdom. Rather, it is marked by reasoning that is cockamamie even if taken on its own terms.

If, for example, you buy the notion there is something about male homosexuality that renders men unfit to be leaders, why doesn’t that same flaw render boys unfit to be followers? And if you buy the idiotic canard that every gay male is a pedophile in waiting, (Once again, note the characterization. Who has said that EVERY gay male is a pedophile?) then how you countenance allowing gay teenagers as old as 17 access to boys as young as 10? ( How ironic. Mr. Pitts makes the exact same arguments as the eeeevil John Sternberger quoted above.)

Worse, what kind of message does all of this send gay boys? You’re acceptable until you aren’t?

It is, of course, a mistake to seek logic here. This isn’t about logic, but about a conservative group doing what conservative groups always do when social change comes. (This is a tautology. A conservative group by definition attempts to preserve the traditions and institutions that have proven to be valuable and worth retaining. If it did not do this, it would be a liberal group.) Meaning, they bring up the rear, the caboose on the freedom train lurching belatedly to where the rest of us have already been.

It happened with racism, happened with sexism, happened with anti-Semitism, all of which conservatism loudly and proudly embraced long after the rest of us came to see them as evil and wrong. (This is historically ignorant. It was the Left that resisted the 13th amendment, it was the Left that enforced Jim Crow laws, it was the Left that voted against the civil rights act. Conservatives have always fought for liberty, rights, and self determination. Conservatives have always valued women more than liberals. And conservatives have caught a lot of flack over the decades for their unfailing support of Israel, while it is the Left that continually attacks Israel. Most recent example here.) It is happening now with homophobia.

The problem for the Scouts and other conservative groups (paging the GOP!) is not simply that this change has been definitive (a record 59 percent of all Americans now find gay and lesbian relationships morally acceptable, according to a Gallup poll). It is not simply that this change has been swift (12 years ago, only 40 percent of us approved). No, it is also, maybe even primarily, that this change has been driven by young people, a whopping 70 percent of whom, ages 18 to 29, now believe same sex marriage should be legal — up an also whopping 18 percentage points just since 2010. (So there it is. The very fact that conservatives disagree is reason enough to insist they change. The majority sez so. The majority, apparently, is the measure of morality. So lemme ask. When only 40% approved of gay relationships, that meant the majority found them immoral. Were we then advised to respect the morality of the majority at that time?)

Hello?

The momentum and trajectory are unmistakable: Gay rights are the future. The organization that fails to understand this sabotages its own future credibility. (Why all the concern for the credibility of conservative organizations? And in the Leftist mindset, what exactly might be credible about a conservative organization? And if conservative organizations need to get with the times and embrace gay marriage [along with every other leftist cause, of course], then they cease to be conservative, don't they? 

More to the point, why do leftists like Mr. Pitt fear irrationally conservative organizations? Why is he threatened by their existence? Why does he insist that they must conform to his idea of morality?) So there is little reason to celebrate the Scouts’ half-hearted attempt to compromise with change. Might as well attempt to compromise with a locomotive.

Last week’s decision is a mere way station en route to a destination that seems increasingly inevitable. One day, and it probably won’t be all that long, the Scouts will concede this. On that day, this absurd decision will fall and scouting will be open to all boys and men regardless of sexual orientation.

That will be a milestone worth clapping for.

Thursday, May 30, 2013

GOP must stop the blame game, move forward - letter by Mary Vant Hull - my commentary

Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes. My comments in bold.
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(I've commented on several occasions on Ms. Vant Hull's letters. She is reliably Left, invariably a parrot-er of talking points, and frequently characterizes her ideological opponents in the the most disparaging of terms.

This letter is no exception. Let's analyze her prose and see where it leads us.)

“A penny saved is a penny earned.” That’s often true in our homes, but is often stupid, when so many of our country’s people are crying for jobs and our country’s investment in the future for everyone is in peril. (So here premise is that by saving pennies we are imperiling everyone's future.)

Right now, a wiser proverb for our country is, “Don’t be penny wise and pound-foolish.”

Consider the recent Montana state Legislature where some short-sighted Republicans voted against Medicaid expansion, blindly following their addiction to “a penny saved is a penny earned.” Hah — maybe sometime! (The medicaid expansion thing is an old issue, going back to at least February. She is simply rehashing the talking points of a dozen previous letter writers, The Chronicle's editorial staff, leftist elected officials, and even businesses. This disinformation campaign has be a veritable onslaught of propaganda.

 Depending on who you read, this is supposed to cost Montana anywhere from $5 million to $7 million a year until the claimed economic trickle-down begins to kick in. Why is it that the Left never believes in trickle-down unless the government is the one doing the trickling?)

Consider the future wisdoms of spending pennies to save pounds:

1. It would be wiser for more Montanans to have health care because right now, you and I — and all of us — pay for the 70,000 working poor Montanans whose only option now is to suffer, lose days at work and finally, finally, go to the emergency room where they cannot legally be turned away. The hospital can’t eat up those costs so it bills you and me more for our health care when we come in for regular care. Everyone’s bottom line would improve. (The reason the rest of us Montanans pay for others' care is because the leftist system forces us to pay. Funny, you will never hear the Left criticize the fact that we have to pay for food stamps, housing, college, retirement, disability, scientific research, art, or any of the thousands of things government subsidizes. But for some reason the subsidies we pay through cost shifting is bad but the subsidies we pay via wealth shifting is just fine.

But this wealth shifting has not improved the problems it was designed to help. The track record of government welfare is abysmal. We already have medicaid, and the problem still is there. So why will expanding medicaid solve anything?)

2. The greatest cause of bankruptcies is unexpected health problems. Other people’s bankruptcies are costly for most of us sooner or later. (Only because one way or the other, people forced to pay for other peoples' stuff. It is government that has created these problems. In the early 1980s, health insurance was relatively cheap, bankruptcies from health related problems were relatively infrequent, And buying insurance was pretty painless. So what has changed? Increased government involvement. 

Before obamacare, government already controlled 47% of every healthcare dollar spent. When government controls such a large portion, the changes it makes and the policies it installs have an impact on the rest of the marketplace. For example, Government is cutting reimbursements to doctors for medicaid. This doesn't happen in a vacuum. Doctors are refusing to see patients who have medicare  or medicaid.  The ones who do will have to cost shift to their other patients, which makes healthcare more expensive for everyone outside the government programs. Thus, private health insurance gets more and more expensive.

If there's anyone to blame, it is government.)

3. The influx of federal money would also increase our bottom lines: more healthy Montanans, more jobs created, fewer people calling in sick, fewer sick people infecting the rest of us. (I've already dealth with this nonsense in the above links. Suffice to say, it just isn't true.)

4. The majority of Montanans polled were in favor of expanding Medicaid. So were the Chamber of Commerce, hospitals, medical organizations, business leaders — almost every segment of our society — wiser than a few dozen ideology-driven legislators. (This is a prime example of the "thinking skills" of the arrogant Left. The "majority" (if indeed there is one...) equals wisdom. How about this: Too many people buy into the Leftist line, and the number of people who believe stupid things does not make what they believe wise.)

The same kind of folly takes place every day in D.C. Can a few Republicans stop blaming others with their trivial pursuits and start moving the country forward? (*Sigh* She pops off these glib bumper sticker statements as if they are devastating rejoinders. Can you imagine? Trillions upon trillions of dollars have been spent on every conceivable hair-brained leftist scheme, which has added an additional $7 trillion to the national debt, which no stands at nearly $17 trillon. And all this has had little, if any positive economic effect. But rather than learn from their mistakes, the Left wants to redouble their efforts and through good money after bad. They want more of the same! 

This economic downturn has been prolonged and intensified by profligate government spending, and it continues to lag.  So who is to blame, according to Ms. Vant Hull? Well, those stingy Republicans! This leaves me almost speechless. It's like these leftists live in this la-la land where everything their big-government keepers feed them is the gospel truth, and anyone who even mildly opposes them is the height of satanic evil in the world today.

Remember her premise. It is mere pennies the Republicans want to withhold. But it is those few pennies that will save us from poverty, disease, and hunger. Never mind that the trillions we have already spent have had no effect. Never mind that the idiotic stimuli, social programs, and ill-advised wars have given EACH PERSON a $53,000 debt. Yes, just a little more and we're saved.

It's insanity.) 

Mary Vant Hull

Wednesday, May 29, 2013

9th Circuit panel rules 2011 pot raids constitutional - The Supremacy Clause - my commentary

Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes. My comments in bold.
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(I have no particular affinity for legalizing marijuana, but I do want to explore the underlying legal principles upon which the 9th circuit based their ruling. Being as how the 9th circuit is the most overruled circuit, and how their rulings nearly always lean left, it's no surprise that this particular ruling is based on what I think is a misapprehension of the Supremacy Clause.

