‘Macaca’ part two?

To put it bluntly, last night’s debate was a snoozer. After smacking my forehead in disbelief a couple times on some really dumb answers from John McCain (it goes without saying that pretty much anything out of Barack Obama’s mouth was a combination of pandering and dollar signs going off in his eyes) I got to the point of agreeing with Michelle Malkin, whose liveblogging I was following for reaction, that listening to this townhall debate was like watching paint dry.

So I was quizzical when I got a comment on the particular post which was up at that time on monoblogue simply stating, “‘That One’ won.” I replied “That one what?” I didn’t find out about the significance until I was listening to Rush today, because what McCain said just didn’t register. Here’s that passage from the transcript:

BROKAW: Should we fund a Manhattan-like project that develops a nuclear bomb to deal with global energy and alternative energy or should we fund 100,000 garages across America, the kind of industry and innovation that developed Silicon Valley?

MCCAIN: I think pure research and development investment on the part of the United States government is certainly appropriate. I think once it gets into productive stages, that we ought to, obviously, turn it over to the private sector.

By the way, my friends, I know you grow a little weary with this back-and-forth. It was an energy bill on the floor of the Senate loaded down with goodies, billions for the oil companies, and it was sponsored by Bush and Cheney.

You know who voted for it? You might never know. That one. (I believe at this moment he pointed in Obama’s direction – Editor.) You know who voted against it? Me. I have fought time after time against these pork barrel — these bills that come to the floor and they have all kinds of goodies and all kinds of things in them for everybody and they buy off the votes.

I vote against them, my friends. I vote against them. But the point is, also, on oil drilling, oil drilling offshore now is vital so that we can bridge the gap. We can bridge the gap between imported oil, which is a national security issue, as well as any other, and it will reduce the price of a barrel of oil, because when people know there’s a greater supply, then the cost of that will go down.

That’s fundamental economics. We’ve got to drill offshore, my friends, and we’ve got to do it now, and we can do it.

And as far as nuclear power is concerned, again, look at the record. Senator Obama has approved storage and reprocessing of spent nuclear fuel.

And I’ll stop, Tom, and you didn’t even wave. Thanks.

Apparently Obama supporters took it as racist, like that same commenter who then shot back to me this morning, “I guess McCain was using ‘One’ as code for ‘Nigger’ to his racist supporters.” (Since I didn’t moderate comments until I got home this evening I heard the Rush reference first.) Personally I took it the same as McCain saying “that guy” or “that dude”, but I guess all that does is make me guilty of being white.

Let’s face facts here – Obama is going to get about 90% of the black vote. And it’s not because he’s black, it’s because he’s a Democrat. If racial unity were that great for just any black candidate, my junior Senator would be Michael Steele, they would be calling Lynn Swann the governor of Pennsylvania, and Ken Blackwell might be midway through his first successful term as Ohio’s governor.

But it’s that sensitivity minority voters have that makes headlines in the drive-by media. Former Senator George Allen of Virginia had his political career derailed because the word ‘macaca’ became a keyboard shortcut for the Washington Post, it was used so often. (And I’m still not sure why that was offensive, but I suppose it was made out to be so.) With Obamaites fanning the flames just as furiously as they can to light this spark of racism, I can tell that even if Obama wins the issue of race doesn’t go away.

Of course, if Obama is unsuccessful in November you can bet your bottom dollar it’s going to be attributed to racism among Republicans. No way would it be Barack’s relative lack of experience, his misguided foreign policy, or his tax-and-spend liberalism. And it can’t be that lack of trust in Obama among rank-and-file Democrats who swept Hillary Clinton to victories in many of the final primaries. In turn, we know that an Obama win will be considered a “mandate” even if he wins by 1 percent or, like Bill Clinton, can’t get a majority of the vote in his bid for the Oval Office.

No, the bets are being hedged as quickly as possible by Obama’s minions who know that the only thing that can stop Obama is his past, so they’re throwing all the mud they can at John McCain while attempting to keep a lid on that bubbling cauldron that is filled with stories about Bill Ayers, Tony Rezko and other Chicago machine politicians, and all that cash from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.

In a nutshell, that’s Election 2008. It’s a shame we couldn’t have a real debate with a decent moderator last night and that one flippant phrase is sure to become a hot issue.

Michigan, welcome to Maryland. And hi to Idaho too!

Governor Sarah Palin wasn’t all that pleased about it, but the McCain campaign’s recent decision to pull resources out of Michigan may not have been all that surprising, given the fact the state has a fairly high minority population and is heavily unionized. Even though the poll margins aren’t all that great, apparently the Senator’s forces are concerned about their limited resources since they didn’t break a promise to accept public financing like Barack Obama did.

But Palin is willing to fight for the state and so is another grassroots group I’ve been pleased to support. They, too, want to “Save Michigan” and its 17 electoral votes. (Something tells me Ohio State fans may like their graphic too.) Their goal is to raise $500,000 to buy anti-Obama television ads in the state, and they wanted to do it in 48 hours (when I wrote this they were about halfway there – not bad.) Even the state’s main newspaper has taken notice of the bid. And it’s worth noting that the person who advised the Obama/Biden ticket on how to sell those same failed liberal policies that put Michigan in a one-state recession in their debate prep was none other than the “Tax Queen” herself, Michigan Governor Jennifer Granholm, who played the mock debate role of Gov. Sarah Palin.

Living in a state and next to another that seemingly long ago was abandoned to the wolves of the Obama campaign, I can feel Michigan’s rank-and-file Republican pain. In part, we in this area of the country are getting out to vote for McCain simply to give him an overall majority in the national popular vote because our votes will likely be swamped by those in urban areas as far as our state totals go. However, we still have a reason to show up November 4th because we also need to make sure we vote for effective representation in Congress, too. And since Governor Palin only has so many hours in the day and does have to tend to Alaskan business once in awhile, I doubt she’s going to step up and fight on our behalf so we in Maryland (and Delaware) will have to do it all ourselves, without the outside help. (Of course, if we can get enough contributions in perhaps the anti-Obama tour could extend east to our area. I still hold out the glimmer of hope Sarah will show up in real life, too – as opposed to a cardboard cutout.)

I had something else I thought was interesting about states helping each other out. As many of you know because it’s become a side issue in our Congressional race, the Club For Growth has supported Congressional aspirant Andy Harris in the contest. Since I am a member of that group (I couldn’t beat the price and I, too, support most of their aims) I get solicitations like this one:

The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) is looking to pack the next Congress with dozens of tax and spend liberal minions to serve as rubber stamps for Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s agenda.

To do this, they are working to defeat as many fiscally conservative Republicans as possible. They call this their “Red to Blue” program – turning Republican “red” seats into Democratic “blue” ones.

One Republican on their target list is Rep. Bill Sali.

In 2006, Club for Growth supporters helped Idaho rebel Bill Sali win a crowded Republican primary and then a tough general election in Idaho’s First Congressional District. Bill Sali promised to take his tough-talking, fiscally conservative bravado to Washington and drive the liberals crazy. He did not disappoint.

Over the past two years, Rep. Sali was elected president of the Republican freshman class, fought for lower taxes, voted against outrageous pork projects, and successfully challenged a federal agency when it wanted to start an anti-private property marketing campaign. He got the 9th best score in the House in the Club’s rating of Congress and also earned one of the top marks in our RePork Card rating on pork barrel spending.

In this case, I didn’t send anything to Bill Sali’s campaign but the parallels to our 1st CD race are fairly close – obviously this is a guy who has fought for smaller government and has a well-funded Democrat opponent this time. He’ll get hundreds of contributions bundled by the Club For Growth just as Andy Harris has.

On that note, this was the last Harris appeal from the Club For Growth. I thought they did a nice writeup and hopefully the financial cavalry will ride in to help Andy as well:

Remember Congressman Wayne Gilchrest? He is the so-called Republican that Andy Harris beat in the Maryland Republican primary, backed by $435,000 in donations from Club for Growth members.

Well, Gilchrest endorsed Andy Harris’s Democratic opponent. He is starring in campaign commercials for the Democrat airing right now.

It gets worse.

The Baltimore Sun newspaper reported September 19 that Gilchrest “strongly supported the Democratic presidential ticket in a radio interview aired yesterday.”

(A few) days ago, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC) unleashed a massive ad buy unfairly attacking Andy Harris’s record in the Maryland Senate. If you watch Baltimore TV, you can’t miss the spots, they’re everywhere.

Help Andy raise the money he needs to fight back.

