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Posts Tagged ‘obama’

Obama’s pet solar company raided by FBI

Friday, September 9th, 2011

From the Washington Post

FBI searches offices of Solyndra; lawmakers say they were misled about firm’s finances

By Carol D. Leonnig and Joe Stephens,

FBI agents executed a surprise search Thursday of a Silicon Valley solar company that collapsed last week, in an investigation that appeared to center on half a billion dollars in federal loan guarantees granted to the company by the Obama administration.

The search at the offices and plant of Solyndra, a California-based manufacturer of solar panels, came as Republicans on Capitol Hill demanded answers to questions about the company’s selection for the $535 million Energy Department loan guarantee. Some Democrats questioned whether the company misled federal officials about its deteriorating financial condition.

More…

COMMENTARY: Stories like this are why the American puiblic increaasingly does not trust the federal government to create jobs and solve problems.

The Obvama Administration gave this outfit a $535 million loan guarantee and touted this comoany as the future for renewable energy and jobs creation.

Looks like Obama got bamboozled. And us taxpayers are stuck with yet another bill from a corporate scamster.

SolarGate and green jobs

Solar company to file for bankruptcy despite $535 million loan guarantee

Full Text of Obama speech to Congress on jobs

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

The following are President Obama’s remarks on his jobs plan as delivered to Congress on Sept. 8, 2011:

Thank you so much. Everyone, please have a seat. Thank you.

Mr. Speaker, Mr. Vice President, members of Congress, and fellow Americans, tonight we meet at an urgent time for our country. We continue to face an economic crisis that has left millions of our neighbors jobless and a political crisis that’s made things worse.

This past week, reporters have been asking, “What will this speech mean for the president? What will it mean for Congress? How will it affect their polls and the next election?”

But the millions of Americans who are watching right now, they don’t care about politics. They have real-life concerns. Many have spent months looking for work. Others are doing their best just to scrape by, giving up nights out with the family to save on gas or make the mortgage, postponing retirement to send a kid to college.

These men and women grew up with faith in an America where hard work and responsibility paid off. They believed in a country where everyone gets a fair shake and does their fair share, where if you stepped up, did your job, and were loyal to your company, that loyalty would be rewarded with a decent salary and good benefits, maybe a raise once in awhile. If you did the right thing, you could make it — anybody could make it in America.

But for decades now, Americans have watched that compact erode. They have seen the decks too often stacked against them. And they know that Washington has not always put their interests first.

The people of this country work hard to meet their responsibilities. The question tonight is whether we’ll meet ours. The question is whether — in the face of an ongoing national crisis — we can stop the political circus and actually do something to help the economy.

The question — the question is whether we can restore some of the fairness and security that has defined this nation since our beginning.

Those of us here tonight can’t solve all our nation’s woes. Ultimately, our recovery will be driven not by Washington, but by our businesses and our workers. But we can help. We can make a difference. There are steps we can take right now to improve people’s lives.

I am sending this Congress a plan that you should pass right away. It’s called the American Jobs Act. There should be nothing controversial about this piece of legislation. Everything in here is the kind of proposal that’s been supported by both Democrats and Republicans, including many who sit here tonight, and everything in this bill will be paid for, everything.

The purpose of the American Jobs Act is simple: to put more people back to work and more money in the pockets of those who are working. It will create more jobs for construction workers, more jobs for teachers, more jobs for veterans, and more jobs for long-term unemployed. It will provide…

It will provide a tax break for companies who hire new workers, and it will cut payroll taxes in half for every working American and every small business.

It will provide a jolt to an economy that has stalled and give companies confidence that, if they invest and if they hire, there will be customers for their products and services. You should pass this jobs plan right away.

Everyone here knows that small businesses are where most new jobs begin. And you know that while corporate profits have come roaring back, smaller companies haven’t. So for everyone who speaks so passionately about making life easier for “job-creators,” this plan’s for you. Pass this jobs bill.

