From the category archives:

Socialism

Here is a short clip from the Right Scoop via Hot Air of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi gloating over the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) scoring of the impact of Obamacare on the deficit and a response from Wisconsin Rep. Paul Ryan on the shell game the Democrats are playing:

Ryan discusses how Medicare cuts and Social Security tax increases are double counted. “…you can manipulate legislation to get the CBO to give you a good-looking number, but that does not manipulate reality and the reality is this bill doesn’t add up. It is massive deficits, massive debt. So the Speaker can write a bill that is full of smoke and mirrors and the CBO can give you the answer you want, but that’s not what happens in the real world.”

IRS 240x300 Obamacare Shell Game: Numbers Dont Add Up; 15,000 New IRS AgentsHowever, Obamacare may be the first actual bill supported by the administration that will create jobs – 15,000 jobs for IRS agents!

They are needed to enforce the mandate for you to buy government-approved health insurance and pay your premiums every month. Congressman Ryan: “Just imagine this, they have to police on a monthly basis whether or not you are doing your job and fulfilling your mandate that the government says you have to buy the health insurance that Katherine Sibelius defines for you, literally. One person will be the regulator of all health insurance in America and Katherine Sibelius will be telling you what you must buy for yourself and the IRS will be policing that.”

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Here is the process by which Democrats want to pass Obamacare explained in 90 seconds in a clever video by the National Republican Congressional Committee’s Code Red project.

Hot Air has the ad that made the narrator, John Moschitta, famous.

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It looks like the House will vote on Obamacare on Sunday. That’s when the House Democrat leadership believes it will have twisted enough arms and paid off enough of their colleagues to have the votes. Will they have a straight up and down vote or will they resort the the Slaughter Rule?

Today, House Democrats defeated 222 – 203 a resolution sponsored by Republicans against the Slaughter Rule.

The Congressional Budget Office (CBO) today released a preliminary estimate of the financial impact of the bill that it admits it pretty much meaningless. Apparently a revised estimate will be released Friday or Saturday. The preliminary estimate projects a 10 year savings that is equal to about 2 weeks of 2010 deficits. Of course, this is all based on the deception of combining ten years of tax increases and Medicare cuts with six years of Obamacare “benefits.”

pelosi 150x150 Critical Obamacare Showdown on Sunday?Democrats have also said that they are just getting started. Nancy Pelosi: “Kick open that door, and there will be other legislation to follow. We’ll take the country in a new direction.” So any projection of the current bill whether we know what’s in it or not is meaningless since it is just the first step toward European-style socialism.

obama 150x150 Critical Obamacare Showdown on Sunday?President Obama has postponed his trip to Indonesia until June presumably so that he can pressure Democrats to support Obamacare with the argument that a “No” vote would ruin his presidency. As Rush Limbaugh has pointed out, this is the behavior of Third World dictators who “destroy their countries to save face or make them look better.”

The public pressure on Democrats who voted against Obamacare in November must continue. Click on “Melt the Phones: President Cancels Trip Because Democrats Don’t have The Votes” to see Hugh Hewitt’s daily list on who to call.

What will happen after the vote? It all depends. If the vote is on the Slaughter Rule and the President signs the Senate bill, it’s constitutionality will be challenged immediately and some states may refuse to recognize it as law. If Senate Democrats try to adopt the House’s “fixes”, Senate Republicans will offer amendments and the process will continue for a while.

The cleanest outcome would be a “No” vote on Sunday. We could sing “Ding Dong, the Witch is Dead” and start the debate on real health care reform.

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Watch Democrat Rep. Tom Perriello of Virginia make a confession. Politicians “have raided the cookie jar… If you don’t tie our hands, we’ll keep on stealing.” Periello argues that the only way to stop politicians is to give them no choice by forcing them to restrict spending, for example, via a balanced budget amendment.

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reagan billboard 520 Remember Real Hope and Change?

A new billboard featuring a smiling Ronald Reagan and the caption “Remember Real Hope and Change?” has appeared next to a highway in Minnesota as reported by Hot Air. The message is similar to the “Miss Me Yet?” billboard featuring George W. Bush that appeared also in Minnesota earlier this year, but this is definitely an upgrade.

