Those who can support the tried and failed policy(ies) of the Democrats
speaks volumes.....​


On Sun, May 11, 2014 at 3:26 PM, MJ <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> The FAITHFUL is the biggest problem with the Republican/Conservative
> effort.
> [That Gutzman may or may not be an idiot is irrelevant to the obsevations
> he cites.]
>
> Regard$,
> --MJ
>
> "The GOP's symbol should be Bullwinkle J. Moose, and its motto should be:
> "This time fer SURE!"" -- William N. Grigg
>
>
>
> At 11:35 AM 5/11/2014, you wrote:
>
> Kevin Gutzman is an idiot....​
>
>
>
> On Sun, May 11, 2014 at 8:57 AM, MJ <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
> ROTFLMAO!
>
> Regard$,
> --MJ
>
> "Republicans commonly complain that President Obama and his supporters
> blame President Bush II for much of what is wrong in contemporary America.
> This complaint's chief weakness is that Bush II is responsible for much
> that's wrong in contemporary America. My chief complaint with President
> Obama is that in reappointing Bernanke, rattling sabers over Syria, pushing
> immigration amnesty, continuing the Drug War, legislating via signing
> statements, spending prodigally, pushing through Obamacare, etc., he has
> built on the foreign-policy, constitutional, and spending legacies of Bush
> II." -- Kevin Gutzman
>
>
>
>
>
>  The Obama Watch
> Light at the End of the Tunnel
> The passing of the Age of Obama.
> By Peter Ferrara – 5.7.14
> Conservatives need to wake up and start thinking past the rapidly passing
> age of Obama. Increasingly likely every day is that voters this November
> will remove Harry Reid as Senate Majority Leader. By electing a new
> Republican Senate majority, the voters will also render Barack Obama a lame
> duck, one of the lamest in history, as he will have no prayer of getting
> any of his legislative proposals —†increasingly reecognized as hard left
> — through Congress. (Despite his early national rhetoric,, Obama doesn’t
> do bipartisanship.)
> > That new Republican Senate majority will also be a new check and
> balance on Obama̢۪s appointment of federal judges, re reversing the
> effect of the Reid rule change eliminating Republican judicial filibusters.
> That is especially crucial given that the five remaining Reagan/Bush
> appointees on the Court constitute the slimmest of majorities, with a
> couple of occasionally weak sisters among them. If just one of these five
> is replaced by another Elena Kagan or Sonia Sotomayor, the resulting shift
> from a Reagan majority on the Court to an Obama one would mean a
> longer-term Obama transformation of America.
> Given the long-term cycles of American political history, Obama̢۪s s
> second midterm this year should be even worse for Democrats than the
> disastrous Obama first midterm in 2010. And the polls are bearing out that
> possibility.
> The latest is a Pew/USA Today poll finding that 47 percent favor the
> Republican candidate for Congress in their district or state, while 43
> percent favor the Democrat. That is a sharp turnaround from last October,
> when Democrats held a 6 point lead in the same generic midterm preference
> poll, 49 percent to 43 percent. The new Pew poll also finds a 16 point GOP
> lead among independent voters.
> Moreover, the Pew poll finds that “65% would like t to see the next
> President offer different policies and programs from the Obama
> Administration while 30 percent want Obama̢۪s successessor to offer
> similar policies,†as reported by Jason Riley in the May 5 Wall Streeet
> Journal.
> In an April 27 Washington Post/ABC News poll, President Obama’s
> approval rating was down to an all-time low of 41 percent. That poll
> featured an 11 point Democratic advantage in the sample, which indicates
> further weakness in that Obama support, especially as compared to the 2010
> midterm turnout rather than the 2012 turnout.
>
> For context, in April 2010, President Obama̢۪s jo job approval in that
> Washington Post/ABC News poll was 54 percent. In October 2010, just before
> the voters administered their first midterm beating to Democrats,
> Obama̢۪s job approval was still 50 percent.
> > Similarly, the April Gallup poll showed an Obama approval rating of 43
> percent, compared to an April 2010 Obama approval rating in that poll of 49
> percent, and an early November 2010 approval rating of 44 percent. The
> latest Wall Street Journal/NBC poll found Obama’™s job approval at 44
> percent, compared to a May 11, 2010 approval of 50 percent, and an October
> 30, 2010 approval of 45 percent. So consistently in all these polls, Obama
> was doing better in 2010 just before that year‬™s Democrat blowout than
> he is doing this year.
> The Washington Post/ABC News poll also found only 42 percent approval of
> Obama̢۪s handling of the economy, lower tr than the 44 percent in the
> October 2010 poll. Most damning of all, 53 percent in the 2014 poll say it
> is more important to have Republican congressional majorities to check
> Obama̢۪s policies, compared to 39 percent wh who believe it is more
> important to have Democratic congressional majorities to support those
> policies.
> Bottom line in that poll, 45 percent say they plan to vote for Democratic
> candidates for Congress this fall, compared to 44 percent who say they plan
> to vote for Republican congressional candidates. But in October 2010, the
> Washington Post/ABC News poll showed Democrats with a 5-point advantage on
> that question, just before voters granted Republicans a 63-seat gain in the
> House, and a 6 to 7 seat gain in the Senate (depending on how you count the
> November 2010 affirmation of Scott Brown̢۪s special election pickup of
> Senator Ted Kennennedy̢۪s s seat).
