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Thursday, December 31, 2009

The Golf Trap

Stody? Old? I play at golf and I am not old... er, stogy... er, I play at golf [working on "playing golf"]. This is just a cheap shot.
Bunker Mentality

Barack Obama's dangerous obsession with golf.
  • Michelle Cottle
    Michelle Cottle
    Senior Editor
  • It’s been a tough first year for President Obama, as critics throughout the body politic bemoan that Mr. Change-We-Can-Believe-In is looking more and more like Mr. Politics-As-Usual. With the coming new year, however, POTUS has a prime opportunity to regroup, reload, and revamp his image. He could start by ditching golf.

    Seriously. Its venerable White House history notwithstanding, golf is a dubious pastime for any decent, sane person, much less for this particular president. Why would a leader vowing to shake up Washington--to alter the very nature of politics--sell his soul to a leisure activity that screams stodgy, hyperconventional Old Guard?

    Read more....

    The one thing this President does that he has in common with Republicans and The New Republic has a hissy-fit. Go burn some bras or come up with a new tax, Michelle Cottle.

    Wednesday, December 30, 2009

    California Liberalism At Work

    Don't fix the problem; fix the blame... another example of why California is doomed.
    Berkeley High May Cut Out Science Labs

    The proposal would trade labs seen as benefiting white students for resources to help struggling students.


    Berkeley High School is considering a controversial proposal to eliminate science labs and the five science teachers who teach them to free up more resources to help struggling students.

    The proposal to put the science-lab cuts on the table was approved recently by Berkeley High's School Governance Council, a body of teachers, parents, and students who oversee a plan to change the structure of the high school to address Berkeley's dismal racial achievement gap, where white students are doing far better than the state average while black and Latino students are doing worse.

    Paul Gibson, an alternate parent representative on the School Governance Council, said that information presented at council meetings suggests that the science labs were largely classes for white students. He said the decision to consider cutting the labs in order to redirect resources to underperforming students was virtually unanimous.

    Read more....

    Science is anti-black???

    Tuesday, December 29, 2009

    The Court of Public Opinion

    The Mackinac Center Legal Foundation's suit against the DHS [Department of Human Services] continues to draw national attention. The case, the first filed by the newly created public-interest law firm, seeks to prevent the state and two unions from siphoning off nearly $4 million in "dues" from subsidy checks that home-based day care operators receive when they care for the children of low-income parents.

    The Wall Street Journal published an Op-Ed by the Mackinac Center's Michael Jahr and Patrick Wright. The piece highlights that the unionization scheme is not unique to Michigan:

    Ms. Berry owns her own business — yet the Michigan Department of Human Services claims she is a government employee and union member. The agency thus withholds union dues from the child-care subsidies it sends to her on behalf of her low-income clients. Those dues are funneled to a public-employee union that claims to represent her. The situation is crazy — and it's happening elsewhere in the country.

    Read more
    ....

    Monday, December 28, 2009

    The Case For Mandatory Sterilization

    Detroit woman, boyfriend face charges in 2-year-old's death

    A 21-year-old Detroit mother and her boyfriend are expected to be arraigned today on charges they beat the woman’s 2-month-old baby to death on Christmas Eve.

    Doublespeak

    Exactly whose actions were undermining the new security arrangement? More doublespeak.
    In an incident in northern Gaza, an IDF force killed three Palestinians who were suspected of trying to cross the security fence after midnight. The soldiers spotted suspicious movement of men who were trying to crawl to the fence and opened fire at them with the assistance of a helicopter. Weapons were found near the bodies of the three Palestinians.

    Palestinian Prime Minister Salam Fayyad denounced the operation in Nablus as a deliberate attempt to undermine recent security gains.

    Read more....

    Sunday, December 27, 2009

    As Long As It Comes From China It Is Acceptable

    After an exhaustive cost analysis by the CBO and a California impact study by the EPA, it has been determined that what happens in China stays in China.
    Earth-Friendly Elements, Mined Destructively

    Thomas Lee for The New York Times

    Zeng Guohui, 41, visiting an abandoned mine where he used to shovel ore from which rare-earth elements were extracted.

    Published: December 25, 2009

    GUYUN VILLAGE, China — Some of the greenest technologies of the age, from electric cars to efficient light bulbs to very large wind turbines, are made possible by an unusual group of elements called rare earths. The world’s dependence on these substances is rising fast.



    In Rare Earth Metals, Chinese Dominance
    Thomas Lee for The New York Times

    This abandoned mine in Guyun Village in China exhausted the local deposit of heavy rare-earth elements in three years.

    Just one problem: These elements come almost entirely from China, from some of the most environmentally damaging mines in the country, in an industry dominated by criminal gangs.

    Read more....

    Aren't you just dying to see those Chinese wind turbines dotting the landscape and your lakefronts?

    Saturday, December 26, 2009

    How Many Tubes Of Caulk Can You Buy For $2 Million?

    All you can do is laugh... sardonically. From Gateway Pundit:
    Saturday, December 26, 2009, 11:48 AM
    Jim Hoft

    Cash for Caulkers–
    The US government spent two million dollars of Stimulus money to caulk 7 homes.