Pass this jobs bill, and starting tomorrow, small businesses will get a tax cut if they hire new workers or if they raise workers’ wages. Pass this jobs bill, and all small-business owners will also see their payroll taxes cut in half next year. If you have 50 employees…

If you have 50 employees making an average salary, that’s an $80,000 tax cut. And all businesses will be able to continue writing off the investments they make in 2012.

It’s not just Democrats who have supported this kind of proposal. Fifty House Republicans have proposed the same payroll tax cut that’s in this plan. You should pass it right away.

Pass this jobs bill, and we can put people to work rebuilding America. Everyone here knows we have badly decaying roads and bridges all over this country. Our highways are clogged with traffic. Our skies are the most congested in the world. It’s an outrage.

Building a world-class transportation system is part of what made us an economic superpower. And now we’re going to sit back and watch China build newer airports and faster railroads, at a time when millions of unemployed construction workers could build them right here in America?

There…

There are private construction companies all across America just waiting to get to work. There’s a bridge that needs repair between Ohio and Kentucky that’s on one of the busiest trucking routes in North America, a public transit project in Houston that will help clear up one of the worst areas of traffic in the country.

And there are schools throughout this country that desperately need renovating. How can we expect our kids to do their best in places that are literally falling apart? This is America. Every child deserves a great school, and we can give it to them, if we act now.

The American Jobs Act will repair and modernize at least 35,000 schools. It will put people to work right now fixing roofs and windows, installing science labs and high-speed Internet in classrooms all across this country. It will rehabilitate homes and businesses in communities hit hardest by foreclosures. It will jump-start thousands of transportation projects all across the country.

And to make sure the money is properly spent, we’re building on reforms we’ve already put in place. No more earmarks. No more boondoggles. No more Bridges to Nowhere. We’re cutting the red tape that prevents some of these projects from getting started as quickly as possible. And we’ll set up an independent fund to attract private dollars and issue loans based on two criteria: how badly a construction project is needed and how much good it will do for the economy.

This idea came from a bill written by a Texas Republican and a Massachusetts Democrat. The idea for a big boost in construction is supported by America’s largest business organization and America’s largest labor organization. It’s the kind of proposal that’s been supported in the past by Democrats and Republicans alike. You should pass it right away.

Pass this jobs bill, and thousands of teachers in every state will go back to work. These are the men and women charged with preparing our children for a world where the competition has never been tougher.

But while they’re adding teachers in places like South Korea, we’re laying them off in droves. It’s unfair to our kids; it undermines their future and ours. And it has to stop. Pass this bill, and put our teachers back in the classroom where they belong.

Pass this jobs bill, and companies will get extra tax credits if they hire America’s veterans. We ask these men and women to leave their careers, leave their families, risk their lives to fight for our country. The last thing they should have to do is fight for a job when they come home.

OBAMA: Pass this bill, and hundreds of thousands of disadvantaged young people will have the hope and the dignity of a summer job next year. And their parents…

… their parents, low-income Americans who desperately want to work, will have more ladders out of poverty.

Pass this jobs bill, and companies will get a $4,000 tax credit if they hire anyone who has spent more than six months looking for a job.

We — we have to do more to help the long-term unemployed in their search for work. This jobs plan builds on a program in Georgia that several Republican leaders have highlighted, where people who collect unemployment insurance participate in temporary work as a way to build their skills while they look for a permanent job.

The plan also extends unemployment insurance for another year.

If the millions of unemployed Americans stopped getting this insurance and stopped using that money for basic necessities, it would be a devastating blow to this economy. Democrats and Republicans in this chamber have supported unemployment insurance plenty of times in the past. And in this time of prolonged hardship, you should pass it again, right away.

Pass this jobs bill, and the typical working family will get a $1,500 tax cut next year, $1,500 that would have been taken out of your pocket will go into your pocket. This expands on the tax cut that Democrats and Republicans already passed for this year.

