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Don’t Spit in My Eye and Tell Me It’s Raining


Donald Trump has refused to disclose his tax returns, stating that an audit by the IRS is preventing disclosure. He has repeatedly  stated that there is nothing significant to be learned from examining a candidates returns. However, clearly there’s a great deal to be learned about his charitable contributions. Perhaps the reason he doesn’t want to disclose his tax information is that he does not want to have his charitable contributions examined by the public. Following is an article by the Associated Press’s Marcia Dunn, posted on the Business Insider’s website on August 2, 2015, entitled “There’s Something Fishy about Donald Trump’s Charitable Donations.”

“Donald Trump, widely believed to the be the wealthiest American ever to run for president, is nowhere among the ranks of the country’s most generous citizens, according to an Associated Press review of his financial records and other government filings.

Trump has said he donated $102 million worth of cash and land to philanthropic and conservation organizations over the past five years.

But his campaign has provided little documentation for most of these contributions, and tax filings of the Donald J. Trump foundation show Trump has made no charitable contributions to his own namesake nonprofit since 2008.

Without an endowment, the fund has continued to give grants only as a result of contributions from others.

Even the $102 million would not impress the wealthy elite whom Trump counts as his peers.

Billionaires like Michael Bloomberg, George Lucas and Warren Buffett have both given far more and pledged to donate most of their wealth to charity during their lifetimes.

It is possible that Trump has been donating money anonymously through avenues other than his foundation, whose tax records the AP reviewed.

But pressed by the AP on the details of his contributions, Trump campaign spokeswoman Hope Hicks provided a partial list of donations that appeared to correspond with the foundation’s gifts — indicating that Trump may be counting other people’s charitable giving as his own.

“I give to hundreds of charities and people in need of help,” Trump said in an emailed response to questions from the AP about how he tallied his own philanthropy. “It is one of the things I most like doing and one of the great reasons to have made a lot of money.”

The Trump campaign did not respond to a request that it identify donations that Trump himself gave.

Trump has not released his own tax records even though some other presidential candidates have disclosed theirs. Such documents would likely provide a clearer picture of his giving.

Actual cash donations account for only around a tenth of the $102 million Trump says he has given in the last five years. Most of the total comes from land-related transactions. One major land donation from Trump earlier this year may result in a significant tax deduction for Trump for continuing to operate a commercial golf driving range.

Trump announced in January he was providing a land conservancy in Rancho Palos Verdes, California, with a legal promise never to develop 16 luxury homes on what is now the driving range of the Trump National Golf Course Los Angeles.

But city planning documents indicate Trump had no plans to use the land for anything other but a driving range — which he will continue to do under the terms of the easement.

A possible multimillion dollar beneficiary of Trump’s gift: Donald Trump. Easements — contractual limitations which formally devalue the land, even if they require no changes in its use or ownership — provide an avenue for federal tax write-offs.

By committing to use his driving range as a driving range, Trump is likely entitled to a sizable tax deduction, said Dean Zerbe, a tax attorney for Alliant Group of Houston and who previously headed an investigation into easement write-offs for the Senate Finance Committee.

“It’s shocking how much you see in the way of golf easements,” he said. “Are we comfortable that this is something we want to subsidize with tax policy?

Trump’s foundation began in 1987 and exists to donate money to other charities.

It has no staff, and its annual IRS filings have regularly listed Trump’s average time spent on it as “minimal” or zero hours a week. The foundation has given out $3.6 million between 2011 and 2013, the most recent year in which its finances are available.

The overwhelming majority of its recent gifts have been made with other people’s money.

NBC Universal, World Wrestling Entertainment and high-end, sporting and entertainment event ticket-reseller Richard Ebers are among the largest donors; Trump made his last significant donation, of $30,000, in 2008.

Until late last year, Trump was described as an “ardent philanthropist” in a biography posted to the Trump Organization’s website. That language has since been removed.

As with Trump’s politics, his donations do not fit neatly within traditional ideological lines: In 2012, he donated to the Gay Men’s Health Crisis — founded by gay rights activist Larry Kramer — and the Billy Graham Evangelical Association, which decries the influence of the “gay lobby” and offers support to people pushing loved ones to “seek freedom from homosexuality.”

A sizable portion of Trump’s giving appears to be geared toward charities prominently affiliated with celebrities or politicians.

Trump has given to the Ronald Reagan Foundation and the Clinton Foundation, and has made donations to charities associated with former major league baseball manager Joe Torre, television personality Larry King and professional golf legend Arnold Palmer.

Some celebrity-backed charities have pitched controversial causes.

In 2010, Trump’s foundation gave $10,000 to Generation Rescue, a nonprofit run by Jenny McCarthy to champion the widely discredited theory that vaccines cause autism.

Trump also gave $1,000 to the New York Rescue Workers Detoxification Project, an organization confounded by Tom Cruise that offered free Scientology-based cleansing to rescue workers after the 2001 terror attacks.

Trump’s tax returns would provide clearer information about any philanthropy he listed as deductible.

In 2011, he indicated he might release his own tax returns when President Barack Obama released his birth certificate, something the president subsequently did.

Trump took credit for pressuring Obama to release the document but did not release his tax records, promising he would do so at an appropriate time.

Such returns could potentially shed light on the nature of some of Trump’s noncash gifts, such as his donation of the easement on his Rancho Palos Verdes golf course. Trump’s gift is to the local land conservancy, which maintains green space and undeveloped coastline owned by city of Rancho Palos Verdes.”

 

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Son of a Gun


In the wake of the June 12 horrific shooting in Orlando, Florida, the July 7 murder of 5 police officers in Dallas, Texas and the July 17 ambush of police officers in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, the contentious debate on gun control is been reignited. Once again, unfortunately, the Congress has been paralyzed, unable to act on the question. Whether the Congress is simply inept, hopefully polarized, or controlled by the National Rifle Association is debatable. Regardless of why our elected leaders are unable to come to grips with this subject, these massacres and previous appalling shootings are much too high a price to pay while a resolution of how to reasonably control weapons languishes. Allow me to repeat, how to REASONABLY control firearms. Please note, I am not suggesting that Americans should not be allowed to keep, own and bear firearms. Our right to keep and bear arms, as provided in the Second Amendment of the Constitution, has been the law of the land since 1791. Whether or not you agree, whether or not you like it, it is the law.

Some, including a presidential candidate, have suggested that if the patrons in the Orlando nightclub had been armed with assault weapons and thus able to return fire when confronted with a deranged shooter intent on inflicting death and destruction, the death toll would have been substantially less.

Immediately after the tragedy in Orlando, my friend Manny posted the following on his Facebook page:

“I stand behind you in line at the store with a smile on my face…and a gun under my shirt and you are none the wiser, yet you are safer for having me next to you. I won’t shoot you. My gun won’t pull it’s own trigger. It is securely holstered with the trigger covered. It can’t just go off. However, rest assured that if a lunatic walks into the grocery store and pulls out a rifle, I will draw my pistol and protect myself and my family and therefore protect you and your family. I may get shot before I can pull the trigger…but, I won’t die in a helpless blubbering heap on the floor begging for my life or my child’s life. No, if I die it will be in a pile of spent shell casings. I won’t be that victim. I choose not to be. As for you, I don’t ask you to carry a gun. If you are not comfortable, then please don’t. But I would like to keep my right to choose to not be a helpless victim. There is evil in the world and if evil has a gun, I want one too…”

What Manny doesn’t tell you, however, is that he is a retired police officer. Manny is highly trained in the use of firearms and in the accurate delivery of lethal force. He’s been trained to know when it is appropriate and when it is not appropriate to fire his weapon in the line of duty. Manny completely understands the solemn responsibility of being armed, and the fateful consequences of using his weapon.

My reason for sharing Manny’s words is to provide a thoughtful and meticulous example of a mature attitude about firearms.  Please note that Manny explicitly says that he does not ask you to carry a weapon. That’s good advice that many of us should follow.

I haven’t asked Manny what he would think about entering a crowded active fire situation where several people, armed with assault weapons, are exchanging gunfire and some have been drinking, perhaps even intoxicated. I suspect it would not be high on his list of things to do. It should be instantly obvious that this would be a situation completely out of control, exposing law enforcement to an unreasonable risk. It is hard to imagine how this would result in a reduced body count.

Those who make this and similar suggestions would be well advised to follow Benjamin Franklin’s counsel, “It is better to remain silent and be thought a fool than to speak and remove all doubt.”