Between the DCCC and his Democratic opponent, Andy is being outgunned right now by nearly a 3 to 1 ratio on TV spots.

The National Republican Campaign Committee has little in the bank, so they may not be able to counter the DCCC.

Andrew Harris, a highly-regarded physician, has a consistent track record of fighting for limited government and pro-growth policies. Harris sponsored a repeal of the Maryland inheritance tax. In a demonstration of his principled independence, he voted against six state budgets, including ones proposed by a Republican governor.

Harris is a terrific candidate in person. He’s smart, articulate and has a long history of public service, including service in the U.S. Naval Reserve Medical Corps since 1988 and active service during Operation Desert Storm.

Harris would not only have a terrific voting record on economic issues, he would become a principled leader in the Republican caucus.

Please, let’s do everything we can to make sure Andy wins in November. (Emphasis mine.)

The reason I placed that emphasis was because it wasn’t special interests (like unions, or trial lawyer groups, or the big-government elitist crowd) who donated to the Club For Growth, it was ordinary everyday people like you and I. And yes, I’ve stroked a couple checks to Andy because to me he’s by far the better candidate here. It’s not even close. I tell people that Kratovil = O’Malley = Pelosi = Obama, all tax-and-spenders, none for reducing the size and scope of government. (So tell me, Kratovil supporters, what will your candidate cut in government?)

Some decry the amount of money that goes into politics and wonder aloud why people raise millions to take a job that pays less than $200,000 a year. (For many it’s a pay cut.) Believe it or not, there’s a lot of us who pay a little now in the hopes that we can keep more of what we have in both a financial and freedom sense later. To me, it’s an investment in my future and that of my daughter’s.

So today I picked a few examples of groups who go against the political grain and need the help for their ideas to prevail. Naturally there’s many groups on the other side of issues, but you have to wonder what’s in it for them at the government table. Those I like want to get the government off the back of all of us and deserve our support. I’m just helping in my little way where I can.

Newt’s October not-so-surprise

Every week I get Newt Gingrich’s column e-mailed to me, and it’s usually very good reading. Obviously since he left inside the Beltway politics, Newt hasn’t rested on his laurels and continued to grace the conservative movement with his input. For my tastes, he leans a little more on the federal government to provide solutions to American issues than I would like but he still carries a worthwhile opinion to me.

Today Newt’s column stated something those on the liberal side will certainly latch onto out of context as he emphasized, “The Bush-Paulson economic strategy has been a disaster.” He then launched into an attack on the $152 billion stimulus plan passed earlier this year as “wasted money.” That’s probably where the liberals will close quote. But the rest of the paragraph and other points Newt made deserve discussion:

It should have been invested in science, technology, energy, infrastructure and pro-jobs, pro-savings tax cuts.

Imagine repealing the business killing Sarbanes-Oxley bill, eliminating the capital gains tax, going to 100 percent annual expensing for small businesses, and other practical steps to create jobs and generate wealth to mop up the bad debts.

Imagine half of the $152 billion invested in clean coal, biofuels, solar power, wind power, nuclear power, natural gas vehicles, hydrogen vehicles and drilling for oil and natural gas. Imagine the other half being invested in the National Institutes of Health, the National Science Foundation, and in a space-based air traffic control system that would increase capacity in the Northeast by 40 percent. That would have been a long-term investment strategy instead of a wasted stimulus package.

Whenever one says that the government needs to “invest” in something, almost invariably it means they need to spread the pork around to favored constituencies and groups. That’s the problem I have with a lot of Gingrich’s ideas, because I think occasionally he forgets where the money comes from in the first place. (Well, in this case it’ll be from whoever invests in the securities Fedzilla had to write in order to make that $152 billion come from whole cloth. But most of what the government spends comes from the wallets of you and I.) Newt makes a much better point here though:

The Paulson bailout was initially bad and made worse by the Congressional Democrats. Then, John McCain and the House Republicans moved the bill from terrible to merely bad.

Still, lobbyists are already lining up to get their piece of the Paulson pie. They see a goldmine of new government regulation and involvement in private industry for them to exploit for their clients. One lobbyist told the Hill newspaper: “This will ripple through every piece of major legislation we are looking at next Congress. This is a paradigm shift.”

I like it when great minds think alike. It’s been my contention for some time that all the money in Washington attracts people who want to get it into their hands like chicken farms attract flies. (And the smell is about the same.) But now we have the precedent for bailing out the financial system, just like we had the precedent for our so-called stimulus during the last period of tough economic times – neither were all that effective for more than a short time.

Another pull quote those on the left will enjoy and take out of context is when Newt flat-out states, “Clearly, by any reasonable standard, the Bush-Paulson stewardship of the economy has failed.” Before you folks jump on that, you should read the rest of Newt’s thought, here in context:

Clearly, by any reasonable standard, the Bush-Paulson stewardship of the economy has failed.

But the Barack Obama-Barney Frank-Chris Dodd-Nancy Pelosi-Harry Reid-left-wing policies of big government, high taxes, more litigation, and insider deals for their left-wing special interests will be even worse.

We’ve heard a lot about predatory lenders in this current economic crisis. They deserve their share of the blame. But it’s time to introduce a new term that gets us closer to the real roots of this crisis: Predatory politicians.

Predatory politicians are much more dangerous than predatory lenders. Predatory politicians have the power of the government to coerce you.

Government under Obama, Frank, Dodd, Pelosi and Reid will be government by and for predatory politicians. It will make dealing with predatory lenders seems like a walk in the park.

The banks can’t put you in prison for not paying your mortgage, but Fedzilla in the form of the Internal Revenue Service can put you there for not paying your taxes. And it’s not like Democrats in office haven’t taken the opportunity to peek into FBI files; it’s just my gut feeling that the Obama Administration would make Bill Clinton’s corruption and cronyism look clean in comparison. Nixon’s “enemies list” will be nothing compared to everyone Barack Obama and his far-left allies would want to target.

Gingrich terms the next 4 weeks as the “last chance” for John McCain, but the Senator needs to in essence kick ass and name names starting tonight. I’d say McCain needs to start drinking whatever water Sarah Palin is drinking because Governor Palin has no compunction in telling things like they are, not being politically correct, and making the Beltway elites squirm. Staunch, unapologetic conservatism is the new maverickism, and we need more of it for John McCain to squash the Obama chances come November.

Harris responds to latest attack ad

You know, sometimes I think the Harris campaign monitors monoblogue – either that or he and I really DO think alike on a number of issues. (There’s definitely nothing wrong with that!) After I did this post, wouldn’t you know the Harris weekly update I received has this passage in it:

I am sure many of you have seen the DCCC (Democratic Congressional Campaign) Ad attacking my stance on healthcare, entitled “Is Andy Harris Lonely?” I realize it is important for you to understand the truth of this issue directly from me:

With a degree in health and policy management/health finance and management from Johns Hopkins University along with over 28 years as a woman’s healthcare specialist at Johns Hopkins Hospital, the health and safety of my patients as well as the finacial security of all Marylanders is within my realm of expertise and of utmost importance to me.

The other bill gave midwives the authority to perform many of the same services as OBGYNs. As a physician and associate professor at Johns Hopkins, I know the training midwives go through is nowhere near as extensive as that of an OBGYN.  I was unwilling to risk the health and safety of patients by signing this bill. (For example: this bill permitted midwives to provide procedures such as cancer screening which a midwife has zero training to do. SB100 from 2001).

In short, one bill added an unnecessary mandate that increased the cost of healthcare for all Marylanders.  Maryland already has the highest cost of healthcare in the region. One of the reasons is beacuse (sic) of the 49 mandates the state has placed on health insurance.  Every new mandate increases the cost of insurance everyone has to pay. Almost 90% of insurance plans in Maryland already cover colon cancer screening. This bill added an unnecessary mandate that increased the cost of healthcare for all Marylanders. For the good of all Marylanders, I was not willing to support a mandate which would further increase this already high cost (SB 567 from 2000).

In contrast, my opponent has taken tens of thousands of dollars from trial attorneys who file frivolous lawsuits that increase the cost of healthcare for all Marylanders.

Thank you for taking the time to research the facts on this negative campaign ad. (Emphasis in original.)

You’re welcome, I enjoyed it. And what’s interesting is his reasoning on voting against the cancer screening bill was right in line with mine – it is yet another health insurance mandate that everyone who has a policy pays for regardless of actual need. Perhaps a libertarian argument could be made against his vote on the midwife bill, but he apparently deferred to his experience in the field. We in the architectural profession make a similar argument against licensing interior designers – they’re not as versed in health and safety issues as we are.