If we allow that tax cut to expire, if we refuse to act, middle- class families will get hit with a tax increase at the worst possible time. We can’t let that happen.

I know that some of you have sworn oaths to never raise any taxes on anyone for as long as you live. Now is not the time to carve out an exception and raise middle-class taxes, which is why you should pass this bill right away.

This is the American Jobs Act. It will lead to new jobs for construction workers, for teachers, for veterans, for first responders, young people, and the long-term unemployed. It will provide tax credits to companies that hire new workers, tax relief to small-business owners, and tax cuts for the middle-class.

And here’s the other thing I want the American people to know: The American Jobs Act will not add to the deficit. It will be paid for. And here’s how.

The agreement we passed in July will cut government spending by about $1 trillion over the next 10 years. It also charges this Congress to come up with an additional $1.5 trillion in savings by Christmas. Tonight, I’m asking you to increase that amount so that it covers the full cost of the American Jobs Act. And a week from Monday, I’ll be releasing a more ambitious deficit plan, a plan that will not only cover the cost of this jobs bill, but stabilize our debt in the long run.

This approach is basically the one I’ve been advocating for months. In addition to the trillion dollars of spending cuts I’ve already signed into law, it’s a balanced plan that would reduce the deficit by making additional spending cuts, by making modest adjustments to health care programs like Medicare and Medicaid, and by reforming our tax code in a way that asks the wealthiest Americans and biggest corporations to pay their fair share.

What’s more, the spending cuts wouldn’t happen so abruptly that they’d be a drag on our economy or prevent us from helping small businesses and middle-class families get back on their feet right away.

Now, I realize there are some in my party who don’t think we should make any changes at all to Medicare and Medicaid, and I understand their concerns. But here’s the truth: Millions of Americans rely on Medicare in their retirement. And millions more will do so in the future. They pay for this benefit during their working years; they earn it.

But with an aging population and rising health care costs, we are spending too fast to sustain the program. And if we don’t gradually reform the system, while protecting current beneficiaries, it won’t be there when future retirees need it. We have to reform Medicare to strengthen it.

I’m also…

I’m also well aware that there are many Republicans who don’t believe we should raise taxes on those who are most fortunate and can best afford it. But here’s what every American knows: While most people in this country struggle to make ends meet, a few of the most affluent citizens and most profitable corporations enjoy tax breaks and loopholes that nobody else gets.

Right now, Warren Buffett pays a lower tax rate than his secretary, an outrage he has asked us to fix. We need a tax code where everyone gets a fair shake and where everybody pays their fair share.

And, by the way, I believe the vast majority of wealthy Americans and CEOs are willing to do just that, if it helps the economy grow and gets our fiscal house in order.

I’ll also offer ideas to reform a corporate tax code that stands as a monument to special interest influence in Washington. By eliminating pages of loopholes and deductions, we can lower one of the highest corporate tax rates in the world.

Our tax code should not give an advantage to companies that can afford the best-connected lobbyists. It should give an advantage to companies that invest and create jobs right here in the United States of America.

So we can reduce this deficit, pay down our debt, and pay for this jobs plan in the process. But in order to do this, we have to decide what our priorities are. We have to ask ourselves, “What’s the best way to grow the economy and create jobs?”

Should we keep tax loopholes for oil companies, or should we use that money to give small-business owners a tax credit when they hire new workers? Because we can’t afford to do both.

Should we keep tax breaks for millionaires and billionaires, or should we put teachers back to work so our kids can graduate ready for college and good jobs?

Right now, we can’t afford to do both.

This isn’t political grandstanding. This isn’t class warfare.

This is simple math. These are real choices. These are real choices that we’ve got to make. And I’m pretty sure I know what most Americans would choose. It’s not even close. And it’s time for us to do what’s right for our future.

Now, the American Jobs Act answers the urgent need to create jobs right away. But we can’t stop there. As I’ve argued since I ran for this office, we have to look beyond the immediate crisis and start building an economy that lasts into the future, an economy that creates good, middle-class jobs that pay well and offer security.

