Monday, April 23, 2012

Sen. Joe Lieberman on 'Fox News Sunday': Obama 'Should Be Held Accountable'

Lieberman indicates that the Secret Service agents "were acting like a bunch of college students away on spring weekend." And toward the end of the clip, "the buck stops at the president's desk ... he's the leader of our government and he now has to be acting with a kind of a relentless determination to find out exactly what happened."

Right, just like with the Fast and Furious scandal.

See the Los Angeles Times, "Lieberman to call hearings on Secret Service sex scandal."


Plus, at the Wall Street Journal, "Obama Later Stayed at Same Hotel as Accused Secret Service Agent."

And more, "Who's Who in the Secret Service Scandal" (via Memeorandum).

Surprise: Small Grocery Stores Gouging Poor Customers on WIC Program

Here's another installment in the welfare reform series.

See the New York Times, "WIC Caps California Reimbursements After Stores Raise Food Prices":
At Rancho Grande Supermarket in San Pablo, a package of 18 corn tortillas recently cost $7.80.

Taxpayers footed the bill for the pricy tortillas, which were bought in early April with a government voucher from the California Women, Infants and Children program, a federally financed nutrition program that is administered by the state.

Despite its name, Rancho Grande Supermarket is a small grocery store located in a strip mall on San Pablo Avenue. Less than a mile away at FoodMaxx, a megastore where WIC vouchers are also accepted, the same tortillas are sold for $1.44.

The California WIC program, which provides staple foods like milk, dried beans and peanut butter to 1.48 million low-income Californians, is the largest in the country. But it is being hit hard by runaway food costs, driven by high prices at small stores, costing the program tens of millions of dollars a year. Under pressure from the United States Department of Agriculture, which oversees the program, California is scrambling to bring food costs down.

“No one should be using these programs to reap obscene profits off of the backs of mothers and young children,” said the Rev. Douglas Greenaway, president and chief executive of the National WIC Association, a nonprofit group.

In recent years, California WIC has seen a flood of small stores seeking to join the program, and it has welcomed many of them. Those stores, some of which have been increasing their prices and aggressively marketing to WIC shoppers, can receive higher reimbursements from California WIC than bigger stores do.

In February 2012, California stores with just one or two cash registers were reimbursed for WIC foods at prices that were 50 percent higher than prices paid to other vendors for comparable foods, according to the U.S.D.A. That is twice as high as the difference in prices paid to stores with one or two registers in fiscal year 2008-9.

While prices are going up in small stores, more WIC vouchers are being redeemed at them. Between October 2009 and September 2011, food costs to the WIC programs in other Western states went down a combined average of more than 7 percent. In California’s WIC program, they increased more than 4 percent.

“When food costs go up, it reduces the pool of food resources available to serve mothers and young children,” said Mr. Greenaway. The California WIC program currently spends about $94 million a month on food, according to the California Department of Public Health.

It is not the first time the program has struggled to contain escalating costs. In 2004, the proliferation of so-called WIC-only stores, catering to WIC shoppers, inspired Congress to impose new regulations on those stores, which curbed the problem.
While there's no excuse for gouging by these grocers, the more fundamental problem is the system of vouchers itself. Providing food aid by voucher is designed to make sure that families obtain needed food support. WIC administrators can't give cash to recipients --- because they could spend the money on alcohol, drugs, or anything else --- but they could distribute generic debit cards that don't identify the families as WIC recipients. Here's another program in which bureaucratic control can't get things just right.

Sunday, April 22, 2012

Barack Obama Is Not a Nice Guy: Time for Straight Talk on Obama's Thuggery and Partisan Brutality

At Michelle's, "No More 'Mr. Obama Is a Nice Guy'."

And here's this from the video transcript, "Michelle Malkin on Fire on 'Hannity'":

MALKIN: The thing that has changed phenomenally between 2008 and 2012 is that we don't have to rely on Barack and Michelle Obama and their Alinsky- ites story-tellers in the mainstream media and all of their operatives to set the tone and the storyline for this election. That is what underscores all of the victory that we've seen over the last four years on the right. Conservatives online are not accepting these fables that have been shoved down our throat, the idea that Obama has brought us out of the light when he's plunged us deeper into the sinkhole of debt.

Somehow Obama has opened up Washington, D.C. to make it as transparent and open as possible when they've done all of these deals and subverted the rule of law behind closed doors. That somehow Obama is more likeable than any Republican and he is a nice guy -- I hate hearing this from Mitt Romney. He's got to get this talking point out of his mouth. Barack Obama is not a nice guy. He has dealed brutally with the right, with people like Paul Ryan and brave Republicans who have been calling him to the carpet on all of the disgusting culture of corruption that has rained and that is the darkness that we have to get out of in November.