    From the Cashing In program on FOX News Saturday.

    Mission Accomplished?

    It may be just a bit early to declare victory and say that the recession is over... at least in Michigan.

    Michigan
    Data Series Back
    Data
    June
    2009
    July
    2009
    Aug
    2009
    Sept
    2009
    Oct
    2009
    Nov
    2009

    Labor Force Data

    Civilian Labor Force (1)

    Jump to page with historical data
    4,869.2 4,857.1 4,844.7 4,833.0 4,850.0 (P) 4,845.7

    Employment (1)

    Jump to page with historical data
    4,129.2 4,126.9 4,108.7 4,093.9 4,116.9 (P) 4,133.1

    Unemployment (1)

    Jump to page with historical data
    740.0 730.2 736.0 739.1 733.1 (P) 712.6

    Unemployment Rate (2)

    Jump to page with historical data
    15.2 15.0 15.2 15.3 15.1 (P) 14.7
    Source: U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics

    Still, this does represent something of an improvement. The real questions are:
    1. is the improvement partially due to Michigan continuing to lose population?
    2. what happens in January when the Christmas retail season is over?
    This might be the start of a Happy New Year... or just another statistical bump in the Michigan economic roller coaster.

    Thursday, December 24, 2009

    Home Sales Up... No Down

    Another government pull-ahead program ala "Cash For Clunkers" that is "full of sound and fury; signifying nothing."

    From The Detroit News:
    Last Updated: December 23. 2009 1:00AM

    Midwest home sales up 58%

    Rush to claim tax credit fuels surge from a year ago

    Josh Funk / Associated Press

    Omaha, Neb. -- Home sales in the Midwest jumped 58 percent last month over year-ago levels, the strongest showing of any region, as first-time buyers rushed to claim a temporary federal tax credit.

    There were 1.2 million total sales in the 11-state region, the National Association of Realtors said Tuesday. The median home price was flat at $140,800.

    For Michigan, total sales in the third quarter amounted to 169,000 units, a 7 percent increase from the previous quarter and an 11 percent increase from the same period a year ago.

    Advertisement

    Nationally, existing home sales jumped almost 47 percent from November of last year, without adjusting for seasonal factors. The median sales price fell 4 percent to $172,600.

    About half of all buyers in November were first-time home buyers, NAR said. Many hurried to get under a deadline to qualify for an $8,000 tax credit that was set to expire at the end of the month, though Congress then extended and expanded the program through April.

    Read more....

    From The Wall Street Journal:

    DECEMBER 23, 2009, 10:15 A.M. ET

    New-Home Sales Slide 11.3%

    BY JEFF BATER

    WASHINGTON -- New-home sales plunged to their lowest in seven months during November, a bigger-than-expected drop and a sign the housing-market recovery will be rocky.

    Separately, the income of Americans made the largest gain in six months during November and their spending rose strongly, according to data hinting the economy might have picked up speed near the end of the year.

    Sales of single-family homes decreased 11.3% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 355,000, the Commerce Department said Wednesday.

    Wednesday, December 23, 2009

    Businesses Brace for Health Bill's Costs

    But... but... wasn't the health care bill supposed to cover 30 million more people and save money? How could saving money be so costly?

    If you are truly wondering that, you are an idiot.
    The Wall Street Journal

    By NEIL KING JR.

    Companies are alarmed at potentially costly provisions in the Senate health-care bill, many of which they hope will be scrapped during a final round of negotiations early next year.

    A scramble to massage the hefty measure, instead of pushing to kill it, reflects the view of many in the business community that a sweeping remake of the U.S. health-care system now appears inevitable.

    The U.S. Chamber of Commerce is among a few big business groups calling for Congress to scrap the overhaul effort.

    Business is worried that President Barack Obama's push to extend coverage to millions more Americans will raise the burden on employers. Business groups have widely criticized the 2,074-page Senate bill, which looks set for passage on Christmas Eve. They also have offered a variety of fixes.

    Democrats
    UPI

    From left, Democratic Sens. Christopher Dodd, Harry Reid and Max Baucus participate in a rally Tuesday after a series of votes on the health-care bill.

    Businesses are bracing for possible rising health care costs, with some businesses holding out hope for new amendments, Neil King reports.

    The legislation's scale and complexity, plus uncertainty over how the Senate bill will be meshed with the version that passed the House in November, make it difficult for most companies to gauge the effect it will have on the bottom line.

    "We're still committed to the notion that health reform can be done right, but I know of no company that is warmly embracing what is in either the House or Senate bills," said Paul Dennett, top health-care adviser to the American Benefits Council, an advocacy group for large employers.

    With all eyes now turning to House-Senate negotiations over a final bill expected next month, corporate lobbyists are jockeying for modifications that will buffer the impact.