Perhaps Andy piled on a little in referring to trial lawyers but it’s well-known that the legal field is backing Kratovil as the medical field backs Harris. Tort reform may not be the entire prescription for bringing down health care costs but it would certainly make a dent in the cost to physicians, who could pass the savings on. (The cynics will of course argue that the doctors would just pocket the savings; however, eventually the market would catch up to the first altruistic practitioner who dropped his prices.)

It’s solid thinking that goes against the political grain, and I’m happy Andy Harris put up his side of the story and fought the DCCC attempt to smear his voting record.

A proper stand

I know we have a major national election in 29 days; however, right on its heels will come the 90 days of terror most call the General Assembly session here in Maryland. It’s never too early to think about the fiscal welfare of Free State citizens and I’m standing (more or less) four-square behind this thinking by the Republicans in our House of Delegates as they formally as a body came out against the Constitutional Amendment for video slot machines and suggested an alternative solution to our continuing budget crisis:

House Republicans today unveiled their budget plan for FY 2010 and announced their opposition to the November 4, 2008 slots constitutional amendment. The Republican plan slows growth in State spending, repeals the O’Malley tax increases, implements a fiscally responsible slots plan, and eliminates the structural deficit.

I’m already liking this because last year they weren’t clear about whether the tax increases Martin O’Malley and his fellow Democrats inflicted on those of us who live, work, or shop in Maryland would be repealed, this time it’s right on top for all to see.

“Maryland’s fiscal problems are not the product of a lack of revenues, but an inherent lack of spending restraint among the majority of its state political leaders”, said House Minority Leader Anthony J. O’Donnell. “Our continued calls for real spending restraint have fallen on deaf ears and it is now abundantly clear that the Governor’s repeated claims of fiscal responsibility have been proven hollow and false. Until the Governor and the Democrat Leadership get serious about spending restraint instead of perpetuating the illusion, Maryland’s fiscal crisis will only get worse.”

Martin O’Malley continues to claim he’s cut over $1 billion in spending – so why did our state budget increase in real dollars? As I continue reviewing the House GOP statement, I’ll see whether they’ll make cuts in the actual number of dollars spent.

“In less than two years Governor O’Malley has spent the surplus, raided every fund, increased taxes at record levels, and has still managed to spend Maryland into the ground”, said Minority Whip Christopher B. Shank. “This new deficit was not inherited – it was created by Governor Martin O’Malley, the Democrat Leadership, and their complete inability to restrain spending. It is time for the Governor to stop blaming others and start taking responsibility for his administration’s spending addiction.”

What was left by Governor Ehrlich was a budget that was balanced, but a structural deficit that was projected if spending continued to increase apace. Ehrlich wasn’t quite as conservative in his last budget as he had been with his prior three; in addition spending mandated by the General Assembly in response to the Thornton case was a sword of Damocles over our budgetary head. Still, the situation was manageable without resorting to the massive tax increases Governor O’Malley and Democrats rammed through on a largely party-line basis.

“The Democrat leadership is selling the myth that passage of the constitutional amendment authorizing slot machines will immediately fix our fiscal problems”, said Delegate O’Donnell. “The reality is that even if the amendment passes the state will not see any significant revenue until 2013 at the earliest. We are facing a $1 billion deficit next year, and we cannot wait three years to address it. There is no will to restrain growth among state leaders; making additional tax increases a real possibility even if the slots amendment is successful. We encourage our fellow citizens to VOTE NO on this unnecessary slots constitutional amendment. Demand that the General Assembly go back to the drawing board and get the citizens the best deal for a change.”

And the House GOP is correct. Why should it take so long to begin collecting revenue?

“In the current economic environment, Maryland citizens are struggling to make ends meet”, said Delegate Steven Schuh. By controlling State spending and implementing a fiscally responsible slots plan, we have a unique opportunity to provide significant tax relief – $1,750 per family – by reversing Governor O’Malley’s unprecedented tax increases of last year and to resolve the State’s fiscal crisis by eliminating deficit spending. Our slots plan calls for awarding slots licenses through a free-market auction process that will bring in $850 million in up-front proceeds. The Governor’s plan calls for allocating slots licenses through a political process at below-market prices, which carries a material risk of unjust enrichment of a few, politically connected special interests.”

You have to like that thinking – we get a large sum of the money up front and much of the rest can be picked up in savings. Just think of what an average Marylander can do with $1,750 and the shot in the arm that would provide.

The Republican plan repeals the O’Malley tax cuts and implements a fiscally responsible slots plan. The GOP slots proposal does not require a constitutional amendment and provides $800 million in up-front revenue from significant licensing fees. The plan puts growth in State spending in line with revenues and eliminates the structural deficit.

Outstanding. I’m liking this better and better. Just tell me where you cut spending.

“The House Republican Caucus has continually advocated for very limited growth in government coupled with a responsible slots program as an alternative to increasing taxes and making draconian cuts to state services”, said Delegate O’Donnell. “Defeating the constitutional amendment and moving forward with our plan not only provides a better deal for Maryland’s citizens, but provides an immediate infusion of $850 million that can fill most of the $1 billion hole this Administration has created.”

That’s a start, and I’m sure the big-time gambling interests are some of the few entities who would be willing and able to drop $850 million into our state coffers. Better them making the investment than us digging it out of our pockets.

“The best part of our plan is the $3.8 billion in tax relief it provides for Maryland’s citizens – $1,750 per household”, said Delegate Gail Bates, the Ranking Republican member of the House Appropriations Committee. “We will be putting money back into the pockets of our working families while restoring true fiscal sanity to the State. This will create jobs and stimulate our economy while restraining the growth in government spending which is what we should have been doing all along.”

And yet the GOP does poorly in Maryland. As a plan this sounds quite logical to me, although I’d like a little more information on where spending would be cut. But I can see where there is some prudence in keeping that powder dry though.

I have nothing against having video lottery terminals in Maryland (well, actually I like traditional slot machines better but that’s a quibble for another time), I just don’t believe that our state Constitution is the place to have them enshrined. It would be difficult to make needed changes as any new locations or an increase in the number of machines would have to be approved by voters statewide. That’s one compelling reason to vote no right there.

And while this seems like an odd time to bring the news out, it shows the Maryland GOP is serious about fiscal responsibility. It’s unfortunate some of their brethren at the national level have problems with the concept – that’s why they’re now a minority too.

Someone likes the bailout

Yes, that professional organization I sort of reluctantly belong to, the American Institute of Architects, has glowingly endorsed the bailout because some of the pork they wanted was included. This came to me from the President of the AIA, Marshall Purnell and CEO Christine McEntee:

(On Friday), President Bush signed into law legislation intended to stabilize the American financial system. This new law seeks to provide the resources necessary to restore solvency to the increasingly tight credit markets and renew confidence in the American economy.

As the markets on Wall Street have struggled over the past few weeks, many of us grew justifiably concerned that the crisis could spread nationwide and affect our current projects, our firms, and our industry as a whole. As banks have restricted lending, many firms that rely on short-term lines of credit to finance operations have grown worried that these credit sources could dry up. And as clients are increasingly delaying payments, this has understandably caused great concern to AIA members nationwide.

The enactment of this law should begin to renew confidence in the economy. Opponents of the bailout have criticized the package as a giveaway to financial firms, while others have called the package an unnecessary and dangerous government intervention into the free market. Without some sort of economic relief, however, most economists agree the economy would have continued to slide deeper into recession, threatening the foundation of the American financial system.

Aside from the provisions designed to improve the financial system, I am pleased to report the new law extends a number of key tax incentives for energy efficiency and renewable sources of energy—long-standing AIA priorities. Specifically, the energy efficiency commercial building tax deduction, a critical federal incentive for green commercial building that was set to expire at the end of the year, will be extended until December 31, 2013. The extension of this deduction has been one of the AIA’s top legislative priorities for nearly two years.

The release goes on to talk about what steps the AIA is undertaking to help architects on their website and asks for input. Well, here’s mine and it’s as easy as reading my site.

It’s no secret that I despise the too-common practice of using the tax code to regulate behavior as well as collecting revenue. The examples Purnell and McEntee cite are but two of the byzantine subchapters of the federal tax code, whereas I’d like to see much more of a consumption tax. That would also help the AIA to achieve its goal of energy efficiency if consumption is taxed; while the organization has gone off the deep end as far as the climate change and sustainability questions are concerned they do have a valid goal in promoting energy efficiency.