The question of the availability of armor piercing ammunition has also been raised. My response is simple. Other than the military and law enforcement, who needs armor piercing bullets? Whose armor does one wish to pierce? Consider for a moment, who wears body armor? The military and the police are the only legitimate users of body armor that I can readily think of. So the real question should be: Why should ammunition capable of piercing the body armor commonly used by military and law enforcement personnel be available to the general public? Precisely whose civil rights are being abridged by denying access to ammunition designed specifically to penetrate body armor and inflict maximum damage to human beings?

The question of gun control is far too detailed and far too intense to be addressed thoroughly and thoughtfully in this blog. However, I am quite confident there is little or no reasonable rationale to justify the general availability of military style assault weapons; weapons designed explicitly to maim and kill people. Additionally, I am equally confident that there is no sensible justification for the general availability of armor piercing ammunition.

The United States has one of the highest rates of firearm related deaths in the world, exceeded only by such countries as Venezuela, Uruguay, Colombia, Swaziland, Panama, and Jamaica. Instead of expounding somewhat mindless catchphrases such as “Make America great again”, why not work together in a thoughtful, intelligent way to make America safe again?

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Buying Democracy


When you go to the polls to vote, how many of you cast your vote based on how much candidates spent on their campaigns? Perhaps you should. Have you ever wondered where the money comes from? In order to meet the high cost of elections, candidates rely on campaign contributions. This results in the golden rule of politics – the person with the gold makes the rules. Consequently, the high cost of campaigns and the lack of restrictions on contributions degrade the integrity of our democracy. As a result, your democracy is often sold to the highest bidder

At the heart of the problem is the extreme high cost of political campaigns. The Center for Responsive Politics, at open secrets.org, accessed May 20, stated that the total cost for the 2012 federal election exceeded $6 billion.

In order to meet these costs, candidates rely on contributions from special interests and wealthy individuals. According to the afore mentioned open secrets.org, in the 2012 presidential campaign, almost $856,000,000 was contributed by wealthy individuals. This amount was 74% of the total of all individual contributions.

One of the primary ways these groups make contributions is through lobbying. According to the lobbying database at open secrets.org, accessed May 19, total lobbying spending in 2013 was $3.23 billion, and in the first quarter of 2014 was $810 million.

Adding fuel to the fire, regulations governing contributions have become less restrictive.

In his April 2, 2014 article in the Washington Post, Robert Barnes wrote that the U.S. Supreme Court ruled in a 2014 case that campaign contributions are essentially free speech and the Congress may not regulate contributions because that violates the first amendment. This ruling essentially removed all restrictions on contributions.  The effect all this has on us is astounding. Our votes now mean less and less.

Often large contributors determine who wins an election. In their 2012 paper in Economic Theory, Rebecca Morton and Roger Myerson state that since candidates must compete for contributions, the expectations of political favors and influence by the contributors is a decisive factor in elections. It gets worse. Large contributors have disproportionate influence over actual governance. Paul Jorgensen, using the pharmaceutical industry as an example, explains in his 2013 paper in the Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics how contributions from this industry not only influenced elections, but also gave the industry critical influence in formulating and implementing policy.  Another way officeholders are influenced is when interest groups offer high paid positions as lobbyists to elected officials. It is exceptionally difficult to assign a dollar value to this system, but there can be little doubt that this practice is as wide spread as it is insidious.

Granted, all this is a great deal of statistics, numbers and dollar amounts. However, if this information is distilled down to its essence, it means many candidates are elected because of the amount of contributions they received, and many laws are enacted because influence was purchased by interest groups.

There are straightforward steps that can be taken to solve this problem. By better controlling the behavior of office holders and how we conduct elections, we can begin to reclaim our democracy.

abramoff

Jack Abramoff

If anyone has insight into the problems with contributions, it would be Jack Abramoff. Abramoff is a former lobbyist, probably the most crooked and notorious of our time. In January 2006, he was convicted of mail fraud, conspiracy to bribe public officials, and tax evasion. Since his release from prison, he has worked as a consultant offering solutions for reforming campaign financing.  In a 2013 interview with State Legislators, Abramoff proposed that legislators should be prevented from soliciting or accepting donations from any industry they regulate.  In that same interview, Abramoff stated that when a member leaves Congress there should be up to a 10-year waiting period before they can enter the lobbying industry.

Lastly, I believe our national campaigns should be limited 90 days. The 2016 election campaigns have already begun, and over the next two years billions of dollars will be raised and spent. Both the United Kingdom and Canada are contemporary examples of the success of shorter campaigns. According to Campaign Finance: United Kingdom, at the Library of Congress website, and The Length of Federal Election Campaigns, at the Parliament of Canada website, both accessed May 27, British and Canadian campaigns are very short. I absolutely believe that everyone in this classroom can decide how to vote in 90 days or less.

I believe that these steps would be more effective that others that propose forcing limits on contributions.

Provisions that would limit what can be accepted by legislators and that would establish an extended waiting period before a member could accept employment as a lobbyist can be authorized internally by the Congress, and as such, they would not be subject to adjudication by the courts.

Congress has the authority to regulate elections. I believe that establishing a maximum length for national elections is legal and would withstand judicial review.

Campaign contributions and lobbying by special interests not only influence the outcome of elections but also how they affect the laws our government enacts. I have outlined some straightforward steps that could diminish this problem. Regardless whether you are a Republican, a Democrat, a Libertarian, a conservative or a liberal, I believe that  your vote should count more than a contribution. I truly hope that you will have a fierce, unrelenting determination that your democracy cannot be bought.

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Trump Supporters Say ‘Yes’ To A Federal Database For Jews


In the last couple of weeks, there’s been a sense of dread that we are seeing the rise of an American Reich in the campaign of Donald Trump. The corporate media has been struggling mightily on how to deal with it and they seem to be OK with calling Trump himself an incipient Nazi while ignoring his followers. But that needle continues to get harder to thread as his supporters, emboldened by Trump’s openly racist and fascistic rhetoric, have begun to be openly racist and fascistic themselves:

Daily Show correspondent Jordan Klepper came away from a focus group of Donald Trump supporters on Tuesday as confused as anyone as to the real estate mogul’s political appeal.

“This is a group that doesn’t like statistics, thinks Muslims need not apply,” Klepper said. “Some would consider rounding the Jews.”

The latter statement was not hyperbole. When asking the group to put down their Trump signs if he named a policy idea that would make them fail to vote for the candidate, Klepper found that two of them would still back the GOP front-runner even if he proposed a “national registry of Jews.”

Mind you, I would bet my last dollar that if you asked them if they supported a national registry for guns, they would start screaming about tyranny. Jews, though? Fuck’em!

Leave to the “fake” news to point out what everyone already knows but “polite” society refuses to say: There is a large part of the Republican base that is champing at the bit to turn America into a 21st century version of Nazi Germany. They would gleefully round up Latinos and deport them. They would cheerfully put Muslims in concentration camps. And they’d throw the Jews in there as well because, you know, Jesus would want that.

Trump is going to lose, badly, if he manages to win the nomination. But even if he drops out of the race, or if the Republican Party figures out how to get rid of him, we cannot allow “polite” society to forget that the American right wing is heavily infested with the same kind of people that celebrated the murder of almost 17 million Jews, gays, blacks, the mentally handicapped, intellectuals, the Romani, etc. etc.

If we let the hate of Trump’s followers become normalized, it will only spread like a cancer. Germany didn’t turn to genocide overnight. It started with a single man willing to stand up and say out loud, “Vote for me! I will get rid of them and you will be safe!”

 

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The Trump Effect


This is a reprint from the Southern Poverty Law Center:

Every four years, teachers in the United States use the presidential election to impart valuable lessons to students about the electoral process, democracy, government and the responsibilities of citizenship.

But, for students and teachers alike, this year’s primary season is starkly different from any in recent memory. The results of an online survey conducted by Teaching Tolerance suggest that the campaign is having a profoundly negative effect on children and classrooms.

It’s producing an alarming level of fear and anxiety among children of color and inflaming racial and ethnic tensions in the classroom. Many students worry about being deported.

Other students have been emboldened by the divisive, often juvenile rhetoric in the campaign. Teachers have noted an increase in bullying, harassment and intimidation of students whose races, religions or nationalities have been the verbal targets of candidates on the campaign trail.

Educators are perplexed and conflicted about what to do. They report being stymied by the need to remain nonpartisan but disturbed by the anxiety in their classrooms and the lessons that children may be absorbing from this campaign.

Two responses from teachers illustrate their dilemma. A teacher in Arlington, Virginia, says, “I try to not bring it up since it is so stressful for my students.” Another, in Indianapolis, Indiana, says, “I am at a point where I’m going to take a stand even if it costs me my position.”