Free Market America: 'If I Wanted America to Fail'

Lots of folks are tweeting this clip, also via Daley Gator and Ed Driscoll:


And check out the website for Free Market America.

Socialist Francois Hollande Beats Nicolas Sarkozy in French Presidential Election First Round

At The Economist, "Round one to Hollande."

And at Telegraph UK, "Francois Hollande 'beats Nicolas Sarkozy' in presidential election first round":
Francois Hollande beat right-wing incumbent Nicolas Sarkozy in France's first round of the presidential race, according to early estimates from several polling institutes.
Both candidates qualified for the second round on May 6, with Mr Hollande taking 28 to 29 per cent of the vote and Mr Sarkozy 25 to 26, according to unofficial estimates from multiple sources.

Far-right candidate Marine Le Pen came third with between 17 and 20 pe rcent, beating far-left firebrand Jean-Luc Melenchon, who scored between 10.5 and 13 per cent, according to the estimates.
More at Astute Bloggers, "AU REVOIR, SARKOZY! AND AU REVOIR FRANCE!"

Is Mitt Romney Really Trying to Get Conservatives in His Corner?

Here's the report yesterday from the front-page at the Los Angeles Times, "Mitt Romney trying to get conservatives in his corner."

It's a strange article, especially as it completely misses the partisan battles of the last couple weeks. The Hilary Rosen/Ann Romney story alone indicates that conservatives are more than ready to back Romney in the general election against Obama. Yeah, they may need nose plugs, but I expect conservatives will rally around Romney in the cause of defeating the greater foe:

Photobucket


That graphic is from The Monkey Cage, which draws from Gallup, "Romney, Obama in Tight Race as Gallup Daily Tracking Begins."

Conservatives are not necessarily Republicans, but as those on the right are more likely to identify with the GOP come November, perhaps the Times is overestimating the likely headwinds for Romney in unifying the base.

More on that later...

France Entered the 21st Century Walking Backward

A fascinating essay, from Olivier Guez, at the New York Times, "Voting for Yesterday in France":
France in 2012 is an old nation that increasingly cultivates the temptation to be an island unto itself.

So many examples from these last few years come to mind: magazine covers devoted to President Nicolas Sarkozy almost every week; the Jan. 7 issue of Le Figaro, naming Joan of Arc Woman of the Year. An issue of Le Figaro Magazine devoted to a portrait of the French people declared: “France is noble in essence, the mother of liberty, the rights of man, letters, arts, and sciences.”

Transfuge, a Parisian literary magazine, offered a harsh assessment this month: French literature, obsessed with the past, is entering the 21st century walking backward. Indeed, the French don’t like the 21st century, and would gladly give it back. Their desire has its roots in a confluence of failures (the defeat in 1940 and the loss of their colonial empire) and the rejection, by other European nations, of building a Europe à la française — France on a bigger scale. France has become a middling power, with a mass culture and a society of consumption like everyone else. Gaullism and Communism kept up the illusion that a great history, a great destiny were still France’s to be had. It didn’t pan out that way. So as the world heeds France less, the French long to shut themselves off from it, to turn toward olden days and protect themselves.
More at that top link.

And previously, "French President Nicolas Sarkozy Predicted to Lose Reelection to Socialist Francois Hollande."

Arizona's SB 1070 Headed to Supreme Court

At the Los Angeles Times, "Showdown on Arizona immigration law goes to Supreme Court":

Photobucket
WASHINGTON — The Supreme Court and the Obama administration are set for another politically charged clash Wednesday as the justices take up Arizona's tough crackdown on illegal immigrants.

It will be a rematch of the attorneys who argued the healthcare case a month ago, and another chapter in the partisan philosophical struggle over states' rights and the role of the federal government.

And once again, President Obama's lawyers are likely to face skeptical questions from the high court. Last year, the court's five more-conservative justices rebuffed the administration and upheld an earlier Arizona immigration law that targeted employers who hired illegal workers.

To prevail this year, the administration must convince at least one of the five to switch sides and rule that the state is going too far and interfering with the federal government's control over immigration policy.

The election-year legal battle goes to the heart of the dispute between Republicans and Democrats over what to do about the estimated 11 million illegal immigrants in the country.