Hope and change were not empty slogans when Reagan was president. Reagan brought hope and change to millions of people throughout the world who were freed from the oppression of communism.

Here is an excerpt from an historic speech President Reagan made to the British Parliament in 1982 where he predicted that communism would be left on the “ash heap of history.” Seven years later the Berlin Wall fell and after two additional years the Soviet Union collapsed in 1991. No one would have believed this possible in 1982 – except Ronald Reagan.

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Via HotAir:

…a seminal moment in American politics from George Will. Will and Robert Reich debated health-care reform yesterday on ABC’s This Week, and Will punctured two of Reich’s arguments. First, he refuted the idea of windfall profits at health insurers, whose margins typically range from 2% -6%, depending on the year. (Computer manufacturers have 20% margins by comparison.) But Will scores an even bigger point when he reduces Reich’s retort to its basic premise — that Americans are just too stupid to act on their own:

George Will: “There you have the premise of this legislation and the core of today’s liberalism: the American people are such dopes they can’t be counted upon to buy their own insurance.”

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obama with doctors 150x150 Why Democrats Are Willing to Lose November Election If They Pass ObamacareOpponents of Obamacare including many Republicans continue to be perplexed why Obama and the Democrats in Congress persist in ramming through health care legislation despite overwhelming popular opposition.

Don’t Democrats want to continue winning elections? Not necessarily. The overriding objective of the socialist Democrats is to permanently expand the size and power of government over its citizens. Experience in Western Europe shows that once the state has expanded to a critical mass, it has been impossible to roll it back even during the occasions when conservative parties win elections. We have had the same experience in the US. Even Ronald Reagan was not able to undo Jimmy Carter’s creation of Federal Departments of Education and Energy.

If Obamacare is passed, the size and power of the federal government has most likely been increased permanently and the left will have new levers to gradually add to this expansion of federal power.

Mark Steyn makes this argument in two recent articles. Here is Steyn in “Disexceptionalizing America:”

I tried to emphasize something that I think U.S. conservatives are too complacent about — the impact of Big Government on free peoples:

American exceptionalism would have to be awfully exceptional to suffer a similar expansion of government and not witness, in enough of the populace, the same descent into dependency and fatalism. As Europe demonstrates, a determined state can change the character of a people in the space of a generation or two.

… take Scotland. Most anywhere you go around the planet, from Hong Kong to Hudson’s Bay, almost everything that works was created and developed by Scotsmen. Now the whole joint’s a statist swamp where government spending accounts for 75 percent of the economy and the menfolk idle away their days on a diet of drugs and fried Mars Bars with a life expectancy in the less salubrious parts of Glasgow getting down to West African standards. They’ll never make any contribution to the world again.

Second Amendment types insist the same thing could never happen here, but they underestimate the transformative power of government at their peril . . .

In a longer piece on this topic for IBD Editorials, Steyn looks at how passing Obamacare will fundamentally change America:

So there was President Obama giving his bazillionth speech on health care, droning yet again that “now is the hour when we must seize the moment,” the same moment he’s been seizing every day of the week for the past year, only this time his genius photo-op guys thought it would look good to have him surrounded by men in white coats.

Why is he doing this? Why let “health” “care” “reform” stagger on like the rotting husk in a low-grade creature feature who refuses to stay dead no matter how many stakes you pound through his chest?

Because it’s worth it. Big time. I’ve been saying in this space for two years that the governmentalization of health care is the fastest way to a permanent left-of-center political culture.

It redefines the relationship between the citizen and the state in fundamental ways that make limited government all but impossible.

In most of the rest of the Western world, there are still nominally “conservative” parties, and they even win elections occasionally, but not to any great effect. (Let’s not forget that Jacques Chirac was, in French terms, a “conservative.”) The result is a kind of two-party one-party state:

Right-of-center parties will once in a while be in office, but never in power, merely presiding over vast left-wing bureaucracies that cruise on regardless.

Republicans seem to have difficulty grasping this basic dynamic.

And, when polls showed an ever larger number of Americans ever more opposed to ObamaCare (by margins approaching 3-to-1), Republicans were further stunned to discover that, in order to advance “reconciliation,” Democrat reconsiglieres had apparently been offering (illegally) various cozy Big Government sinecures to swing-state congressmen in order to induce them to climb into the cockpit for the kamikaze raid to push the bill through.