We now live in a world where technology has made it possible for companies to take their business anywhere. If we want them to start here and stay here and hire here, we have to be able to out-build, and out-educate, and out-innovate every other country on Earth.

This task, of making America more competitive for the long haul, that’s a job for all of us, for government and for private companies, for states and for local communities, and for every American citizen. All of us will have to up our game. All of us will have to change the way we do business.

My administration can and will take some steps to improve our competitiveness on our own. For example, if you’re a small-business owner who has a contract with the federal government, we’re going to make sure you get paid a lot faster than you do right now.

We’re also planning to cut away the red tape that prevents too many rapidly growing start-up companies from raising capital and going public.

And to help responsible homeowners, we’re going to work with federal housing agencies to help more people refinance their mortgages at interest rates that are now near 4 percent. That’s a step…

I know you guys must be for this, because that’s a step that can put more than $2,000 a year in a family’s pocket and give a lift to an economy still burdened by the drop in housing prices.

So some things we can do on our own. Other steps will require congressional action.

Today, you passed reform that will speed up the outdated patent process so that entrepreneurs can turn a new idea into a new business as quickly as possible. That’s the kind of action we need.

Now it’s time to clear the way for a series of trade agreements that would make it easier for American companies to sell their products in Panama, and Colombia, and South Korea, while also helping the workers whose jobs have been affected by global competition.

If Americans can buy Kias and Hyundais, I want to see folks in South Korea driving Fords and Chevys and Chryslers.

I want to see more products sold around the world stamped with the three proud words, “Made in America.” That’s what we need to get done.

And on all of our efforts to strengthen competitiveness, we need to look for ways to work side by side with America’s businesses. That’s why I’ve brought together a jobs council of leaders from different industries who are developing a wide range of new ideas to help companies grow and create jobs.

Already, we’ve mobilized business leaders to train 10,000 American engineers a year, by providing company internships and training. Other businesses are covering tuition for workers who learn new skills at community colleges.

And we’re going to make sure the next generation of manufacturing takes root not in China or Europe, but right here in the United States of America.

If we provide the right incentives, the right support, and if we make sure our trading partners play by the rules, we can be the ones to build everything from fuel-efficient cars to advanced biofuels to semiconductors that we sell all around the world. That’s how America can be number-one again. And that’s how America will be number-one again.

Now, I realize that some of you have a different theory on how to grow the economy. Some of you sincerely believe that the only solution to our economic challenges is to simply cut most government spending and eliminate most government regulations.

And — well, I agree that we can’t afford wasteful spending, and I’ll work with you, with Congress, to root it out. And I agree that there are some rules and regulations that do put an unnecessary burden on businesses at a time when they can least afford it.

That’s why I ordered a review of all government regulations. So far, we’ve identified over 500 reforms, which will save billions of dollars over the next few years. We should have no more regulation than the health, safety and security of the American people require. Every rule should meet that commonsense test.

But what we can’t do — what I will not do — is let this economic crisis be used as an excuse to wipe out the basic protections that Americans have counted on for decades.

I reject the idea that we need to ask people to choose between their jobs and their safety. I reject the argument that says, for the economy to grow, we have to roll back protections that ban hidden fees by credit card companies, or rules that keep our kids from being exposed to mercury, or laws that prevent the health insurance industry from shortchanging patients.

I reject the idea that we have to strip away collective bargaining rights to compete in a global economy.

We shouldn’t be in a race to the bottom, where we try to offer the cheapest labor and the worst pollution standards. America should be in a race to the top, and I believe we can win that race.

In fact, this larger notion that the only thing we can do to restore prosperity is just dismantle government, refund everybody’s money, and let everyone write their own rules, and tell everyone they’re on their own, that’s not who we are. That’s not the story of America.

