November 17th, 2009 at 11:28 am
Iran Answers Obama By Constructing New Nuclear Sites
Apparently, Iran never received Barack Obama’s “Hope and Change” memo. Or, more worrisome, they did and opted to play him for a Jimmy Carter-like fool.
Yesterday, the United Nations International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) announced that Iran may be constructing multiple covert nuclear facilities in addition to the Qom site disclosed two months ago. Moreover, Iranian representatives have brazenly announced that they intend to commence operating the exposed Qom facility by 2011. Making matters even worse, Iran is also wavering on its commitment following exposure of the Qom plant to ship its uranium to other nations for benign reprocessing.
The Obama State Department and IAEA reacted with their usual impotence, with the State Department saying that “now is the time for Iran to signal that it wants to be a responsible member of the international community.” No, that time passed decades ago.
This endless cycle of Iranian duplicity and feckless response is beyond farce. Obama brought false “hope” to international relations, but where’s the “change?”
November 17th, 2009 at 11:25 am
Democrats Have a Problem with Judges
Republicans spent the last eight years trying to ensure an up-or-down vote for their judicial nominees. Democrats, for the first time in history, decided to take the extraordinary step of filibustering all of the nominees that they deemed “out of the judicial mainstream.”
The Democratic standard for mainstream: ‘We don’t like them and we’ll do everything possible to keep them off the bench.’
Now, Democrats are having problems with the judicial confirmation process, even though they hold 60 seats in the U.S. Senate.
Today the Senate will hold a cloture vote on the nomination of Judge David Hamilton to the Seventh Circuit Court of Appeals. Senate Republicans are currently mulling political payback and will likely filibuster Judge Hamilton’s nomination. If successful, Hamilton’s nomination will wind up just like dozens of blocked judges during the Bush Administration.
It appears that Democrats, too, have a problem with judges. What goes around comes around in Washington, D.C.
November 17th, 2009 at 9:58 am
Morning Links
November 16th, 2009 at 4:43 pm
Obama: More Free Speech in China, But Not America?
This is rich. Barack Obama told Chinese students yesterday that an uncensored society is healthiest.
“I’m a big supporter of non-censorship,” Obama said with an apparent straight face, because “it forces me to hear opinions that I don’t want to hear.” He added, “I think that the more freely information flows, the stronger society becomes,” and “they can begin to think for themselves.”
This is the same Barack Obama who admonished anyone who opposes his policy agenda to “get out of the way,” expresses support for the “Fairness Doctrine” and whose White House hit men orchestrated a campaign to silence and marginalize Fox News, the Chamber of Commerce and health insurers who had the audacity to actually communicate critical information to their members. One can only infer that Obama stands more willing to advocate freedom of speech for the Chinese than his own citizens.
November 16th, 2009 at 4:31 pm
Fear & Loathing in the West Wing
It may be that Barack Obama’s time in office serves to enhance Bill Clinton’s (personal) legacy among Democratic operatives. For all his faults, The Man from Hope at least made many people he spoke to and worked with feel better about themselves. Obama is a different cat. During his campaign for president, several reporters who had worked around both men remarked that Clinton sees a person the way that person wants to be seen; Obama sees a person the way that person is.
And when it comes to working in the Obama White House, loyalty runs in only one direction. The curious case of soon-to-be-former White House Counsel Gregory Craig is the most recent example. Last Friday, the early supporter (and bridge builder to the Kennedy family) was forced to resign because of his apparent inability to close down immediately the Guantanamo Bay Detention Center. You know, the same site filled with terrorists no other country wants, including America?
Maybe the only thing different if this had occurred in the Clinton White House would be the inclusion of a teary-eyed hug on the way out the door. Now that Craig is moving back to his white shoe D.C. law firm, maybe he’d appreciate knowing the president he helped elect still thinks he’s an effective lawyer. While Craig separates his aspiration from his reality, he’s got plenty of company among those listing the ending date of Obama-related work on their resumes.
November 16th, 2009 at 4:19 pm
75,343 Bogus Stimulus Jobs… and Counting
More than ten percent — or 75,343 — of the jobs the Obama Administration claims have been “created or saved” by the $787 billion Stimulus package are “doubtful or imaginary.”
That’s the conclusion of a comprehensive analysis performed by David Freddoso and Mark Hemingway of The Washington Examiner, who compiled and analyzed media reports on the Stimulus over the course of the last two weeks.
