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Flotsam and Jetsam

What a difference less than a year of one-party liberal rule makes: “Republicans can take a bit of satisfaction from a new survey by Democracy Corps. … The survey found that voters now say, by a three-point margin (45% to 42%), that Republicans would do a better job on the economy than Democrats. That’s a change from the 16-point lead Democrats had in May on the question of managing the economy, and marks the first time since 2002 that Republicans have had a lead on the issue in Democracy Corps polling.”

The Afghans, I think, have reason to worry: “Afghan officials hope President Barack Obama’s address on Afghanistan won’t be weighted too heavily on an exit strategy — even though that’s the message many Americans and Democrats in Congress want to hear. If he talks extensively in his speech Tuesday night about winding down the war, Afghans fear the Taliban will simply bide their time until the Americans abandon the country much as Washington did after the Soviets left 20 years ago.”

The latest on radical jihadism at a taxpayer-supported college: “Siraj Wahhaj, a radical Muslim cleric who authorities in 1995 identified as an unindicted co-conspirator in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, was last week invited to Queens College to speak on the subject ‘How Islam Perfected Thanksgiving.’ Wahhaj testified in 1996 for convicted terror plotter Omar Abdel Rahman, who was charged with attempting to bomb New York’s Lincoln Tunnel and the United Nations.” He was invited by the Muslim Student Association, a member of which was reported to have declared after the showing of a radical Muslim film: ‘If I had enough money I would be part of the jihad army, I would kill all the Jews.’ … Another spoke of getting a ‘bomb.’” Read the whole outrageous account.

The CBO’s latest: “Individual insurance premiums would increase by an average of 10 percent or more, according to an analysis of the Senate healthcare bill. The long-awaited report by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) also concluded that subsidies provided by the legislation would make coverage cheaper for those who qualify.” And more expensive for everyone else.

The epidemic of BRIs (Bagel Related Injuries): “In 2008, according to an analysis of fingers cut by knives as reported in the government’s National Electronic Injury Surveillance System, 1,979 people appeared in ERs with a BRI. Chicken-related injuries (3,463) led the category, but recorded bagel injuries were otherwise exceeded only by potato, apple and onion injuries. Bagels, in fact, were implicated in more finger cuts than pumpkins (1,195) or cheese (1,236). … (Of course, many BRI victims skip ERs and go to urgent-care offices. Or they stay home and eat breakfast anyway.)”

Jeffrey Goldberg acknowledges that in objecting to building in Gilo, within Jerusalem, Obama “doesn’t seem to understand that all settlements are not created equal. Palestinian negotiators have fairly consistently recognized that Gilo, a Jerusalem suburb built over the 1967 Green Line, but south, not east, of the city, would remain inside Israel in a final-status peace deal.” What’s worse is Obama’ justifying, or at the very least predicting, Palestinian violence. (“Obama’s statement reads almost as a kind of preemptive rationalization for violent Palestinian protest.”) Is there anyone who thinks the Obami haven’t made the Middle East “peace process” worse?

Not so fast: “Senators may have agreed to have the debate; but the parameters of the debate have not been set. The leaders have to agree on which amendments to consider when. The first two amendments were formally introduced Monday afternoon, but when votes will occur remains unclear.” One of those is an amendment by Sen. John McCain to strip out the Democrats’ draconian Medicare cuts: “Stripping the Medicare cost savings (cuts) would essentially kill the bill and send it back to committee.” Because the bill, you see, depends on hundreds of billions being slashed from Medicare. So don’t expect a vote too soon.

Well, he did say he was leaning against running: “The conservative blogosphere unleashed a torrent of criticism against Mike Huckabee Monday after a man whose sentence he commuted as Arkansas governor was suspected of gunning down four police officers in Washington state over the weekend.”

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0 Responses to “Flotsam and Jetsam”

  1. s gerber says:

    I remember the op-ed McGovern wrote for the Wall Street Journal many years ago about his experiences as a businessman. He wrote that he wished he had known as a senator what he learned in business, such as the problems business have dealing with government regulations.

  2. Dellis says:

    If I were a democratic candidate, I would be proposing massive bailouts to new homeowners. I would propose a $76 billion dollar yearly deduction in their mortgage interest, I would inferthat the federal government will back Fannie and Freddie regardless of the risk they take on, and I would provide favorable tax treatment for home appreciation versus other forms of investment gain.

    Oh wait, our government already does all that.

    As a young outsider looking in, I am disappointed no one is looking out for my interests. Already I am paying way more than I should for education and health care costs that have been inflated by government policy such as essentially forcing me to purchase health insurance only through my employer – now there appears to finally be a solution to housing inflation, yet Hillary/Obama want to step in and continue to make housing unaffordable.

  3. lester says:

    wether it is military or economic interventionism, mcgovern is on the right side = no and no.

  4. Shmuel BenYosef says:

    I was also surprised when I read the column this a.m. Perhaps he is in the process of reinventing himself as a libertarian. Maybe this can start a trend to get the libertarians over to the Democratic party. The anti-semites are already there.

  5. lester says:

    schmuel- we tried. they hate us (libertarians)

  6. Ziggy Zoggy says:

    Mo Lester,

    everybody does.

  7. lester says:

    z-because half of them work for the government

  8. lester says:

    mcgovern is a hero because when he went bankrupt running a bed and breakfast or something, he admitted it was the regulatory policies of his own party that were largely to blame.

  9. lou says:

    does anyone have a link to that mcgovern article from the Wall Street Journal 16 years ago about running the bed and breakfast? i’ve looked everywhere for it