Yes, we are rugged individualists. Yes, we are strong and self- reliant. And it has been the drive and initiative of our workers and entrepreneurs that has made this economy the engine and the envy of the world.

But there’s always been another thread running throughout our history, a belief that we’re all connected, and that there are some things we can only do together as a nation.

We all remember Abraham Lincoln as the leader who saved our union, founder of the Republican Party. But in the middle of a Civil War, he was also a leader who looked to the future, a Republican president who mobilized government to build the transcontinental railroad, launch the National Academy of Sciences, set up the first land grant colleges. And leaders of both parties have followed the example he set.

Ask yourselves: Where would we be right now if the people who sat here before us decided not to build our highways, not to build our bridges, our dams, our airports? What would this country be like if we had chosen not to spend money on public high schools, or research universities, or community colleges?

Millions of returning heroes, including my grandfather, had the opportunity to go to school because of the G.I. Bill. Where would we be if they hadn’t had that chance?

How many jobs would it have cost us if past Congresses decided not to support the basic research that led to the Internet and the computer chip? What kind of country would this be if this chamber had voted down Social Security or Medicare just because it violated some rigid idea about what government could or could not do? How many Americans would have suffered as a result?

No single individual built America on their own. We built it together. We have been — and always will be — one nation, under God, indivisible, with liberty and justice for all, a nation with responsibilities to ourselves and with responsibilities to one another.

And, members of Congress, it is time for us to meet our responsibilities.

Every proposal I’ve laid out tonight is the kind that’s been supported by Democrats and Republicans in the past. Every proposal I’ve laid out tonight will be paid for. And every proposal is designed to meet the urgent needs of our people and our communities.

Now, I know there’s been a lot of skepticism about whether the politics of the moment will allow us to pass this jobs plan, or any jobs plan. Already, we’re seeing the same old press releases and tweets flying back and forth. Already, the media has proclaimed that it’s impossible to bridge our differences. And maybe some of you have decided that those differences are so great that we can only resolve them at the ballot box.

But know this: The next election is 14 months away. And the people who sent us here, the people who hired us to work for them, they don’t have the luxury of waiting 14 months.

Some of them are living week to week, paycheck to paycheck, even day to day. They need help, and they need it now.

I don’t pretend that this plan will solve all our problems. It should not be — nor will it be — the last plan of action we propose. What’s guided us from the start of this crisis hasn’t been the search for a silver bullet. It’s been a commitment to stay at it, to be persistent, to keep trying every new idea that works and listen to every good proposal, no matter which party comes up with it.

Regardless of the arguments we’ve had in the past, regardless of the arguments we’ll have in the future, this plan is the right thing to do right now. You should pass it. And I intend to take that message to every corner of this country.

And I ask — I ask every American who agrees to lift your voice, tell the people who are gathered here tonight that you want action now. Tell Washington that doing nothing is not an option. Remind us that, if we act as one nation and one people, we have it within our power to meet this challenge.

President Kennedy once said, “Our problems are manmade; therefore, they can be solved by man. And man can be as big as he wants.”

These are difficult years for our country, but we are Americans. We are tougher than the times that we live in, and we are bigger than our politics have been. So let’s meet the moment, let’s get to work, and let’s show the world once again why the United States of America remains the greatest nation on Earth.

Thank you very much. God bless you, and God bless the United States of America.

An Open Letter From the Cowboy Libertarian to President Obama, Congress and the Mainstream Media

Thursday, September 8th, 2011

My buddy Patrick Dorinson…the Cowboy Libertarian … got a big burr under his saddle this week:

An Open Letter From the Cowboy Libertarian to President Obama, Congress and the Mainstream Media

By Patrick Dorinson

Dear Mr. President, Members of Congress, and the Mainstream Media,

Well, summer is now unofficially over and with Labor Day in the rearview mirror, it is “back to work” time. I hope all of you had swell vacations, in your case Mr. President, on high falutin’ Martha’s Vineyard. And in the case of some members of Congress on taxpayer paid junkets to exotic locales. Many Americans could not afford to take vacations and would love to get back to work as well but there are no jobs.