According to Freddoso and Hemingway:
The Obama administration has claimed that the $787 billion economic stimulus package ‘saved or created’ some 650,000 jobs. But almost as soon as the White House trotted out this figure, news organizations found huge exaggerations in the reported data. Many of the jobs reportedly created do not exist or cannot be accounted for.
The Examiner has created a handy interactive map highlighting the exaggerated job claims, broken down by state and locality. The map is accompanied by a chart fully documenting the jobs “not really created or saved” by the Stimulus. Check both out here.
Freddoso and Hemingway write that the project “remains a work in progress because relatively few newspapers have scrutinized stimulus spending so far.” They plan to update the map and chart as new revelations are reported on by the media.
November 16th, 2009 at 3:24 pm
Pain Panels, Anyone?
Okay, so maybe the cost-control bureaucrats under ObamaCare wouldn’t directly kill people forced into a national health plan. However, a sobering article in today’s Wall Street Journal shows how a key element of every health reform bill now in Congress could cause death(s) by a thousand denials.
As envisioned by the Senate Finance Committee, the commission—all 15 members appointed by the President—would have to meet certain budget targets each year. Starting in 2015, Medicare could not grow more rapidly on a per capita basis than by a measure of inflation. After 2019, it could only grow at the same rate as GDP, plus one percentage point.
The theory is to let technocrats set Medicare payments free from political pressure, as with the military base closing commissions. But that process presented recommendations to Congress for an up-or-down vote. Here, the commission’s decisions would go into effect automatically if Congress couldn’t agree within six months on different cuts that met the same target. The board’s decisions would not be subject to ordinary notice-and-comment rule-making, or even judicial review.”
So, absent a congressional override, there is no appeal for a denial of care made in the name of cost-benefit analysis. Of course, the “costs” and “benefits” will be considered as collective values interpreted by government administrators – not individual patients and taxpayers.
The State of Washington already has a similarly functioning “independent commission” that is actively denying care like the types mentioned above. While the consequences could be deadly, the creation of prolonged pain in the interim borders on unconscionable. Such decisions will become a reality when the public “option” becomes a public “mandate” forcing all but the wealthiest to suffer under a rationed health care system. Let’s hope there is enough push-back from Congress and the country to guarantee similar types of “pain panels” don’t take up residence in the nation’s capitol.
November 16th, 2009 at 2:46 pm
Ramirez Cartoon: Iran’s Nuclear Countdown
Below is one of the latest cartoons from Pulitzer Prize-winner Michael Ramirez.

View more of Ramirez’s cartoons on CFIF’s website.
November 16th, 2009 at 1:05 pm
Report: ObamaCare Will Increase Health Care Spending
The government can’t manage to control the laws of economics like it used to.
No surprise here, but according to a new study released by the non-partisan Center for Medicare and Medicaid Studies, the House health care bill will increase health care costs by $289 billion in the next ten years.
As much as the White House talked about “bending the health care cost curve” downward, the House health care bill, H.R.3962, does the exact opposite.
For some reason the Administration can’t understand that more government spending on health care without commensurate gains in supply leads to health care inflation, driving up costs for all consumers.
Other highlights from the report:
By calendar year 2019, the mandates, coupled with the Medicaid expansion, would reduce the number of uninsured from 57 million, as projected under current law, to an estimated 23 million under H.R. 3962.
The estimated effects of H.R. 3962 on overall national health expenditures (NHE) are shown in table 5. In aggregate, we estimate that for calendar years 2010 through 2019 NHE would increase by $289 billion, or 0.8 percent, over the updated baseline projection that was released on June 29, 2009… The NHE share of GDP is projected to be 21.1 percent in 2019, compared to 20.8 percent under current law.
Public spending would increase under H.R. 3962 as a result of the expansion of the Medicaid program and other Medicaid changes, less the net Medicare savings under the bill. Private expenditures would be higher as well…
November 16th, 2009 at 1:02 pm
Poll: We’re Winning the Battle Over Climate Change
One of the more frustrating aspects of debunking worldwide climate change hysteria is the false notion that a consensus exists that global warming is man-made.
On that front, there’s good news to report for those of us who prefer sobriety to fashionability. According to a new Rasmussen Reports public opinion poll, a 47% to 37% plurality believes that climate change results more from long-term planetary causes than human activity. Considering the fact that temperatures have declined since eleven years ago, and that global cooling was the trendy hysteria just thirty years ago, it’s refreshing to know that Americans are on to the scam.