Arizona and five other Republican-led states seek a stepped-up effort to arrest and deport illegal immigrants. They say the federal system is broken and fault Obama for what they consider a "relaxed" enforcement policy.

If cleared by the courts, Arizona would tell its police to check the immigration status of people they lawfully stop and suspect of being in the country illegally. If they were unable to show a driver's license or other "proof of legal presence," they would be arrested and held for federal immigration agents. Arizona also would make it a crime to lack immigration papers or for illegal immigrants to seek work.
FLASHBACK: "'Phoenix Rising' for SB 1070 at Arizona State Capitol."

How Psychedelic Drugs Can Help Patients Face Death

This is interesting, at the New York Times.

Obama Justice Department Referring Fast and Furious Inquiries to Media Matter for America

Okay, an update on Katie Pavlich and Obama's bloodiest scandal.

I saw this breaking on Twitter the other day, and thought it mostly just interesting. I checked the purported Media Matters "debunking" of Pavich's book, which wasn't all that impressive.

My thinking was that Pavlich's book needs a scholarly review in confirming the claims made there, and of course Media Matters is the least credible outlet to be doing any debunking in the first place.

But now here comes this fascinating piece at Big Government, "Vast Left Wing Conspiracy: DOJ Refers Reporter to Media Matters, Source Claims" (via Memeorandum). Especially interesting is the update at the post:
UPDATE : Deparment of Justice PR Katie Dixon also worked for the Democratic National Committee and Organizing For America, according to her LinkedIn profile. [Editor's note: following the publication of this article, the Past Employers section of Dixon's LinkedIn profile has been made private.]
Read the whole thing.

God, these people are f-king criminals. Seriously, it's f-king insane. People are getting killed by these idiots.

See also, "THE THIRD GUN: NEW BOOK CLAIMS FBI COVER UP OF THIRD GUN IN MURDER OF BORDER PATROL AGENT."

Why Holocaust Remembrance Is NOT Enough

I meant to post on Holocaust Remembrance Day earlier this week but didn't have the chance.

So, check out the post at Blazing Cat Fur.

Also, an outstanding entry at Pamela's, "Yom HaShoah: Holocaust Remembrance Day."

Smokin' Claudia Schiffer Gets Hot in Guess 30th Anniversary Photo Shoot

Hey, Neo-Neocon does some Rule 5!

See: "Stop the presses! Geriatric Claudia Schiffer still looks pretty darn good."


Also at London's Daily Mail, "How DOES she do it? Claudia Schiffer has barely aged a day as she poses for Guess 23 years after she first modelled for brand."

'The Mountain'

Via Theo Spark:

Democrats Increasingly Abandon Obama on Health Care and Keystone

At IBD, "Democrats Are Jumping Ship" (via Randy's Roundtable.)

RELATED: From Glenn Reynolds, "HYPOCRISY AMONG THE 1%: Elizabeth Warren chose not to pay a voluntary higher tax rate, which is an official option in Massachusetts."

Saturday, April 21, 2012

Nancy Pelosi Wants Constitutional Amendment to Crush Conservative Speech

Mind-boggling.

Responding to the Supreme Court's decision in Citizens United, Minority Leader Pelosi said:
“We have a clear agenda in this regard: Disclose, reform the system reducing the role of money in campaigns, and amend the Constitution to rid it of this ability for special interests to use secret, unlimited, huge amounts of money flowing to campaigns.”
Via CNS News and Linkmaster Smith:


BONUS: At Protein Wisdom, "When Nancy Pelosi Speaks…", and "Follow-up to Nancy Pelosi’s First Amendment Amendment announcement."

Senator Orrin Hatch to Face First GOP Primary Election in Decades

The main story's at the Salt Lake Tribune, but see Michelle, "Tea Party roars: Six-term incumbent Sen. Orrin Hatch forced into primary" (via Memeorandum):
Well, if you’ve been reading this blog and my column, the outcome of today’s Utah GOP convention will not be a surprise.

Despite amassing a giant, $6 million campaign war chest and calling in every last chit with Republican friends and cronies, 77-year-old GOP Sen. Orrin Hatch will now face upstart conservative entrepreneur and renowned state pension reformer Dan Liljenquist (with campaign coffers of about $200,000) in a primary contest. He fell short of the 60 percent needed to avoid the primary race.
Well, I guess those "radical libertarians" don't take well to threats.

Like Total Bummer, Dude: Obama Blows Off the Wiz Khalifi Constituency With U-Turn on Marijuana Legalization

Things aren't looking so great for the pro-pot movement, something I've been writing about here periodically.