Our survey of approximately 2,000 K-12 teachers was not scientific. Our email subscribers and those who visit our website are not a random sample of teachers nationally, and those who chose to respond to our survey are likely to be those who are most concerned about the impact of the presidential campaign on their students and schools.

But the data we collected is the richest source of information that we know of about the effect of the presidential campaign on education in our country. And there is nothing counterintuitive about the results. They show a disturbing nationwide problem, one that is particularly acute in schools with high concentrations of minority children.

Here are the highlights:

  • More than two-thirds of the teachers reported that students—mainly immigrants, children of immigrants and Muslims—have expressed concerns or fears about what might happen to them or their families after the election.
  • More than half have seen an increase in uncivil political discourse.
  • More than one-third have observed an increase in anti-Muslim or anti-immigrant sentiment.
  • More than 40 percent are hesitant to teach about the election.

The comments are particularly revealing.

The survey did not identify any candidates. But out of 5,000 total comments, more than 1,000 mentioned Donald Trump. In contrast, a total of fewer than 200 contained the names Ted Cruz, Bernie Sanders or Hillary Clinton. During the campaign, Trump has spoken of deporting millions of Latino immigrants, building a wall between the United States and Mexico, banning Muslim immigrants and even killing the families of Islamist terrorists. He has also called Mexican immigrants “rapists” and drug dealers.

“My students are terrified of Donald Trump,” says one teacher from a middle school with a large population of African-American Muslims. “They think that if he’s elected, all black people will get sent back to Africa.”

In state after state, teachers report similar fears among minority children.

In Virginia, an elementary school teacher says students are “crying in the classroom and having meltdowns at home.” In Oregon, a K-3 teacher says her black students are “concerned for their safety because of what they see on TV at Trump rallies.” In North Carolina, a high school teacher says she has “Latino students who carry their birth certificates and Social Security cards to school because they are afraid they will be deported.”

Some of the stories are heartbreaking. In Tennessee, a kindergarten teacher says a Latino child—told by classmates that he will be deported and trapped behind a wall—asks every day, “Is the wall here yet?”

Many children, however, are not afraid at all. Rather, some are using the word Trump as a taunt or as a chant as they gang up on others. Muslim children are being calledterrorist or ISIS or bomber.

“Students are hearing more hate language than I have ever heard at our school before,” says a high school teacher in Helena, Montana. Another teacher reports that a fifth-grader told a Muslim student “that he was supporting Donald Trump because he was going to kill all of the Muslims if he became president!”

The long-term impact on children’s well-being, their behavior or their civic education is impossible to gauge. Some teachers report that their students are highly engaged and interested in the political process this year. Others worry that the election is making them “less trusting of government” or “hostile to opposing points of view,” or that children are “losing respect for the political process.”

For the sake of children and their education, presidential candidates should begin modeling the kind of civil behavior and civic values that we all want children to learn in school. Barring such a change in tone, however, teachers and school administrators will face an uphill battle. Remaining impartial will be difficult when the students’ conversation revolves largely around Trump.

But we urge educators not to abandon their teaching about the election, to use instances of incivility as teaching moments, and to support the children who are hurt, confused and frightened by what they’re hearing from the candidates.

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Guns at the GOP Convention


 

I thought I had seen it all in the GOP primaries this year, but I was in for a surprise. It seems that some 35,000 people have signed an online petition to allow openly carrying firearms at the GOP convention in Cleveland. My first thought was, “You’ve got to be kidding.” Nevertheless, this story is for real.

Posted on the website change.org, the petition notes “though Ohio is an open carry state, which allows for the open carry of guns, the hosting venue — the Quicken Loans Arena — strictly forbids the open carry of firearms on their premises.” That “is a direct affront to the Second Amendment and puts all attendees at risk,” said the petition. I have actually read the Second Amendment, and it does not say anything about openly carrying firearms. The Constitution nor the Bill of Rights create a right to openly carry firearms, and does not mention “risk” as a reason to openly carry firearms. Granted, individual states can allow certain firearms to be carried openly. However, it is fair to conclude that those same states can determine when and where firearms can be carried out in the open, and where such activity can be prohibited.

The petition also states, “This is a direct affront to the Second Amendment and puts all attendees at risk.” The petition reads, “As the National Rifle Association has made clear, ‘gun-free zones’ such as the Quicken Loans Arena are ‘the worst and most dangerous of all lies.” I would be curious to know which lies the petition is referring to. Considering that I have spent most of my life in so-called “gun-free zones”, I have never considered myself at risk or subjected to danger.

A blog called Hyperationalist has claimed responsibility. He or she writes: “It just doesn’t seem right that thousands of patriotic Republican good guys should be left totally unprotected by whatever bad guys might wish to do them harm. I mean forgodsake people, ISIS could show up to take out everybody in and around that building and they’d be sitting ducks. Sitting ducks, I tell you! There might even be a bad egg or two among the delegates.”  It’s my guess that this person also sees the boogieman, make that a Muslim bogeyman, under the bed.

According to an analysis by the New America Foundation, Islamic terror attacks in the United States have led to the deaths of 45 people since 9/11. That is an annual average of three deaths per year attributed to Islamic terrorism. Following are a few things that are more likely to kill you then an Islamic terrorist:

Television: TV might be linked to earlier deaths among those who watch more than a few hours a day, but more concretely, the devices themselves kill 176 people a year. Literally. They fall on people. That’s 55 times more deaths than Islamic terror claims annually.

Fireworks: According to the Consumer Product Safety Commission, celebrating the 4th of July might be more deadly than Islamic terror attacks. The organization reports an average of 7.1 deaths per year — meaning Americans are more likely to blow themselves up than be eviscerated by the jihadist bombers they so fear.

Cows: Yes, cows. According to the CDC, cattle slay an average of 20 Americans every year. While these deaths occur mostly among farm workers, dogs kill 28 Americans per year, spiders kill seven, and venomous lizards and snakes kill six. All of these animals are still more likely to kill an American than the caliphate and other Islamic boogeymen.

Elevators: While the fear of dying as a result of an elevator malfunction has probably plagued many Americans at one time or another, such a worry is likely fleeting. However, if Americans are truly concerned with “common sense,” a virtue Donald Trump frequently touts, they would do well to readjust their phobias. Elevators kill 27 Americans per year, according to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics and the Consumer Product Safety Commission.

Choking: Americans will sooner perish from choking on food or other objects than from an Islamic terror attack. At least 2,500 people per year are killed by this type of asphyxiation — 781 times more than from a jihadi assault. Hot dogs are particularly menacing. Perhaps we should ban them in the same vein as Trump’s proposed ban on Muslims. Then again, killing fewer cows to grind up for beef dogs might lead to an uptick in cattle-on-human violence. America is at a perilous crossroads.

Lightning: People often quip that one is “more likely to be struck by lightning” when they want to highlight an event’s improbability. However, even as the number of deaths from lightning decreases over the long-term, it is still higher than the number of people killed by Muslim terror attacks each year. Forty-nine people per year die from being struck by lightning — more than 15 times the rate of death from Islamic extremist murders.

Car accidents: Though most Americans are aware of the high risk of death by car accident, this knowledge doesn’t mitigate their extreme Islamophobia. The Association for Safe International Road Travel estimates about 37,000 Americans die each year in vehicular accidents, over 11,562 times the number killed by Muslim fanatics.

Heart Attacks: Heart attacks are one of America’s leading killers, claiming 190,625 times more American lives than Islamic terror. 610,000 Americans die from heart attacks per year. Cancer kills 589,430 Americans annually, and diabetes is the main cause of death for 69,071 Americans per year. They are responsible for astronomically more fatalities than radical Islamic terror.

Police: According to a three-year average of American police killings logged by killedbypolice.net — a more comprehensive database than the federal government’s — police killed 998 people on average per year from 2013-2015. That’s roughly 312 times the average annual number of people killed by Islamic extremists since 9/11. The average number of people killed by Islamic terrorism in the last three years is 7.7 — including the recent shooting in San Bernardino — and by that parallel measure, police are still about 130 times deadlier than terrorists.

Prescription Painkillers: The CDC estimates that 44 people die per day from overdosing on pharmaceutical painkillers. Never mind that that number is almost 14 times the number of Americans killed by Islamic terrorism each year. Based on the CDC’s figure, about 16,060 Americans die annually from painkillers — making the Big-Pharma money-makers 5,019 times more deadly than the Islamic terror that has Americans trembling whilst hiding under their blankies.

Overall, the chances of being killed by an Islamic terrorist in the United States are fairly slim. I should have mentioned that the odds of being killed at the GOP convention in Cleveland by an openly carrying, gun toting fellow Republican are substantially greater than being killed by an Islamic terrorist.