And dangerously for Barack Obama, Americans by 50% to 20% believe that he still considers global warming man-made. Thus, like ObamaCare, this means that more Americans view his agenda as one opposing theirs, creating a precarious phenomenon for him. As he prepares to travel to Copenhagen to once again bow before the false international gods of global warming at the expense of America’s economy and taxpayers, it’s something of which his bumbling staff had better become aware.
November 16th, 2009 at 8:50 am
Morning Links
November 14th, 2009 at 6:59 pm
Moral Confusion on the Potomac
In the aftermath of the Obama Justice Department’s (and, let’s be clear, the President’s) decision to bring a group of terrorist figures — including professed 9/11 mastermind Khalid Sheikh Mohammed — to trial in American courtrooms, liberals in Congress are bending over backwards to tout the administration’s moral superiority.
What’s notable about their talking points is how thin the gruel they’re serving up is. Consider this gem from Senate Armed Services Committee Chairman Carl Levin (D-Michigan):
The argument by some that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed should be treated as a warrior and not as a common criminal misses the point. He wants us to treat him as a warrior. But he should, and will, be treated as the common terrorist criminal that he is.
As Charles Krauthammer noted on last night’s “Special Report,” the phrase “terrorist criminal” is, in and of itself, an oxymoron. But there’s also a bit of a stolen base in Levin’s argument. Because KSM wants to be treated as a warrior, he shouldn’t be? How about a justice system that operates according to the facts rather than the feelings of those involved? Sure, KSM might want the glories of martyrdom — give it to him. For every died in the wool jihadi who bids him well as he’s ferried across the River Styx to the land of subjugated virgins, they’ll be another potential Al-Qaeda recruit who learns that terrorism is a short road that ends in the embrace of an American noose.
Also weighing in was Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vermont):
By trying them in our federal courts, we demonstrate to the world that the most powerful nation on earth also trusts its judicial system — a system respected around the world.
That Leahy seems to think that whether or not America has any faith in the judicial process hinges on whether or not we empty out the population of Guantanamo Bay into New York City courtrooms doesn’t speak well of his standing as judiciary chairman. But are the military tribunals that these men would have otherwise faced not part of our judicial system? Or does he not remember being on the losing end of the vote on the Military Commissions Act of 2006?
Politics is supposed to stop at the water’s edge. Unfortunately, these days that water is in the Potomac River.
November 13th, 2009 at 6:08 pm
Breaking the Glass Ceiling of Debt
Uninhibited by the mounting debt being incurred through present and future spending, the White House is pressuring Congress to raise the legal cap on the country’s debt limit. Rebecca Christie of Bloomberg reports:
The Obama administration is confident Congress will raise the country’s debt limit by year end to avert a showdown similar to the one that shuttered parts of the government in 1995, administration officials said.
The White House wants an increase of at least $1 trillion to $1.5 trillion, according to a person familiar with the deliberations between lawmakers and the administration. Record budget deficits are pushing the national debt closer to the $12.1 trillion statutory limit.”
One would think a debt ceiling of $12.1 trillion would be a high enough threshold that – if reached – would prompt lawmakers to question the necessity (and sanity) of going over it. One would be wrong. What’s more, the Obama Administration is signaling that it doesn’t really care how Congress gets around to extending the nation’s credit line, as long as it does so before anyone has to choose between less spending or less work for federal employees.
The administration officials said the White House is open to any legislative vehicle that will raise the debt limit, by any amount.”
November 13th, 2009 at 5:12 pm
Our Dour Leader
While touring Asia, President Barack Obama continued his recent backhanding of the international community. Last week it was failing to attend the 20th anniversary of the Berlin Wall falling. Today, it’s telling Asian markets to perish the thought of relying on future American spending.
President Barack Obama has come halfway around the world to personally deliver the message to East Asia that the global economy can no longer count on the U.S. consumer to keep it afloat.
In what White House aides call a “major address” here on Friday, and in planned comments in Singapore and China next week, Mr. Obama will press his push to “rebalance” the world’s economy, urging China to adjust its economic policy to spur domestic consumption as the U.S. encourages less consumption, more savings and more exports.”
But perhaps the news isn’t all bad for Asian exporters. With the increasing purchasing power of the federal government under Obama’s rapacious domestic agenda, Asian businesses will soon be able to find a new buyer for their goods: the all-encompassing federal bureaucracy!