In the meantime, we’re stuck with this pork-ridden bailout that will likely cost taxpayers upward of a trillion dollars when all is said and done. (While that’s an impressive figure, we spend that amount in Washington now about every four months. I’m not sure which is the scarier fact.) The problem I see with this is that those inside the Beltway will need to print more money to make this happen and inflation will once again rear its ugly head. Moreover, if Barack Obama is elected and follows through on his promised spending even more money will be vacuumed out of the private sector, where most of us in the architectural field get our clientele. And even though the organization hasn’t officially endorsed one candidate or the other for President, the majority of their PAC’s contributions go to Democrats. (That’s why I won’t donate to their PAC.)

So I’m making yet another note about the political views of the group representing my profession, and it’s another black mark next to their name.

Wicomico County McCain/Palin rally in pictures and text

Yesterday Salisbury’s City Park became a political venue as hundreds celebrated the Republican ticket of John McCain, Sarah Palin, and Andy Harris. As I often do, the pictures will have much of the story but there were other noteworthy items I’m placing in the text portion of this post.

Looking down the hill before the event, you can see a nice crowd was already gathering when I arrived.

State Senator Lowell Stoltzfus hosted the rally and had a special 'guest' by his side.

While this annual event is hosted by State Senator Lowell Stoltzfus, this year he decided to bring the focus to the national ticket. But Stoltzfus, who was described in his introduction as one “who speaks from truth and righteousness” did serve as the master of ceremonies for the event. He brought up the two featured speakers, Congressional candidate and State Senator Andy Harris and two-time candidate for Governor and more recently Bush Administration official Ellen Sauerbrey.

Before the speechmaking commenced, those attending had the opportunity to participate in a live auction of a number of nice items ranging from books to golf and travel packages to the ever-popular in these parts Smith Island cakes. (They’re Maryland’s official state dessert.)

The auction drew quite a bit of interest and raised a nice tidy sum of money for future campaigning.

One thing that wasn’t auctioned off was what you saw in the picture above with Senator Stoltzfus. This allowed him to quip that “Sarah can’t be bought.” It’s interesting to ponder whether there’s any market for John McCain cutouts compared to Palin ones.

This event also brought out most of the local GOP politicians along with a few select state ones. It’s probably fortunate that they were simply introduced for the most part and didn’t take the time to speechify.

On stage left, the elected officials and distinguished guests included (left to right) keynote speaker and former General Assembly member Ellen Sauerbrey, State Senators Allan Kittleman, Andy Harris, and Rich Colburn, and Delegate Richard Sossi.

On stage right were seated mostly local officials, including (left to right) Wicomico County Sheriff Mike Lewis, Wicomico County Council members John Cannon, Joe Holloway, and Gail Bartkovich, along with Delegate Addie Eckardt.

We did hear briefly from representatives of the local GOP youth groups; pictured below is Mark Biehl of the Lower Shore Young Republicans. It’s great to see our youth represented in this way.

Mark Biehl, president of the Lower Shore Young Republicans, was among three youths who spoke about this year's campaign. The LSYR's were restarted earlier this year after a hiatus of a few years.

The final preliminary speaker was State Senator Allan Kittleman, who will become Minority Leader in the next General Assembly session come January. He praised Senator Stoltzfus for his “principled” stances and said that “(had) we listened to Lowell Stoltzfus, we wouldn’t be in our (dire financial) situation,” referring to an alternative spending plan which Kittleman claimed Democrats could support but couldn’t cross the aisle to vote for because of pressure from above.

Allan Kittleman, soon to be Minority Leader in the State Senate, came with praise for the host and made a nice impression on those attending.

While the auction was a nice fundraiser and the food was excellent (particularly the barbequed pork), the people came to whoop it up for John McCain, Sarah Palin, and Andy Harris.

After Lowell introduced the man who he said exhibited integrity and honesty, and who has the “right philosophy” to be our next Congressman, it was time for Andy Harris to continue stating his case for a promotion to Washington, D.C.

State Senator Andy Harris received a warm reception at the rally and I think even Sarah smiled.

Andy Harris has the thumbs-up for the McCain-Palin ticket.

Making it clear that, “we need to change the way Congress does business,” Harris blasted the recent passage of the nearly trillion dollar financial rescue bill as a “bailout for Wall Street” and charged the package was loaded with tax breaks for “special interests.” (Would someone on the Kratovil side like to argue that point?) Washington was “broken”, continued Harris, who then painted his opponent as “not the independent conservative” Frank Kratovil is making himself out to be.

Again turning his complaint to the Democrat-controlled House, he hammered the body for adjourning without doing anything to address the energy situation or illegal immigration. (Actually, Congress accomplished one thing by doing nothing – they allowed the offshore drilling ban to expire. As I noted a few days back though, the oil industry is waiting for a clearer signal from Washington before going whole hog into the exploration efforts.)

Most notably though, Harris predicted that this election would be close enough to be decided by the absentee ballots and beseeched all of us to “win this election on the ground.”

Before introducing Ellen Sauerbrey, we were surprised to hear from another speaker who called in to send his regards. On the phone, former Lieutenant Governor and GOPAC head Michael Steele exhorted the gathering to “work hard” for the election of Andy Harris. “I cannot tell you enough how important the election of Andy Harris is,” remarked Steele.

As our surrogate speaker for McCain/Palin, Sauerbrey – who “should’ve been Governor” according to Stoltzfus, referring to the 1994 election – was pleased that she “can dabble in politics again” after serving in the State Department for several years. After praising Andy Harris as a “stalwart conservative” who “can be fully trusted” in Congress, she turned her remarks first to Vice-Presidential nominee Sarah Palin. Ellen told us what we already knew, that the GOP was “excited and elated” about the addition of Palin to the ticket and, quoting Michael Reagan, she said that “I saw my dad again, only he was a she.”

Keynote speaker Ellen Sauerbrey makes a point during her speech.

Sauerbrey then went on to describe the treatment Sarah has received from the drive-by media, asking where the outrage was about Palin’s personal e-mail account being hacked as opposed to the media-induced “Troopergate” scandal involving her family. And somehow family was not off limits in her case. Those “hysterical” attacks on Palin were because, Ellen opined, she presents a “fundamental threat to Democrats” – not just for four years, but for a whole voting bloc they’ve come to depend on in the women’s vote. So you get things said about her like the Philadelphia Inquirer calling Sarah’s views “radical” and “nutty.”

Ellen then talked about the “experience” factor in the race. It was “experience,” she claimed, “(which) brought us to the brink of financial collapse,” referring to policies pushed by former Presidents Carter and Clinton. More important was the “courage” Palin has shown thus far.

The crowd stuck around for most of the event, certainly they liked the Palin references.

To be honest, I know she also praised John McCain but I think the crowd was more attentive to the red meat being tossed to them regarding Sarah Palin. Ellen did assail Barack Obama for his associations with people like Tony Rezko, the Rev. Jeremiah Wright, and Bill Ayers, but much of what she said about McCain in her conclusion was quoting from a column attributed to writer Thomas Sowell but was written by someone unknown.

This is what you call the campaign taking the high road.

I just liked the picture I got with the sun shining and flags waving in the breeze. It's my artsy photography shot.

The event drew about 300 people but neither one of the two local television stations nor the Daily Times bothered to send anyone to cover the event. It’s typical for this practice here in Salisbury – anytime the Democrats do something it makes news while the GOP toils in relative obscurity until the votes are counted. That’s our goal, to win Wicomico County for our team and let the other counties take care of their part of the bargain.

Kudos should go to Bonnie Luna for putting the event together…she even put me to work playing food server and cleaning up afterward. (Hey, I got to serve Senator Harris his pork barbeque.) It was a lot of labor but I enjoyed helping out.

Switching to the ‘tooting my own horn’ department:

You may notice that my BlogNetNews overall rank here in Maryland is number 1. I think this is the fifth time I’ve achieved that milestone, but something that’s not as apparent is that I’m the first person I know of to score a trifecta – not only is my rank first overall but its also first on the per-post rating and among those bloggers considered conservative. (The latter is nothing unusual, I’ve been first on that measure for several weeks in a row.) So I’ll enjoy the week at the top and see if I can make it two next Sunday.