Article VI, Paragraph 2 reads, "This Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made, or which shall be made, under the authority of the United States, shall be the supreme law of the land; and the judges in every state shall be bound thereby, anything in the constitution or laws of any state to the contrary notwithstanding."

I did a little bit of poking around and found quite a bit of disappointing commentary on the clause. One website wrote this astounding statement: "...any federal law--even a regulation of a federal agency--trumps any conflicting state law." This clearly cannot be the case, since a cursory reading of the clause reveals it to be conditional. The word "pursuance" is used, and that is the key word which defines the power granted to the federal government by this clause.


Surprisingly, the best commentary was at Wikipedia. We read: "The Supremacy Clause only applies if Congress is acting in pursuit of its constitutionally authorized powers. Federal laws are valid and are supreme, so long as those laws were adopted in pursuance of—that is, consistent with—the Constitution." This is key. The Constitution, as I have written many times, is the document that creates, defines, and limits the federal government. It very specifically grants powers to government, while leaving the remaining powers to the states or the people.

In order for the Supremacy Clause to apply, the law must be in pursuance to the Constitution, that is, the law must conform to the limited powers granted to the federal government. Based on this criteria, it is not difficult to see that there are many laws on the books that cannot find a basis in the enumerated constitutional powers.

So back to marijuana. On what constitutional provision might the federal government rely to regulate marijuana? Clearly not the Supremacy Clause, since there is no enumerated power in the Constitution that allows the government to regulate substances that people ingest or inhale.

The General Welfare clause, perhaps? We read in Article 1, Section 8: “The Congress shall have the Power to lay and collect Taxes, Duties, Imposts and Excises, to pay the Debts and provide for the common defense and general welfare of the United States...” The Left has taken this to mean that government has the power to help the poor, to subsidize businesses, to tax one citizen in order to give money to another, to provide retirement income, unemployment income, and disability income, as well as perhaps thousands of other programs.

But does the Constitution grant the authority to do these things? The Federalist Papers were written to answer objections made to the proposed Constitution. They are rejoinders to points being made by those who believed the Constitution granted too much power to the new federal government. James Madison sought to assuage these fears. 


In Federalist #41 he wrote about the "general welfare" clause in response to those who were asserting that this clause granted carte blanche power to the federal government: "Had no other enumeration or definition of the powers of the Congress been found in the Constitution than the general expressions just cited, the authors of the objection might have had some color for it; though it would have been difficult to find a reason for so awkward a form of describing an authority to legislate in all possible cases."

In other words, the General Welfare clause, like the Supremacy clause, empowers government to legislate only within the confines of the specific constitutional powers granted to it. Indeed, if we understand the clause correctly, we would conclude that the clause is a fairness statement. Rather than enhance the welfare of certain specific people (like the poor, the unemployed, the retired, the disabled, people of color, etc.), we should interpret this clause to mean that the government can show no favoritism and grant no special benefit to anyone. It does, after all, use the word "general."

This of course goes against the grain of the Leftist view. They believe the government is the ultimate doer of good in society. All other entities, charities, individuals, even local or state governments, pale in comparison to the wonderful things the federal government can (and should) do. That's why the left chafes under the limitations of the Constitution, because the Constitution contains curtails this noble ability. 

As a practical matter, government is god for the Left. The left complains about the political Right not supporting government redistributionist initiatives, indeed, characterizing them as bad Christians. These people want the "separation of church and state" while simultaneously equating government programs with christian virtue. 

It therefore appears that the Left grants nearly unlimited power to the federal government, if the cause is viewed as good. One problem with this is that they get to decide what is good. And by extension, they get to decide what is good for you, and also, what you must support as good via your tax dollars. Another problem is that a government that has this kind of power to decide what is good can use that power in pretty much whatever way it wants. So what happens when certain officials get elected to office who have a totalitarian bent? How will they be restrained? They can pass whatever laws they want and go after those who oppose them. What's to stop them?)
HELENA (AP) — A panel of appellate judges has upheld as constitutional the 2011 federal raids on Montana medical marijuana businesses, warehouses and homes that pot providers claimed violated their right to operate under state law.

The three-judge 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals panel on May 15 affirmed U.S. District Judge Donald Molloy’s dismissal of the lawsuit brought by 14 medical marijuana providers and associations.

The appellate judges agreed with Molloy that the federal government did not overstep its authority when it executed more than 26 search warrants across the state in March 2011 as part of a drug trafficking investigation.

The plaintiffs claim they were operating under a voter-approved Montana medical marijuana law and the government interfered with the rights and powers given to the states by the Constitution’s 10th Amendment.

Molloy ruled that state law does not shield medical marijuana providers from federal prosecution. He cited a 2005 U.S. Supreme Court decision that said the Constitution’s supremacy clause applies in medical marijuana cases.

The supremacy clause says that federal law prevails if there is any conflict between state and federal statutes.

The appellate panel agreed there was no violation of the 10th Amendment, and it also dismissed the providers’ argument they have a fundamental right to cultivate marijuana for medical purposes.

New Mexico attorney Paul Livingston, who represented the plaintiffs, said Friday the 2005 Supreme Court decision cited by Molloy and the 9th Circuit panel should be re-examined. Today, there is a much broader acceptance of medical marijuana across the nation and voters have legalized the recreational use of marijuana in Washington state and Colorado, he said.

Livingston is considering an appeal to the full 9th Circuit court and the U.S. Supreme Court, but says he needs more support from medical marijuana advocates. Up to this point, interest in the case has been lacking, he said.

“None of that is of any significance if nobody cares about this case,” he said of the appeals.

The Montana Cannabis Information Association, which filed a friend-of-the court brief in the case, has previously said it is reluctant to become more involved because all of its resources are going to a state court challenge of a 2011 Montana law restricting how medical marijuana is distributed.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office earlier this month wrapped up its final prosecution from the drug-trafficking investigation. The probe has resulted in 33 provider convictions and the dwindling of a once booming medical marijuana industry.

Five of the individual plaintiffs were convicted in the probe.

Thousands of medical pot providers have gone out of business since the raids, and a state health department survey shows the number of registered users have fallen to less than a quarter of their 2011 numbers.

Thursday, May 23, 2013

CAFE standards and expensive car parts - FB conversation

FB friend S.W. posted this:

Once again I had to deliver the news to a guy last night that the car he was so proud of because it got a few mpg more that my own now needs $1000 or more in work.

There is a false economy being promoted around the price of operating a car; fuel costs are the most immediate, what you feel every day. However, the real costs start showing up when you have to replace those lightweight parts...they aren't cheap.

Overhead cam? Sure, you can spin up a few more hp in the upper rpm range, but break a timing belt and see what it costs ya. Got a Hemi? Replacing bent follower plates is about $2500. Last night it was a lightweight steering rack...part @ $400, labor twice that. Exotic metals are expensive and the use of plastics more common...I have seen bearing sets with every second bearing removed and filled with a plastic blank to make it cheaper and lighter. Are you really saving money buying crap like that?

Where did all that money saved in fuel costs go?

J.T.: Scary. In a couple of cars I've owned, the plastics used under the hood and inside the car seem to get brittle and break before the engine parts wear out. Engine's purring but I have to replace the windshield washer tank........

S.W.: Yup, seen that one before! The heat just ruins the plastic and rubber parts.

Me: Imagine what you new car will be like when cafe goes to 35 mpg...

S.W.: CAFE is a piece of feel-good legislation that ignores the laws of physics. They can improve engine efficiency to a point, but only so much. And to make it an average standard means that to sell one low mileage vehicle, say a truck, they will have to sell a very high mileage car to even things out.

T.N.: There is a lot of technology out there that could be explored if the gov would just do it. I am tired of being forced to help the gas companies get there 5-6 billion in profits every 3 months.

S.W.: Oh, I agree! I just see a lot of cheap cars that turn out to be very expensive.

Me: Profit is good.

Me: Oh, and federal fuel tax revenue is $25 billion. So who is really making the big bucks from gas, courtesy of you and me?

B.W.: Gas is taxed at a per gallon rate when fuel prices go up the consumption goes down. The tax rate has not kept up with inflation. Road maintenance and construction is now subsidized by your income, and property taxes.

S.W.: While all companies would love to make cars with great mileage, some sacrifice mpg for stronger and more reliable parts. Customers only see the sticker price and the mpg and opt for the best gas mileage. Yet down the road they have paid out more in maintenance and repairs than they would have if they bought the more expensive car in the first place. This was a cheap, bottom of the line import that delivered on low initial cost and good gas mileage. Parts aren't common and the supply chain is limited; the have him over a barrel: pay up or walk home. Having hit 100,000 miles he is entering a a high maintenance period where he can expect to start replacing worn parts. The longer he drives it, the more expensive it will become.