While you were gone, the economy sunk further — as did all of your poll numbers.

More… http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011/09/08/open-letter-from-cowboy-libertarian-to-president-obama-congress-and-mainstream/#ixzz1XOsPL0R9

Among opther things Dorison tells Obama: “As the saying goes, if you’ve got nothing much to say, don’t take an hour to prove it.”

SolarGate and green jobs

Wednesday, September 7th, 2011

As we contemplate Obama’s latest scheme to spur the economy, Investors.com has a stunning article up about how a crony of Obama’s  managed to get a $535 million loan guarantee for a dubious solar scheme…which recently went bankrupt.


Solargate

….Despite a warning from Solyndra’s own accountants at PricewaterhouseCoopers that the company’s business model was suspect and raised “substantial doubt about its ability to continue as a going concern,” President Obama visited the company and gave it a glowing endorsement as a government-picked winner alongside electric cars and high-speed rail.

More…

And David Brooks has an excellent commentary on how the green jobs efforts has cost a lot of money and produced few new jobs:


Where the Jobs Aren’t

There’s a wealth of other evidence to suggest that the green economy will not be a short-term jobs machine. According to Investor’s Business Daily, executives at Johnson Controls turned $300 million in green technology grants into 150 jobs — that’s $2 million per job.

More…

More

Solar company to file for bankruptcy despite $535 million loan guarantee

$14 trillion…use closing tax loopholes to pay off the federal deficit

Friday, July 29th, 2011

Imagine if you can $14 trillion which is the current national debt.

For all the fuss and furor in Washington…no one is even getting close to really crunching the problem.

First we have to quit spending more money than we take in in taxes and fees. The budget has to be balanced so the deficit does not keep growing. A trillion dollars of deficit spending a year adds up fast.

The only way to balance the budget and reduce the deficit is to reduce spending and increase revenues.

Cutting federal spending to a level where that spending does not exceed existing revenues is imperative.

This is exactly what millions of us had to do when we lost our jobs or saw our incomes reduced in the recession.

But we will not get there if there are any “protected” expenditures. Everything has to be on the table.

But just balancing the current budget does not solve the $14 trillion deficit problem.

We need to wipe that deficit out.

How about reducing it by $1 trillion a year…14 years…deficit gone.

We’re not going to do that without additional revenues.

There are three paths to revenue increases…eliminating tax loopholes….using more “enterprise fund” activities at the federal level (fees for services like cities and states do)…and grow the economy. Does not see like any of these items are really on the agenda right now.

But what if any revenue increases such as closing tax loopholes was used exclusively to reduce the deficit?

As they say when one is in a hole…the first thing you have to do it quit digging.

Winston Churchill: “You can always count on Americans to do the right thing, after they’ve tried everything else.”

Sunday, July 24th, 2011

As the clock ticks down on the deadline to deal with raising the federal debt limit, some good quotes come to mind:

“You can always count on Americans to do the right thing, after they’ve tried everything else.” Winston Churchill

“Insanity: doing the same thing over and over again and expecting different results. ” Albert Einstein

“If you’re already in a hole, quit digging.”  Cowyboy Way

“That sooner or later…somewhere…somehow…we must settle with the world and make payment for what we have taken”  Lone Ranger

“If you waste time or money today, you will regret it tomorrow. Practice thrift in all ways.”  Hopalong Cassidy

“Don’t corner something that would normally run from you.” Cowboy Way

“If you looking for a helping hand, start by looking at the end of your own arm.” Patrick Dorinson the Cowboy Libertarian

“The Government keeps trying to make us better people. They’re wasting their time and our money.” Old cowboy

Boehner is supposed to announce his new plan at 4PM EDT which is 1PM our time.

See also:

Enough of the games in DC…solve the darned debt limit problem!