Minority report

If you believe the polls, most are saying that Senator Joe Biden outperformed Governor Sarah Palin in Thursday night’s Vice-Presidential debate. However, discerning readers should know that these polls aren’t scientific in nature – especially if they’re internet-based. So I’m going to give you the other side, beginning with the Maryland Republican Party:

After (Thursday) night’s Vice Presidential Debate, Maryland Republican Party Chairman Jim Pelura released the following statement:

“Governor Palin clearly showed that she is ready to lead as Vice President of the United States. She won this debate, besting Joe Biden in the areas of energy, taxes, the economy, foreign policy, and even education” Chairman Pelura said.  “Governor Palin also did a great job of contrasting Barack Obama’s record of voting to raise taxes, opposing the surge in Iraq, and proposing to meet unconditionally with the leaders of state sponsors of terror with John McCain’s record of fighting for lower taxes, working across party lines to put our country first, and moral clarity in our foreign policy.”

“The differences between the Obama-Biden ticket and the McCain-Palin ticket could not have been clearer,” continued Pelura.  “The American people saw stark contrasts in style and worldview. They saw Joe Biden, a Washington insider and a 36-year Senator who often bent the truth during the debate, and Governor Palin, a Washington outsider and a maverick reformer. Governor Palin was direct, forceful and a breath of fresh air.”

Senator McCain and Governor Palin have a bi-partisan record of accomplishment that Barack Obama and Joe Biden simply don’t have. John McCain has fought to shake up Washington D.C. and Sarah Palin has spent her time in office shaking up government in Alaska. Barack Obama has spent his time in office running for President. With John McCain as President and Sarah Palin as Vice President, we can rest easy knowing that they will be fighting for hard-working families and small businesses every day,” concluded Chairman Pelura.

I can’t argue with that, although I only happened to catch the back half of the debate. During the part I watched, all Biden kept doing besides overacting on the part about losing his wife and daughter was attempt to tie John McCain and George W. Bush together. I enjoyed how Sarah put Slow Joe in his place about looking backward instead of forward. Certainly many facets of President Bush’s two terms have left me wanting, but I’m also sure that neither Al Gore nor John Kerry would have done any better and probably left us far worse off. And I’d certainly put more trust in someone who’s served in an executive capacity if the unthinkable happens than I would a guy who’s never run anything bigger than a Senate staff.

And after Katie Couric took the time to make Governor Palin look as bad as she could during her interview with Sarah, it’s encouraging to see someone standing up for her. I’m pleased to embed this video from some friends of mine:

Another reason to like Governor Palin is her fighting spirit. I’d love to have John McCain announce he’s pulling out of Maryland or Delaware just so we could get Sarah Palin to this side of the country. (Governor Bobby Jindal of Louisiana would be an interesting speaker to come stump this way too.) Instead we’ll have former candidate for Governor here in Maryland Ellen Sauerbrey as our speaker at the McCain/Palin rally I’ll be attending shortly down at Salisbury’s City Park. But I’ll have my camera there nonetheless and see what kind of stories I can come up with.

While the partisan media wants us to believe that the election of Barack Obama is a fait accompli and Frank Kratovil’s supporters would love you to think that Andy Harris is too extreme for the First District, I beg to differ and you know what? I suspect I’ll be proven correct when it’s all said and done.

Just as a heads-up, I may actually have more posts than normal next week assuming my work schedule allows, all because I have about 30 items in my “blog ideas” mailbox and I’d like to get through the backlog before we’re too close to the election. (This post knocked off two of them.) It’s more reading for you.

Also, I’m trying to ascertain whether my Red County site has polling capability – if so I’ll begin doing some there because I don’t have that plugin on WordPress. (The other site uses MovableType.) It’s a work in progress, I asked the main editor who brought me on board about it yesterday evening.

It’s all more things to look forward to.

‘Carol’ing is a little earlier this year

Something which has been much-hyped in conservative circles over the past couple months is a new movie called An American Carol. Essentially the movie is a spoof of Michael Moore and some of his films, and the marketing angle that is being played is that it’s “almost criminal” in Hollywood to be conservative.

A couple months back, I introduced a short video that was created by the Zucker brothers, who made themselves famous with movies like Airplane! and the Naked Gun series. David Zucker is the brains behind American Carol and obviously he and the movie’s investors are playing to what some may consider a niche market. I’ll let Washington Times (and other outlets) writer Frank Gaffney pick up the story:

It’s election season, so it is appropriate that an important vote will be cast this weekend. No, I am not talking about early balloting in Ohio or Oregon for the November presidential race. Rather, this vote is a national one- and it will be taking place at a theater near you.

This weekend, the returns will be tallied on box-office sales of the opening weekend of An American Carol – a marvelously politically incorrect take-off on the timeless Dickensian morality tale. Set around the Fourth of July in contemporary America rather than a Victorian Yuletide, it has been created and directed by my friend, the zany and wildly successful David Zucker.

This Carol’s Scrooge character, played by Kevin Farley, is a dead-ringer for radical leftist filmmaker Michael Moore. The ghosts who visit him – including John F. Kennedy, George S. Patton, and George Washington – labor to teach their subject about the greatness of this country, the absurdity of the “Blame-America-First” Left’s toxic hatred for it and the opening the latter provides for Islamists bent on our destruction. Punctuated by trademark Zucker slapstick humor (his other credits include Airplane!, The Naked Gun, Scary Movie 3, and assorted sequels), the movie makes a deadly serious point: Everything is on the line in this War for the Free World and those of us who prize our freedoms will lose them if we fail to protect them against enemies foreign and domestic.

In a sense the pilgrimage Zucker chronicles is an autobiographical one. He had his own epiphany after 9/11, prompting him to break with Hollywood’s dominant left-wing politics and reflexive contempt for our government, military, and people (even, amazingly, the movie-going ones). With the passion of a convert, he uses his skills to poke fun at his industry, academia, political and media elites and such mainstays of the radical Left as the ACLU, MoveOn.org, Rosie O’Donnell and, of course, Michael Moore.

Zucker and Farley are joined in this apostasy by other accomplished stars, including Jon Voight, Kelsey Grammer, James Woods, and Robert Davi. Their courage in goring so many of Hollywood’s sacred cows is palpable given that community’s notorious practice of ensuring that those who are shunned never “eat lunch” (read, work) in that town again.

Amidst the sight-gags, the slapstick (often literally), the absurd moments and hilarious quips, there is a scene that is transcendently important and deeply affecting. After the protagonist has proven infuriatingly resistant to mentoring from JFK and Patton, he is given a tour of St. Paul’s Chapel near Wall Street by its most famous parishioner, President Washington. Jon Voight does not act this part; he channels the father of our country. Moore-as-Scrooge comes face to face with the carnage of 9/11 and confronts at last the necessity of taking responsibility for his own destructive actions. It is one of the most powerful pieces of cinematic artistry I have ever seen.

An American Carol is more than a wonderfully entertaining film. It is more even than a forceful political statement on behalf of the values and institutions that have made America, as the bumper sticker has it, thanks to the brave, the land of the free.

David Zucker’s new film is also an opportunity – a chance to show Hollywood in the only way it understands that the people of this country admire those prepared unashamedly to stand up for us and the country we hold dear.

For the film industry, opening weekend box office returns determine whether a film is deemed to be a success or not. A big turn-out demonstrates an appeal that will result in more movie theaters showing the film and for longer runs than will otherwise be the case.

Consequently, we have a chance to do something more than properly reward David Zucker and his gutsy team by turning out this weekend to see their movie. In the process, we can demonstrate in a most tangible and impactful way to others in their industry that there is a market not only for this film but for others who revere this country, rather than demean it.

In short, I urge you to take not just your family and friends to see An American Carol. Ask everyone you know to do the same. If possible, do it this weekend and thereby vote in a contest that may prove to be nearly as far-reaching as that whose balloting will take place a month later.

Perhaps I gave away half the plot by using all of Gaffney’s piece, but we will indeed see if the marketing works in the case of An American Carol; especially since it’s opening on the same weekend as Bill Maher’s Religulous, which questions the role of religion in life and is more of an “establishment” movie with a typcial Hollywood viewpoint. While it may well be a box office smash, my bet is that the success of An American Carol will be dismissed in much the same way as Mel Gibson’s The Passion of the Christ box office revenues were. It’s par for the course for conservatism, so we’ll just have to enjoy yet another well-kept secret from the elites who think they know it all.