Me:  B.W., true but irrelevant. My point remains that the big bucks are being made by government, not oil companies. And whether by our incomes, our property taxes, or at the pump, we are still the ones being forced to pay.

R.W.: Our taxes would be spent wiser if we had wiser people in office. Heres hoping that the new captian at the helm quits writing checks he can't cash like the old crack ho whats here face did for 8 years.

J.H.: Gees, I wish for the days when I could work on the car myself. It is hard to even change a headlight on your own. Steve do you work at a shop? or just on your own? Oh and Rick if you think that the oil companies are not making money I suggest you check again.

Me: J.H., I simply contrasted the bigger take by government. We complain about oil company profits when it's government that gets a far bigger share of our gasoline dollar.

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Lew taps government retiree pension fund - my commentary

I know, I'm just a right wing kook, I'm too extreme, I believe government is evil. NOW do you believe me? Hmmm?

Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes.
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Lew taps government retiree pension fund

WASHINGTON (AP) — Treasury Secretary Jacob Lew said late Monday he will begin tapping into two government employee retirement funds to buy more time before the U.S. Treasury is faced with the prospect of defaulting on the national debt.

In a letter to congressional leaders, Lew said that he would tap the civil service retirement and disability fund and a similar fund that covers retired postal workers. The law allows him to remove investments from these funds to clear room for more borrowing until Congress votes to raise the debt limit

Under the law, any investments diverted from the pension funds must be replaced with interest once Congress approves raising the debt limit.

Lew has said the various bookkeeping measures he is allowed to employ should provide enough maneuvering room to keep the government from defaulting on its debt until after Labor Day. Other estimates say Lew may be able to forestall a default until as late as November.

In January, Congress voted to temporarily suspend the debt limit but that suspension ended Sunday.

Before the suspension, the debt limit stood at $16.4 trillion. The government has borrowed $300 billion since the suspension took effect. On Sunday, the debt limit reset at the higher level of $16.7 trillion.

The government has run annual deficits of more than $1 trillion for the past four years. But the Congressional Budget Office last week estimated that this year's deficit will drop to $643 billion, an improvement that reflects increased revenue from a stronger economy and the effect of tax increases that took effect in January.

Republicans want to reduce future deficits by cutting back on spending. Democrats have proposed a mix of spending cuts and tax increases, which Republicans oppose. The dispute has led to the current budget impasse.

A standoff over budget issues in August 2011 pushed the country close to its first-ever default before President Barack Obama and Republicans reached a last-minute compromise. That battle prompted Standard & Poor's to issue the first-ever downgrade on long-term Treasury debt. The administration has vowed to prevent Republicans from using the need to raise the borrowing limit as leverage in the current budget battle.

"I respectfully urge Congress to protect America's good credit and avoid the potentially catastrophic consequences of failing to act by increasing the debt limit in a timely fashion," Lew said in his Monday letter.

Monday, May 20, 2013

Citizens need to look past bias, zealots - Bozeman Chronicle editorial - my commentary

Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes. My comments in bold.
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(The Chronicle has written before about how much it loves compromise, and it is a regular Leftist meme as well. I won't rehash the vapidness of the position in favor of analyzing the below article for its manifest deficiencies in other areas. 

Note that its defense of traditional media sources [like itself] is wholly self-serving.)
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Space aliens visiting our planet would quickly conclude that the United States is inhabited by two bitterly divided tribes on the verge of splitting the nation asunder.

But they would be wrong.

Actually Americans espouse remarkably similar social and political values — across all political, religious, gender, racial and ethnic differences. An Associated Press story published in the May 12 Chronicle pointed out that recent polling shows significant levels of agreement even on issues considered to be divisive, such as the environment and immigration.

Pollsters have found that large majorities of Americans believe in God, place a premium on higher education, support raising the minimum wage and back term limits for members of Congress. Certainly there are issues on which there is wide disagreement, but the range of issues on which Americans largely agree is remarkable.

So why all the talk about this being the most polarizing era of American politics ever? (Partly because they're wrong due to having a too small historical window.)

Three and four decades ago, Republicans and Democrats in Washington routinely found ways to work together and reach compromise or issues that were important to Americans — even the most divisive ones. (Ok, we now have the size of their historical window. In the next paragraph they will offfer their theories as to what has changed. the get the cause correct, but miss the reasons.) Today, we find the successors of those politicians racing to the nearest microphone and camera to heap vitriol on their opponents. Compromise has become a dirty word.

What changed? What we didn’t have before but have now is an explosion of ideologically driven websites and cable news channels that shamelessly push patently false and wildly distorted information to whip their faithful into a froth over a weekly menu of manufactured outrages. (They view the alternative media as the problem, but in actual fact, the traditional media outlets had an unchallenged monopoly on the information that was made available to the people. Their take on the issues were never challenged, never fact-checked, and never countered with a contrary perspective. With the advent of the alternative media, no there is a option for people, and they began to discover how they were being misled according to the political perspective of the news gathers. This, of course, does not sit well with them.

But notice, the fact that people have found out what is going on is an indicator of their ability to rightly judge things. They are stupid, they are being manipulated, the information is false, their outrages are all manufactured. Do you see how the Chronicle editorial writers are trying to marginalize those people who get their news from "unapproved" sources?) And the politicians respond to this sideshow like trained seals, spouting to any cable TV channel whatever that channel’s audience wants to hear. The splintering of media into mouthpieces for almost any imaginable political perspective has created a funhouse mirror that in no way reflects the reality of Americans’ values. (Whew. I just had to catch my breath after reading this. Cable news is giving people what they want to hear. But this "in no way reflects the reality of Americans' values?" How is it possible to give someone what they want that conflicts with their values? 

But the real question is, what are Americans' values? Is there such a thing? A poll of preferences ["...believe in God, place a premium on higher education, support raising the minimum wage and back term limits for members of Congress] are not values. Values are bedrock perspectives on how an INDIVIDUAL chooses to lead his life. There is no such thing as group values.)

The only antidote for this poison (Hmm. Obtaining information from a variety of sources with a variety of perspectives is poison, you see.)  is for the citizenry to recognize and reject this kind of zealotry. (A pejorative word intended to impugn dissenters.) And there are promising signs. The numbers of voters who call themselves Republican or Democrat has shrunk in recent decades, while the number of those who call themselves independents is growing. Those who call themselves independents may be less than purely independent, but they are at least signaling a willingness to consider issues from all sides and choose a position based on the merits of the arguments. (Independent does not mean flexible, thoughtful, tolerant, nuanced, or anything of the like. It simply means they've chosen to not be a part of the two-party club.)

Let’s hope this trend continues. The polling found one of the things nearly all Americans agree on is that our government is broken. Fixing that mess will begin with a more media-savvy electorate. (Unfortunately for the Chronicle, if Bozemanites restricted their reading to the Chonicle's pages, they would no little or nothing about a lot of issues. In fact, had  there not been an alternative media, the traditional media likely would have never reported anything at all. ABC, for example, has yet to devote any coverage at all to the horrific crimes of Kermit Gosnell, for no discernible reason than he was an abortion provider. 

The fact of the matter is that traditional media have done a sorrowful job in covering any news that does not fit their ideological template. Had it been doing its job, the alternative media would have never arose.)
Get smart. (Which means that you are dumb if you disagree with the editorialists.) Think before nodding in agreement with any of those over-top talking heads infesting politically biased media on either end of the spectrum. Let’s reclaim our ability to think for ourselves. (Again, the Chronicle attempts to marginalize dissenters by characterizing them as non-thinkers, mind-numbed robots, and idiots who are easily manipulated. This is insulting and beneath reasoned discourse. The Chronicle is routinely engaging in its own biased reporting but never seems to get that upset [if they even notice] about their own many failures.)

Friday, May 17, 2013

It’s time to end tax-exempt status - Lane Filler, Newsday - my commentary

Our comments in bold.
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(This author is mostly right, but mostly for the wrong reasons. I'll explain.)

You are a financial supporter of the Westboro Baptist Church. You know, that posse of full-blown whackdoodles from Kansas that descends on our nation’s most tragic moments, particularly military funerals, waving signs that say “Thank God for dead soldiers.” (Notice how  the author begins with an extreme example, which sets the reader up for future agreement based on a distaste for the extreme example.)