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LIARS AND THE LIES THEY TELL


The Republican candidates met once again.  Ten candidates vied in the main event of the Oct. 28 economy-focused third Republican debate, hosted by CNBC at the University of Colorado Boulder: former Florida governor Jeb Bush, retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie, Sen. Ted Cruz, former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina, former Arkansas governor Mike Huckabee, Ohio Gov. John Kasich, Sen. Rand Paul, Sen. Marco Rubio and entrepreneur Donald Trump.  These candidates all say they are supremely qualified to be President.  The one thing they have in common is that they are fast and loose with the facts.  Don’t confuse them with the facts, their minds are made up!

USA Today found several claims worthy of fact-checking. Here are some of the highlights from the debate:

  •  Former CEO Carly Fiorina claimed that 92% of the job losses in President Obama’s first term belonged to women, but women — and men — gained jobs by the end of Obama’s first term.
  •  Businessman Donald Trump disputed the idea that he had criticized Sen. Marco Rubio and Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg for supporting H-1B visas. In fact, Trump’s immigration plan, posted on his website, is critical of both of them.
  •  Trump also claimed his campaign was 100% self-funded, but more than half of the money his campaign has raised came from supporters’ contributions.
  •  Fiorina blamed the Affordable Care Act for a large disparity in firm closings versus openings every year. But closings outnumbered firm births by the widest margin in 2009, a year before the law was enacted.
  •  Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson said it was “total propaganda” to say he was involved with a controversial nutritional supplement company, but he appeared in promotional videos for the company, touting its products.
  •  New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie said that Social Security would be insolvent in seven to eight years. But even after the trust funds are exhausted — estimated to be in 14 to 19 years — the program can still pay out 73% of benefits for several decades.
  •  Sen. Ted Cruz said women’s wages have declined under Obama, when in fact the latest figures show their wages have increased.
  •  Rubio claimed CNBC’s John Harwood was wrong that a Tax Foundation analysis of his tax plan found those in the top 1% of earners would get nearly twice the gain as those in the middle. Harwood was right, and that’s on a percentage basis.
  •  In the undercard debate, former New York governor George Pataki claimed the Iranians, Russians and Chinese “hacked” the private server Hillary Clinton used as secretary of state and obtained “state secrets.” There’s no evidence of that.

Fiorina On Job ‘Losses’ For Women Under Obama

Fiorina revived a dated, and now incorrect, talking point from Mitt Romney’s campaign in 2012 when she claimed that “92% of the jobs lost during Barack Obama’s first term belonged to women.” It’s true that in the early years of Obama’s presidency, job losses from the recession continued to mount, and women lost a higher percentage of those jobs. But that ignores the massive job losses by men in the recession prior to Obama taking office. And by the end of Obama’s first term, both men and women had gained jobs.

Fiorina: “It is the height of hypocrisy for Mrs. Clinton to talk about being the first woman president, when every single policy she espouses, and every single policy of President Obama has been demonstrably bad for women. Ninety-two percent of the jobs lost during Barack Obama’s first term belonged to women.”

Back in April 2012, we wrote about Romney’s frequent campaign line that “over 92% of the jobs lost under this president were lost by women,” which Romney cited as evidence that Obama’s policies amounted to a “war on women.” Romney was referring to Bureau of Labor Statistics data between January 2009, when Obama took office, and March 2012, the latest available at the time. We noted that statistic was accurate, but didn’t tell the whole story.

Looking back at the whole recession, we wrote, men had lost many more jobs than women. But the biggest job losses for men came earlier in the recession, and recovery for men came faster than it did for women.

Fiorina, however, referred to “Obama’s first term,” and, of course, we now have access to data from the entirety of that first term. And looking at the full four years of Obama’s first term, both men and womengained jobs. According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, women gained 416,000 jobs in Obama’s first term (about 32% of the overall job gains).

As for Obama’s second term, women have gained another roughly 3.5 million jobs between January 2013 and September 2015. That accounts for 49% of the overall job gains during Obama’s second term.

Trump’s Forgotten Criticism

Trump denied ever criticizing Facebook founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg, as well as Marco Rubio, with regard to the H-1B visa program. But he actually did so — in his very own immigration plan on his own website.

During a question about the visa program that allows companies to bring foreign workers to the United States for “specialty occupations” in technology and other fields, CNBC moderator Becky Quick said that Trump had criticized Zuckerberg for his position on H-1B visas. He responded:

Trump: “I was not at all critical of him. I was not at all. In fact, frankly, he’s complaining about the fact that we’re losing some of the most talented people. They go to Harvard. They go to Yale. They go to Princeton. They come from another country and they’re immediately sent out. I am all in favor of keeping these talented people here so they can go to work in Silicon Valley. …  So I have nothing at all critical of him.”

Moderator Becky Quick: “Where did I read this and come up with this that you were …”

Trump: “Probably, I don’t know — you people write the stuff.”

Quick also said that Trump has called Rubio Zuckerberg’s “own personal senator,” which Trump again denied, claiming “I never said that. … Somebody’s doing some really bad fact-checking. I never said that.”

But Trump’s own immigration plan, posted on his website, appears to criticize both Zuckerberg and Rubio, and does contain the line Quick mentioned. His plan calls for raising wages paid to H-1B workers, which it says would convince companies to hire more Americans.

Trump’s immigration plan: “This will improve the number of black, Hispanic and female workers in Silicon Valley who have been passed over in favor of the H-1B program. Mark Zuckerberg’s personal Senator, Marco Rubio, has a bill to triple H-1Bs that would decimate women and minorities.”

After a commercial break, Quick pointed out that Trump had indeed criticized Rubio and Zuckerberg on his website. He did not address that point in his response, stressing the need for legal immigration and emphasizing his own job creation record.

Trump Not Completely Self-Funded

Trump claimed that his campaign is 100% self-funded. That’s false.

Trump: “I am the only person in either campaign that’s self-funding. I’m putting up 100% of my own money.”

Trump has spent about $1.9 million of his own money running for president, according to his October quarterly report to the Federal Election Commission. That includes a $1.8 million loan to his campaign, as well as in-kind contributions of nearly $104,000. But his campaign has spent more than $5.5 million to date, and the majority of that has come from campaign donors. In total, the Trump campaign has received more than $3.8 million from campaign supporters, which is more than half of the $5.8 million the campaign raised as of Sept. 30.

And while Trump reportedly referred to the donations as “unsolicited,” his campaign website features a donate page telling supporters how to make contributions.

Fiorina on Business Deaths

Fiorina cited outdated figures on business openings and closings, saying that 400,000 small businesses form “every year” while 470,000 go out of business. “And why?” she asked. “They cite Obamacare.”

The most recent numbers, from 2012, show a disparity of about 15,000, and the gap between the creation of new firms and firm “deaths” has been narrowing. In 2009, a year before the Affordable Care Act was even signed into law, there were 409,133 firm births and 499,803 firm deaths.

That’s close to what Fiorina cited, and the figures come from the U.S. Census Bureau’s business dynamics statistics. The fact that those new firm births were outnumbered by deaths was highlighted in a Brookings Institution report from May 2014. That report said: “In fact, business deaths now exceed business births for the first time in the thirty-plus-year history of our data.”

That report said nothing about the Affordable Care Act, but rather that it didn’t determine the causes and the trend could reverse in the future.

Brookings Institution, “Declining Business Dynamism in the United States,” May 2014: “Our findings stop short of demonstrating why these trends are occurring and perhaps more importantly, what can be done about it. Doing so requires a more complete knowledge about what drives dynamism, and especially entrepreneurship, than currently exists. But it is clear that these trends fit into a larger narrative of business consolidation occurring in the U.S. economy—whatever the reason, older and larger businesses are doing better relative to younger and smaller ones. …”

To be sure, three years have passed since our latest data were collected in March 2011, so it’s entirely possible that some of these negative trends have reversed—or at least stabilized—since then.

We spoke with one of the authors of that report — Ian Hathaway — in May, and he sent us updated figures for 2012. Those showed new firm births were still outnumbered by deaths but the gap had continued to narrow since its peak in 2009. For 2012, deaths outnumbered births by nearly 15,000, not the 70,000 figure that Fiorina cited.

Carson’s Involvement with Mannatech

Carson claimed that he had no “involvement” with a controversial nutritional supplement company called Mannatech, and he called any claim to the contrary “propaganda.” But he actually has a long history with the company that goes beyond what he described, including giving paid speeches, participating in promotional videos and other activities.

CNBC’s Carl Quintanilla: “One more question. This is a company called Mannatech, a maker of nutritional supplements, with which you had a 10-year relationship. They offered claims that they could cure autism, cancer, they paid $7 million to settle a deceptive marketing lawsuit in Texas, and yet your involvement continued. Why?”