How not to save a boat from sinking

Debt ceiling battle…the national soap opera

Debt ceiling battle…the national soap opera

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

Who needs soap opera when we have the gigantic fight going on in Washington over whether or not to raise the national debt ceiling.

Republicans will only agree to raise the debt ceiling by $2.5 trillion if an equal amount of budget cuts are agreed to.

Democrats have proposed budget cuts of something like $1.5 trillion, but want revenue increases to make up the difference.

Republicans say no tax increases.

Democrats suggest getting rid of a lot of the loopholes in the tax code such as the deduction for corporate jets.

Republicans think eliminating loopholes for their corporate buddies is a tax increase because Grover Norquist says so.

Democrats even put reducing future Social Security benefits on the table…providing the Republican would agree to get rid of the tax loopholes.

Liberal Democrats immediately went ballistic that “their” president would be willing to throw old people under the bus.

Conservative Republicans started a fight within the GOP over how close to the edge would they be willing to push the country to get the maximum budget cuts with no “tax increases”.

House Majority leader Eric Cantor pushed so hard at a meeting at the White House that President Obama abruptly got up and left the meeting.

The deadline to approval an increase in the debt ceiling is August 2nd.

Tea party favorite Michelle Bachmann thinks the crisis about failing to increase the debt limit is overstated and seems to want to drive the country off the cliff just to see what happens.

Senate Republican minority leader Mitch McConnell offered a deal to extend the debt limit and then dump the decisions about what spending to cut squarely in Obama’s lap so he’d get the blame for whomever’s ox was gored.

House Speaker John Boehner seems to have been eclipsed by Cantor’s hard line position against Obama. Then again, Boehner, and old Washington hand, may be just giving Cantor enough rope, a tree and a horse to hang himself with.

House minority leader Nancy Pelosi is off somewhere whining about staying true to Democratic Party principles, whatever those are.

Moody’s issues a dire warning about downgrading US Treasury debt ratings.

China begins to think holding US debt is sort of like how we see owning a Chinese-made toy.

Meanwhile, millions of Americans are watching all of this wondering things like….

….if the Republicans succeed in not increasing the debt limit will I get my government check after August 3rd?

…why should we get hit with reductions in our pet government programs if big business keeps getting tax breaks that we don’t get?

…but if we give the feds more money in tax revenues is that not like giving a junkie more crack?

…and since a lot of people had their credit wrecked in the financial collapse, job losses, reduction in home equity values and all the other fallout from Wall Street’s orgy of greed why should we care about the national credit rating?

My guess is most people don’t adhere to a strictly “Republican” or “Democrat” view of the problem or the menu of solutions.

We’ve got to cut spending, no question.

But lets not make the decision on whose ideology wins the fight….lets cut everything.

We’ve got to fix the tax code and stop giving away potential tax revenues because some special interests were successful in getting tax code loopholes they obviously do not want to give up.

If we’re going to feel some pain…everyone should.

Why should I give up my mortgage interest deduction so some corporate fat cat can write off his jet?

Maybe getting rid of the mortgage interest deduction for mortgage amounts over $1 million could work if the corporate fat cats could only get airplane deductions for propeller driven aircraft.

Who makes propeller driven airplanes? Do we?

But, as the show goes on in Washington, it seems like everyone is playing for air time on the network news and cable talk shows.

Meanwhile, millions of us have got to get dressed and go to work or look for work. Tonight we will see act 42 in the DC “showdown at the debt ceiling corral”.

A friend described the process of negotiating the debt limit increase as “you put a Republican and a Democrat in a sinking boat and they argue about whose fault it was the boat is sinking and then realize neither of them know how to swim.”