You don’t (please say you don’t) support Westboro by sending cash for their placard ’n’ magic marker budget. What you do pay, infinitesimally, is that church’s taxes, because it, like all houses of worship and so many other institutions, is exempt. You also pay the taxes of its contributors, because the money those folks fork over is tax-deductible. (This is incorrect. Tax-exempt organizations do not deprive the government of tax revenue. Legislators choose how tax law will be written, and carve out exceptions, benefits, and surcharges based on the societal outcomes they're trying to achieve. This is a conscious choice by government. No one is being coerced.

But more to the point, all money is privately possessed before it is taxed by government. Government is not entitled to tax anything and everything, simply because it exists. Therefore, its "failure" to tax something does not mean those who are being taxed have had a tax burden transferred to them.

Unless the author is willing to concede that a well-to-do person who pays a 28% tax rate is being burdened by someone else's 15% tax rate.)

Why is this notable this week? Because the Internal Revenue Service just got caught trying to crash the tea party, punk the patriots and deny conservative groups their 501(C)4 status. Such status exempts groups’ income from taxes. It also allows “nonprofits” to do political activism without disclosing donors, as long as the organizations also promote social welfare. (What is "social welfare?" The IRS uses this term.  It suggests that a tax-exempt organization is legitimate so long as its performing a role that government would do ordinarily.  For the second time in two paragraphs, the author makes an observation from a governo-centric perspective, as if everything and everyone revolved around what government does and doesn't do.)

To a politico, the distinction between “promoting social welfare” and “promoting the ideas and candidates that we believe will improve stuff ” is a line about an atom wide. But that’s an outrage for another day. (It's interesting that the Constitution uses the phrase "promote the general welfare" in its preamble, and the phrase "provide for the common defence and general welfare of the the United States" in the context of 16 powers [section 8]. I suspect that the IRS phrase sounds enough like the Constitution to lend it legitimacy.)

The IRS admits it’s been obstructing and scrutinizing right-leaning applicants for 501(C)4 status. This deployment of the IRS — exclusively against a political movement that opposes President Barack Obama like kids oppose calves liver cupcakes — is seriously nefarious. We should fire everyone involved and highlight their sins on a televised reality show called “So You Think You Can Screw Over Conservatives!”

After that, let’s change the tax code so Americans don’t have to fund movements and religions they don’t agree with. (How about, let's eliminate the tax code, repeal the 16th amendment, and defund the IRS so that they don't have any power? The problem is not the tax exempt status, the problem is the excessive power of the IRS!

Ironically, it is government that removes choices. It takes your money and spends it where its priorities are. You cannot choose. However, charities are voluntary.)

No institution, organization or individual should be exempt from taxes, nor should any donations be tax-deductible. (Agreed. Unions, operas, and environmental organizations included. No organization should be singled out for preferential treatment. The constitution forbids congress from making "any law," including favorable ones, regarding the establishment or free exercise of religion. Congress needs to get out of the faith and values business. In fact, it needs to stop meddling with peoples' lives at all levels.)

Nonprofits, hospitals, colleges, houses of worship and charities are sometimes the richest institutions on the block. (Untrue and irrelevant.) 

Yet they generally don’t help pay to sweep that block, or extinguish it if it catches fire, or to fight off another nation’s army or fund school districts. (Sure, and they don't have soup kitchens, clothing drives, volunteer at schools, fund hospitals, build houses for people, or send teams to help when hurricanes hit, either. Yup, that money just disappears down a rat hole, doesn't it?) 

And when their contributors throw them $100 or $1 million, these folks deduct those contributions off their tax liability, too.

Many tax-exempt institutions and organizations do wonderful things. When you identify one, support it with your cash. (Wait, I thought they don't help sweep that block or extinguish if it catches fire... etc.? I thought they were the richest institutions on the block? I thought they weren't paying their fair share?) 

Why, though, should that entitle you to pay less into federal or state coffers, and thus force everyone else, who may hate the college, church or charity you’re contributing to, to pay more? (Hmm. The author apparently doesn't understand the nature of charities. Charities meet needs, and they're very effective and cost efficient. People like helping, and having a choice on where their hard-earned dollars go, as opposed to government extracting it and spending it as it decides, regardless of your preferences. 

See, government does exactly what the author complains charities are doing. People who pay taxes have no voice on where that money goes. And a lot of it goes to supporting values that many find abhorrent. Whether it be illegal invasions of other countries, Planned Parenthood, Piss Christ, or a million other government initiatives, that money it spends was first extracted, with or without permission, from the pockets of private citizens. And the author complains about charities being subsidized by unwilling taxpayers?)

You can argue that a soup kitchen or other charity does work governments can’t afford to handle, thus saving taxpayers money, but it’s a circular argument. The government is broke in the first place because of all the tax exemptions. (At $2.8 trillion in revenue per year, the government is hardly broke. It is broke because it can't control spending. Increasing revenue always results in even more spending. The problem is spending, not revenue.)

What’s more, when a politician wants to fund the Department of Soup For All, I can vote for or against that person based on whether I agree. (A powerless choice, since the person may or may not get elected anyway in contravention of the author's "choice." And even if the author's vote succeeds in obtaining the choice he wants, there is the matter of all the other elected representatives, who may go in a way in opposition to the author's desires. But with charities, the entire transaction is voluntary.) 

But when we set up a tax system to buttress charities and institutions, I have no way to withdraw support if I think everyone should work for their soup, or would rather give all my financial support to education and none to soup kitchens. (Mr. Filler, tell us how well it would go for you if you decided to stop paying taxes? You complain about charities, but the government is the real sucker of wealth from your pocket.)

If a charity or church or college or “social welfare/political campaigning group” must escape taxes to survive, or needs tax-deductibility for its contributors to pull in enough funds to squeak by, it doesn’t have enough voluntary support to exist. It shouldn’t have any involuntary support at all. (Very few organizations are in this situation. But it isn't relevant. Charities aren't charities because of the tax benefits. They do so to meet needs in a very personal and productive way. People want to participate in doing good things. That's why they give to charities. I doubt that their desire to do good things hinges on what the government might do.)

Beneath the political skulduggery of what the IRS did in targeting these conservative groups lies a flawed question: What groups in America deserve tax-exempt status, and tax-deductibility for their patrons? The answer is “none.” (Agreed.)

The best way to avoid arguing over who should be members of the special, privileged classes is to not have any special, privileged categories at all.

Lane Filler is a member of the Newsday editorial board.

Tuesday, May 14, 2013

What to do? Budget surpluses spur tension in some GOP states - my commentary

Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes. My comments in bold.
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JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. (AP) — Turns out that cutting was the easy part. (You know, I think these journalists are lazy, and therefore make lazy assertions like this. Checking this stuff is not that hard, although I will admit that finding concise data is somewhat difficult. According to the State of Missouri website, Missouri's operating budget looks like this:

(These numbers were compiled in 2011. You will note that the totals go up every year except for the 2012 projection. Jumping over to here, we find that the Missouri legislature passed a $23.2 billion budget for 2012, and $24 billion for 2013. Governor Jay Nixon is now outlining plans for a $25.7 budget for 2014. So, do you see any cuts of any kind in these numbers?)  Now Republicans who control a majority of the state capitols in the United States face a far greater philosophical dilemma — what to do with all the money when an improving economy suddenly creates a surplus in revenues. (Isn't this odd? The Republicans demonstrated that by restraining government slightly, without actually cutting budgets to a level that is lower than prior years, will produce increased revenue. And this is a problem for the REPUBLICANS? 

The word "Democrat" doesn't even appear in the article, but it's the Democrats that have the real problem. The fairy tale they've been preaching for the last 50 years has been unveiled as false! They have told us unrelentingly that cutting government spending will cause the economy to plunge. The media have followed right along with this narrative. But it isn't true!

We must also note that the article attributes the revenue bonanza to the improving economy. This is an editorial interpretation that does not belong in a news article. Indeed, the article has it backwards. The fiscal restraint shown by Missouri legislature is what caused the economic uptick.)

Save it? Refund it though tax cuts? Or spend it?

Though they won majorities in more than half the statehouses on principled platforms of making government smaller, some Republicans now are feeling tremendous pressure to spend newfound money on roads, buildings and schools that had been neglected or cut during the recession-induced downturn of recent years. (Um, yeah. Big spending Democrats, who cannot countenance even the thought of spending less money, are certainly the ones supplying the pressure. But more to the point, I am absolutely, positively sure, without even having to research it, that there have been zero cuts in any state anywhere for roads, buildings, and schools.)

“Everybody wants that money,” said North Dakota Senate Majority Leader Rich Wardner, where an oil industry boom has fueled one of the largest per capita budget surpluses in the nation.