    Retailers want a longer delay before new employees qualify for company-subsidized benefits. Big employers such as Caterpillar Inc., Boeing Co. and Xerox Corp. want to modify Medicare tax provisions in the Senate bill that would cut their earnings. Small construction companies want an exemption from employee coverage that the Senate bill already applies to other businesses with fewer than 50 employees.

    Across the spectrum, businesses worry that a series of new taxes and fees to pay for expanding health-care coverage will push up premiums, particularly for smaller employers.

    The Senate bill calls for a nearly $70 billion tax over 10 years on insurance companies, plus a $2 billion-a-year tax on medical devices. Billions of dollars are also meant to be raised from added taxes and fees on wealthier seniors, higher-end insurance plans and tanning salons.

    Companies of all sizes have been increasingly burdened by health-care costs, which topped $400 billion in 2007, according to data from the Employee Benefit Research Institute. Unrestrained, that figure is expected to double by 2017. About 70% of workers receive health insurance through their employers.

    Groups representing smaller businesses say the threat of increased taxes and premiums could outweigh provisions intended to limit the impact on small employers. The Senate bill "will not only fail to reduce and control the constantly climbing health-care costs small-business owners face, but it will result in new and greater costs on their business," said Dan Danner, head of the National Federation of Independent Business.

    Tuesday, December 22, 2009

    On Time Departures Grounded

    The airlines industry is scored on "on time departures" so it is common practice to hustle everyone on the plane whether the plane can actually fly away or not. My own son experienced this about a week ago in Ft. Lauderdale when a Spirit Airlines flight was pushed back from the gate as a huge thunderstorm cell hit from Miami northward. An hour and a half of sitting on the tarmac and the weather abated enough for takeoff.

    Still, his flight "departed" on time. Now there is some hope for travelers, but not nearly as much as they might want.
    U.S. imposes 3-hour limit on tarmac strandings

    Washington Post Staff Writer
    Monday, December 21, 2009; 4:29 PM

    Under new federal rules, airlines with loaded jets on the tarmac will now have to get them in the air within three hours, or allow the passengers off.

    New U.S. Department of Transportation regulations issued Monday also say that airlines must provide adequate food and potable water for passengers within two hours of an aircraft being delayed on the tarmac. Additionally, airlines must maintain "operable lavatories" and provide passengers on delayed aircraft with necessary medical attention.

    The new rules apply to U.S. airlines and domestic flights. They allow exceptions for safety, security and other reasons linked to specific instructions from air traffic control officials.

    Passenger advocates and lawmakers have demanded federal action in recent years to combat excessive tarmac delays. The new regulations authorize fines of as much as $27,500 per passenger for violations. The new rules go into effect in about three months, officials said.

    Read more....

    Monday, December 21, 2009

    The Democratic Porkers Are Stuffed In The Health Bill

    If you happen to be in Washington D.C., be very careful. You could get trampled by these Democratic Porkers trying to get into the Health Care Bill.

    Deep in Health Bill, Very Specific Beneficiaries

    By ROBERT PEAR
    Published: December 20, 2009

    WASHINGTON — Buried in the deal-clinching health care package that Senate Democrats unveiled over the weekend is an inconspicuous proposal expanding Medicare to cover certain victims of “environmental health hazards.”

    Read more....


    Saturday, December 19, 2009

    Hacking Systems

    With all of the recent angst about how al Qaeda hacked U.S. military drones with $26 software, it shouldn't be surprising that "hackers" are now finding gainful employment with the government, among other employers.
    Certified Ethical Hacker: Not Your Everyday Job Certified Ethical Hacker: Not Your Everyday Job

    The term "hacker" doesn't just apply to crooks, thieves and anyone else looking to subvert computer security systems for malevolent purposes. Some hackers are in the business of improving security. Certified Ethical Hackers are paid by companies and government agencies to test their computer systems against the sort of attacks the bad guys often attempt to pull off.

    Read more....

    This would seem to be a perfect short-term job for a high-school senior who is trying to get some money together to go to his favorite party college.

    Friday, December 18, 2009

    Copenhagen Accord Not Worth One Honda Accord

    It all boils down to a lot of over-paid politicians flying around the world using a lot of expensive jet fuel to meet in costly locations to say "look at me; look at me..." and then agreeing to do it again sometime.
    Leaders Strike Climate Deal

    By JEFFREY BALL, STEPHEN POWER and ELIZABETH WILLIAMSON
    [President Barack Obama in Copenhagen on the final day of the U.N. summit on climate change.]
    Getty Images

    President Barack Obama in Copenhagen on the final day of the U.N. summit on climate change.

    COPENHAGEN -- Leaders of the U.S., China and several other major economies said late Friday they had tentatively reached a new climate accord, though they said the pact wasn't aggressive enough to meaningfully curb greenhouse-gas emissions and merely set up a future round of negotiations to hash out the details.

    The announcement followed a hectic day of diplomacy that included an approximately four-hour meeting that featured clashes between U.S. and Chinese officials. But the so-called "Copenhagen Accord" leaves key questions unanswered, and will likely have little immediate impact on companies in the U.S. and elsewhere that had hoped for more certainty about the future direction of regulation to curb greenhouse gas emissions.