No big deal. At least this gives me another chance to post the Wiz/Snoop Dogg video, which single-handedly exposes the abject scam of the legalization fraud.

See William Teach at Right Wing News, "Sorry, Stoners, Looks Like Obama’s Not On Your Side For Marijuana Legalization."

'God's Best Moment'

From Joel Kotkin, at the Wall Street Journal, "The Great California Exodus":
'California is God's best moment," says Joel Kotkin. "It's the best place in the world to live." Or at least it used to be.

Mr. Kotkin, one of the nation's premier demographers, left his native New York City in 1971 to enroll at the University of California, Berkeley. The state was a far-out paradise for hipsters who had grown up listening to the Mamas & the Papas' iconic "California Dreamin'" and the Beach Boys' "California Girls." But it also attracted young, ambitious people "who had a lot of dreams, wanted to build big companies." Think Intel, Apple and Hewlett-Packard.

Now, however, the Golden State's fastest-growing entity is government and its biggest product is red tape. The first thing that comes to many American minds when you mention California isn't Hollywood or tanned girls on a beach, but Greece. Many progressives in California take that as a compliment since Greeks are ostensibly happier. But as Mr. Kotkin notes, Californians are increasingly pursuing happiness elsewhere.

Nearly four million more people have left the Golden State in the last two decades than have come from other states. This is a sharp reversal from the 1980s, when 100,000 more Americans were settling in California each year than were leaving. According to Mr. Kotkin, most of those leaving are between the ages of 5 and 14 or 34 to 45. In other words, young families.
Continue reading.

And be sure to see Kotkin's earlier essay, "The Golden State Is Crumbling."

Big Old Saturday Rule 5

Well, I haven't done a roundup in a while, so what the heck?

Starting things off is Bob Belvedere: "Rule 5 News: 20 April 2012 A.D."

And an encore for Kim Novak, at The Last Tradition, "Kim Novak Rule #5 Sunday."

Our lovely brunette here is courtesy of Theo Spark:

Babae Blogging

Plus, a huge roundup at Daley Gator, "DaleyGator DaleyBabe Joelle Kayembe takes us on a Rule 5 tour! Updated throughout the weekend."

And an earlier entry at Maggie's Notebook, "Rule 5 Saturday Night: Kelly Brook." Also at American Perspective, "Irina Shayk - a little mid-week Rule 5."

Plus, at Randy's Roundtable, "Thursday Nite Tart: Lily Aldridge."

Also at Pirate's Cove, "If All You See…is an evil dog which causes the seas to rise, you might just be a Warmist."

Teresamerica bring us "Heidi Klum." And from Jake Finnegan, "Burkalesque Babes: Ke$ha."

And at Reaganite, "Oy Vey! 'Miss Israel 2011' is the Utterly Georgeous Kim Edri."

Wirecutter posts some "Beachside Bikini Babes." And Jamie Jeffords has Anne Hathaway.

Guns and Bikinis has some "Friday Rule 5 Models." And from A Mad, Mad, Mad, Mad World, "The Friday Pin UP."

Plus, from Woodsterman, "When Did The Bikini Become an Accessory ~OR~ Rule 5 Woodsterman Style."

BONUS: Proof Positive has your weekend linkage: "Saturday Linkaround."

And be sure to drop your links in the comments for the updates.

The Obama Campaign's Reelection Death Rattle

It's not yet Mitt Romney's election to lose, but if President Obama ends up squeaking out a victory in November it won't be for having run on his record. Presidential campaigns are always polarized, but 10 will get you 20 on the early predictions that this will be the most negative campaign ever.

So with that, here's a Saturday morning roundup on election news:

At AoSHQ: "Gallup: President Obama on the Brink, Polls WORSE THAN CARTER." And at U.S News, "The Obama Campaign Should Be Hitting the Panic Button."

And this is amazing, at the New York Times, "Obama Sees Steep Dropoff in Cash From Major Donors" (via Astute Bloggers and Memeorandum).

Obama Sky Rocket

EXTRA: Glenn Reynolds posts on Obama's improving numbers in Ohio: "Energy Jobs a Driving Force in Ohio Economic Recovery":
With new domestic oil and gas production being one of the few bright spots in the otherwise lousy Obama economy, it’s ironic that Dick Cheney’s legacy may be helping Obama get re-elected.
IMAGE CREDIT: The People's Cube, "Obama’s Necessarily Sky Rocket Gasoline."

More later...