Only a few states still face budget difficulties (all Democratically controlled) several years after the Great Recession forced widespread cuts to public education and social services, according to a new report by the National Conference of State Legislatures. (No, no, no! There have been no cuts! None! Nada! This is a total fabrication, but it fits the Leftist narrative.) To the contrary, a growing number anticipate that they will finish the 2013 fiscal year with surpluses, some totaling hundreds of millions of dollars.

That has created new tensions in places such as Michigan, Missouri and Texas, where GOP majorities are wrestling with the morality of spending money. ("Wrestling with the morality of spending money." Whaaa? The GOP is doing no such thing. This is hyperbole and total nonsense. That's what government does, spend money. The fact that they have "extra" money only means that the people have been overtaxed. It's their money. There is no issue regarding the morality of spending money.)

“I like to save money, I like to keep it in the bank, I like to give it back to the taxpayers,” said Missouri House Budget Committee Chairman Rick Stream, a self-described fiscal conservative from suburban St. Louis. “But sometimes, you also have to spend money on big capital improvements to move the state forward.” (Sometimes? How about "all the time?" This has what government has been doing for decades.  Isn't interesting that in the context of showing a surplus that people like this guy simply repeat the same leftist talking points as if nothing has happened? He simply ignores the contradictory information and keeps to his parroted meme.)

Tax revenues that are running more than 11 percent above last year have given Missouri’s largest Republican majority since the Civil War a budget surplus that they estimate at more than $400 million. (Again, note how the presentation skews the perspective. The Republicans were not "given" anything by the economy. They enacted legislation with budget priorities and spending levels that created a surplus.) As recently as a few weeks ago, Stream adamantly opposed spending much of that money. But he now has agreed to use about $120 million to construct an office building in Jefferson City, make repairs to the Capitol and state parks and draw up designs for a new mental hospital. Through such spending now, he said, the state will “save a lot of money down the road.” (It is mismanagement to neglect valuable assets like public buildings and infrastructure. Any prudently run organization puts a line item in their budget for maintenance and repairs. To not do so is willful neglect. These government types purposely allow these things to deteriorate because they know they can use them as crisis opportunities. They want to manipulate taxpayers into ponying up more dough to fix these neglected assets.)

How states choose to handle their surplus revenues will provide a good first test of whether Republicans can make the cuts they enacted during tough times stick during better times, or whether government will return to its pre-recession levels. Those decisions could depend on whether lawmakers view the financial influx as lasting.

A recent Rockefeller Institute of Government report warned that the surge may be blip caused by wealthy taxpayers taking profits in 2012 to avoid getting hit by a federal tax hike in 2013.

The save-verses-spend conflicts are mounting in a number of states.

Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder — a Republican who is a former accountant — is pushing to sock away more money in a state savings account that already is at its healthiest level in about a dozen years. But some in the Republican-led Senate have other GOP-friendly uses for the money.

A revenue surge also has stirred turmoil among Texas Republicans, who are especially zealous about small government. After previously cutting $15 billion from the state budget, lawmakers convened in 2013 to learn they had $8.8 billion more in revenues than projected.

With the state at its constitutional spending limit, the Texas Senate wants to ask voters to approve using $2 billion to develop more water resources, $2.9 billion for roads and bridges and $800 million for public schools. But tea party conservatives, along with Gov. Rick Perry, are calling for tax cuts. Perry says the state already spends plenty on education, even after it cut $5.4 billion from the schools’ budget in 2011.

“We have challenges when we don’t have money in this legislative body, and we have even bigger challenges when we do,” said Texas Rep. Brandon Creighton, a Republican from Conroe.

Monday, May 13, 2013

Recession dragged down birth rates for less-educated - By Emily Alpert - Los Angeles Times - my commentary

Original article found here. Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes. My comments in bold.
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Poorly educated women is a euphemism for the poor. This article is not about education, it is about reducing unwanted pregnancies. The Left has been trumpeting free birth control as a right, claiming it is a means to reduce unwanted pregnancies and therefore abortions. I posted a FB conversation about the muddled thinking regarding this issue. 

Though they would never admit it, the Left has this disturbing tendency to lean toward eugenics. They are always careful to couch their advocacy in terms of civil rights or compassion, but it still amounts to reducing the fertility of undesirables.  

So here we have the real solution for lowering birth rates for undesirables: Economic insecurity. The Left hates it when undesirables have babies, so obviously the recession has actually been a good thing. 
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 LOS ANGELES — Birthrates were dramatically reduced during the recession among women who did not finish high school, a development that far outpaced the drop among women with higher levels of education, according to a new study by the Pew Research Center.

Between 2008 and 2011, birthrates fell 13 percent among women who hadn’t finished high school — nearly twice as much as for women who had earned bachelor’s degrees or more, Pew found. The overall drop continued a trend among U.S. women for the past five decades.

“When people feel that their economic foundations are insecure, they’re often reluctant to have a child,” said Bradford Wilcox, director of the National Marriage Project at the University of Virginia, which wasn’t involved in the Pew study. “We’ve seen this for many years in places like Spain and Italy and Greece — a real problem of unemployment that is linked to low levels of fertility.”

Declining birthrates among women without high school diplomas, combined with increased education for American women, has helped push the percentage of new mothers with at least some college education to its highest point ever, Pew found.

Census data reveal that between 1960 and 2011, the share of new mothers with at least some college education leaped from 18 percent to 66 percent.

Higher education levels among mothers can translate to benefits for their children, researchers have found. More highly educated mothers tend to have healthier babies who do better in school later, researchers have
found. It is unclear, however, whether education is the reason, or whether educated mothers are different in other ways that help their children, such as being better off economically, Pew wrote.

A shift toward more educated mothers could also affect what motherhood looks like: Less educated mothers are more likely to be unmarried and have their children at younger ages.

Almost half of new mothers without high school diplomas were younger than 25, and only 3 percent of new mothers with bachelor’s degrees were as young, Pew found.

Friday, May 10, 2013

Balyeat’s rant just wrongheaded - letter by Swep Davis - my commentary

Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes.
--------------

First Joe Balyeat's column:

“Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys.” – P.J. O’Rourke

The dust hasn’t totally settled on the legislative session. We don’t yet have the final fiscal results of governor vetoes. But the picture’s beginning to take shape, and for those who believe in limited government and slower bureaucracy growth, that picture isn’t pretty. Starting with almost half a billion surplus, a coalition of Democrats and swing-vote, squishy Republicans blew through that surplus plus another $9.5 billion in Montana tax dollars and federal funny money. The $10 billion total budget works out to be $115 million ($115,000,000) for every single day the Legislature was in session. That old adage needs re-vamping: “Another day ... another 100 million dollars.”

Here’s a clearer picture – with only 1 million people in Montana, the biannual $10.042 billion budget spends almost exactly $40,000 per every average family of four in the entire state! This doesn’t include direct federal spending nor city/county government spending – $40,000 state government spending in a state where the average private sector worker makes only about $35,000 per year! The burden of government on the backs of Montana’s private sector workers is heavy indeed.

Like O’Rourke’s drunken teens, Montana’s big spending politicians need to pull to the curb long enough to burp and ask themselves the crucial question: Over the long term, can a small private sector economy like Montana’s ($35,000/year per worker) support this much government? The $10 billion budget is a 13.35 percent increase from the last budget ... while inflation has only been about 2 percent per year. Can state government continue to grow at this unsustainable pace without seriously damaging Montana’s economic prospects for our children? Answer: no.

National economic studies (such as “Government Spending and Economic Growth – a 50 State Analysis”) prove conclusively that state government overspending results in slower economies and stagnant wage growth. But Helena’s big-spending binge continues with little thought given to the economic hangover which will be inflicted on Montana’s private sector.

A minority of conservative legislators attempted to act responsibly ... like teen friends trying to take away the car keys after the kegger. They blocked the multi-billion dollar, irresponsible Medicaid expansion; and on the final day made one last ditch effort to stop the governor’s demand for millions more in spending. But Democrat leaders and Bullock were indignant that anyone would challenge their spending sobriety, so squishy swing votes handed them back the spending car keys and the last bottle of “Jim Beam” by voting through every last “Bullock binge” dollar before hastily adjourning.

And the reward to those who tried to act responsibly was excoriation in the media and scorn from their big-spending colleagues. The squishy, swing-vote big spenders were labeled “responsible,” while those who maintained spending sobriety were labeled “irresponsible.” This makes as much sense as starting an organization called “Mothers Against Sober Drivers.”