    The agreement was still subject late Friday to final ratification by nations at the conference.

    The Copenhagen agreement contained no specific targets for greenhouse gas emissions by 2050. A proposed 50% cut that was in earlier drafts was removed.

    Read more....

    Thursday, December 17, 2009

    The Golden Bubble

    Bubbles... we love bubbles. We have songs about bubbles... tiny bubbles, in the wine, makes me happy, makes me feel fine.... Kids love to blow soap bubbles. But the thing about bubbles is... they pop!
    • dot-coms ... pop
    • oil ... pop
    • housing ... pop
    • gold ...
    Gold plummets as the dollar firms
    By Ben Rooney, staff reporter

    NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Gold prices plunged Thursday as the dollar surged against the euro amid concerns about the economic health of certain European nations.

    February gold fell $28, or 2.5%, to settle at $1,107.40 an ounce after falling to a low of $1,098 an ounce earlier in the session. The retreat came two weeks after gold settled at an all-time high of $1,218.30 an ounce

    ...

    In a research report out Thursday, analysts at Morgan Stanley raised their forecast for gold prices next year by 20% to $1,200 an ounce. The investment bank also raised the outlook for 2011, but reduced forecasts from 2013 onwards.

    Is this beating a dead horse? Wait, that's another metaphor. But it may be beating the bushes for the last of the bubble customers.

    Wednesday, December 16, 2009

    Censure Or Action

    And now will President Obama define just what this means?
    Iran draws censure after missile test

    TEHRAN — Iran on Wednesday test-fired what it said was a faster version of a medium-range missile which could allow it to strike Israel, drawing international censure and warnings of "serious" fallout.

    The defiant test of the Sejil 2 (Lethal Stone) missile comes as world powers mull fresh sanctions against the Islamic republic for its controversial nuclear enrichment programme.

    "It hit the defined target," state television reported, without giving further details.

    The two-stage Sejil, powered by solid fuel, is capable according to Iran of travelling 2,000 kilometres (1,240 miles), which would put arch-foe Israel, most Arab states and parts of Europe, including much of Turkey, within range.

    Read more....

    Let's hope that he responds with as much vigor as the U.S. military did against the Navy SEALs who will be brought to court martial for allegedly hitting a most-wanted terrorist.

    Tuesday, December 15, 2009

    Will They Sue For More Protection?

    The Muslim terrorists will be protected from Chicago street thugs and politicians who are deemed to be far more dangerous....
    U.S. announces transfer of Guantanamo detainees to Ill. prison

    By Peter Slevin Washington Post Staff Writer
    Tuesday, December 15, 2009; 1:41 PM

    CHICAGO -- Dozens of terrorism suspects being held at the U.S. naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, will be moved to a little-used Illinois state prison that will be acquired and upgraded by the federal government, the Obama administration said Tuesday.

    In a letter addressed to Illinois Gov. Pat Quinn, administration officials confirmed that the government would acquire the eight-year-old Thomson Correctional Center, about 150 miles west of Chicago, to house detainees from Guantanamo. The Justice Department will use part of the facility to house federal inmates, while the Defense Department will use part to house a "limited number" of Guantanamo detainees.

    "The two parts of the facility will be managed separately, and Federal inmates will have no opportunity to interact with Guantanamo detainees," according to the letter, which was released by the White House and signed by officials including Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton and Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates.

    Read more....

    Monday, December 14, 2009

    The EPA's Carbon Bomb Fizzles

    The Democratic Party is careening toward suicide with all of its CO2-related efforts. The Wall Street Journal reports on how the recent EPA actions may delay that eventuality... briefly.
    In the high-stakes game of chicken the Obama White House has been playing with Congress over who will regulate the earth's climate, the president's team just motored into a ditch. So much for threats. The threat the White House has been leveling at Congress is the Environmental Protection Agency's "endangerment finding," which EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson finally issued this week. The finding lays the groundwork for the EPA to regulate greenhouse gas emissions across the entire economy, on the grounds that global warming is hazardous to human health.

    From the start, the Obama team has wielded the EPA action as a club, warning Congress that if it did not come up with cap-and-trade legislation the EPA would act on its own—and in a far more blunt fashion than Congress preferred. As one anonymous administration official menaced again this week: "If [Congress doesn't] pass this legislation," the EPA is going to have to "regulate in a command-and-control way, which will probably generate even more uncertainty."

    Read more....

    Friday, December 11, 2009

    Obama Knows How To Pick His Czars

    President Obama has selected one classless radical after another to "advise" him on matters of the nation. You all remember "green jobs" Van Jones? How about "safe schools" Kevin "I'm Queerer Than You" Jennings? Jennings has been involved in the "education" of young people for some time.

    Now you can read for yourself how he intends to educate our children in his version of "safe" schools.

    [click image for downloadable .pdf document - not recommended for children]

    That should make your day. h/t Gateway Pundit

    Oh, by the way, Van Jones did not go away.