__________________________

How not to save a boat from sinking

Another Open Letter to Obama…this one from the residents in Eastern Arizona on their border situation

Monday, May 16th, 2011

 

Drug smuggler backpack Photo by Stephen Cullen

This Open Letter to Obama was written by Dinah Davidson of Portal. The folks living around Portal are in one of the most dangerous drug smuggling corridors on the border…over by the Chiricahua Mountains in Cochise County which is called the ” Chiricahua-Peloncillo drug and human smuggling corridor” :

President Barack Obama
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500

Copies to: The Honorable Gabrielle Giffords, Senator John McCain, Senator Jon Kyl, Secretary (of Homeland Security) Janet Napolitano, Secretary (of Agriculture) Tom Vilsack, Secretary (of State) Hillary Clinton, Governor Jan Brewer, NPR.

Dear President Obama:

It is with great wonderment and sadness that we listened to your May 10 speech on immigration issues.  All of the joking about moats and alligators cut residents of Portal, AZ, to the core as we sheltered with friends or at a Red Cross evacuation site, to survive a terrible fire that still threatens our lives and property, as well as our ecotourism-based economy.

Like last spring’s ‘Horseshoe Fire’, fought in SE Arizona at a cost of more than $10 million, ‘Horseshoe Fire 2’ was ignited by humans along a well-established route used by human and drug smugglers high in Horseshoe Canyon, about 50 miles north of Mexico.  This fire burned catastrophically in an environment stressed by the worst drought this region has ever recorded, and 50 mph winds have propelled it through whole mountain valleys in a heartbeat.  During its first 24-hrs, the fire consumed a greater area than did last year’s fire over a 6-week period.  Local residents were roused after midnight, and some slept fitfully in cars after fleeing with family photos and any valuables that could be quickly assembled.  Elderly retirees left with medical supplies, including oxygen tanks on which some depend.

Thinking about this in the context of your own loved ones, does this account strike you as a description of security?  We can personally attest to the fact that neither the border nor daily life is secure for members of our community.  Seizure of record quantities of drugs may pad the statistics of Homeland Security, but it does nothing to ease the burdens we have been forced to bear.  Over the years, as our homes have been burgled or invaded, our fences, water lines and windows repeatedly broken, our businesses driven toward bankruptcy, our natural surroundings desecrated by trash and fire, and our lives even obliterated (neighbor Rob Krentz, murdered by a drug scout), it has amazed us how little note is taken of these tragedies by our government and the press.  Is it enough, now that we have suffered back-to-back fires that threaten to erase our very reasons for living here?  What must we say or do to garner your attention and help?  How is it that, on the same day we took Osama bin Laden in Pakistan, we could not prevent illegals – 50 miles within our borders (!) – from setting a fire along a known smuggling route in an extremely dry year?  Why were federal agents (BP, ICE, National Guard, or Special Forces) not posted along this route in anticipation of a repeat of last year’s calamity?  Better still, why were the illegals not captured before they had traveled 50 miles north of the border?!  Or, in the eyes of our government, do we just reside in a ‘sacrifice zone’?

The region where we live is not just our personal homeland but a repository for much of the nation’s biological diversity.  Naturalists from all over the world come here to study at the American Museum’s SWRS field station, or just to observe, but year after year, less natural habitat survives to accommodate them.  For them and for ourselves, watching this environment collapse is akin to watching a beloved family member die. 

All of Arizona’s highly biodiverse ‘Sky (Mountain) Islands’ are in jeopardy and for the same reason – fires set by drug and human smugglers.  (For other examples, you might ask your Agriculture Secretary about the Santa Rita range south of Tucson, and the Sierritas, west of that, and also on fire at this moment.)  Moreover, the country itself is in jeopardy of losing not just the extraordinary biological patrimony represented in these mountain ranges, but (extrapolating over a century or two) the U.S. territory itself.  If this strikes you as hyperbole, what Americans do you know who would choose to remain in lands so tragically depleted?

We therefore wish to know what you plan to do to protect our constitutional right (Article IV, section IV) to defense from foreign invasions, especially as this regards fires set by Mexican drug and human smugglers.  We thank you in advance for your anticipated response.

Sincerely,

The following residents of the Chiricahua-Peloncillo drug and human smuggling corridor: