"THIS IS A WAY TO GET SOME STRAIGHT SKINNY" - Sen. Mike Gravel

Archive for February 2009

(Il)liberal Intolerance

In Uncategorized on February 26, 2009 at 11:07 pm

(Originally published in the Harvard Salient. Sorry for being absent to Bowen’s socialist propaganda – I had the site under a right-wing monopoly long enough for some wrongheadedness to get a chance again)

Your presence in this country will “threaten community harmony and therefore public security.” Your views are “one-sided generalizations.” You will be scrutinized in a court of law in your home country for broadcasting a subversive, divisive message. You will find no asylum here.

If the above paragraph were shown to Dutch parliamentary leftists without context, I suspect more than a few would rightly find it to be a detestable rejection of the right of free speech and the right of asylum that are so essential to the identity of that small country. Unfortunately for freedom’s sake, these insults were found in a notice to Dutch parliamentarian Geert Wilders from British Home Minister Jacqui Smith when he tried to enter the country in mid-February. Wilders returned home where the Dutch government, at the behest of its more leftist elements, continued its investigation of the MP for promoting intolerance.

Wilders is not a popular man among leftists in the Netherlands. Originally elected in 1998, Wilders is known worldwide for his vehement arguments against Islam. His vitriolic platform calls for such drastic measures as banning Islamic headwear in public and creating a limit of 5,000 political refugees in the Netherlands at any given time. His general attitudes towards Islam are best summed up by his own suggestion that the Dutch should “not tolerate the intolerant.”

Ironically, Wilders himself has not been tolerated by the Dutch and British governments. After creating a short film entitled Fitna, Wilders has come under investigation by his own government for inaccurately portraying Muslims. A group of British parliamentarians invited Wilders to present the film to them in England shortly after, but he soon received the Home Secretary’s notice declaring him persona non grata, and was sent back to the Netherlands.

Wilders’s case is disturbing for believers in free speech. The inability of the government to restrict certain views, no matter how distasteful, is a cornerstone of legal tradition in both Britain and the Netherlands. Unfortunately, the European Left seems to have a double standard for who exactly deserves protection under free speech laws. In many cases, the very same leftists calling for the prosecution of Wilders have advocated protection for radical Muslim activists. Former London Mayor Ken Livingstone, for example, is a self-described socialist who invited Muslim preacher Yusuf al-Qaradawi to talk about moderate Islam. Unfortunately for Livingstone, activists discovered that al-Qaradawi has spoken sympathetically in the past about suicide bombing, female genital mutilation, the killing of Israeli civilians, and the stoning of homosexuals. Livingstone was outraged that critics would point out these inconveniences, accusing them of pushing “lies and Islamophobia.” There is nothing fair, just, or free about Livingstone’s decision to give a podium to al-Qaradawi followed by his vocal support of the entry ban against Wilders. When Livingstone originally stood up for free speech, perhaps he ought to have just come out and specified that he only meant the kind that was convenient for delivering votes from his constituencies.

Wilders is an obsessive, irrational, fixated man. He scapegoats Muslim immigrants as responsible for crime, budget problems, and declining moral standards in his home country – ironic, given that Muslims do not tend to frequent the brothels and abortion clinics that Wilders’s Dutch predecessors made widely available. The point here is that Wilders’s views hardly deserve credence, but they, too, are entitled to tolerance. In a free marketplace of ideas, illogical hatred will be pushed to the margins. In a society that seeks to defend one group against another and to protect a minority from the views of a belligerent extremist, however, resentment will grow alongside sympathy for extremism. People will react strongly against what they perceive to be a threat to their liberties. So long as Muslims are correctly seen as appreciating freedom in the West, they will be welcomed and, over time, integrated. The moment that Muslims are seen as an excuse for censorship, otherwise indifferent people will begin to resent their presence.

The other unintended consequence of statements made by people like Minister Smith is that they actually reinforce Wilders’s point. After all, if Muslims truly are peace-loving people who respect liberty, why does the government have to prevent an extremist from entering in order to preserve the security of the community? In her own lefty way, Smith herself is embracing as much of a dangerous stereotype of Muslims as Wilders is. Unfortunately, when she enters another country, there won’t be a band of protestors to greet her.

Obama Unvails Bold New Budget

In Uncategorized on February 26, 2009 at 4:06 pm

In a 134 page document released today, the Obama Administration unvailed it’s first budget proposal. Previous speculation in many circles rumored a delay in ending the Bush tax cuts and a modest move towards Universal Healthinsurance. Shattering those expectations, President Obama moved boldly to the left.