    WASHINGTON, Dec. 1 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Van Jones, President Obama's controversial former "green jobs" czar, serves on the advisory board of an independent environmental organization actively working with the White House, reports Aaron Klein of WorldNetDaily.com.

    Jones resigned in September after it was exposed he founded a communist revolutionary organization and signed a statement that accused the Bush administration of possible involvement in the 9/11 attacks.

    Jones is one of 20 advisers to the University of Colorado-based Presidential Climate Action Project, or PCAP, which draws up climate-policy recommendations for the White House and has been working with members of the Obama administration.

    Read more....

    Michigan State Players Kicked Off Team

    They were smart enough to get into college. They were athletic enough to play Division 1 football. They were stupid enough to throw it all away for some sort of macho code to deal with being "disrespected." How much respect have they earned for this stupidity?

    Full story....

    Thursday, December 10, 2009

    The Fiction Of Climate Science

    Repeat this: politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good... politically-correct is good...
    The Fiction Of Climate Science

    Gary Sutton
    , 12.04.09, 10:00 AM EST

    In 2002 I stood in a room of the Smithsonian. One entire wall charted the cooling of our globe over the last 60 million years. This was no straight line. The curve had two steep dips followed by leveling. There were no significant warming periods. Smithsonian scientists inscribed it across some 20 feet of plaster, with timelines.

    Last year, I went back. That fresco is painted over. The same curve hides behind smoked glass, shrunk to three feet but showing the same cooling trend. Hey, why should the Smithsonian put its tax-free status at risk? If the politicians decide to whip up public fear in a different direction, get with it, oh ye subsidized servants. Downplay that embarrassing old chart and maybe nobody will notice.

    Read more....


    Wednesday, December 9, 2009

    $10 Trillion - Zero Return On Investment

    Earth's climate has been changing for billions of years. Now we are going to prevent that with government programs. Sure.
    Climate Deal Likely to Bear Big Price Tag

    Published: December 8, 2009

    WASHINGTON — If negotiators reach an accord at the climate talks in Copenhagen it will entail profound shifts in energy production, dislocations in how and where people live, sweeping changes in agriculture and forestry and the creation of complex new markets in global warming pollution credits.

    So what is all this going to cost?

    The short answer is trillions of dollars over the next few decades. It is a significant sum but a relatively small fraction of the world’s total economic output. In energy infrastructure alone, the transformational ambitions that delegates to the United Nations climate change conference are expected to set in the coming days will cost more than $10 trillion in additional investment from 2010 to 2030, according to a new estimate from the International Energy Agency.

    Read more....
    Anyone who can't see that these programs are nothing more than scams and money-making schemes for government-connected groups and individuals isn't really looking.

    New U.S. Plan to Battle AIDS Slows Growth in Treatment

    Portends the new Obamacare? Oh, you have a serious, but costly illness. Too bad.
    New U.S. Plan to Battle AIDS Slows Growth in Treatment

    Published: December 8, 2009

    As the Obama administration slowly unveils its global AIDS plan, the drive to put more people on drugs is being scaled back as emphasis is shifted to prevention and to diseases that cost less to fight, including pneumonia, diarrhea, malaria and fatal birth complications.

    AIDS activists complained bitterly that they have been betrayed and that the Bush administration’s best legacy is being gutted — and they blame a doctor and budget advisor who is also the brother of White House chief of staff Rahm Emanuel.

    “I’m holding my nose as I say this, but I miss George W. Bush,” said Gregg Gonsalves a long-time AIDS campaigner. “On AIDS, he really stepped up. He did a tremendous thing. Now, to have this happen under Obama is really depressing.”

    Read more....

    Tuesday, December 8, 2009

    Solar Energy Shares Jump On Upgrades,EPA Greenhouse Gas Ruling

    Makes you kind of wonder when big business jumps on the CO2-is-poison bandwagon... until you realize that they see it as the anti-CO2-is-big-bucks bandwagon.

    This is a money grab by the government in the form of higher and higher taxes and a money grab by big business in the form of sweetheart subsidies from the government. The only group not on the money bandwagon is the taxpayer group... they just shell out the money in the form of more taxes and higher energy costs.

    And the taxpayers get in return... nada, zilch, zip, zero.

    The Wall Street Journal reports:

    NEW YORK (Dow Jones)--Shares of solar energy stocks climbed Monday as the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency declared greenhouse gases a danger to public health and as an analyst turned bullish on several solar names, saying he expects strong demand to continue into the first half of 2010.

    The so-called "endangerment finding" announced by EPA Administrator Lisa Jackson is necessary for the administration to move ahead with new light-duty vehicle emission standards and is the precursor to wide-ranging regulations on greenhouse gas emissions. The EPA said Monday that large emitters of greenhouse gases would come under new regulations next spring

    Will They Also Call Sharia Law "Freedom Of Religion"

    While I have to agree with the idea that religious symbols should be given freedom of expression regardless of the religion, I wonder if those who are so protective of that right will stand up for Christian and Jewish symbols when those are banned by Muslim majorities?

    Just wondering....

