- this week in the GOP

November 14, 2011

Let’s see how the GOP candidates are doing this week:

 

Hermain Cain – accused of harassment again, this time by a woman who does not want to be anonymous, like the other accusers.  That she wants to be on camera, and that she’s attractive in a “cougar” kind of way makes me think she’s just trying to get her picture and name on the gossip shows like “Access Hollywood” and “TMZ.”  It’s hard for me to take her seriously because she complained that Cain harassed her when she was working for him.  Then she left his company.  Then later, when out of work, she called him and asked if he could help her get a job, and that’s when he harassed her again.  The way I see it, she came back to him after being harassed.  That’s almost asking for it.  I’m not saying Cain did a good thing.  Clearly he didn’t.  However, since she already knew what he was like, and she asked him for a favor, she had to expect what he would do.  If she didn’t foresee that, she’s an idiot.  Well, she’s probably an idiot either way, but now she’s a bigger idiot.

Michelle Bachman – accused CBS news of a media bias against her because an e-mail was leaked that stated that CBS was planning on asking fewer questions to her because of how low her percentages are coming in.  4%.  Sorry, Michelle, that’s not a media bias.  That’s smart programming.  If you’re clearly not anyone that the GOP voting block is interested in, then why should CBS waste its time asking you questions?

Rick Perry – forgot the third department he wanted to get rid of and again looked drunk as he attempted to think.  Haven’t we had enough of drunk Texans in office?  Actually, to be fair, George Bush was from Maine and transplanted himself to Texas.  He’s no more of a Texan than he is a National Guard pilot.

Rick Santorum – irrelevant.

John Huntsman – smart, but irrelevant.  And his wife is hot.

Newt Gingrich – old, but irrelevant.  And his wife is not hot.

Mitt Romney – waiting for the others to eat each other before winning the nomination.

Ron Paul – complaining about alleged “death panels” in Obamacare while declaring that people without healthcare will just have to die.

Sarah Palin – waiting for Hugh Hefner to offer her $1 million to appear in playboy.  I hope she takes it.


- lying, again

August 10, 2011

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

It’s about lying, and more than just regular lying, like a kid lying to his mother about not having homework, I mean a national figure knowingly lying through the media to the American people.

Rush Limbaugh today talked about how the state of Arkansas cut some of their state sales taxes.  The fear was that there might be a revenue loss.  However, cutting the sales tax caused people to get out and spend some money, knowing they’d be automatically saving roughly 6%.  The increase in spending actually caused an increase in revenue instead of the loss that was predicted.

That’s a great story that shows what happens to the economy when you put more money into the hands of the middle and lower class.  The upper class doesn’t really factor into
this because they don’t sit on their money until there’s a drop in sales tax.  If they need, they buy without hoping to save 6% in sales tax.  But that’s not how Rush spun it.

Rush told this story in the wake of talking about renewing the Bush tax cuts for the rich.  After telling the same story about Arkansas, Rush summarized it by saying that this
demonstrates by tax cuts are so important.  Literally, he was correct, but not when you strongly imply that the Bush tax cuts were responsible for this revenue increase.

C’mon, Rush.  You can do better.  Or, maybe you can’t.  During the debate over President Obama’s universal healthcare bill, Limbaugh and many other Republicans kept repeating
the same GOP talking point:  “The American people do not want this plan.”  It’s a very ambiguous statement, but it’s a very easy lie.  What does “the American people” mean?  Literally, it should mean “all” of the people, but that’s not possible.  If I say “the team,” that means all of them, but it doesn’t have to.  I can say the words “the American people,” while only thinking about one segment, such as those American people with whom I agree, and I’m sufficiently covering my lie.  The proof is that every poll leading up to that healthcare vote clearly showed that more than 50% of “the American people” said yes, we want that plan.

If there’s anything the Republicans have learned, it’s how to lie with a straight, unapologetic face.  They are especially good at repeating, repeating, and repeating a lie with the hope of convincing the public that it’s the truth.  They’ll say it on television, at speeches, on
talk radio, and on the senate floor.  They know they’re lying and their opponents know they’re lying, but too many of “the American people” have become complacent enough to believe the lies.  One of the problems is that the press also knows they’re lying.  All it takes is one reporter to stand up at a press conference and ask, “Senator, why do you keep
saying that the people don’t want this plan when polls show that a majority
really does want this plan?”

Just one.


- governor christie vs. new jersey teachers

April 26, 2010

 

In times of great strife, it’s not unusual for the powers that be to find an easy target at which the masses could aim their wrath, especially when the powers that be are really to blame.  There is no question that New Jersey is gripped by an unprecedented financial crisis.  There is also no question that Governor Christie has successfully convinced most of the state’s population that public school teachers and the New Jersey Education Association are to blame.  Teachers are universally unpopular.  We are disliked by kids who grow up to dislike what we tell them about their own kids.  Although we are certainly guilty of being unpopular, we are not guilty of that financial mismanagement that is bankrupting the state. 

Radio talk shows, newspaper editorials, and letters to the editor have been crying out against the business end of education and the powerful influence of the NJEA.  If you listen at all, especially to Jim Gearhart on WKXW (NJ-101.5), you’ve likely been told that too much tax money is going to too few people, specifically teachers.  On a daily basis, no exaggeration, the radio is dominated with discussions about teachers whose job is too easy, pay is too high, union is too strong, benefits are too good, and pension is too generous.  Governor Christie claims that all of these conditions have driven New Jerseyans down a financial dead end. 

Your perpetually-rising property taxes pay my salary and those of all public school teachers, but please try to remember that my property taxes are going up too.  If my school budget had passed, my taxes would have increased $750, which is about a 7% jump.  If my salary or any school spending goes up, it’s likely – but not definite – that your property taxes also go up.  However, there are many other things driving up school spending.  Did you know that textbooks cost around $150?  Go into any bookstore and pick up a hardcover book that’s about the same size as a school textbook.  That book is likely around $30.  Why should a physically similar school book cost five times more than other books?  It’s because vendors and other companies know they can bleed all kinds of money from a board of education, and the board is not spending their money.  They’re spending everyone else’s money.  Most teachers spend about $500 of their own money for their students each year.  Teacher spending is so high that there is now a separate deduction on the 1040 tax form just for teachers. 

An administrator in a NJ school was buying a piece of technology called a “SmartBoard.”  It looks almost like a whiteboard, but it can interact with and display a computer’s screen for a whole class to see.  The school district wanted to purchase fifty boards at the catalogue price of $3,000 each for a total of $150,000.  The administrator wisely decided to contact the company directly because she believed she could get a much better price if she were buying fifty.  The company agreed to charge only $1,500 as a volume discount and a savings of $75,000.  However, when she tried to submit the purchase, it was rejected because of something known as Ed-Data.  Any New Jersey school expenditure greater than $29,500 must go through Ed-Data, a company used by the state to connect school districts and vendors.  Ed-Data is nothing more than a middle man that makes money by charging fees for vendors to be part of their system and collecting a percentage of the purchase from the school district.  Once Ed-Data handled the purchase of the SmartBoards, the price was back up to a total of $150,000 of your money.

Gov. Christie and Mr. Gearhart have also cried loudly about the pension system that rewards teachers and other state workers at the end of their long careers.  They may have cried loudly, but they have not cried accurately.  Christie and Gearhart make it sound like we’re getting free money at the taxpayer’s expense, but here’s how it really works:  My three highest salaries are averaged.  If my three highest years are $68, $70, and $72,000 then my average is $70,000.  That gets cut in half to $35,000.  That’s my pension, $35,000 a year for the rest of my life.  If you listen to the radio, teachers are bleeding the state dry with these exorbitant pensions.  What they don’t tell you is that we pay a great deal of money for those pensions.  This year $3,500 will be deducted from my paycheck and put towards my pension.  That’s about 7%.  So as Christie is crying that I got a 4% raise, he likely won’t tell you that I gave 7% of my salary to the state so they could invest it.  So did 113,000 other teachers and about 5,000 administrators for a total of about $440 million.  Each year we give the state that much money so their experts can invest it and make some money for the state until we’re ready to retire and get our own money back, plus interest.  It’s no different than what any bank does with your mortgage.  Unfortunately, someone in Trenton mismanaged our money.  Not your money, our money.  You, Joe Taxpayer, are not paying my pension.  If anything, I allowed the state to make some interest in order to keep your taxes down.  It’s not my fault that someone in Trenton screwed up.  Aim your wrath at them, not teachers.