The blueprint advocates the repeal of the Bush tax cuts for the wealthiest 1% remain on schedule for cancelation in 2011. It promotes a further increase in the taxes of Americans earning more than $250,000 annually. Those new taxes would cover the costs of adopting Universal Health Insurance by 2012. President Obama heeded the environmental community with a commitment to introduce a system of cap and trade on carbon emissions. These new commitments represent a step towards fulfilling the ideals of his inspiring Presidential Campaign.

While the changes in content over previous budgets are enormously significant, the structural changes are important and should gain bipartisan applause. Over the past 8 years, we have been dealing in budgets that hid key costs. Although the Bush Administration knew that the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan would cost large sums of money, they would ask for emergency appropriations of dozens of billions of dollars each year. Those appropriations remained obscure to the general public who were somewhat confused about how the government could end up in such massive debt with only moderately over-budget proposals. This new honesty about budgets is an absolute prerequisite to paying down the national debt over the next decade.

Read the Full Text

Tragedy for Camerons

In Uncategorized on February 25, 2009 at 1:51 pm

David Cameron’s eldest son Ivan passed away yesterday at the age of 6. He lived all of his life with an extreme form of Cerebral palsy. We wish the Camerons all the best as they greive for their son.

“I know that, in an all-too-brief life, he brought joy to all those around him and I know also that, for all the days of his life, he was surrounded by his family’s love,”…”Every child is precious and irreplaceable and the death of a child is an unbearable sorrow that no parent should ever have to endure. Politics can sometimes divide us, but there is a common human bond that unites us in sympathy and compassion at times of trial and in support for each other at times of grief.”

- Gordon Brown

Alan Keyes how Obama will Destroy the Country

In Uncategorized on February 24, 2009 at 7:49 pm

I saw this and it was so crazy that I had to share it.

He could afford to make his criticisms more sharp. I’m not really feeling it.

Priority 1: Primary and Secondary Education (UK)

In Uncategorized on February 24, 2009 at 6:19 pm

Cameron starts off by promising to improve “discipline and behaviour in schools by shifting the balance of power in every classroom back in favour of the teacher”. I’m sorry, since when is that a policy? In practice, what does that mean? Since indeed, the British people would be paying David Cameron to be Prime Minister, I would expect him to take some kind of action.

He packed his green paper with other terrific proposals like a promise to deliver “more teaching by ability which streaches the strongest and nurtures the weakest.” Again, as an implemented policy, what would this look like? It would be nothing while looking like change, which actually fits Cameron’s m.o. just fine.

Finally, Cameron proposes increasing the number of private schools that are publicly funded. That, as it happens, is an actual initiative. Rather rare for him. However, current British law already allows for such schools. In 2000, the Government introduced a program by which a private individual or group (charity/corporation) could contribute up to 2 million pounds to defray the costs of the construction of a new school. The remainder of the funds, an average of 28 million pounds, is taxpayer funded. Under this law, such schools would be considered companies limited by guarantee, and granted charitable tax status.

The sponsoring group or individual would have the responsibility of most major decisions over the school. For example, they would pick the headteacher, be involved in the determination of the budget, appoint a majority of the governing board, and restrict the number of locally elected board members (the option remains for them to set the number at one). 83 such schools are in operation as of the posting of this article.

So, David Cameron’s only substantive proposal on education is to expand a program that would restrict the power of parents to influence their child’s education and transfer responsibility for the school from locally elected officials to unaccountable private entities able to shell out 2 million pounds. Does that sound like a good idea?

There would be another effect. Because he also proposes cutting taxes for the wealthy and paying down the British debt, new funding for private schools would almost certainly come at the expense of current public schools. Depriving public schools of funding isn’t going to help struggling families, and it isn’t going to increase opportunities for working-class citizens.

That’s all. David Cameron, the man who thinks he’s ready to be Prime Minister, has exactly 3 ideas on how to improve the UK’s education system. That’s it. You can’t make this stuff up. Never mind that two of the ideas wouldn’t actually translate into any government action. Never mind that the third idea doesn’t actually do anything that isn’t already being done.

However, his lack of actual ideas didn’t stop him from bloviating for the better part of a page. Here’s an excerpt:

In our open and dynamic world, people’s horizons are broader, their ambitions are greater, and they expect to be able to make more and more decisions for themselves. Advancing opportunity means shifting power from the state to individuals and civic institutions, in order to open up this new world of freedom to everyone.

What? His platitudes don’t convince you? This guy’s a snake oil salesman if I’ve ever seen one.

So, if you want someone to get up on TV and talk for half an hour about how kids should be more respectful (see proposal 1 of 3) then pick David Cameron. But, if you want to hire someone who will actually do something, pick someone else. Anyone else.