    Swiss leftists to push to revoke minaret ban


    Conservatives marked victory in last week's referendum against construction of minarets, but left-wing intellectuals are formulation new referendum to have ban overturned

    Ynet

    Published: 12.07.09, 13:20 / Israel News


    Left-wing activists in Switzerland are planning a new initiative to overturn the ban on the construction of minarets in the country, the British "Independent" reported on Monday.

    According to the report, the initiative is meant to restore Muslim's faith in the country's institutions, as well as Switzerland's standing in the world.

    In a referendum carried out last week, 57% of the country's citizens voted in favor of banning the construction of new minarets. Justice Minister Evelyn Widmer-Schlumpf said following the approval of the initiative, that the ban would be effective immediately, but is not set in stone and could be overturned.

    Culture War

    Swiss government 'very concerned' over minaret ban / Associated Press

    Foreign minister says limitations on coexistence of different cultures, religions 'endangers our security'; stresses ban only on new minarets, not on new mosques
    Full Story

    A group of 20 Swiss intellectuals called Club Helvetique has formulated an action plan to tackle the ban. "A new initiative is the most democratic way of achieving this," attorney Joerg Mueller of Club Helvetique said.

    Switzerland's conservative SVP party which led the campaign for the ban said in response: "The Club Helvetique is an association of bad losers."

    The results of the referendum enraged many in the country and major protests by leftists in Zurich, Bern and Basel were seen over the weekend.

    According to the report, those who oppose the ban have already filed two petitions to the federal court claiming it is a violation of freedom of religion.
    Read more....

    Monday, December 7, 2009

    Carbon Dioxide Emission Rules Due Today

    That insidious pollutant, CO2... carbon dioxide... is everywhere. It causes untold damage to our environment as shown here. Al Gore and Barack Obama have sworn to save us from this danger, even if it bankrupts coal companies... and us.

    The Wall Street Journal
    reports:


    Officials gather in Copenhagen this week for an international climate summit, but business leaders are focusing even more on Washington, where the Obama administration is expected as early as Monday to formally declare carbon dioxide a dangerous pollutant.

    An "endangerment" finding by the Environmental Protection Agency could pave the way for the government to require businesses that emit carbon dioxide and five other greenhouse gases to make costly changes in machinery to reduce emissions -- even if Congress doesn't pass pending climate-change legislation. EPA action to regulate emissions could affect the U.S. economy more directly, and more quickly, than any global deal inked in the Danish capital, where no binding agreement is expected.

    Many business groups are opposed to EPA efforts to curb a gas as ubiquitous as carbon dioxide.

    An EPA endangerment finding "could result in a top-down command-and-control regime that will choke off growth by adding new mandates to virtually every major construction and renovation project," U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Thomas Donohue said in a statement. "The devil will be in the details, and we look forward to working with the government to ensure we don't stifle our economic recovery," he said, noting that the group supports federal legislation.

    Advancing Emissions

    Track the rise of carbon dioxide emissions.

    Countdown to Copenhagen

    Take a look at events leading up to the climate conference.

    EPA action won't do much to combat climate change, and "is certain to come at a huge cost to the economy," said the National Association of Manufacturers, a trade group that stands as a proxy for U.S. industry.

    Dan Riedinger, spokesman for the Edison Electric Institute, a power-industry trade group, said the EPA would be less likely than Congress to come up with an "economywide approach" to regulating emissions. The power industry prefers such an approach because it would spread the burden of emission cuts to other industries as well.

    Electricity generation, transportation and industry represent the three largest sources of U.S. greenhouse-gas emissions.

    An EPA spokeswoman declined to comment Sunday on when the agency might finalize its proposed endangerment finding. Congressional Republicans have called on the EPA to withdraw it, saying recently disclosed emails written by scientists at the Climatic Research Unit of the U.K.'s University of East Anglia and their peers call into question the scientific rationale for regulation.

    The spokeswoman said that the EPA is confident the basis for its decision will be "very strong," and that when it is published, "we invite the public to review the extensive scientific analysis informing" the decision.

    EPA action would give President Barack Obama something to show leaders from other nations when he attends the Copenhagen conference on Dec. 18 and tries to persuade them that the U.S. is serious about cutting its contribution to global greenhouse-gas emissions.

    [Climate]

    The vast majority of increased greenhouse-gas emissions is expected to come from developing countries such as China and India, not from rich countries like the U.S. But developing countries have made it clear that their willingness to reduce growth in emissions will depend on what rich countries do first. That puts a geopolitical spotlight on the U.S.

    At the heart of the fight over whether U.S. emission constraints should come from the EPA or Congress is a high-stakes issue: which industries will have to foot the bill for a climate cleanup. A similar theme will play out in Copenhagen as rich countries wrangle over how much they should have to pay to help the developing world shift to cleaner technologies.

    "There is no agreement without money," says Rosário Bento Pais, a top climate negotiator for the European Commission, the European Union's executive arm. "That is clear."

    An endangerment finding would allow the EPA to use the federal Clean Air Act to regulate carbon-dioxide emissions, which are produced whenever fossil fuel is burned. Under that law, the EPA could require emitters of as little as 250 tons of carbon dioxide per year to install new technology to curb their emissions starting as soon as 2012.