There are alternatives to the state pension system, naturally with both positives and negatives.  Let’s say I retire today after 30 years of teaching, and 30 years ago I put $3,500 into US savings bonds.  Today, it would have increased about 300% to about $11,500.  How many investments pay that high?  After 30 years, that would add up to about $350,000 and would allow me to collect about $35,000 a year for ten years, which would be the same amount as my pension would pay me over the first ten years after retirement, carrying me from age 60 to 70 if I were to retire at 60.  Here’s where it gets tricky.  With savings bonds, my money is limited to the $350,000.  The pension is unlimited – until I die.  If I were to die before age 70, nobody is collecting my pension for me because it’s only for me, but the savings bonds are mine and can be given to someone else in my will.  If I put my money into savings bonds and an emergency arises, I can cash one or more of those bonds for less than the 300%.  Oh, wait.  I’m a teacher.  My $3,500 is going to the state, not savings bonds, and there’s nothing I can do about it.

Teachers will never be rich, but they will always be safe.  If you want to make big money, you go into the private sector, open your own business, risk your savings, and basically take a calculated gamble.  If you want to have a safe, small, but steadily growing salary that might require a part-time job to get through the summer, you go into education.  It’s delayed gratification.  You forego much of a salary during most of your career, but then you cash in after it’s over with a pension during retirement.  No matter how well your school district performs, you will never get a Holiday bonus.  No matter how well you perform individually, your salary is strictly controlled down to the penny.

Gov. Christie has “called out” teachers to take a salary freeze for next year to help offset the great property tax increases that would probably still increase even if there were no record deficit.  He told teachers that if we really care about the kids, we’ll agree to hold our salaries back for one year and allow that money to be put towards schools, thus holding back another great tax increase.  Unfortunately, there are two problems with that.  First, can anyone guarantee that taxes aren’t going up anyway?  Second, what happened back in the 90’s when the economy was booming, the stock market was flowing, and salaries were at their highest?  Nobody looked at teachers and said, “Aww, I’m sorry.  Our salaries are climbing thanks to this capitalist, free-market system, but yours is stuck at $27,000 because you chose a safe, steady, secure, but low-paying career.  Tell ya what I’m gonna do.  I’m going to take a salary freeze and give my next raise to my township in order to hold back your property taxes.”  I don’t recall that happening. 

I would be willing to go along with the salary freeze, but what bothers me is that most of the people screaming for it are Republican Conservatives.  They cry, and they have every right to cry, when their paycheck being taxed for unemployment funds, and they call President Obama’s healthcare reform as “socialist.”  However, they’re in favor of taking my salary increase to keep their property taxes down, which is also socialist.  That’s rather contradictory and hypocritical. 

If you took the risk of private employment in a democratic, free-market system, then you benefitted when things were going well.  Now you are hurting because things are not going well.  That was your choice, not mine.