The most glaring example of this topsy-turvy “responsibility” mislabeling is the Medicaid debate. Those who blocked Medicaid expansion were armed with research showing the program is a wasteful boondoggle – that Medicaid recipients have even worse medical outcomes than patients with no insurance whatsoever. Yet, daily we see news editorials excoriating conservatives for “irresponsible” rejection of Medicaid expansion ... even while the latest Medicaid medical studies prove the conservative point conclusively.

On May 1, researchers released results of an enormous, multi-year Oregon scientific study of more than 10,000 random patients. Conclusion: Medicaid enrollment “generated no significant improvement in measured physical health outcomes.” There was no significant health outcome difference between the 5,000+ patients in Medicaid versus the 5,000+ non-insured patients. In fact, the only significant difference between the two huge samples is that the Medicaid enrollees were happier because taxpayers were footing the bill for their substantially increased use of medical facilities. Fact: We’d be better off just handing folks money to spend as they wish ... that’d make them even “happier” than enrollment in an inferior health program.

Yet conservative Montana legislators who blocked this boondoggle spending program are called “irresponsible,” while those who joined with Democrats to take the car and the “Jim Beam” on a $10 billion binge are “responsible Republicans.” I think I need a drink.

Former state Sen. Joe Balyeat is now the state director of Americans For Prosperity.
---------------------
Now For Mr. Davis' response:

On Wednesday, the Chronicle granted a guest column to former state Sen. Joe Balyeat for a rambling rant ("Rant: to speak or declaim extravagantly or violently; talk in a wild or vehement way." You decide who is doing the ranting.) 

about government spending that was so filled with half-baked logic that it would take a couple of pages to respond. To pick just one example in the space allowed here, Balyeat argues that people on Medicaid are no more healthy that those without insurance. (no, Mr. Davis. Mr. Balyeat cited a study that came to the conclusion that "there was no significant health outcome difference." If you're going to "debunk" someone, Mr. Davis, at least get the facts straight.) 

He seems to think the only purpose of insurance (Seems to think? If you don't know what he thinks about it, then what is the purpose of your statement other than to impugn his integrity?)

is to make people more healthy, and while it might do that in some cases, that is not the main reason for insurance. (Um, yeah. Mr. Balyeat did not claim it was the "main reason for insurance." He did make any claim other than to cite a study that dealt with one aspect of medicaid. 

Mr. Davis, have you heard of something called preventative care, and how medicaid is supposed to improve outcomes because of preventative benefits? Do you know that one of the justifications promulgated by supporters of the expansion was because of preventative care and how it would lower medical expenses by keeping people healthier? Despite your hysterical protestations, obtaining better outcomes via preventative care IS one of the issues, one that Mr. Balyeat is quite properly addressing.)

The point of Medicaid, among other things, is to enable people to get the care they need without going bankrupt. (Among other things, like preventative care, perhaps?) 

Balyeat’s logic would argue that people with car insurance are just as likely to have accidents as people without it, thus no one should carry car insurance. (A spectacularly bad analogy. No part of car insurance pays for "preventative care" like brake jobs, tire replacement, or new windshield wipers in order to lower the chance of accidents and therefore claims.) 

He doesn’t address some obvious questions such as (1) are some people going without insurance because they are healthier to start with, (2) does his study account for people without insurance who go to the emergency room when they are sick, costing the system (and the taxpayers ) far more than basic health care under Medicaid and (3) does the study take into account a myriad of other differences between Medicaid patients and the uninsured that might easily account for the health differences between the two groups? (What the study says is up to Mr. Davis to determine. He can read it and see if these points are addressed, and then he can save himself some typing time by not having to ask questions. The purpose of his questions, however, are not to obtain information. They are designed to neuter Mr. Balyeat without ever having to address the main points of his column. Which of course Mr. Davis never gets around to.)

Mr. Balyeat’s rant either is based on ignorance, the more flattering explanation, or is typical of the malicious and wrongheaded thinking of many ultra conservatives who think the poor would be better off if we’d just cut the safety nets and make them get off their lazy back ends and go to work. (Name 5 prominent "ultra conservatives" that believe this. Quotes please.) If only all our social problems could be solved so easily.

Swep Davis Bozeman

City to consider hiring real estate agent to sell North Park - By Amanda Ricker - my commentary

Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes. My comments in bold.
-------------------

Three private parties have expressed interest in buying the city-owned North Park property, formerly Mandeville Farm, and developing the land. The Bozeman City Commission on Monday will consider hiring a real estate agent to facilitate a sale. (The purpose of a real estate agent is to represent the property so as to attract sellers. If there are three potential buyers, why does the city need a real estate agent?)

“The property has a lot of potential,” said Brit Fontenot, director of economic development and community relations for the city of Bozeman. “(The city doesn’t) have the resources to sort of kick start it, and the private sector does.” (The city apparently has enough resources to sink into the Story mansion, a new community pool, economic studies, greenhouse gas plans, master plans, downtown revitalization, and a dozen other bone-headed expenditures. Now suddenly they are lookiing at their finances and deciding they don't have the money? 

But actually, what authority does the city possess to "kickstart" anything? Why does it think that it can pick and choose which projects deserve its favor? The city took the property away from any potential kickstarting in 2003, and the property has languished there ever since. Now that the economy has failed the city is realizing belatedly that it simply cannot spend money on every hair-brained project that comes down the pipeline. But it still retains the idea that it can "kickstart" things if only it had the resources. I guess they've learned nothing.)

The city owns 85 acres of vacant farmland west of North Seventh Avenue between Interstate 90 and the railroad. Mandeville Creek flows through the property.

The city bought the property for $3 million in 2003 to use as a garbage transfer station, but that plan never came to fruition. The city is now paying a $2 million court settlement to its insurer for undermining a local
developer’s plan to buy the land. (The city paid $3 million for this property, plus $2 million in a court settlement. Plus, the developer  that the city screwed would have been a taxpayer selling the developed property to taxpayers, so the city also has hundreds of thousands of dollars of lost tax revenue. This is familiar ground for the city. It has been sued numerous times, it has wasted taxpayer money on every conceivable feel-good project. And yet the people of Bozeman keep reelecting these clowns.) 

In January, the City Commission adopted a 95-page master plan aimed at establishing an industrial park at the site. (Another $25,000.) The goal of the plan is to create a place where area businesses with high growth potential — such as the bioscience, photonics and outdoor recreation industries — can manufacture products, resulting in the creation of new jobs and a more diverse Bozeman economy. (Wee, we have a plan! It's a cool plan. We are so smart for creating this plan. We don't just want any businesses, we want businesses with a high growth potential. It's all spelled out in the plan. Because it's in the plan, these high growth businesses will magically appear and pay lots of taxes and hire lots of people. That's what the plan says. 

This is how government creates jobs! Yes, this plan means all this prosperity will result which means we can tax it! The plan says so. We don't care that businesses make products because there is a market for them. We don't care about the risks or hard work of the business owner. No, none of that is important. The plan is proof enough of how good an idea this is.)

Fontenot said Thursday the plan has added value to the property. The plan includes a market analysis and outlines industries the Bozeman market, and North Park specifically, could support over the next 20 to 30 years.

The plan was created in coordination with the state Department of Natural Resources and Conservation, which owns 190 acres of school trust land adjacent to the city’s land. The plan was paid for with a matching
grant, and the city and state each paid $12,500. Since the plan was released, Fontenot said three parties — both local and from outside the southwest Montana region — have expressed interest in buying North Park and carrying out some version of the plan. Still, if the city sells its property, there’s no guarantee that the plan would be realized. (Way to go, Chronicle. Throw cold water on the genius of the central planners.)

Fontenot said he could not release any more information about the potential buyers.

“They’re still just looking around,” he said. “The property is not for sale at the moment.” (Whaaa? The property is not for sale? Then why is there a master plan for developing the property, and why are they considering obtaining a realtor? Why would three purchasers be looking at purchasing a property if it's not for sale?)

Developing North Park, according to the plan, would require an estimated $5 million in the first phase to install water lines, sewer lines, roads and other infrastructure. Fontenot said the city doesn’t have that money.
City officials have applied for grant money to help cover the cost, but he said the chances of securing those funds are slim. (Grant money, as in federal funds. So that makes it free! Unfortunately, government is no longer handing out money to just any old entity like it used to. Well, maybe they're trying to make it seem that way in order to punish us for the sequester. But there's still plenty of debt-backed cash floating around out there. And gosh, $5 million is such a small amount of money for such a worthy cause.)

City Manager Chris Kukulski said selling the land could be a good opportunity for the city. And, the city’s seven-member, citizen Economic Development Council has endorsed the idea. (They bought is 10 years ago, but that all fell through. So making a silk purse out a sow's ear, all the money they wasted is suddenly a "good opportunity." Hmm.  And the Council is a volunteer committee of the City government! Well, if THEY think it's a good idea...)