Fact checking ‘Record’

Yesterday the Frank Kratovil for Congress campaign decided to go negative, just as I figured they did it first. Here’s the ad they dubbed “Record”:

What interested me the most was the so-called poor environmental record they tagged Andy Harris with, citing a number of votes he’d taken since 1999. I took the opportunity to look up some of these bills and found out one of them made it into my monoblogue Legislative Scorecard for this season. The other bills Kratovil cited were reintroductions of a bill that didn’t make it through previous sessions. I’ll begin with my description of one bill Harris properly voted against, this year’s HB1253.

HB1253/SB844Chesapeake and Atlantic Coastal Bays Critical Area Protection Program – Administrative and Enforcement Provisions

Why I’d vote no: Perhaps the bill has merit in making enforcement more consistent statewide; however, I have objections to doubling the buffer area of land in certain instances, the “soft shoreline” provisions, and the overly punitive nature of penalties. Originally the bill would have allowed the state free rein to inspect construction sites as well, one of the amendments addressed this issue.

Disposition: HB1253 passed the House of Delegates 119-15 (Vote #1088), passed the Senate 41-6 (Vote #1011), and was approved by Governor O’Malley on April 24, 2008.

You’ll notice that Harris had a little company in his vote, included in that company is one of our local Senators, Lowell Stoltzfus. Harris did vote the bill out of committee, but obviously Frank Kratovil’s campaign doesn’t count the committee vote. This bill as crossfiled and a previous version are three of the nine bills Frank cites.

Another bill cited in five different versions was a bill debaring people from state contracts for certain violations of law. I’ll allow Governor Ehrlich to speak as to why this bill was worth voting against; this is from his veto letter in 2003:

I believe that the approval of Senate Bill 122 would have a chilling effect on the companies wishing to do business with the State, particularly in light of the fact that there is no distinction made between willful violations and minor violations (such as accidents) that may occur without the knowledge or intent of the contractor. The threat of debarment may cause companies to shy away from State contracts, which, in turn, would have an adverse effect on competition and negatively impact the price of competitively bid procurements. Additionally, the inclusion of contiguous jurisdictions in the civil violations section raises possible equal protection issues. A contractor may violate the law in 46 other states and the District of Columbia and be immune from debarment, but would be denied immunity from debarment if the violation occurred in a state contiguous to Maryland. While a court may find that this provision is rationally related to protecting an interest of the State, it undoubtedly will invite litigation and complicate the procurement process.

Senate Bill 122 does not enhance the Board of Public Works’ ability to protect the integrity of the State procurement process, and it complicates the ability of the State to secure efficiently and fairly necessary State contracts. I have pledged to the citizens of Maryland to deliver a streamlined, more efficient government, and I intend to keep that promise.

Again, Andy had plenty of company because it was essentially a party-line vote in each of the five cases cited in the commercial.

The final vote Kratovil counts against Andy Harris was voting against increasing penalties for certain environmental violations. While that doesn’t seem good in and of itself, this also gave the courts the power to compel owners to fix violations (see the final page).

Now let’s talk about the League of Conservation Voters. They seem to have a problem with Andy Harris voting against the following (among other items):

  • an amendment to weaken the job-killing, so-called Global Warming Solutions act;
  • the cap-and-trade auctions (read: sticking it to utility providers) like the one we had last week;
  • the Critical Areas legislation I wrote about above;
  • the Renewable Portfolio Standard, which is a budget-busting mandate for utility providers, and;
  • wetlands and waterway permit fees – yet another fee for developers to pass along to prospective homeowners.

Guess what? I have no problem with him voting no and right-thinking voters shouldn’t have an issue with it either. You know, I’d comment on Frank Kratovil’s legislative record but – oh wait, he doesn’t have one.

And since I’m in for a penny, I’m in for a pound. Here’s the commercial the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee dumped big money into Kratovil’s campaign for:

Again, I looked up the bills in question and both of these are health insurance coverage mandates. It’s mandates like these that make health insurance so expensive. Think of it this way – if I had true choice in my health insurance and could get it with specific coverages I desire, obviously I have no need for OB/GYN services. A younger person may not desire the cancer screening that the other bill makes all health insurance policies in Maryland feature.

Oh, and that $400,000 in health care contributions? It’s a drop in the bucket compared to that $1.6 million the DCCC is dumping into Frank’s campaign. Do you think they’re buying independence? You know, it’s too bad that question didn’t come up in the debate because I really wanted to see Frank squirm out of that one.

Is profit the next entitlement?

As I finally sit down to write this evening, the Senate moments ago passed their version of the $700 billion bailout bill, with the House now slated to vote on Friday. Assuming the House opposition crumbles in the wake of electiontime politics, it soon may be the law of the land that profits are privatized and risk is socialized. Isn’t that known as fascism?

Maybe it doesn’t meet the true definition of the term but this takes a trend of government intervention into other markets like energy and health care and finally seals the fate of our financial companies. No longer will they have to worry about poor investment choices, for Uncle Sam will be right there holding their hand and shoveling whatever amount they need to make it right into their accounts.

But it’s not like we’ve never been here before, as President Carter signed the bailout of Chrysler into law in 1980. In that case, money was simply guaranteed to the company to avoid its collapsing and eventually the loans were paid off. More recently the Big Three came hat in hand to the federal government for another infusion of cash in order to design and build cars to meet the new and tougher CAFE standards. In both cases, rather than allow the market to take its course the taxpayers were tapped for the money. Obviously it worked out all right in the case of Chrysler as the company still exists (albeit with several changes in ownership groups) but only time will tell regarding the latest effort by Washington to prop up Detroit’s (and Toledo’s, and Lordstown’s, and other cities all over the country who depend on the auto industry) sagging fortunes.

In this newest bailout scenario it’s different. Instead of a tangible product which is produced, this infusion of funding courtesy of John Q. Taxpayer (via securities likely to be purchased by China) is propping up an industry that simply exists on paper. It’s those pieces of paper which state that Homeowner X is liable to Bank of Y for repayment on a loan of Z dollars that led to the problem because Bank of Y was told by the federal government to loan Homeowner X the money despite the fact his or her credit wouldn’t necessarily support it. In some respects, this bailout is the price banks are exacting because of ill-considered regulations much like Detroit and its auto industry is remitting its payoff because of other ill-considered regulations.

The larger question to me is the precedent set. There are many on my side who say, yeah, we’re forced to fix this issue now – but it can’t happen again. Well, having lived on this planet for a decent number of years and being somewhat of a student of history I can flat out guarantee you that indeed this will happen again – UNLESS we reassess the situation of how our government functions as a whole.

Last night’s debate was a case in point. We had the Democrat decrying the “greed” of Wall Street, conveniently forgetting that many of the key players there are Democrats – think Jon Corzine as one example, Robert Rubin as another. While the Republican made me cringe when he also mentioned “Wall Street fat cats”, by and large he blamed liberal policy for the mess and that’s much closer to the truth. However, for all the faults of his party, the Libertarian got it right when he said that both parties had been running us into the ground for the past fifty years. I say this because, with some exception for the Reagan Administration and a brief hiatus after the Contract With America, government at all levels has become the source of wealth for more and more Americans at all economic strata.

I state this not just because of the patently obvious handout programs like welfare or Social Security, but in the way regulations are written at the behest of a large corporation or group thereof. Perhaps your little hometown bank was pleased that certain regulations were written in certain ways, but the ones who really cleaned up on the edicts handed down from an alphabet soup of agencies and bureaus were those behemoths who had the large amount of cash necessary to make things go their way and eventually bought out the hometown bank. While it’s a maxim of capitalism that the bigger fish generally have the resources to devour smaller companies sooner or later, I don’t think it’s the place of government to take steps to encourage or discourage market activity. Much as they regulate individual behavior too often via the tax code, the same goes for corporations too.

The large financial entities have slowly but surely shifted the playing field into one where they are simultaneously maximizing profit, swallowing up smaller competitors, and minimizing their risk by unloading their liabilities onto the taxpayer in the name of saving our economy. Coupled with their willingness to help out other large entities like the Big Three, it makes me wonder where the cutoff is for assurance of financial aid if things get tough – do you have to be a Fortune 500 company to qualify? In that case, pity the workers who depend on number 501 for their livelihood because it’s tough toenails for them if the place goes belly-up.

There’s a part of me which fears that this may be the tipping point, a point of no return insofar as American capitalism goes. When one no longer has risk but is assured a good return on investment that Ponzi scheme can’t long be maintained without more investors at the bottom. And when those investors are forced to participate under threat of fines or jail time it creates less of an incentive to excel and a much more difficult situation to extricate one’s self from.