Full Text of Tory Planhttp://www.conservatives.com/Policy/Opportunity_Agenda.aspx

David Cameron is Unprepared to be Prime Minister

In Uncategorized on February 23, 2009 at 4:47 pm

In the United Kingdom, David Cameron has turned the Conservative Party around to a 20 point (48-28) poll lead over Prime Minister Gordon Brown’s Labour party. This is a serious threat to Labour’s 11 year administration because Gordon Brown will have to call elections by the summer of 2010. Despite his lead in the polls, Cameron is a dangerously unprepared flip-flopper.

He opposed the National Minimum wage in 1998 (there was no British minimum wage prior to that). Even as his fellow Tory MP Peter Bone bragged that he was paying an employee 88 pence an hour. For those unfamiliar, that’s significantly less than $2 an hour. He opposed targeted tax cuts for the bottom brackets in the current recession. He’s proposed less financial regulation as a preventative measure for further recessions. He wants to slash maternity leave and eliminate paternity leave entirely. I suppose he believes that raising a child is only the mother’s job.

He first claimed that raising taxes after the recession was “inevitable” but after he was criticized, he entirely reversed his position, saying that the government would be able to afford tax cuts after the recession. Similarly, he supported the government’s move to shore up the British banking system until he dipped in the polls at which point he reversed his position and began criticizing Brown on the issue. 

As for the lack of experience, he had never held a shadow cabinet post (much less an actual cabinet post) until taking over as Conservative leader a few years back. In fact, most of his political experience comes from being a media executive.

The Conservative Party has released Green Sheets on 7 topic areas:

1) Primary and Secondary Education

2) Alternative Energy

3) Poverty

4) Crime

5) Responsibility

6) Healthcare

7) Apprenticeships

Each of these policy’s consists mainly of fluff and Cameron’s chief goal in releasing them is to appear ready to take charge and full of ideas because he’s betting that no one will actually read and criticize his plans. That’s why, for the next 7 days, I will address each of his major proposed reforms.

Hectic Show!

In Uncategorized on February 22, 2009 at 8:25 pm

 

Thanks for joining us tonight — sorry for the trouble.
Tune in next week for another exciting installment!

It’s Time for Universal Healthcare

In Uncategorized on February 22, 2009 at 5:42 pm

Our healthcare system is in crisis. We annually spend $2.4 trillion dollars, a stunning 17% of GDP, on healthcare. For the extra 6.5% of GDP (compared to Switzerland who is the 2nd largest spender) we receive the 37th best healthcare system in the world according to the World Health Organization’s rankings. 47 million Americans have no health insurance at all, and millions more are underinsured. Our international corporations are suffering from competition with Japanese and European companies that do not bear the cost of healthcare for their employees. Our employer-based health insurance system is being torn apart.

In a fundamental misallocation of resources, private insurers spend anywhere from 14% to 18% of their income in administrative costs (it varies based upon provider). That money is used to hire employees that actively work to deny coverage. Just as unethically, health insurance companies spend much of your money ‘underwriting’. The word itself sounds mundane which is exactly what it’s supposed to sound like. What they really mean is if you have a family history of an expensive disease or you have a dangerous job (also likely to be a low paying job) you will either be denied coverage or have it offered at prohibitively high rates. The concept is fundamentally this: health insurance companies make money by charging you higher premiums while denying you coverage for expensive and necessary procedures.

The best solution would be universal, single-payer health insurance. To clear up a few things, this is not socialized medicine. In a socialized system, such as the United Kingdom’s National Health Service, the doctors are employees of the state. My proposal is a system in which the federal government pays for health insurance for all Americans. Let me reiterate: the single-payer system would only be a financing mechanism. You still have complete control over which doctor you receive care from and what kind of care you receive. All medically necessary services would be covered including primary care, prescription drugs, emergency care, long term care, dental, and vision. 

Many would argue that a government program could not be more efficient than private insurance. In most cases this is probably true. However, the Healthcare system the exception in this regard because of an incentive to deny coverage that is unique to private insurers. Medicare administrative costs are projected at 2% by the Department of Health and Human Services. The net gain of 16% would go a long way to covering the costs of those newly insured. In addition, the government would be able to negotiate bulk-orders of drugs as Canada does. A study commissioned by the US House of Representatives found that the cost of drugs from US manufacturers were 98% higher in the US than they were in Canada.

The opposition will attempt to scare you away from change by telling stories about long waiting periods. To this, I simply say: the plural of anecdote is not data. The statistics tell a different story about single-payer health insurance. In Canada, people undergoing voluntary treatments (plastic surgery) face long waiting times. However, people who need heart transplants aren’t forced to wait. It is time for us to put a system in place that recognizes that healthcare is a right, not a privilege.