    Pawel Kopczynski/Reuters

    A man climbed on a globe that is part of an installation in downtown Copenhagen.

    The EPA has said it will only require permits from big emitters -- facilities that put out 25,000 tons of carbon dioxide a year. But that effort to tailor the regulations to avoid slamming small businesses with new costs is expected to be challenged in court.

    Legislators are aware that polls show the public appetite for action that would raise energy prices to protect the environment has fallen precipitously amid the recession.

    Congressional legislation also faces plenty of U.S. industry opposition. Under the legislation, which has been passed by the House but is now stuck in the Senate, the federal government would set a cap on the amount of greenhouse gas the economy could emit every year. The government would distribute a set number of emission permits to various industries. Companies that wanted to be able to emit more than their quota could buy extra permits from those that had figured out how to emit less.

    Proponents of the cap-and-trade approach say emission-permit trading will encourage industries to find the least-expensive ways to curb greenhouse-gas output. But opponents say it will saddle key industries with high costs not borne by rivals in China or India, and potentially cost the U.S. jobs.

    An official prepares the Danish flag in the large Copenhagen meeting hall that will host the United Nation's summit on climate change beginning Monday. The conference ends Dec. 18.
    Climate
    Climate

    The oil industry has warned that climate legislation could force some U.S. refineries to shut down, because importing gasoline from countries without emission caps could be cheaper than making the gasoline on domestic soil.

    Legislators "have decided that coal and electric users don't bear the burden" of emissions constraints for many years, said John Felmy, chief economist for the American Petroleum Institute, an industry group. "Early in the program, oil users are the ones who are hammered."

    The Iron and Steel Institute, which represents more than 75% of steel made in the U.S., said that successful climate policy -- whether through the EPA or Congress -- must "reduce emissions without altering the competitiveness of American steelmakers."

    The issue of how curbing emissions would affect jobs in developed countries is likely to erupt in Copenhagen in the battle over how much rich countries should pony up for cleaner technologies in developing nations.

    Estimates of the cost for reducing emissions in developing countries vary widely, but the European Commission said in September that the bill could reach $150 billion annually by 2020. Leaders of the EU's 27 nations have said only that the EU would pay its "fair share" of the total, without committing to an amount.

    Yet EU industry lobbies are weighing in against that proposal. It is "not realistic," said Axel Eggert, spokesman for Eurofer, the trade group for European steelmakers. Steelmakers want to "make sure that the financing is not a subsidy for our competitors," he said.

    -- Ian Talley and Stephen Power contributed to this article.

    Write to Jeffrey Ball at jeffrey.ball@wsj.com and Charles Forelle at charles.forelle@wsj.com

    Saturday, December 5, 2009

    Ounces Are Getting Smaller

    In 2008, it took only 16.9 ounces to equal 500 ml. In 2009, it takes 17.6 ounces to equal 500 ml.

    Click image for larger view.

    I guess ounces must be pegged to the dollar and mls pegged to the Euro. What is more likely is that someone who was designing the new package didn't look at the old one, then entered 520 ml. into a conversion formula and came up with the 17.58 [17.6] ounces for the new package.

    Makes you glad this isn't medicine.

    Friday, December 4, 2009

    Climategate - A Republican Myth

    While the world of science is somewhat vibrating due to the disclosure of political hanky-panky with data and analysis, the political world is vibrating to... uh, nothing much more than some bureaucratic inbreeding.
    Climategate? What Climategate?

    The scandal involving leaked or purloined emails from the Climatic Research Unit at Britain's University of East Anglia finally reached Capitol Hill this week, but not in the way you'd expect. Democratic committee chairmen ignored the evidence of scientific skullduggery at the influential research unit, even as its head Phil Jones stepped aside this week to make way for an investigation.

    Senator Barbara Boxer, chair of the Environment Committee, did rouse herself to comment on the emails, saying their release should be treated as a criminal matter. "You call it 'Climategate'; I call it 'Email-theft-gate,'" she said. "Part of our looking at this will be looking at a criminal activity which could have well been coordinated."

    In the House, the Committee on Energy Independence and Global Warming held a hearing on what Chairman Ed Markey said was "the urgent consensus view . . . that global warming is real, and the science indicates it is getting worse." But the only witnesses were officials from the Obama administration, who support dramatic action on climate change. Republicans asked to have a global-warming skeptic appear but were denied.

    Read more....

    Thursday, December 3, 2009

    Not Faster Than A Glacier

    Who would have thought that ice could move so fast? Apparently, not two brothers. So far, no calls to ban CO2.

    Men crushed by glacier 'ignored signs'

    Friday, December 04, 2009 » 02:54am

    Two Melbourne brothers ignored numerous warning signs to reach a New Zealand glacier that collapsed, engulfing them in ice, an inquest has heard.

    Ashish Miranda, 24, an aircraft engineer, and Akshay Miranda, a 22-year-old student, were killed at the Fox Glacier on January 8 after stepping over a safety rope and wading through a swollen stream to get to the glacier.