“The economy seems to be picking back up, and really frankly, we feel that the private sector is in a better position to develop it to its highest best use,” Kukulski said.

The City Commission will discuss whether to prepare a request for proposals for real estate services for North Park during its regular meeting Monday night.

Amanda Ricker can be reached at aricker@dailychronicle.com or 582-2628. 

Thursday, May 9, 2013

Former evangelist becomes agnostic - FB conversation

I posted this:

I found this story to be intriguing. An evangelist decides Christinaity is not for him, but late in life regrets the loss of his closeness to Jesus. B.R., I thought this might interest you.

Charles Templeton: Missing Jesus thegospelcoalition.org
B.F.: Thanks, I'll check it out.

B.F.: That's a sweet story. I don't really see where the regret comes in, though. It sounds from the article like he took a different spiritual path than Billy Graham, and that in this late-life interview, he talked about how much he loved Jesus. Now, I can see the inherent conflict in loving Jesus but not following a particular church or Christian leader. That's my conflict, too.

Me: It seems to me that he didn't take a different spiritual path, he rejected spirituality entirely. He separated himself from the Jesus he loved and ended up missing the relationship.

Your last statement is precisely correct and profound, and it is exactly the same for me. But to me there is no inherent conflict, because Jesus as a person is not related to church or Christian leaders or movements or denominations. That's why I always make the distinction between religion (the man-made system of beliefs and practices) and faith (the personal expression).

The way I see it is that Jesus provides the way to connect to the divine. He tells us this quite specifically. He doesn't say to give up cussing or do nice things for people or give 10% to the church or wear a tie. He says we cannot change ourselves so as to connect to him. He says that connecting to him is how we become changed.

The real conflict that I see is giving up myself for the sake of that relationship. I don't see how I can do that.

B.F.: Deep stuff. I don't think we're meant to give up ourselves for the sake of a relationship with Jesus. I feel my relationship with him when I'm answering my callings, helping others, improving relationships and interpersonal communication, exploring my passions, being selfless, connecting with nature, and generally acting in my own definition of good and righteous. When I go against those instincts, I feel the guilt and shame that most people refer to as sinning. I could never escape Jesus, but I can ignore the sway he has on my conscience, and then I would feel less connected to him. It seems if anything, that's the real regret from Charles Templeton; he stopped accepting and cultivating his personal relationship with Jesus, and though he still probably had a good life, he saw in the end that there were opportunities he missed.

Me: Jesus sets the terms for the connection to the divine. I don't think that you or I get to decide what he requires. Which means we are really on a jouney of discovery to find out what that is, and where our preferences don't coincide with his are the places we give up ourselves.

B.F.: Now I see what you mean by that. I feel similarly, but I'd replace "ourselves" with "our egos" or "the way we're attached to thinking about our lives". Whatever we do, we are ourselves. The distinction is whether we choose the turn in the path that Jesus is showing us, or the turn in the path that serves ourselves. An example: I'm a filmmaker, and have had many opportunities to make shallow art, pull focus onto myself and thus achieve my egoic desires. However, the older I get, the more often I opt for the alternative opportunities, which involve helping other filmmakers, making art that serves a deeper humanist purpose, and letting go of my attachment to the normal definitions of success and fame. Make sense?

B.F.: There's a word we haven't mentioned but I think we'd both agree is a strong element: ACCOUNTABILITY. Like a recovering addict is accountable to his sponsor and support system to keep himself on track with sobriety, so am I accountable to Jesus for my actions and choices.

Me: "Fascinating. I want my story to show that aggressive, protective element of Jesus, but it's tricky territory without a clear understanding of the Biblical context." It would be interesting to couple what we've been discussing here with with the warrior/king element of Jesus we discussed previously, and see how that might impact the idea of accountability.

B.R.: Oooh love it. How do we start? Maybe I need some reading assignments?

Me: I need to confess my inadequacy at this point. I am much more confident of my political theories than my spiritual ones. I have thought about the nature of divinity quite a bit over the years, and the more I discover the more I find I don't know.

Jesus is the quintessential paradox. Friend/judge, peacemaker/warrior, demanding/gentle, exalted/accessible, harsh/forgiving, holy/intimate. I don't know where to begin.

Judge rules for cheerleaders in Bible banner lawsuit - my commentary

Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes. My comments in bold.
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(Of course this is good news for religious liberty, but some of the things reported here are very troubling.

The first thing we need to note is that these cheerleaders are not government entities, they are individuals expressing their religious proclivities. The manner, place, or time at which they exercise their religious liberty is not a matter for government to decide. "Congress shall make no law..." is unambiguous.

The second thing is the judge's statement that  no law "prohibits cheerleaders from using religious-themed banners at school sporting events.” This is irrelevant and bone-headed. Had there been such a law, it would be unconstitutional. The judge was ruling on the constitutionality of religious expression in the public schools, so whether it was a school policy or a law did not matter. 

The third thing is the judge's statement that "the establishment clause does not prohibit the use of such religious themed banners..." The restrictions of establishment clause is applies to government activities. It tells government what it can't do. It does not tell cheerleaders or any other person what they can't do.

The fourth thing is the statement made by the school's attorney that "the district can permit the banners under the establishment clause but is not required to do so." If the judge truly ruled this way it was another bone-headed move. The school has no choice as to whether or not it "permits" people to exercise their rights. One more time. The first amendment does not empower government in any way. It only limits government and tells government what it cannot do.)  

HOUSTON (AP) — A judge ruled Wednesday that cheerleaders at a Southeast Texas high school can display banners emblazoned with Bible verses at football games.

But the ruling might not have settled the issue of whether the banners are protected free speech, according to an attorney for the cheerleaders’ school district.

State District Judge Steven Thomas determined the Kountze High School cheerleaders’ banners are constitutionally permissible. In the ruling, Thomas determined that no law “prohibits cheerleaders from using religious-themed banners at school sporting events.”

The Kountze school district had initially said the banners could not be displayed after receiving a complaint about them in September from the Freedom From Religion Foundation. The foundation argued the banners
violated the so called First Amendment Establishment Clause that bars government — or publicly funded school districts in this case — from establishing or endorsing a religion.

Thomas ruled that the establishment clause does not prohibit the use of such religious themed banners at school sporting events.

“This is a great victory for the cheerleaders and now they’re going to be able to have their banners,” said Hiram Sasser, a lead attorney for the Liberty Institute, a Plano, Texas-based nonprofit law firm that represented the cheerleaders.

But Thomas Brandt, the school district’s attorney, argued that Judge Thomas also granted a school district motion in his ruling that says the district can permit the banners under the establishment clause but is not required to do so.

A deficit shift the GOP may struggle to explain - Rachel Maddow - FB discussion

FB friend B.R. posted this:

I know you probably take Rachel Maddow with a pound of salt, but other than the leftist slant of the article, don't these numbers debunk the claim that the deficit is growing? Or are there certain distinctions or metrics that you think they're missing which negate their optimism?

A deficit shift the GOP may struggle to explain maddowblog.msnbc.com
For deficit hawks, all of the news is good news.

Me: It's interesting that you ask me these questions. You know my predilections. How do you know I won't just feed you a bunch of right wing talking points?

B.R.: I don't. I'm relying on your intelligence and integrity to tell me, in your opinion. which details are true signs of deficit reduction and which elements are leftist spin. If you simply said, "this is all BS, the deficit is going up", and nothing else, then I'd be a little let down. Other than that, I'm open to hearing whatever you have to say.

Me: I don't know who might be claiming what about the deficit, but for me the national debt is the relevant number. The deficit is the shortfall from year to year, and the debt is the accumulation of those deficits. The national debt has increased every year since 1957. https://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/pd/histdebt/histdebt.htm

Here's the national debt for that last dozen fiscal years.
4/30/2013 16,828,845,878,546.72 (1.31 trillion added to the debt, annualized)

09/30/2012 16,066,241,407,385.89 (1.27 trillion added)
09/30/2011 14,790,340,328,557.13 (1.23)
09/30/2010 13,561,623,030,891.79 (1.65)
09/30/2009 11,909,829,003,511.75 (1.89)
09/30/2008 10,024,724,896,912.49 (.798)
09/30/2007 9,007,653,372,262.48 (.501)
09/30/2006 8,506,973,899,215.23 (.574)
09/30/2005 7,932,709,661,723.50 (.553)
09/30/2004 7,379,052,696,330.32
09/30/2003 6,783,231,062,743.62
09/30/2002 6,228,235,965,597.16
09/30/2001 5,807,463,412,200.06
09/30/2000 5,674,178,209,886.86

It's going to be a long time before we get back to bush-era deficits, let alone start paying off the national debt.