It may be hyperbole to declare this as liberty’s last chance, but as more people see their livelihoods become more dependent on things which occur in the nation’s capital, there’s less hope that any change would come peacefully. As a whole, Americans used to demand better from themselves and their country but far fewer actually want to put in the work to achieve that cause now. More and more, the chains of regulation and taxation bind those who still seek success on their own terms and they’re not going to lay loosely on any of us when the changeover from capitalism to socialism, fascism, or whatever -ism we seem to be headed toward is complete.

1st CD debate at Salisbury University

Tonight our part of the district was able to listen to a “dialogue about the pressing issues of our time” courtesy of Salisbury University and their PACE (Institute for Public Affairs and Civic Engagement) group. Three of the contestants on the ballot were there:

The three Congressional candidates debating at Salisbury University gather their thoughts before the event. From left to right, Democrat Frank Kratovil, Republican Dr. Andy Harris, and Libertarian Dr. Richard Davis.

The debate, which was moderated by Don Rush of Delmarva Public Radio, consisted of four parts: an opening statement, questions which were presumably written by the moderator, questions selected from student submissions, and a closing statement. In all there were nine questions, with each candidate getting time for both a response and a rebuttal to each question. The event was also taped for later broadcast on PAC14, the local community affairs cable channel.

What I’ve decided to do is devote a paragraph or two to each question, along with the opening and closing statements. At the end I’ll add my thoughts on how the debate went overall.

Opening statement:

Rather than a true opening statement to introduce himself, Richard Davis instead went over some of the basics of what his Libertarian Party stands for – less government and more personal freedom, along with stressing a non-interventionist foreign policy. Andy Harris decided on a more traditional opening, bringing up a quick bio before terming himself the only candidate with a record of change, who “took on the Republican establishment” not just in this year’s primary but in winning his State Senate seat back in 1998 as well. Frank Kratovil also brought up his family and avocation before announcing that he was “tired of politics as usual” and that to him, principle was more important than party.

Questions:

After that few minutes of introduction, it was time for questioning. The first question was whether the candidates would have voted for yesterday’s failed bailout.

Davis led off by pleading a slight bit of ignorance, having not seen the bill in question, but based on the reports he’s seen he would have voted no. He wasn’t sure the bailout would help but expressed confidence in the American economy to get through this crisis.

Asking “how do we move forward”, Kratovil also would have voted no and noted that even this was an issue where both sides couldn’t come together, blaming “corporate greed” and a “lack of oversight” for the troubled financial situation. What he did want in a bailout package was one where taxpayers would accrue benefits in the long run, but “hold companies accountable” as well.

Harris also chastised the “fat cats of Wall Street” who didn’t play by the rules, but drew derisive laughter from some in the auditorium when he blamed the “failed liberal policies of the past.” The “inconvenient truth” was that the problem was the result of “liberal Democrats” and their policies.

On rebuttal, Davis argued that the system couldn’t be supported and that it was time to rein in government. Meanwhile, Kratovil opined that the audience should “count how many times Andy Harris says liberal” during the evening and hammered on the familiar mantra of Harris being supported by the Club For Growth with $1 million of bundled contributions while also stating again about not wanting “tax breaks for CEO’s.” Harris shot back that Kratovil had not signed the Americans for Tax Reform pledge against raising taxes and had ironically taken thousands in contributions from defense attorneys. He also spoke about not being a blanket deregulator, pointing to an effort to reregulate utilities in Maryland.

Citing a poll that showed Americans felt the Iraqi invasion was “not worth it”, moderator Rush asked the trio if going into Iraq was the right thing and whether we should withdraw.

Kratovil said in no uncertain terms that going to Iraq as “occupiers” was a “mistake” and that we “went in alone” to boot. However, he did not favor a specific timetable after looking at “neutral” information. When we do withdraw it should be in a “responsible” way and we should not forget the care of the veterans returning, particularly in mental health issues. In the future he called for “aggressive diplomacy” in foreign affairs.

While Harris sort of sidestepped a bit about the going into Iraq part, he stressed that this was part of a greater War on Terror and that the “experts in the field” should decide when the time is right for withdrawal. He also was critical of Kratovil’s use of the term “occupiers” because to him we were liberators, freeing Iraq from a theocracy.

Davis stated that there was no declaration of war against Iraq so we were wrong to go in there. Perhaps we freed them from a dictator but other countries have dictators too. He thought that one possible solution was to figure out how quickly we could withdraw and then let the Iraqi people decide whether we should stay or leave.

To rebut, Kratovil asked if we were “moving in the right direction” with our policies and that we “failed in promoting foreign policy with aggressive diplomacy.” Harris replied that as a veteran he knew that the goal of a military commander was to stay no longer than necessary and that we should be proud of our Iraqi work, which was now “on the right course.” Davis chided our having troops in Iraq – but also being in Bosnia and other places on the globe in conflicts started under both Republican and Democratic administrations.

The next question dealt with balancing environmental concerns with agricultural and economic ones.

Harris told the audience that it was Federal action which was needed for Chesapeake Bay to “reverse its course” of being more polluted. It was one problem that couldn’t be attacked on a state level but needed regional cooperation. He talked about his help in ending the practice of dumping dredge spoils into the Bay early on in his first Senate term and that the federal government was a main source of the Chesapeake’s problems, asserting that the largest point source polluter is the sewage treatment plant for Washington, D.C.

Davis figuratively shrugged his shoulders and wistfully said, “I wish I had an answer for the Bay.” He did point out that Lake Erie could be an example to follow and one other tactic would be for individuals to take polluters to court.

Telling his supporters that Andy Harris “doesn’t get it”, Kratovil blasted a number of votes Harris had made in the State Senate, finishing with a claim that Harris has the “sixth worst” environmental record in the General Assembly. He also tied protecting the environment with economic viability for the region.

For his rebuttal, Harris directed Frank Kratovil to “stop listening to the lobbying groups” and claimed Frank was “misrepresenting” his record. Davis correctly noted that every year brought more bills intended to clean up the Bay, but there was little improvement to show for all that government. And while Kratovil tossed out the notion that “reasonable people could disagree”, Andy Harris was “not reasonable” in balancing business against the environment.

Next up was a question on gasoline prices and energy independence.

According to Davis, he was “not sure there’s a solution based on the price” in part because of inflated dollars and global competition. There were a lot of solutions that were out there for alternatives, but he decried how the government sometimes played favorites and we were losing out on possible options because of this.

Domestic drilling was “part of the answer” according to Kratovil, but we needed to have both short- and long-term goals and “stop depending on oil.” He compared the effort necessary to that of our moon launch, and ticked down a list of solutions which included ending “tax breaks” for the oil industry, closing the “loophole” of speculation, increasing automotive efficiency (CAFE standards), and investing in renewable energy.

Harris spoke about his support for biodiesel and ethanol, but said America had turned from “energy leader” to “energy follower” over the past few decades. Sure, conservation and alternative energy have their place but we “can’t take oil and gas off the table” either. He charged that Kratovil has “changed his tune” about drilling and that he “likes taxes” too.

In rebutting the other two speakers, Davis talked about changes already occurring in the market like windmills being allowed in more places, driving less, and solar panels. Kratovil charged that Andy Harris didn’t believe in a government role for the energy situation and that incentives were needed to change behavior and add supplies. Curiously, Harris went off the page here and criticized Kratovil’s record as a prosecutor, partially in response to Frank Kratovil’s attacks on Harris and his ideas for health care based on his experience as a physician.

As it turned out, the next question was on the very subject of health insurance and support for universal health care.

Kratovil told the group that “we need to make progress” on the 47 million he claimed were uninsured after reacting to Andy Harris’s claims, purporting that “I hit with facts” when attacked. He also stated we have a “right to health coverage” and that “everyone must be insured.” He also vowed to cut costs by increasing the pool of insured and cutting the bureaucracy.

As one in the field, Harris understood where health care is failing; however, his idea to cut a significant portion of their costs was embodied in tort reform. In short, health insurance needed to be “personal, portable, accessible, and affordable” – besides, there was “nothing that government runs better than the private sector.”

We all want to live forever, said Davis, but we don’t want to pay for it. His idea for insurance was to focus it on the areas needed. You don’t have auto insurance to pay for an oil change but in case of an accident; hence the idea of just having catastrophic medical insurance.