    The brothers were travelling with their parents on a summer holiday they had funded as a silver wedding anniversary gift to their mum and dad.

    One of the brothers was leaning against the ice wall while the other took his picture, when a groan from the glacier warned of impending disaster.

    The brothers tried to flee to safety but had no chance of outrunning the hundreds of tonnes of ice that crushed them.

    Read more....

    h/t Tom Nelson

    Wednesday, December 2, 2009

    Tuesday, December 1, 2009

    Minaret ban 'a security risk' - Swiss minister

    And have you noticed all of the new churches and synagogues springing up in Muslim countries? Why do you suppose Muslims are perceived to represent a "security threat?" Could it be because they are?
    Minaret ban 'a security risk' - Swiss minister

    A decision by Swiss voters to ban the construction of minarets poses a risk to Switzerland's security, the country's foreign minister says.

    Micheline Calmy-Rey said the Swiss government was "very concerned" about the ban, adopted by voters on Sunday.

    "Each limitation on the co-existence of different cultures and religions also endangers our security," she told the European security body, the OSCE.

    A top UN official has called the ban "clearly discriminatory".

    Monday, November 30, 2009

    Tiger Woods Driving

    Let's skip all of the press releases and get straight to the punch line: Tiger Woods should keep his driving limited to the golf course.

    That said, we're all waiting to let Tiger's driver do the talking... and we'll all be listening.

    Treasury Pushes Mortgage Firms for Loan Relief

    Here is the problem: there are no viable options for salvaging mortgages when the value of the property is 30-40% less than the mortgaged amount. Who eats the loss? The homeowner? The bank? Taxpayers? All of the above?

    Furthermore, how many mortgages are in default because buyers simply cannot afford a home regardless of the loan modification terms? What percentage of defaults are a result of unemployment and how do you modify a loan for someone without income?

    Broad mandates from the Federal government simply cause further market and economic decisions that are decidedly stupid.
    Treasury Pushes Mortgage Firms for Loan Relief

    The administration said Monday that it would increase the pressure on banks to help troubled homeowners permanently lower mortgage payments.

    The Treasury Department said that mortgage servicers would be required to submit plans on how they would decide whether a loan would be permanent modified. Bank that fall short of the guidelines of their agreement could face fines or sanctions, the Treasury said.

    Monday’s push was the latest evidence that a $75 billion taxpayer-financed effort aimed at stemming foreclosures was struggling. Even as lenders have accelerated the pace at which they are reducing mortgage payments for borrowers, most loans modified remain in a trial stage lasting up to five months, and only a tiny fraction have been made permanent.

    Read more....

    There really is only one solution: let the marketplace work and let the lenders and borrowers take the heat. It's not pleasant, but it will be better in the long run. Those of us with homes that have lost value [roughtly 90+%] have the choices to either stay and pay or leave and pay. Eventually, the home market will recover and so will home prices. It may take quite a few years, but it will be a lesson worth learning and heeding in future.

    Sunday, November 29, 2009

    Politics of Climategate threatens climate change conference in Copenhagen

    Using data without irresponsible manipulation, fraud, and lying is somehow being the stooge of big business and the energy lobby.

    But using data with irresponsible manipulation, fraud, and lying is giving our children "a better world." Those politics are a good thing.

    Portland Progressive Examiner


    November 29, 12:26 AMPortland Progressive ExaminerMichael Stone




    Tree stumps displayed in Trafalgar Square, London, as part of an art piece entitled "Ghost Forest"
    Tree stumps displayed in Trafalgar Square, London, as part of an art piece entitled "Ghost Forest"
    (AP Photo/Matt Dunham)

    The politics of Climategate threatens the climate change conference in Copenhagen. The UN climate change conference in Copenhagen opens next week.


    The political fall out from the release of hacked emails from one of the UK's leading climate research centers threatens the climate change consensus.

    Climate change sceptics have used the hacked emails to try and prove climate change researchers are playing fast and loose with the figures. More than this, it has emboldened climate change deniers, and spawned a great deal of misinformation.

    Read more....

    Friday, November 27, 2009

    Iran rebuked over nuclear 'cover-up' by UN watchdog

    Just what are the implications of a "rebuke" by the United Nations? Does that mean that Disney will not build a "Disneystan" near Qom? Does the Iranian regime care one bit? Unlikely.
    Iran rebuked over nuclear 'cover-up' by UN watchdog
    Site of uranium enrichment plant near Qom, Iran
    Iran's second uranium enrichment facility came to light in September

    The UN nuclear watchdog's governing body has passed a resolution condemning Iran for developing a uranium enrichment site in secret.

    The International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) also demanded that Iran freeze the project immediately.

    The resolution, the first against Iran in nearly four years, was passed by a 25-3 margin with six abstentions.

    But Iran's envoy to the watchdog denounced the move, calling it intimidation.

    Iran says its nuclear programme is for peaceful energy purposes, but the US says it is seeking nuclear weapons.

    Read more....