B.R.: Alright, so we're agreed that the debt is increasing, and will continue to do so until there IS NO DEFICIT, but instead a surplus, in the annual budget. Don't you think it's at least encouraging, though, that the deficit is decreasing, and that we're getting closer to a surplus?

Me: Sorry, I accidently hit "enter" and was editing. As you can see by the 2013 deficit figures, at the end of Aapril we are on track for a 1.31 trillion deficit. I don't think Maddow's projects are accurate. I am not encouraged yet, until I see some longer term trends that show a commitment to fiscal restraint. Like I said, it will be a long time before we're actually paying off the debt.

B.R.: Ok...they got their numbers from the CBO - do you think the CBO isn't accurate? And while I would also like to see longer term trends, we are seeing "the fastest deficit reduction Americans have seen since World War II". It's okay if you're not encouraged (yet), but I assume we can agree this is the right direction in which to head.

Me: The CBO is a congressional organization. My figures are from the actual Treasury website.

I don't mean to contend with you, and I don't take your points lightly. The statement "the fastest deficit reduction Americans have seen since World War II" can't be demonstrated, because we don't know the criteria being judged. If you like, you can go to the link I provided and calculate the raw change, the percentage change, and the proportional change of the national debt from year to year for every year since WWII. It's more work than I want to do.

But even still, remember what we are dealing with here. The deficit exploded to incredible levels over the last 5 years. Any reduction in a huge number is going to be a huge raw number. But I don't think we can give props for them exploding the debt and then reducing it by a large number. All that means is we've been on a spending binge for the last few years, and if it's really being reeled in, it still leaves us with huge deficit and debt numbers.

B.R.: Awesome, those are like the exact thoughts I was hoping for. Now I have a balanced perspective on the unbalanced budget. Thanks Rich!

Thursday, May 2, 2013

Militia-minded rhetoric trumped by civil solutions - letter by Richard Benert - my commentary

Reproduced here for fair use and discussion purposes. My comments in bold.
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(Richard Benert recently wrote a letter to the editor in response to Bob Chase's letter. Mr. Chase's letter first, followed by Mr. Benert's response.)
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Bob Chase: When it comes to gun control I support the Second Amendment – “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.” There is a growing number of Americans who believe there should be stronger state militias because our nation’s leaders are irresponsible and irresponsive to the public's concerns about the economy, health care etc., but most of all liberty and freedom. Most Americans, myself included, recognize reforms are needed but the solutions coming out of Congress are influenced by corporate greed and our representatives putting their job security before good legislation.

In context of foreign invasion, someone once said, “there would be a rifle behind every blade of grass,” making invasion unlikely. But distrust of the federal government continues to plague our elected officials; it is a natural evolution for them to want more control and to use isolated events to leverage more gun control. This method of legislation is disgraceful and an unwise assault on Americans.

Maybe there could be a compromise. NACTRIM is a National Criminal Locator Database (there are many databases) that searches over 500 million criminal records from all 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico and U.S. territories. That’s more criminal records than there are American citizens. So when it comes to gun purchases is there something wrong if the gun retailer checks a purchasers name against a criminal database? If the purchasers name is not in the database then let the purchaser get his gun and go on his merry way. Maybe I am missing something, but it looks to me like the federal government wants a database on law-abiding citizens. Why?

Bob Chase
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Richard Benert: In a recent letter (“Law-abiding citizens shouldn’t be tracked”) there occurs one of the most frightening statements I’ve ever seen on this page. According to Mr. Chase, “There is a growing number of Americans who believe there should be stronger state militias because our nation’s leaders are irresponsible and irresponsive to the publics (sic) concerns about the economy, health care etc., but most of all liberty and freedom.”

Leaving aside the question of what is meant by “liberty and freedom,” since, if it (they?) truly were under attack, I might agree with the writer. (Um, yeah. Except he did agree at one point.) The amazing thing here is the calmness with which he (and gun-loonies in general) would employ military force to resolve public policy issues. (Note the dismissive characterization: "Loonies." Note also the false equation. This is not a case of employing military force to resolve public policy issues. The military is an arm of government, and these are not public policy issues. Mr. Chase describes the way government has dealt with certain issues, then expands his focus to the larger issue of liberty. This is a case of resisting the abuse of the people by a tyrannical government. The founders threw off the British government mostly because of taxes, no representation, and injustice! They dealt with their grievances on a "public policy" level for years, then asserted that because the Crown was unresponsive, indeed, it doubled down on the tyranny, that the people were not only justified, but duty bound, to revolt. 

How could they say that it is the right and duty of the people "to throw off such Government, and to provide new Guards for their future security?" How abusive does a government have to get in order to justify the embrace of the founders' words? The founders, then. must be "gun loonies."

As a matter of fact, the Left has long complained about the abuses of government. The Left has a long history of fighting against the Man, sometimes employing violence. Have they already forgotten the plight of the black man? Do they now support the Patriot Act? What about warrantless wiretapping? Are all these abuses of freedom now inconsequential? Why does Mr Benert overlook the long train of abuses which the Left revolted against?) 

Mr. Benert appears to simply intend to impugn Mr. Chase as an outlier, an extremist, a lone voice. However, Mr. Chase appears to be in good company.)  Mr. Chase, please be notified that the U.S. Constitution, which you good militiamen supposedly adore, was painstakingly devised precisely to deal with these issues — without bloodshed. (Um, no it wasn't. The Constitution was written to create, define, and limit government. The government largely ignores the provisions that limit it, which has led to the aforementioned abuses.) 

Also, look carefully at article 1, section 8, of this document. It gives Congress the power to organize, arm, and discipline the militias. State-appointed officers could train them “according to the discipline prescribed by Congress.” It’s hard to reconcile this with the idea that the Second Amendment gives state militias the right to wage war on Congress, let alone that it places our freedom in the hands of rag-tag gangs of insurrectionists. (So we we have a Leftist, while mocking Mr. Chase's love of the Constitution, citing a provision of a document he himself disdains. It seems that Leftists only cite the constitution when it bolsters their cause, then mock it as an ancient document that couldn't anticipate our modern era. 

Anyway, state militias as originally conceived were made up of every able bodied man, and the states were sovereign entities responsible for their own security. The Declaration demonstrates this: "That these united Colonies are, and of Right ought to be Free and Independent States, that they are Absolved from all Allegiance to the British Crown, and that all political connection between them and the State of Great Britain, is and ought to be totally dissolved; and that as Free and Independent States, they have full Power to levy War, conclude Peace, contract Alliances, establish Commerce, and to do all other Acts and Things which Independent States may of right do." 

Notice the plural tense. The Declaration treated the states as individual entities, and the constitution honored that understanding. The Constitution takes these state militias and draws them together for times when the common defense needs to be executed on behalf of the several states.)

Mr. Chase does recognize the damaging influence of “corporate greed” over congressional “solutions.” Right on, Mr. Chase. But you would wage war on the only public structure we have that’s big enough to control these corporations? What would you put in its place? (Why is it ridiculous for Mr. Chase but not the founders? If the government is oppressive and tyrannical, why should it be retained? Further, if the main recommending feature of government is to restrain corporations [which is hardly true anyway], then how good of a job is government doing right now? After, all, if you get Leftists talking about corporations, it will take maybe ten seconds for them to start complaining about their greed and how eeeevil they are. It seems that whenever the Left talks about issues, they always seem to think that nothing has been done up til now, so we need laws to reel in these greedy CEO because apparently there are no laws now.

Anyway, if the principle is true that the people have a right to throw off tyrannical government, then it's not relevant to that right. It doesn't matter what would replace it. However, those who would overthrow a tyrannical government get to install the new government, and since tyranny was the reason, it is doubtful that another flavor of tyranny would be acceptable.) Very likely the military dictatorship you create would quickly be absorbed by these corporations, putting us in a fine fascistic fix. (Interesting that Mr. Benert looks for the very worst that could happen. But more interestingly, he describes a replacement government which is by and large exactly what we have now: a fascistic government controlled by corporations. And we need to note with irony that he argued for more government/corporate partnerships here.) Why not give the Constitution a chance? (Irony is often lost on the ironic. He, like most Leftists, have little regard for constitution. It is an impediment. It's prevents government from doing good things, It places too much trust in the people to govern themselves. The constitution is hated by the Left.) You know, things like public campaign financing, congressional reform, ending Washington’s revolving door, etc.? You know, civil solutions befitting civilized people. (Sigh. His list of things to be solved has nothing to do with honoring the constitution. In fact, the constitution would have to be amended in order to implement some of these things.)

Richard Benert