why ann coulter doesn’t make sense

January 14, 2009
just in case you don’t know who ass, i mean ann coulter is, here’s a link. just make sure you wash your hands afterward.
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/tvguide/395886_tvgif13.html?source=rss
the funny thing to me about ann coulter is how she contradicts herself.
contradiction 1: in her new book, she complains about how obama praised single mothers as heroes, and she quotes statistics that indicate how many men in the prison system, failing students, and educational drop-outs are from single parents. let’s pretend she’s correct. let’s also state that any abortion, albeit legal, is a sad occasion. then shouldn’t she and the conservatives back off on trying to repeal roe v. wade? wouldn’t the absence of abortion rights only add to the single-parent problem? she also fails to realize the reason obama was praising single mothers because it wasn’t really about the mothers but about the children. if i’m a child of a single mom, and all i hear is a right wingnut spouting off about single mothers ruining the country, what’s that going to do to my psyche? my self esteem? my respect for my mother?
contradiction b: for someone who complains so much about the whining liberal left, she sure writes a lot of whiny books about the whiny liberal left.
she’s a bully using typical republican bully tactics. she argues by throwing sand in your face so you’re forced to deflect her lies instead of presenting a coherent opinion. conservatives didn’t lose this election because obama is a far better candidate. i mean, he is, but that’s not why he won. instead of presenting reasons why we should vote for mccain, the g.o.p. spent its time telling us why we should not vote for obama. fortunately, we weren’t fooled again. those tactics might win yodeling contests but not debates.
i try to look at her as a character, a facade, someone playing a role in order to sell books, get on television, and get attention. and just like when a new actor takes over the role of a steady soap opera character, i expect one day to hear, “the part of ann coulter is now being played by the scarecrow from the wizard of oz.”

good night and good luck. no, really.

election thought 2 – nothing to fear but old white guys

September 3, 2008

terrorism is based on – surprise! – terror. fear.

back in 1933, franklin d. roosevelt, an excellent president, said, “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself — nameless, unreasoning, unjustified terror…”

however, the republicans want you to be afraid. their speeches at this convention are all about security, 9/11, the military, the war on terror, the enemy that wants to come here and blow us up, etc. they want you to believe that obama will allow the terrorists to waltz into the country, but mccain will round up the posse and head ‘em off at the pass.

the want you to be afraid because a fearful citizen is an obedient citizen who will cower in the corner while the rough, tough sheriff rides into town to save the day.

a few months back, president bush criticized obama for saying that he’d have a dialogue with our enemies. bush likened that comment to what might have happened if we tried to have friendly chat with hitler back before world war II. what bush is too dumb to realize is that communicating with your enemy is a good thing. why do you think the police have hostage negotiators? so we can talk, find out what’s wrong, what can be done, and what can’t be done. just because obama wants to talk to the enemy doesn’t mean he wants to give them his car keys and wallet.

i’m tired of the fear messages. mccain said that he’ll keep the military in iraq for 100 years if necessary. now that’s something to be afraid of.

and why is it that the republicans seem to be mostly old, rich, white guys?


- is there really a “liberal” media?

November 27, 2007

i’m rather tired of hearing about the “liberal media.” in fact, i don’t agree with the thought, although i don’t disagree either. let me explain.

are the media on the left, sort of liberal in their attitudes? i’d have to admit, yes they are. however, are they automatically left, just because they’re part of the fourth estate? hell no. let me explain that too.

answer these questions please:

who pays more attention to world events than anyone else?

who pays more attention to u.s. events than anyone else?

who pays more attention to state and local events than anyone else?

whose job is it to examine pretty much everything that happens in this world, digest it, regurgitate it, and make sense of it in order that the general public can understand and react to it?

yes, the answer to every question is “the media.”

therefore, let me ask you this:

given that the media is more aware of everything that happens in this world than anyone else, then whose opinion would be more informed than anyone else’s? whose opinions are determined with a better awareness of the facts, a better understanding of the facts, and a better formulation of the facts?

yes, the answer again is “the media.”

so, if the media is the most aware, most informed, and the most credible segment of society, then whose opinions, thoughts, and answers are probably formed with the best composition and understanding of reality?

yes, again, the media.

so, if the media, having been determined to be the best informed and most intelligent segment of society, has also determined that the best thoughts and attitudes are in the minds of the liberals, then i guess it makes total sense to trust the media – because who would know better?

certainly not the g.o.p.


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