In his response, Kratovil cited a number of votes where he percieved Andy Harris was working against expanding health care and wanted to bring all the parties together to find a solution. Harris countered that you “don’t pass bills (simply) because they sound good” and stated that many of the programs he voted against would have duplicated other state services. “Bureaucracy never treated a patient,” he said. Davis decided to pass on a rebuttal.

At this point, we got a break as moderator Don Rush had finished his line of questions. It was noteworthy to me that Harris and Davis stayed on stage while Kratovil went offstage to talk with some of his staffers.

It was time for student questions, with the first asking about whether the federal government should have records of who owns guns, support for the Second Amendment and being allowed to carry guns on campus.

Harris put his answer relatively simply, as he understood the importance of the Bill of Rights allowing lawabiding citizens to keep and bear arms, period, end of sentence. He also stated support for an expanded concealed carry law in Maryland and sponsored legislation to that effect.

Davis also was an “absolute believer” in the Second Amendment, and that his right was “infringed by the state of Maryland.”

Not surprisingly, Kratovil joined the pro-Second Amendment chorus, but added we should focus on lawbreakers and enforce the laws on the books, some of which weren’t being enforced.

Harris began the rebuttal by restating his support from the NRA and inviting Frank Kratovil to become a member too. Davis related the story of his son, who was fortunate enough to be away for the semester when the shootings occurred at Virginia Tech. Had someone else with a gun been there, the loss of life may not have been so great, he noted. Kratovil thought the issue was best left to the states and their respective institutions.

Next up was a question about undocumented workers.

Since the previous question concerned hunting to a small extent, Davis quipped that you couldn’t hunt undocumented workers, but those who broke the law should be deported. The illegal immigration conflict made it harder to bring in legal workers as well, he opined.

“One reason” Kratovil ran, he said, was the influx of illegal immigrants. More money was needed at the local level for the problem. But he also told the gathering that one of our greatest strengths was our diversity, but another was being a nation of laws. He also mentioned working in Annapolis to make driving without a license a jailable offense.

After reminding Frank Kratovil that the Bill of Rights outlined items pertaining to the federal government, Harris said that the Eastern Shore needed legal immigrants and they should be given more opportunities to come here legally. He also reminded the people watching that Frank Kratovil expressed support for the amnesty bill that was halted in Congress last year and would have voted in its favor.

Because Davis again skipped a chance for rebuttal, Kratovil immediately could counter that it was not Andy Harris’s task to define terms like “liberal” or “amnesty”; instead he favored streamlining the legal immigration process and consequences for employers who hire undocumented workers. But Harris again stated there was a clear difference between the two on that amnesty bill issue, and asked where Frank Kratovil was when he fought against the state of Maryland continuing to give drivers’ licenses to illegals.

Another student question asked how the three would appeal to voters who previously supported Wayne Gilchrest (who lost in the GOP primary) for 18 years.

Kratovil hoped to “carry on Gilchrest’s environmental tradition” if elected and that constituent services were an “important responsibility.” He added that Andy Harris was running against him, not Governor O’Malley or Washington liberals.

Harris pointed out the bipartisan support he received from his district as proof of constituent service and remarked that he defeated Gilchrest in the primary because Wayne had become “out of touch” with the district, adding that Gilchrest had endorsed Barack Obama in the Presidential race and questioning the type of Commander-in-Chief Barack would be.

Davis simply made the statement that his job would be to “defend my constituents from the federal government.”

None of the candidates took the time for rebuttal to this question so we reached the final question of the evening. It asked about the effect of the bailout on college students.

Harris talked initially about legislation he sponsored to prevent tuition increases from exceeding the rate of inflation, but also noted that the effect on student loans would be to make them less forgiving and that the market needed to have some liquidity restored.

Davis was bluntly honest and told those present that “we have no clue” about the effects of the bailout.

For his part, Kratovil warned of “dire consequences” if no solution was reached and that it was “time to put an end to extreme partisanship.” We needed to focus on policies to help families and not Wall Street.

In the final rebuttal period of the evening, Davis put it simply – we’ve spent ourselves to bankruptcy and it was time to make cuts in the federal government. Harris did Richard one better, saying it was time to eliminate the federal Department of Education. On the other hand, Kratovil chided Harris for voting against educational proposals like reducing class sizes at the 1st and 2nd grade level, then spoke about the need for “incentives to hard-working families.”

Closing statement:

Richard Davis made his case for office by telling us that the two major parties had “run us into the ground for fifty years” and that perhaps it was time to consider a minor party guy.

Andy Harris pointed out a number of differences between himself and Frank Kratovil – positions on taxation, spending, an “all of the above” energy policy, and amnesty to name a few which were discussed. He also mentioned that Kratovil was against school choice. One other anecdote Andy shared was being told by a fellow legislator to “stop reading the bills” and just vote – but that wasn’t his style.

The last word was from Frank Kratovil. There was “enough blame to go around” for our situation and we “need change.” Harris was supported by Wall Street interests while Frank favored financial responsibility through eliminating the “breaks” Exxon/Mobil and Wall Street executives were getting. We “need bipartisanship,” he concluded.

And that’s where I about threw up. I was already pretty pissed sitting there because all Frank had to talk about was a number of class envy issues. It’s not Wall Street that’s the problem because those executives make their money by bringing a lot of the rest of us the ability to retire at an early age or enjoy our prosperity in whatever ways we desire. I think Frank tends to forget the solid economy we’ve enjoyed for most of the period since Ronald Reagan became President – remember those consecutive years of growth? I think some of these executives may have had a little to do with that.

I will tip my hat to Frank for one thing – he had a pretty good ground game at the event. Here’s another picture to illustrate.

The young lady on the left was passing out the little Kratovil lapel stickers while the table on the right was brimming with Kratovil literature and stickers. I politely passed on the former and think I have most of the latter literature for reference already.

The young lady was trying to back out of the picture but I wanted her in the shot! It’s a case study for future reference. One thing I didn’t take a picture of was the busload of supporters Kratovil’s campaign brought, which made the crowd probably more pro-Kratovil than the public at large would be. (But it will sound good on television.) I did notice some Harris items afterward, but I don’t know when they arrived.

I’ll make no bones about it, I’m a Harris supporter. The drop that Kratovil’s people got on Andy’s was a little worrisome but this can be corrected. I was a little more perturbed about Harris going sideways into the prosecutorial job Frank Kratovil is doing; allegedly Frank and his staff are not pushing all that hard to convict some of those who he’s paid to. Perhaps that charge has its place in a closing statement, but bringing that up when he did made him look a little bit desperate and Andy’s so correct on the issues there should be no need. Others thought Harris came across as arrogant but having spoken to him on several occasions I can vouch for the fact it’s not the case.

One shame of the format tonight was that I had already written questions I’d like answered and they didn’t take audience questions. So I have three queries here that I don’t want to go to waste; maybe the next forum can use them and let me know how they were answered.

  1. Where candidates receive their financial support has been an issue in this campaign. My question is why is it so terrible to take contributions from individuals acting in concert who support lower taxes for all, modernizing Social Security, enacting tort reform, school choice, and free trade while thinking it’s perfectly okay to accept money from entities who wish to deny those who are considering whether to join or not the right to a secret ballot?
  2. All three candidates are running to one extent or another on the mantra of “change” yet you’ll only be one of 435 Congressmen and also lowest on the seniority totem pole. With that said, what change is your highest priority and how can you make that happen?
  3. While growth is a local issue, your position at the federal table can help make or break our regional efforts at improving the Eastern Shore. What steps would you advocate to assist our efforts in economic improvement?

There is one final item I’ll touch on, and that happened about 11 hours before the debate began. This morning Frank Kratovil appeared on the AM Salisbury radio program, and host Bill Reddish questioned him on several issues:

On the bailout: In the interview, Frank admitted to “mixed views” on the bailout, but wanted to focus on how we got here and to him, he was “tired of Wall Street greed.” (See, that class envy bullshit started at 7:40 this morning.) As he would repeat later, there’s enough blame to go around and we “need to move forward” while we “really look at” what Wall Street executives are making. Still, this was “not a party issue.” And just to hammer the class envy point home, Frank opined that “greed is what’s killing the country.”

On oil prices: Here Frank changed his tune somewhat from earlier interviews, now claiming we “need to increase our domestic supply” but also as he said tonight curb the speculators and invest in alternative fuels.

He also claimed in the ten-minute interview that illegal immigration was a “pet peeve” of his.

So that brings an end to a day of First District politics. With all this writing, I’m going to skip the usual afternoon post and return this evening with my thoughts on the bailout.