> These polls above, and state by state polls, are consistent with a
> Republican pickup in this fall̢۪s midterm of as many ny as 10 Senate
> seats, establishing a new 55 to 45 Republican Senate majority, and 20 more
> House seats. To maximize that victory, Republicans need to campaign on a
> pro-growth platform of specific reforms to get America booming again as
> under Reagan. But in designing those proposals, conservative and Republican
> candidates, think tanks, publications, and policy intellectuals need to
> think past what can possibly be compromised with President Obama, and take
> their case for populist, pro-growth reforms directly to the people.
> That should begin with pro-growth tax reform. Directly contrary to the
> Thomas Piketty/MSNBC socialists celebrating around massive, far left,
> anti-growth increases in tax rates on the most productive, Republican tax
> reform should involve sharp reductions in tax rates for everyone, in return
> for eliminating tax loopholes for special interest, crony capitalists.
> A good model for that are the tax reform proposals developed by House
> Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan, already included in his budget
> proposals approved by the full House. For personal, individual income
> taxes, those proposals involve a 10 percent tax rate for annual incomes
> below $100,000, and a 25 percent tax rate for incomes above that. For
> corporate taxes, the top federal tax rate would be reduced to 25 percent as
> well.
>
> Republicans should avoid the trap of promising that such reform would be
> revenue neutral, shifting the debate to that rather than the impact on
> growth. Their proposals should involve a net tax cut on a static revenue
> estimating basis (not taking into account the pro-growth effects), and a
> net revenue gain on a dynamic basis, considering the pro-growth effects.
> Another pro-growth measure would be to repeal and replace Obamacare with
> the Patient Power health policy reforms proposed by free market health
> policy expert John Goodman, president of the National Center for Policy
> Analysis in Dallas. Those reforms would assure universal health care for
> all, with no individual mandate, no employer mandate, and a sharp net cut
> in taxes, spending, and cost-increasing regulatory burdens.
> Those reforms would be based on a universal health insurance tax credit of
> roughly $2,500 per person, $8,000 per family, that every citizen could use
> to help purchase the private health insurance of their choice. For those
> who nevertheless still don̢۪t choosoose to buy coverage with the credit,
> the unused funds would be sent in federal block grants to clinics and
> hospitals that serve the indigent. For those who get too sick while
> uninsured, perhaps with cancer or heart disease, to then buy private health
> insurance for the first time, the tax credit can be used to buy coverage
> from a state-based uninsurable risk pool, or from Medicaid, which would
> assure coverage for pre-existing conditions in any event. Medicaid should
> also be turned over to the states for further reform, with block grants as
> in the enormously successful, 1996 welfare reforms. That has also been
> endorsed by Ryan̢۪s Repubpublican budgets, and by the 2012 Romney/Ryan
> ticket. CBO estimates that would save $1 to $2 trillion in the first 10
> years alone.
> Some conservative analysts, and Republican health policy staffers, have
> been too pessimistic about the prospects for such reforms. They have
> succumbed to the fundamental mistake that under any market
> repeal-and-replace plan like the Goodman Patient Power plan, tens of
> millions of Americans will necessarily lose the health insurance plan they
> now have under Obamacare, doing to them what Obamacare just did to millions
> of Americans who were falsely told by President Obama that under Obamacare,
> if they liked their health plan, they could keep it.
> The egregious error here is that since there is no mandate at all in the
> Patient Power market alternative to Obamacare, not a single health policy
> insurance plan in the entire country would be invalidated by repeal and
> replacement of Obamacare by the Patient Power market plan. Under that
> market plan, each individual chooses the health plan he will buy with the
> universal health insurance tax credit. The federal government does not
> specify what health plan anyone has to buy. So the Patient Power market
> reforms would not require the cancellation or invalidation, of any health
> insurance plans. Anyone who likes the health plan he has under Obamacare
> can simply use the tax credit to help pay for that one. The exact number of
> health insurance plans in the entire country invalidated if Obamacare is
> repealed and replaced by Goodman̢۪s Patient Power market plan would be
> preciseisely 0.00, not 35 million as some analysts have misled their more
> credulous readers to believe.
>
>
> With no employer mandate in the Patient Power plan, the effects of
> Obamacare in destroying jobs and full time employment are eliminated. With
> no individual mandate and no guaranteed issue or community rating
> regulation, the primary effects of Obamacare in increasing health costs are
> eliminated as well. The elimination of increased taxes and spending under
> Obamacare would be powerfully pro-growth as well.
> Other important pro-growth reforms for Republicans to support would
> include a federal balanced budget amendment, fundamental reform of the Fed
> and monetary policy, possibly including a restored link to gold and other
> precious metals to at least guide monetary policy, comprehensive welfare
> reform based on work for the able bodied instead of guaranteed handouts,
> and personal savings, investment. and insurance accounts for Social
> Security and Medicare (instead of suicidal cuts in those highly sensitive
> programs).
> Such reforms would involve a dramatic reduction in government spending and
> taxes over a generation, and restore booming, world leading, traditional
> American economic growth and prosperity, meaning millions of more jobs,
> higher wages and incomes for working families, and more real equality as a
> result.
> The American Spectator Foundation is the 501(c)(3) organization
> responsible for publishing The American Spectator magazine and training
> aspiring journalists who espouse traditional American values. Your
> contributions are tax deductible to the extent permitted by law. Each donor
> receives a year-end summary of their giving for tax purposes.
>
>
>  Copyright 2013, The American Spectator. All rights reserved.
>
>  Source URL: http://spectator.org/articles/59065/light-end-tunnel
>
> Â
>
>
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