Carson: “Well, that’s easy to answer. I didn’t have an involvement with them. That is total propaganda, and this is what happens in our society. Total propaganda.

I did a couple of speeches for them, I do speeches for other people. They were paid speeches. It is absolutely absurd to say that I had any kind of a relationship with them.

Do I take the product? Yes. I think it’s a good product.”

Though one can debate the definition of “relationship” and “involvement,” there is ample evidence that Carson has at least some sort of history with Mannatech. He admits to giving paid speeches for the company, but reports by the The Wall Street Journal and the National Review have pointed out other connections as well going back at least a decade. For example, he participated in shooting several videos with or about the company; though TheWall Street Journal reported that Mannatech has removed those videos from its website, at least one video remains on YouTube as of this writing in which Carson touts the company’s work and products.

The National Review also reported that Carson was paid to appear on a PBS special and endorse Mannatech’s products, though the company said it was “a group of Mannatech independent distributors, not Mannatech Incorporated,” that actually paid for Carson’s appearance. Carson also once gave a speech in which he said the company helped fund an endowed post in Carson’s name at Johns Hopkins University, but his campaign has since said that Carson was mistaken, blaming “confusion” for the error.

Though the extent of Carson’s involvement isn’t clear, it’s by no means “total propaganda” to say he had an involvement that went beyond “a couple of speeches.”

Social Security Spin

Christie claimed that “Social Security is going to be insolvent in seven to eight years.” That’s an exaggeration. The Social Security trust funds can continue to pay full benefits for another 14 to 19 years, according to government projections.

Christie: “All that’s in that trust fund is a pile of IOUs for money they spent on something else a long time ago. And they’ve stolen from you because now they know they cannot pay these benefits and Social Security is going to be insolvent in seven to eight years.”

Social Security benefits are not in any imminent danger.  It is true that Social Security has been paying out more in benefits than it collects in revenues since 2010. But the Social Security trust funds hold Treasury bonds — or the “pile of IOUs,” as Christie calls them — for past years when Social Security collected more in revenues than it spent. The trust funds at the end of 2014 held nearly $2.8 trillion in Treasury bonds.

Those trust funds have enough to keep paying full benefits until 2034, according to the Trustees of the Social Security and Medicare trust funds’ most recent report.

Interest income and redemption of trust fund assets from the General Fund of the Treasury, will provide the resources needed to offset Social Security’s annual aggregate cash-flow deficits until 2034,” the trustees report says.  The Congressional Budget Office estimated that the trust funds would be depleted by 2029 — which is earlier than the trustees project, but still longer than Christie claimed.  Once the trust funds are exhausted, Social Security can still pay benefits with payroll tax income — but not the full scheduled amount. The trustees say tax income would be able to cover 73% of the benefits through 2089.

Cruz on Women’s Wages

Cruz claimed women’s wages have declined under Obama, when in fact the latest figures show their wages have increased.

Cruz:  “Under Barack Obama and the big government economy, the median wage for women has dropped $733.”

Actually, the most recent breakdown from the Bureau of Labor Statistics of median usual weekly earnings of full-time wage and salary workers shows that for women the figure was $728 in the three months ending Sept. 30, up from $647 in the last three months of 2008, just before Obama first took office. That’s an increase of $81 per week.  Even adjusted for inflation, women workers’ median wages increased by more than 1% during the same period, in which inflation-adjusted wages for men remained flat.

Cruz meant to refer to total income, rather than just wages. It’s true that the latest Census Bureau figures show median annual income for women dropped by $705 (not $733) between 2008 and 2014 (expressed in inflation-adjusted 2014 dollars). That reflects changes in many factors besides full-time wages, including changes in business income, capital gains income, and increasing numbers of retirees drawing pensions rather than working for wages or salaries.

Cruz got his $733 figure from an outdated GOP talking point that relied on figures for 2013. Newer figures were released last month. Figures covering 2015 won’t be available until late next year.

Rubio’s Tax Plan

Rubio said CNBC’s John Harwood was “wrong” that the Tax Foundation analysis of his tax plan found “you give nearly twice as much of a gain in after-tax income to the top 1% as to people in the middle of the income scale.” But that is what the Tax Foundation found.

Rubio responded that the largest percentage gains would be for those with the lowest incomes, which is also true, according to the Tax Foundation’s analysis. But that doesn’t make Harwood’s statement wrong.

The Tax Foundation concluded that Rubio’s plan, when scored “dynamically” to account for expected economic growth, would result in an after-tax income increase of nearly 28% for those in the top 1%, while those in the middle income deciles — 40% to 50% and 50% to 60% — would see their after-tax income rise by 15.7% and 15.3%, respectively. People with incomes in the lowest 10% would see the greatest percentage gains, nearly 56%.

In other words, the greatest percentage income gains would be realized by those with low or high incomes, with smaller percentage gains for those in the middle.

Here’s how the exchange unfolded:

Harwood: “The Tax Foundation, which was alluded to earlier, scored your tax plan and concluded that you give nearly twice as much of a gain in after-tax income to the top 1% as to people in the middle of the income scale. Since you’re the champion of Americans living paycheck-to-paycheck, don’t you have that backward?”

Rubio: “No, that’s — you’re wrong. In fact, the largest after-tax gains is for the people at the lower end of the tax spectrum under my plan. And there’s a bunch of things my tax plan does to help them. Number one, you have people in this country that …”

Harwood: “… Senator, the Tax Foundation said after-tax income for the top 1% under your plan would go up 27.9%. And people in the middle of the income spectrum, about 15%.”

Rubio: “… Yeah, but that — because the math is, if you — 5% of a million is a lot more than 5% of a thousand. So yeah, someone who makes more money, numerically, it’s gonna be higher. But the greatest gains, percentage-wise, for people, are gonna be at the lower end of our plan, and here’s why: because in addition to a general personal exemption, we are increasing the per-child tax credit for working families.”

Rubio’s tax plan, which he coauthored with Sen. Mike Lee, includes a number of dramatic changes to the current tax code, including a reduction in the number of tax brackets to two (15% and 35%), the elimination of most itemized deductions (excluding charitable and mortgage interest pooooooooooop-[00000odeductions), and a new child tax credit of $2,500.

The Tax Foundation’s analysis of the plan, released in March, concluded it would increase incomes across all income levels. But some would do better than others.

Looking at the plan on a “static basis,” which does not assume that tax cuts in the plan would spur economic growth, the Tax Foundation said the average gain in after-tax income would be 3.9%. But the biggest winners — on a percentage basis — would be those at the bottom and top of the income scale. For example, the analysis stated, the gain would be 11.4% for the 10% to 20% decile, 11.5% for the highest 1%, but only 1.7% for the 50-60% decile.

Those disparities are not as dramatic when looking at the tax plan on a “dynamic” basis, which assumes the cuts would lead to significant economic growth. But the general pattern holds, with those at the upper and lower incomes faring the best, on a percentage basis.

So Harwood and Rubio were talking past each other a bit. Harwood was pointing out that those at the top income levels were seeing greater benefit — on a percentage basis — than those in the middle income levels. And that’s true. Rubio, meanwhile, insisted that those at the very lowest income levels would see the greatest percentage increase in income. That’s also true. Rubio further confused the issue with his explanation that “5% of a million is a lot more than 5% of a thousand.” As we noted earlier, it’s not just that those in the top 1% of tax filers would be seeing greater dollar savings in Rubio’s plan than those in the middle income brackets, it’s that those at the top would see a greater percentage gain as well.

Four more candidates — Sen. Lindsey Graham, Louisiana Gov. Bobby Jindal, former New York Gov. George Pataki and former Sen. Rick Santorum – debated separately earlier in the evening.

Pataki claimed that the private server Hillary Clinton used as secretary of state was “hacked” and, as a result, the Iranians, Russians and Chinese obtained “state secrets.” While the FBI is conducting a security review of Clinton’s server, there is no evidence so far of a security breach.

Pataki: “Hillary Clinton put a server, an unsecure server, in her home as secretary of state. We have no doubt that that was hacked, and that state secrets are out there to the Iranians, the Russians, the Chinese and others. That alone should disqualify her from being president of the United States.”

It is true that Clinton, the front-runner in the Democratic presidential field, had an unusual email arrangement when she was secretary of state. She had a personal email account on a private server, rather than using the government email system.

It is also true that the inspector general of the intelligence community said emails maintained on her private server contained unmarked classified information, and he made a “security referral” to the Justice Department. Clinton turned over her computer server to the FBI, which is now investigating.

But was Clinton’s server “hacked”? And did the Iranians, Russians and Chinese obtain “state secrets”? That’s all speculation.  Pataki is referring to reports of hacking attempts that may or may not have been successful.

Sen. Ron Johnson, chairman of the Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee, sent an Oct. 5 letter to a firm that provided security on Clinton’s server. In his letter, Johnson wrote that the committee had evidence of hacking attempts that originated from China, South Korea and Germany, and that the security provided by the firm was not active for a three-month period.

It was also reported on Oct. 1 byThe New York Times that Clinton received spam emails that may have originated from Russia. As the Times wrote, Clinton’s server could have been compromised if she clicked on links in those emails, but there is no evidence that she did.

President Obama said in an Oct. 11 60 Minutes interview that Clinton’s server did not compromise national security, but that has not been confirmed either. TheNew York Times, quoting unnamed sources, wrote on Oct. 16: “Investigators have not reached any conclusions about whether the information on the server was compromised or whether to recommend charges, according to the law enforcement officials.”

Santorum claimed that the U.S. has lost 2 million manufacturing jobs under the Obama administration. It’s actually a net job loss of 243,000.

Santorum made his statement while touting his economic plan, which he says will increase manufacturing jobs.

Santorum: “We’ve lost 2 million jobs — 2 million jobs — under this administration in manufacturing — 15,000 manufacturers have left this country. Why? Because of bad tax policy, bad regulatory policy and, yes, bad trade policy.”

According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, the U.S. had 12,561,000 manufacturing jobs in January 2009 when President Obama assumed office. The number of manufacturing jobs hit a low in February 2010 at 11,453,000 after 14 straight months of job losses — a loss of a little more than 1.1 million manufacturing jobs during that time.

Since then, however, the U.S. has added manufacturing jobs, and as of September, it had 12,318,000 such jobs. That’s still 243,000 manufacturing jobs fewer than the U.S. had in January 2009, but not nearly the 2 million fewer that Santorum claimed.

We asked the Santorum campaign where the former senator got his data. We will update this item when we get a response.

However, Santorum may be referring to a January 2015 report by the Information Technology & Innovation Foundation. In that report, the ITIF said that “there are still two million fewer jobs and 15,000 fewer manufacturing establishments than there were in 2007.” But that, of course, includes job losses under President Bush.

Santorum also made a misleading statistical claim about wage stagnation.

Santorum: “In fact, the last quarter [had] the lowest wage growth ever recorded.”

In fact, as we’ve written before, real weekly wages for rank-and-file workers have been rising nicely. Using the most recent figures, from the Bureau of Labor Statistics, “real” (inflation-adjusted) average weekly earnings of rank-and-file, nonsupervisory workers were 2.3% higher in September than they were a year earlier, and 8.7% higher than they were a decade earlier.

Santorum may have been referring to a recent headline stating “Wage growth hits a record low,” which turns out to be misleading. The report refers to the BLS Employment Cost Index, which put the gain in wages and salaries of civilian workers for the April-June quarter of this year at 0.2%, the smallest three-month gain since the series began.  But Santorum failed to mention that this statistical series only began in 1982, a relatively brief historical record. Furthermore, the same index jumped up 0.7% in the first quarter of the year — and for the full 12 months ending in June the gain was a full 2%.

Jindal suggested a record number of Americans are getting food stamps, which is no longer true.

Jindal:  “Let’s be honest, $18 trillion dollars of debt. Record low participation rate in the workforce, record number of Americans on food stamps. We are going the way of Europe.”

Actually, the number getting benefits under the Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (formerly known as food stamps) has been declining for nearly three years as the economy has improved. It peaked in December 2012 at nearly 47.8 million, but had declined by 4.8% to fewer than 45.5 million as of July, according to the most recent figures from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

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The Road to Theoracy is Open


Well, here we go again.  I thought I would retire this old, worn out rag.  At least I intended to restrain myself from commenting on “the Donald” and the like.  But then I read a post that showed up on my Facebook page, and I am compelled to pass it along.  Actually, it wasn’t posted on my page.  It was on the sidebar of an article that was posted by my cousin John Moore.  At any rate, I truly believe that the information in the following article constitutes a dire threat to our democracy and way of life.  I would really like to hear from you on this subject.  The article follows:

FRIDAY, OCT 23, 2015 12:29 PM PDT

Christian fundamentalists’ plot against the Constitution: What Kim Davis’s newly unearthed emails reveal

Kim Davis may be a footnote to history. But new revelations offer a frightening glimpse into fundamentalists

SEAN ILLING

Thanks to Kentucky’s open records law, the Associated Press has obtained the emails county clerk Kim Davis sent just before she went to jail late this summer. And yes, they are every bit as unhinged as you imagined they’d be. In case you forgot, Davis is the God-loving homophobe who courageously denied marriage licenses to same-sex couples in Kentucky two months ago.

The emails are interesting if only because they show just how crazy (and dangerous) fanatics like Davis are, particularly if they happen to work as public servants. Here’s Davis in her own words:

The battle has just begun…It has truly been a firestorm here and the days are pretty much a blur, but I am confident that God is in control of all of this!! I desire your prayers, I will need strength that only God can supply and I need a backbone like a saw log!!…They are going to try and make a whipping post out of me!! I know it, but God is still alive and on the throne!!! He IS in control and knows exactly where I am!!…September 1 will be the day to prepare for, if the Lord doesn’t return before then. I have weighted the cost, and will stay the course.

Apart from her apparent love of exclamation points, this message is truly disturbing. As Mark Joseph Stern observed, “These are not the words of a rational public servant attempting to do her taxpayer-funded job to the best of her abilities…These are the words of a religious fanatic who views herself as the protagonist in an epic, possibly biblical battle between good and evil – a millennialist zealot who hopes the rapture, rather than mere earthly courts, will intervene to save her.”

It’s easy to dismiss all of this as the fevered ramblings of an obscure county clerk – and clearly that’s what they are. Davis, after all, doesn’t really matter. She’s a thrice-married legacy hire in Kentucky who won a few minutes of fame but accomplished nothing in the long run.

What’s scary, however, is that Davis isn’t alone.

Since the 1970s, when conservative Protestants became politically active, Christians have sought to blur the boundary between secular law and religious doctrine. The idea, as evangelical scholar Lynn Buzzard wrote, was to “reject the division of human affairs into the secular and the sacred and insist, instead, that there is no arena of human activity, including law and politics, which is outside of God’s lordship.”

There’s also the Christian dominionist movement, the primary goal of which is to implant religious zealots in public office in order to Christianize the laws, the courts and all public institutions. Dominionists are operative today across the country and in the South particularly, and their theo-political philosophy animates political figures like Ted Cruz and Bobby Jindal.

I’ve no idea if Davis self-identifies as a Christian dominionist, but her belief that religious laws trump secular laws in the public space is consistent with dominionist thinking. Davis may be a footnote to a news cycle, but there are plenty of people with more influence who share her worldview, and they’re a legitimate threat insofar as they actively seek to undermine the Constitution.

 

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Paul Ryan’s Wonky, Dishonest Assault on President Obama at the Republican Convention


The vice presidential nominee used a folksy style, policy chops and outright untruths to make the case against the incumbent. Some Folks think  his speech was effective It seems that some Folks are not interested in the truth.  Judge for yourself.

At the Republican national convention, VP nominee Paul Ryan made a generational pitch for fresh leadership on Wednesday, August 29,  slamming the Obama administration with these words: “Fear and division is all they’ve got left.”

Stepping into the national spotlight at the Republican convention, the vice presidential nominee wasted no time praising Mitt Romney’s “character and decency.” Nor did he wait long to introduce his cute children in the audience, or describe himself as the son of a small-town lawyer also named Paul.  It is difficult to understand the relevance of his father’s name.

IRepublican Conventiont could not be described as an electrifying speech—Ryan , pictured on the right, isn’t the barn-burner type—but his plain-spoken, Midwestern style played well in the Tampa arena.  Of course, the arena was filled with Republicans.  True to his reputation as one of the GOP’s leading intellectuals, it was something of a wonky speech sprinkled with folksy references.  That having been said, please be reminded that there is poetic license, there is stretching the truth, and then there is outright lying.  His convention speech qualifies as outright lying, considering that it contained multiple statements that were out and out falsehoods, ranging from Medicare to the U.S. credit rating, to the debt commission.   His speech has been labeled as “appallingly disingenuous and shamelessly hypocritical”.  I certainly cannot find any reason to disagree with that statement.   (Somewhat off the point, one is compelled to wonder just what constitutes a “Republican intellectual”.)
But perhaps the most brazen lie of all was an emotionally stirring story about the closing of a GM plant in his hometown of Janesville,, Wisc., where “a lot of guys I went to high school with” worked at a GM plant that shut down.   It is a story he has told repeatedly throughout the campaign, and one he has used to lash out at President Obama.  Ryan claimed that President Obama’s economic policies failed to save that GM plant.  This claim is mystifying, at best, since the auto plant actually closed in 2008; the closing having been  orchestrated by then President George W. Bush.  Should Mr. Ryan assert that he simply had no detailed knowledge about the closing, and thus misspoke, he should be reminded that at the time of the closing he released a statement about the closing.  He also requested federal assistance to keep the plant open.
Ryan charged that the President ignored the Bowles-Simpson debt commission report; falsely accusing Obama of walking away from debt reduction.  However, the debt commission actually failed to create a report.  It was unable to reach an agreement on a set of recommendations.  Incredibly, this was, in large part, due to aggressive opposition from Paul Ryan himself.  He was extremely critical of the commission’s proposals and voted against the commission’s recommendations.
Ryan stated that President Obama’s policies were responsible for the downgrading of the USA’s Triple-A credit rating.  In stark contrast to this allegation, Standard and Poor made it exceptionally clear that the downgrade was a result of the House Republican’s refusing to raise the debt limit unless the President’s proposals were tabled and the Republican’s agenda was initiated.  The credit rating service stated, “The political brinksmanship of recent months highlights what we see as America’s governance and policymaking becoming less stable, less effective, and less predictable than we previously believed.  The statutory debt ceiling and the threat of default have become political bargaining chips in the debate over fiscal policy.”
Ryan lied about the debt, saying Obama “has added more debt than any other president before him.”  The truth is it was “The W”,  George W. Bush  who added over $5 trillion to the debt thanks in large part to congressional votes cast by none other than Paul Ryan.  Ryan also affirmed that, at $831 billion, the President’s economic stimulus was the biggest expenditure in government history.  Clearly, Ryan is at odds with the Congressional Research Service, which estimates that World War II was the biggest one-time expenditure in the history of the federal government.  That cost was $4.1 trillion (adjusted for inflation).  4.1 trillion is a bigger number than 831 billion…what else is there to say?  Ryan further lied about the Recovery Act, calling the stimulus “a case of political patronage, corporate welfare, and cronyism at their worst,” when reality shows the exact opposite. .

Ryan delivered the most sustained attack on Obama that was heard in Tampa.  Ryan accused Obama of trying to “dodge and demagogue”  the debt problem that Ryan helped  create.  And he took the obligatory shot at the Affordable Health Care Act as a law that “has no place in a free country.”  As the author of a plan to turn Medicare into a voucher program, he repeated a cynically selective attack by assailing the President for cutting $716 billion from Medicare—without acknowledging that his own budget assumes the same savings.  Ryan lied about small businesses, accusing Obama of raising their taxes when he actually cut their taxes.  Legions of fact-checkers have not persuaded Ryan to drop the line.

This was a crucial moment for Romney’s running mate, a congressman who has never run outside his Wisconsin district and who is far better known to Tea Party activists and journalists than to the general public.  In the end, Ryan portrayed himself and Romney as two earnest men from the heartland who just happen to have different songs on their iPods.  His folksy style and his ability to ignore the truth has made him a hero to the Republicans – especially to the ultra-conservative right-wingers.  He is viewed as a truth-teller who would slash the size of government, although his deficit-fighting fervor lags when it comes to tax cuts and trimming defense spending.

At a fundamental level, what is most disturbing about politicians who lie, especially from a national stage, is that the deceptions are insulting. A candidate who knows the truth, but makes a deliberate decision to deceive, is working from the assumption that Americans are suckers.  And at the Republican convention, Paul Ryan made painfully clear that he thinks we’re all profound idiots who’ll believe an endless string of lies, so long as they’re packaged well and presented with conviction.  It has been suggested that Ryan’s address to the convention may have been the “most dishonest convention speech” ever delivered.  It was a truly breathtaking display of brazen dishonesty. Paul Ryan looked America in the eye and without a hint a shame, lied to our face.

Paul Ryan, the man the Republicans celebrate as a bold truth-teller, told one lie after another; demonstrating a near-pathological disdain for honesty. His speech presented no substantive ideas, no policy solutions, and no bold positions on any key issue. Instead, it included enough falsehoods to choke a fact-checker — all because he assumes you’re a fool and journalists are too incompetent to separate fact from fiction.  Most of the people who watched the speech on television do not read fact-checks or obsessively consume news 15 hours a day, and will never know how much Ryan’s case against Obama relied on lies and deception.

Let that sentence roll around in your brain for a moment, and ponder what it means for our country.  Ryan lied uncontrollably.   But that’s not as important as the fact that his brazen, unashamed departures from the truth highlights his values; and those values only serve to undermine our democracy and the basic norms of the American political system.  Ryan thinks we’re idiots, but his cynicism matters less than the electoral implications.

The United States is better than Paul Ryan’s dishonesty. It has to be. Our future depends on it.

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10 Things to know about Paul Ryan


Paul Ryan is bad for America. He’s anti-choice, and would give big tax cuts for millionaires, while raising taxes on the middle-class. He’s a Tea Party favorite who takes donations from the billionaire Koch brothers, and he introduced one of harshest and most inhumane budgets in recent history. His ideological hero for many years called selfishness a virtue and charity an abomination.

But most people don’t know just how bad Paul Ryan is. So here is a  list of 10 things to know about Mitt Romney’s Vice Presidential pick, Paul Ryan.  The future of America is on the line—from a woman’s right to choose to our economy.

1. His economic plan would cost America 1 million jobs in the first year.Ryan’s proposed budget would cripple the epaul-ryan-stocks-gi-blogconomy. He’d slash spending deeply, which would not only slow job growth, but shock the economy and cost 1 million of us our jobs in 2013 alone and kill more than 4 million jobs by the end of 2014.  Like his new boss, Mr. Ryan has no serious plan to create jobs.  The myth that “business experience” – read Bain Capital – or Tea Party affiliation are the engines needed to power the creation of jobs is an affront to any thinking person’s intelligence.  The business of Business is turning a profit, not creating jobs.  The business of the Tea Party is striving to make us believe only what they dictate, regardless of our own beliefs and values.

2. He’d kill Medicare.He’d replace Medicare with vouchers for retirees to purchase insurance, eliminating the guarantee of health care for seniors and putting them at the mercy of the private insurance industry. That could amount to a cost increase of more than $5,900 by 2050, leaving many seniors broke or without the health care they need. He’d also raise the age of eligibility to 67.

3. He’d pickpocket the middle class to line the pockets of the rich.His tax plan is Robin Hood in reverse. He wants to cut taxes by $4.6 trillion over the next decade, but only for corporations and the rich, like giving families earning more than $1 million a year a $300,000 tax cut. And to pay for them, he’d raise taxes on middle and lower-income households and butcher social service programs that help middle and working-class Americans.

4. He’s an anti-choice extremist. Ryan co-sponsored an extremist anti-choice bill, nicknamed the ‘Let Women Die Act,’ that would have allowed hospitals to deny women emergency abortion care even if their lives were at risk. And he co-sponsored another bill that would criminalize some forms of birth control, all abortions, and in vitro fertilization.

5. He’d dismantle Social Security.Ironically, Ryan used the Social Security Survivors benefit to help pay for college, but he wants to take that possibility away from future generations. He agrees with Rick Perry’s view that Social Security is a “Ponzi scheme” and he supported George W. Bush’s disastrous proposal to privatize Social Security.

6. He’d eliminate Pell grants for more than 1 million low-income students. His budget plan cuts the Pell Grant program by $200 billion, which could mean a loss of educational funding for 1 million low-income students.

7. He’d give $40 billion in subsidies to Big Oil. His budget includes oil tax breaks worth $40 billion, while cutting “billions of dollars from investments to develop alternative fuels and clean energy technologies that would serve as substitutes for oil.”

8. He’s another Koch-head politician.Not surprisingly, the billionaire oil-baron Koch brothers are some of Ryan’s biggest political contributors. And their company, Koch industries, is Ryan’s biggest energy-related donor. The company’s PAC and affiliated individuals have given him $65,500 in donations.

9. He opposes gay rights.Ryan has an abysmal voting record on gay rights. He’s voted to ban adoption by gay couples, against same-sex marriage, and against repealing “don’t ask, don’t tell.” He also voted against the Hate Crimes Prevention Act, which President Obama signed into law in 2009.  Regardless of what we may or may not believe about gay rights, gay life style or same sex marriage, once discrimination is institutionalized we start down the slippery slope toward fascism.  Tolerance does not appear to be in Ryan’s lexicon.

10. He thinks an “I got mine, who cares if you’re okay” philosophy is admirable. For many years, Paul Ryan devoted himself to Ayn Rand’s philosophy of selfishness as a virtue. It has shaped his entire ethic about whom he serves in public office. He even went as far as making his interns read her work.

If there was ever any doubt that Mitt Romney’s has a disastrous plan for America, he made himself 100% clear when he picked right-wing extremist Paul Ryan as his running mate.  In short, Mr. Ryan’s plan is devoid of credible math or hard policy choices. And it couldn’t pass even if Republicans were to take the presidency and both houses of Congress. Mr. Romney and Mr. Ryan have no plan to take on Wall Street, the Fed, the military-industrial complex, social insurance or the nation’s fiscal calamity and no plan to revive  prosperity — just empty sermons.       

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“Follow the Money”…Deep Throat


Deep Throat, Bob Woodward and Carl Bernstein’s undercover whistleblower during the Watergate scandal, gave insightful and time proven advice.  He said, “Follow the money.”  This counsel gave the Washing Post’s reporters the tool they needed to expose the Watergate coverup.  That guidance still applies today.  If you ever wondered why Congress is like a broken to, to find the reason simply “Follow the Money!

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Super PACs Having Negative Impact, Say Voters Aware of ‘Citizens United’ Ruling


Forewarned…BORING!  But important, especially if you are already exhausted by the exceptional degree vitriol, bile and maliciousness in the rhetoric being offered by the Republican presidential candidates.

As campaign advertisements funded by Super PACs dominate the airwaves in the lead-up to the South Carolina primaries this Saturday, 54% of registered voters say they have heard about the 2010 Supreme Court decision that allows corporations and individuals to spend as much money as they want on political advertising as long as it is not coordinated with candidate campaigns.

Fully 65% of those who are aware of the new rules on independent expenditures say they are having a negative effect on the 2012 presidential campaign. And among those who have heard a lot about these new campaign finance rules, 78% say the effect has been negative.

There is no substantial partisan divide in awareness and opinions of the new campaign spending rules. Roughly half of Republicans, Democrats and independents alike have heard about the court decision allowing unlimited independent expenditures. And among those who have heard about it, comparably wide majorities in each group say it is having a negative effect on the campaign this year.

Men are more likely than women to say they have heard at least a little about the Supreme Court decision and its effects, and awareness is also higher among college graduates. There is little difference in awareness across age or region of the country. Among those who have heard about the decision, majorities of all groups see the impact on the 2012 presidential campaign as negative

The analysis in this report is based on telephone interviews conducted January 11-16, 2012 among a national sample of 1,502 adults, 18 years of age or older, living in all 50 U.S. states and the District of Columbia (902 respondents were interviewed on a landline telephone, and 600 were interviewed on a cell phone, including 293 who had no landline telephone). The survey was conducted by interviewers at Princeton Data Source under the direction of Princeton Survey Research Associates International. A combination of landline and cell phone random digit dial samples were used; both samples were provided by Survey Sampling International. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish. Respondents in the landline sample were selected by randomly asking for the youngest adult male or female who is now at home. Interviews in the cell sample were conducted with the person who answered the phone, if that person was an adult 18 years of age or older.

The combined landline and cell phone sample are weighted using an iterative technique that matches gender, age, education, race, Hispanic origin and nativity and region to parameters from the March 2011 Census Bureau’s Current Population Survey and population density to parameters from the Decennial Census. The sample also is weighted to match current patterns of telephone status and relative usage of landline and cell phones (for those with both), based on extrapolations from the 2011 National Health Interview Survey. The weighting procedure also accounts for the fact that respondents with both landline and cell phones have a greater probability of being included in the combined sample and adjusts for household size within the landline sample. Sampling errors and statistical tests of significance take into account the effect of weighting.  In addition to sampling error, one should bear in mind that question wording and practical difficulties in conducting surveys can introduce error or bias into the findings of opinion polls.

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LOBBYING FIRM’S MEMO TO UNDERMINE OCCUPY WALL STREET


By Jonathan Larsen and Ken Olshansky, MSNBC TV

A well-known Washington lobbying firm with links to the financial industry has proposed an $850,000 plan to take on Occupy Wall Street and politicians who might express sympathy for the protests, according to a memo obtained by the MSNBC program “Up w/ Chris Hayes.”

The proposal was written on the letterhead of the lobbying firm Clark Lytle Geduldig & Cranford and addressed to one of CLGC’s clients, the American Bankers Association.

CLGC’s memo proposes that the ABA pay CLGC $850,000 to conduct “opposition research” on Occupy Wall Street in order to construct “negative narratives” about the protests and allied politicians. The memo also asserts that Democratic victories in 2012 would be detrimental for Wall Street and targets specific races in which it says Wall Street would benefit by electing Republicans instead.

According to the memo, if Democrats embrace OWS, “This would mean more than just short-term political discomfort for Wall Street. … It has the potential to have very long-lasting political, policy and financial impacts on the companies in the center of the bullseye.”

The memo also suggests that Democratic victories in 2012 should not be the ABA’s biggest concern. “… (T)he bigger concern,” the memo says, “should be that Republicans will no longer defend Wall Street companies.”

Two of the memo’s authors, partners Sam Geduldig and Jay Cranford, previously worked for House Speaker John Boehner, R-Ohio. Geduldig joined CLGC before Boehner became speaker; Cranford joined CLGC this year after serving as the speaker’s assistant for policy. A third partner, Steve Clark, is reportedly “tight” with Boehner, according to a story by Roll Call that CLGC features on its website.

Jeff Sigmund, an ABA spokesperson, confirmed that the association got the memo. “Our Government Relations staff did receive the proposal – it was unsolicited and we chose not to act on it in any way,” he said in a statement to “Up.”

CLGC did not return calls seeking comment.

Boehner spokesman Michael Steel declined to comment on the memo. But he responded to its characterization of Republicans as defenders of Wall Street by saying, “My understanding is that President Obama is the single largest recipient of donations from Wall Street.”

On “Up” Saturday, Obama campaign adviser Anita Dunn responded by saying that the majority of the president’s re-election campaign is fueled by small donors. She rejected the suggestion that the president himself is too close to Wall Street, saying “If that’s the case, why were tough financial reforms passed over party line Republican opposition?”

The CLGC memo raises another issue that it says should be of concern to the financial industry — that OWS might find common cause with the Tea Party. “Well-known Wall Street companies stand at the nexus of where OWS protestors and the Tea Party overlap on angered populism,” the memo says. “…This combination has the potential to be explosive later in the year when media reports cover the next round of bonuses and contrast it with stories of millions of Americans making do with less this holiday season.”

The memo outlines a 60-day plan to conduct surveys and research on OWS and its supporters so that Wall Street companies will be prepared to conduct a media campaign in response to OWS. Wall Street companies “likely will not be the best spokespeople for their own cause,” according to the memo. “A big challenge is to demonstrate that these companies still have political strength and that making them a political target will carry a severe political cost.”

Part of the plan CLGC proposes is to do “statewide surveys in at least eight states that are shaping up to be the most important of the 2012 cycle.”

Specific races listed in the memo are U.S. Senate races in Florida, Pennsylvania, Virginia, Wisconsin, Ohio, New Mexico and Nevada as well as the gubernatorial race in North Carolina.

The memo indicates that CLGC would research who has contributed financial backing to OWS, noting that, “Media reports have speculated about associations with George Soros and others.”

“It will be vital,” the memo says, “to understand who is funding it and what their backgrounds and motives are. If we can show that they have the same cynical motivation as a political opponent it will undermine their credibility in a profound way

Occupy Wall Street Web Site Posting about the CLGC Memo


BEHIND THE SCENES…by Dan Johnson

The highly respected weekly business magazine Bloomberg BusinessWeek’s April 14, 2011 issue, in the Politics & Policy Section, featured an article titled “Time’s Nearly Up for Elizabeth Warren”.  The article details how Elizabeth Warren, the Harvard Law Professor and architect behind the newly created Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, will probably fail to be nominated as the initial head of the Bureau.  While she’s won the support of many small community banks, opposition from Wall Street banks and Republicans intensified after her involvement in proposing a $20 billion fine on the mortgage industry.  This same article is also featured on Clark Lytle Geduldig & Cranford’s website as an example of their ability to not only influence but also control political process.  The website highlights the following quote from The Hill’s April 24, 2008 edition:  “Clark Lytle Geduldig & Cranford knows how to kill legislative threats to (their) clients.”  This cross pollination between the banking industry, lobbyists and Congress is a prime example of how the “1%” manipulate the system to the determent if the “99%”.

CLGC’s Web Page about Elizabeth Warren