November 13th, 2009 at 4:46 pm
CBO Chief: U.S. is Broke
Well, not yet. But this week Congressional Budget Office (CBO) Director Doug Elmendorf issued a sobering report on the state of the nation’s finances.
The largest problem by far? Entitlements … those “popular” little nuggets of government largesse that everyone enjoys receiving but no one (maybe some liberals) enjoys paying for out of their paycheck. For example, Medicare and Medicaid are projected to grow by 80% over the next 25 years, while Social Security will only grow 20%.
As Elmendorf notes, the nation simply can’t continue to run up the national debt, currently at almost $12 trillion. He alludes to possible crises down the road: a drastic drop in the dollar, an increase in interest rates and massive tax hikes.
His conclusion:
[F]iscal policy is on an unsustainable path to an extent that cannot be solved by minor tinkering. The country faces a fundamental disconnect between the services the people expect the government to provide, particularly in the form of benefits for older Americans, and the tax revenues that people are willing to send to the government to finance those services. That fundamental disconnect will have to be addressed in some way if the budget is to be placed on a sustainable course.
November 13th, 2009 at 3:28 pm
CFIF Video: Smothered by the Nanny State
From government-run health care to a cap-and-trade energy tax, from bans on new fast food restaurants to taxing soft drinks, elected officials at the federal and state levels are working to rapidly expand the Nanny State. CFIF’s Renee Giachino discusses the issue in this week’s Freedom Minute.
Watch the video below.
November 13th, 2009 at 11:50 am
This Week’s Liberty Update
This week’s edition of the Liberty Update, CFIF’s weekly e-newsletter, is out. For those readers who don’t receive it in their e-mail inboxes or if you haven’t had a chance to read it yet, below is a summary of its contents:
Lee: ObamaCare and the Auto Insurance Analogy
Batkins: Health Care Turncoats
CFIF Staff: Keep on Lying, Charlie. That’s What Florida Really Wants in its Next Senator
Senik: The Politician America Needs: Margaret Thatcher
Freedom Minute Video: Smothered by the Nanny State
Podcast: Health Care Reform – Fact vs. Fiction – Interview with Sally Pipes
Jester’s Courtroom: Lawsuit Suggests Crime Does Pay
Editorial Cartoons: Latest Cartoons of Michael Ramirez
Quiz: Question of the Week
Notable Quotes: Quotes of the Week
If you are not already signed up to receive CFIF’s Liberty Update, sign up here.
November 13th, 2009 at 10:36 am
Must Read: Rahm Emanuel vs. ObamaCare
This one is from James Capretta over at The New Atlantis, a technology and science journal, is a must read.
Capretta highlights why the federal government will never be able to truly “bend the cost curve” on health care.
Here is the link and a few highlights:
Obamacare is predicated on the assumption that the federal government has the knowledge, capacity, and will to drive greater efficiency in American health care. Inadvertently, White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel has become an articulate spokesman for why that assumption is dead wrong.
Emanuel blames the limits of politics. “Let’s be honest,” Emanuel apparently stated in a recent interview. “The goal isn’t to see whether I can pass this through the executive board of the Brookings Institution. I’m passing it through the United State Congress with people who represent constituents.” That’s exactly right of course. But it’s also an indictment of the entire Obamacare enterprise. The health-care bills under consideration would hand over to the federal government nearly all power for organizing American health care. And yet there is not a shred of evidence that Congress or the administration can handle these tasks well.
The only way to slow the pace of rising costs without sacrificing quality is by building a functioning marketplace, with cost-conscious consumers driving the allocation of resources. The government must play an important oversight role in such a marketplace. But if we rely on politicians, or even commissions that answer to them, for cost control, what we will get is lower quality, not more efficiency.
HT: Greg Mankiw
November 13th, 2009 at 9:21 am
Morning Links
November 12th, 2009 at 7:09 pm
Now He Tells Us!
Apparently, former president George W. Bush “went against (his) free-market instincts” when he approved the Wall Street bailout towards the end of his administration. Better late than never I suppose.
After issuing his mea culpa, “W” had some words of wisdom for his successor:
And without mentioning President Obama by name the former President did have some rather pointed comments for the current Administration claiming that generally “history shows that the greater threat to prosperity is not too little government involvement, but too much.”
Bush, who as President also signed off on massive aid to the auto industry, warned against a government takeover of the economy fearing it would eliminate free-market enterprise. “As the world recovers, we are going to face the temptation to replace the risk and reward model of the private sector with the blunt instruments of government spending and control.”
Do as I say…