Matt Cavedon is an Investment Banker

In Uncategorized on February 18, 2009 at 5:17 pm

AYN RAND = ETHICAL

Shocking news out of Harvard University today: Matt Cavedon is an investment banker. Just as true as his previous allegation, he took a large part in driving our economy into the ground and then taking million dollar tax-payer-funded bonuses.

BOB BOWEN IS A COMMUNIST!!!!!!!!!!!

In Uncategorized on February 18, 2009 at 1:04 am

bowencommie

And he doesn’t contribute nearly enough any more!
Consider this a call-out, comrade!

Did you catch Chris Myers Asch?

In Uncategorized on February 12, 2009 at 11:35 pm

Did you catch our show Sunday night? We’ll broke down the latest in the political world, including the Stimulus Package, and Judd Gregg’s decision to withdraw his name from consideration for commerce secretary.  We also spoke with Chris Myers Asch about his proposal for the National Public Service Academy.  

CLICK HERE TO LISTEN ON DEMAND!

Fight agriculture subsidies!

In Uncategorized on February 7, 2009 at 9:22 pm

agsubsidiescatThey’re bad for the economy, the world, and farming. Sign our bipartisan petition to send them to the Dustbowl of history!

[Just a quick note for transparency: this petition is not endorsed by the show, and not necessarily the position of all panelists. - WF Online Editor]

Palin reconsidered

In Uncategorized on February 6, 2009 at 10:08 pm

I loved her, then I hated her. This insightful commentary has me reconsidering her.

Thoughts?

Be proud to be partisan!

In Uncategorized on February 6, 2009 at 1:28 am

An argument against bipartisanship and political independence by the head of Harvard’s Government Department. I do not know her political leanings.

Medicare for Millionaires: thanks to the Democrats, Party of the Poor (C)

In Uncategorized on February 5, 2009 at 9:27 pm

“Republicans wanted to deny the premium subsidies to people who had annual incomes of more than $100,000 or assets of more than $1 million. They also wanted to prevent people with more than $1 million of family income from taking advantage of the Medicaid option for the unemployed.

Democrats voted down those proposals in the House Committee on Energy and Commerce. (emphasis mine)

Representative Nathan Deal, Republican of Georgia, said “the poorest of the poor” had long been subject to income and asset tests when applying for Medicaid. But, Mr. Deal argued, under the new option, a millionaire could get Medicaid benefits, financed entirely by the federal government, without being asked about such matters.

The committee chairman, Representative Henry A. Waxman, Democrat of California, said, “It’s highly unlikely that you are going to find millionaires who would like to go on Medicaid.”

Moreover, Mr. Waxman said, the purpose of the new options is to “streamline the enrollment process” and speed assistance to people who are unemployed.

“It’s going to set up an unnecessary barrier if we have any income test,” Mr. Waxman said, adding that the enforcement of a means test could require “a whole new bureaucracy.””

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/01/28/us/28health.html?_r=1&pagewanted=2

Did you catch Bob Smith & HW Brands?

In Uncategorized on February 4, 2009 at 6:33 pm

Did you miss Sunday’s show?

LISTEN ON DEMAND!  CLICK HERE!

CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE WEEKLY FILBUSTER PODCAST!

In a Weekly Filibuster exclusive, former New Hampshire Senator Bob Smith returns to the show to talk about Commerce Secretary-designate Judd Gregg.  Smith and Gregg together represented the Granite State in the United States House of Representatives (1984-1986) and Senate (1993-2003).  We’ll also ask Senator Smith about the President’s stimulus bill and reports that he is testing the warmer waters in Florida for a potential bid for the seat Mel Martinez will vacate next year.

In addition to breaking down the latest news in the political world, we’ll talk with the author of Traitor to His Class: The Privileged Life and Radical Presidency of Franklin Delano RooseveltHW Brands, about FDR’s legacy and the presidency today.

PODCASTING across America and the World…

In Uncategorized on February 4, 2009 at 6:18 pm

It took us a year, but it’s finally here!
Now you can take the Filibuster with you wherever you go!

Download The Weekly Filibuster PODCAST on ITunes here!

New politics strike again!

In Uncategorized on February 3, 2009 at 2:23 pm

Thank goodness we elected Obama and put an end to years of corruption, secrecy, waste, and divisive politics!

UPDATE: Yet another prospective nominee has joined the ranks of Tom Daschle and Bill Richardson in withdrawing herself from consideration. Ironically, this time it’s Nancy Killefer, Obama’s would-have-been chief performance officer.