The Democrats understand that politics is not just about Tuesday evenings every other November, but about everything else, too.

Once the state swells to a certain size, the people available to fill the ever expanding number of government jobs will be statists — sometimes hard-core Marxist statists, sometimes social-engineering multiculti statists, sometimes fluffily “compassionate” statists, but always statists.

The short history of the postwar welfare state is that you don’t need a president-for-life if you’ve got a bureaucracy-for-life: The people can elect “conservatives,” as the Germans have done and the British are about to do, and the left is mostly relaxed about it because, in all but exceptional cases (Thatcher), they fulfill the same function in the system as the first-year boys at wintry English boarding schools who for tuppence-ha’penny or some such would agree to go and warm the seat in the unheated lavatories until the prefects strolled in and took their rightful place.

Republicans are good at keeping the seat warm. A big-time GOP consultant was on TV crowing that Republicans wanted the Dems to pass ObamaCare because it’s so unpopular it will guarantee a GOP sweep in November.

Okay, then what? You’ll roll it back — like you’ve rolled back all those other unsustainable entitlements premised on cobwebbed actuarial tables from 80 years ago?

Like you’ve undone the Department of Education and of Energy and all the other nickel ‘n’ dime novelties of even a universally reviled one-term loser like Jimmy Carter?

Andrew McCarthy concluded a shrewd analysis of the political realities thus:

“Health care is a loser for the Left only if the Right has the steel to undo it. The Left is banking on an absence of steel. Why is that a bad bet?”

Indeed.

Look at it from the Dems’ point of view. You pass ObamaCare. You lose the 2010 election, which gives the GOP co-ownership of an awkward couple of years.

And you come back in 2012 to find your health care apparatus is still in place, a fetid behemoth of toxic pustules oozing all over the basement, and, simply through the natural processes of government, already bigger and more expensive and more bureaucratic than it was when you passed it two years earlier.

That’s a huge prize, and well worth a midterm timeout.

I’ve been bandying comparisons with Britain and France, but that hardly begins to convey the scale of it. ObamaCare represents the government annexation of “one-sixth of the U.S. economy” — i.e., the equivalent of the entire British or French economy, or the entire Indian economy twice over.

Unprecedented Takeover

Nobody has ever attempted this level of centralized planning for an advanced society of 300 million people.

Even the control freaks of the European Union have never tried to impose a unitary “comprehensive” health care system from Galway to Greece. The Soviet Union did, of course, and we know how that worked out.

Read the whole article here.

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teapoartyprotest1 British Tea Party Movement to Launch on Saturday

American protesters hold signs in the rain during the protest last year (Photo: AP)



British Member of Parliament Daniel Hannan is launching a tea party movement in Great Britain this weekend.
To people perplexed that about launching a movement that is based on American protests against Great Britain in 1773, Hannan responds:

Some British Lefties – and some Americans – are thrown by the idea of a Brighton Tea Party. After all, they point out, the original Boston Tea Party was directed against the British Crown.

Yes, it was. But where do you think its leaders drew their inspiration from? The American patriots didn’t see themselves as revolutionaries, but as conservatives. In their own minds, all they were asking for was what they had always assumed to be their birthright as freeborn Englishman.

Part of that birthright was liberty from unjust, arbitrary or punitive taxation. The proposition that taxes ought not to be levied except by elected representatives would have been every bit as popular in Great Britain in 1773 as in America.

The American Revolution, in other words, was inspired by British political philosophy and – more to the point – by British political practice. American patriots saw themselves as part of a continuing British tradition…

A large majority of the British population sympathised with the arguments of the colonists. So, indeed, did the greatest British parliamentarians of the age.

“I rejoice that America has resisted,” proclaimed William Pitt the Elder setting out the case against the Stamp Act in 1766. “Three million people so dead to all feelings of liberty as voluntarily to submit to be slaves would have been fit instruments to make slaves of the rest [of us]”

“Let us get an American revenue as we have got an American Empire,” said Edmund Burke in 1775, taking up the cause of no taxation without representation. “English privileges have made it all that it is; English privileges alone will make it all it can be.”

Those British Lefties who now sneer at what they regard as the Americanisation of the British Right would do well to remember their own history. They are the political heirs of Charles James Fox, of John Wilkes, or Tom Paine. I have no doubt that if the heroes of that age – Burke or Fox or Pitt or Johnson or Swift – could be transported to our own time, they would recoil with horror at the level of taxation and state intervention.

To remind you, Labour has introduced 111 tax rises since 1997. It has taken a trillion pounds in additional taxation. And it has still left us with a deficit of 12.6 per cent of GDP.

Enough is enough. I’m not asking you to throw any chests into the Channel, but at least come to Brighton, drink some tea, and let our leaders know how you feel about their squandering of our property and our heritage.

Here is Daniel Hannan confronting British Prime Minister Gordon Brown at the European Parliament last year:

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Ronald Reagan

February 6, 2010

reagan hat 239x300 Ronald Reagan

Today is Ronald Reagan’s 99th birthday.

Hot Air
provides a nice summary of what made Reagan unique:

Reagan is a great conservative hero for what he wasn’t as well as for what he was. In an era when people thought the entree to political leadership was a degree from an elite university and a lifetime spent currying favor and working within the establishment, Reagan was a small-town Midwesterner who’d gone to an obscure college and spent most of his adult life doing other things: a sportscaster, an actor, a pundit. He was well into middle age before he got into electoral politics.

This confounded his critics, who believed that the true measure of a 50-something man of accomplishment was a degree he’d gotten when he was 22.

He was, in short, pretty much like the rest of us – as Dinesh D’Souza noted, an ordinary man who became an extraordinary president.

He really had two great accomplishments. For starters, he had an uncommon gift for translating immensely high concepts – the economics of Hayek, the philosophy of the Federalists – into terminology that resonated with people who’d never sat through a political science seminar.

He also had a singular knack for envisioning a goal, and focusing on it with a genial ruthlessness that drew his supporters down the path, no matter how difficult, and outlasted his opponents, no matter how well entrenched.

Today, what Reagan said to Americans 20, 30 and 40 years ago still is relevant even if the current crop of politicians and the current president are trying to return to failed ideas of the past. Here is Ronald Reagan in the 1964 speech in support of Barry Goldwater that launched his political career:

Not too long ago, two friends of mine were talking to a Cuban refugee, a businessman who had escaped from Castro, and in the midst of his story one of my friends turned to the other and said, “We don’t know how lucky we are.” And the Cuban stopped and said, “How lucky you are? I had someplace to escape to.” And in that sentence he told us the entire story. If we lose freedom here, there’s no place to escape to. This is the last stand on earth.

And this idea that government is beholden to the people, that it has no other source of power except the sovereign people, is still the newest and the most unique idea in all the long history of man’s relation to man.

This is the issue of this election: Whether we believe in our capacity for self-government or whether we abandon the American revolution and confess that a little intellectual elite in a far-distant capitol can plan our lives for us better than we can plan them ourselves.
- Ronald Reagan, October 27, 1964 – “A Time for Choosing”

And here is a famous moment in President Reagan’s successful effort to “leave communism on the ash heap of history”:

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‘Fear the Boom and Bust’

January 26, 2010

hayek 150x150 Fear the Boom and Bustkeynes john maynard 136x150 Fear the Boom and BustThe video “Fear the Boom and Bust – a Hayek vs. Keynes Rap Anthem” presents the ideas of 20th century economists Friedrick Hayek and John Maynard Keynes that are still shaping much of the debate on the current economic crisis and how to deal with it.

The video produced by Econstories.tv has gone viral – over 122,000 views on Youtube just three days after it was published. According to the website, Econstories.tv “is a place to learn about the economic way of thinking through the eyes of creative director John Papola and creative economist Russ Roberts.”

Based on the number of views, Papola and Roberts have found an innovative way of making economic ideas accessible to a wider audience. The video features the following quotes by Keynes and Hayek on the importance of economic ideas:

“The ideas of economists and political philosophers, both when they are right and when they are wrong, are more powerful than is commonly understood. Indeed the world is ruled by little else. Practical men, who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influence, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist.”

John Maynard Keynes
The General Theory of Employment, Interest and Money

“The curious task of economics is to demonstrate to men how little they really know about what they imagine they can design.”

F A Hayek
The Fatal Conceit

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