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.

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.

Outdoing each other in the wrong way

On Thursday I received an interesting release from the National Taxpayers Union. I’m pleased that it’s a private entity figuring this stuff out, I guess those who donate to the group are paying for the staffer or two who has to sit through watching the news videos and spend the rest of their time reading all of the press releases to ascertain what new spending program comes up next. Here’s the important portion of what the NTU said:

As John McCain and Barack Obama jockeyed for position in the race to appear “leader-like” over the economy and in upcoming debates, the latest update of the National Taxpayers Union Foundation’s (NTUF) candidate cost analysis project shows that despite their different styles, the major party Presidential hopefuls have one thing in common: both their agendas would add billions more to the taxpayer’s tab every year.

NTUF’s fourth and final round of assigning price tags to the candidates’ platforms since January 29 found that Sen. McCain (R-AZ) would increase yearly federal spending by $92.4 billion, compared to Sen. Obama’s (D-IL) $293.0 billion. NTUF also released a first-time analysis of Libertarian Party candidate Bob Barr, who would instead cut annual federal spending by $200.9 billion. The studies include proposals through September 19.

“Both the McCain and Obama campaigns have tried to keep pace with the political issues of the day — largely by responding with proposals for new programs and regulations that could reach deeper and deeper into taxpayers’ pockets,” NTUF Senior Policy Analyst Demian Brady said. “On the other side of the spectrum, Bob Barr’s Libertarian philosophy is strongly reflected in a platform that is built upon cutting programs and slashing spending.” (Emphasis in original.)

It’s notable that both Obama and Barr take “savings” from withdrawing our troops fighting the Long War. It accounts for almost half of Barr’s total cuts, with much of the rest coming from disbanding the Department of Education. Unfortunately the NTUF doesn’t figure out the numbers for Constitution Party nominee Chuck Baldwin, who is on Maryland’s ballot as an unaffiliated candidate – I suspect his may be similar to Barr’s.

One weakness insofar as I can tell with the NTUF study is that it doesn’t account for the inside the Beltway practice of “baseline budgeting”, where spending the exact same amount of money year-over-year (or even a small increase) is considered a “cut”. And let’s face a cold hard reality here: with a federal budget now north of $3 trillion and trillions more in unfunded liabilities because of entitlement programs built up over the last seventy years, even the cuts Barr proposes are but a drop in the bucket (about 7% of the total budget, including the withdrawal of troops.)

It’s a point I’m going to expand on in a later post, but Americans need a sea change in their attitudes about government before progress can be made. I applaud the Barr stance on cutting spending (except for troop withdrawals, of course) but if he gets 2% of the vote it would be cause for celebration among the Libertarians who read here. And that’s part of the problem – there are too many among us who talk the talk but only walk the walk until they find their pet program is the one under the meat cleaver.

The first thing which has to go in this new educational effort is support for the idea of privatizing profit but socializing risk. This bailout we’re going through is but the latest chapter in a sorry evolution, and it’s where I’m going to take this concept when I get back to it later this week.

Two views on the bailout

Tonight I’m going to let a couple other opinions on the proposed $700 billion financial system bailout take the place of my own opinion on the subject. I’m saving that for a later post because it’s also going to tie together with my lunchtime post tomorrow.

The first opinion is from my GOP cohort Dave Parker. This was an e-mail which Republicans and others on our e-mail list received as his thoughts on the situation at hand. I actually embed the video (it’s about 10 minutes and goes quickly), he just linked to it.

This will be almost a tirade, and I’m sorry about that. But with the talking heads pretending that the causes of the financial meltdown are beyond our understanding, blaming Republicans for deregulating the mortgage markets – even though the real causes are obvious – I’m really getting irritated!  Perhaps the talking heads are so stupid that they lack understanding (and that’s my generous appraisal since they are probably deliberately covering up the facts), but most people are bright enough to analyze the facts and understand what happened. This really isn’t all that complicated! And it wasn’t caused by Republicans pushing for deregulation (which is the spin coming from the Dems and their allies)! 

Why aren’t we hearing more about the real causes of the financial crisis? This isn’t rocket science!  Carter began it, Clinton pushed it forward, Bush and McCain tried to stop it — and corrupt thieves stole everything they could until the whole house of cards collapsed. No wonder the Democrat Party doesn’t want to investigate it! THEY CAUSED IT! And Obama’s right in the middle of the money, taking in donations and surrounding himself with advisers who picked up every loose dollar they could find. Here’s a video that points out most of the problem:

Watch it – and then send the link to anyone who has the ability to think! (I want to see if some of my so-called-intellectual, left-wing colleagues are able to ignore this!) Yes, this is biased pro-McCain – but with good reason! This mess was caused by people who believe that everyone deserves a good home, even if they don’t work hard to earn enough to afford homes. Equal OPPORTUNITY isn’t enough for socialists/communists – they want equal ALLOCATION of wealth and property, taking from those who have and giving it from those who do not. Karl Marx called this “redistribution of wealth” and it was a fundamental part of Communist theory. (People with lots of money are always evil, and they should have their money taken away from them and given to the poor. Sound familiar? Pander to the poor and demonize the wealthy.) Don’t they teach this in school anymore?

Perhaps at the next debate, McCain will go after Obama on this issue. I truly hope so! If he doesn’t, McCain risks losing – and losing big! McCain TRIED to end it; Obama and his friends let it happen. Don’t the voters deserve to know these important facts? Bad Democrat economic theories (actually socialist/communistic theories), started by Carter and forced upon banks by Clinton, embraced by crooked supporters of Obama – and here we are in a mess!

Now we’re supposed to pay off homes for people who bought them, even though they couldn’t (and can’t) afford them? Is that one of the results of the plan? (Listen to the people on TV. That’s what the Dems really want!) People who worked for what they have get to pay for Carter’s and Clinton’s failed social engineering – and for Obama’s friends’ greed? What’s wrong with this story? And why isn’t the mainstream media on top of this? Do I really have to ask?

The other opinion comes from Mark Alexander at the Patriot Post, who led off last Friday’s Digest with this editorial comment:

“For years I have been concerned about the regulatory structure that governs Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac… and the sheer magnitude of these companies and the role they play in the housing market… If Congress does not act, American taxpayers will continue to be exposed to the enormous risk that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac pose to the housing market, the overall financial system, and the economy as a whole.” —John McCain arguing for passage of the Federal Housing Enterprise Regulatory Reform Act (S. 190) which he co-sponsored in 2005.

While Sen. McCain is being pilloried by his opponent, Barack Hussein Obama, for asserting (correctly) last week that the fundamentals of most U.S. economic sectors are sound, clearly, Sen. McCain has understood for years that irresponsible lending practices for U.S. housing posed “enormous risk… to the housing market, the overall financial system, and the economy as a whole.”

While Obama was out politicking this week, ostensibly itching for a debate that he’d been avoiding all summer, McCain suspended his campaign to work with Republicans in Congress, outlining conditions for an agreement that would both protect the American taxpayer and thwart a meltdown of the U.S. economy. So, “Country First” is not just a campaign slogan…

The enormous risk that Sen. McCain warned of in 2005 has now become a financial crisis of staggering proportions. That crisis can trace its roots to Bill Clinton’s signature on legislation making it easier for minority constituents with bad credit to obtain mortgages. In 1995, he had his Treasury Secretary, Robert Rubin, rewrite the lending rules for the Community Reinvestment Act, opening the flood gates of mortgage lending to unqualified borrowers.

This legislation, in effect, applied affirmative action to the lending industry, which is to say that the current crisis is NOT a “free market failure” but the result of socially engineered financial policy by the central government. The financial markets welcomed their new customers with open arms, fueling a real estate boom across the board.

These so-called “subprime mortgages,” which were offered at variable interest rates, were widely perceived as good investments. Investors used the high-risk instruments to secure assets in other markets fueling profits for investment banks and mortgage lenders. The subprime market thus expanded rapidly and the mortgage instruments were used by other firms as collateral for investments in stocks, commodities and the like.

Unfortunately, no one questioned the pell-mell regulatory system of oversight for these transactions until large cracks appeared in our economy’s foundation, the first being the collapse of Countrywide, the nation’s largest subprime lender. Then banks and mortgage lenders large and small began downsizing, dumping assets and closing their doors. Bear Stearns filed for bankruptcy. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, holders of trillions of dollars in mortgages, were bailed out with 200 billion taxpayer dollars. Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, and insurance giant AIG was given an $85-billion taxpayer prop to keep it solvent.

This morning, as Congress is debating whether to implement the Democrat-backed “bailout plan” or the Republican-backed “workout plan,” Washington Mutual Inc. has been seized by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC) after collapsing under the weight of reams of bad mortgages. WaMu, listing $307 billion in assets, becomes the largest bank failure in U.S. history. The FDIC sold WaMu’s assets for $1.9 billion to JPMorgan Chase & Co., which bought Bear Stearns Cos. earlier this year.

(Congressional Republicans might also consider repeal of Sarbox, the Sarbanes-Oxley Public Company Accounting Reform and Investor Protection Act of 2002, which has maintained a choke hold on financial institutions and is high on the list of proximate causes for the failure of Countrywide and Bear Stearns.)

The serious economic calamity confronting our nation, and the world, is being labeled a “credit crisis.” But we are on the verge of a crisis of cascading confidence in the U.S. economy, which, in the absence of aggressive intervention, could, no, will result in a dramatic recession affecting every sector of the U.S. and, eventually, world economy.

The catastrophe looming just over the horizon is indeed that big, and we must all hope that the solution is big enough to interrupt the domino effect already underway.

The question that must be asked, however, is whether the people’s confidence in their government is sufficient to thwart this cascading effect. Far more often than not, in the inimitable words of Ronald Reagan, “Government is not the solution to our problem. Government is the problem.” Of course, the only institution big enough to address a problem of this magnitude is the government.

Perception v. Reality

Essentially, perception defines value, and the shared confidence in our perception of the value of one major sector of our economy, the housing market, has eroded dramatically.

To understand the notion of perceived value, consider all that paper we call currency. If I walk into a store and pull out one of these pieces of paper with Ben Franklin’s picture handsomely printed upon it, the store proprietor will accept that paper in trade for some of his products or services because he believes it to have intrinsic value (which it once did, when it was backed by hard assets—gold and silver). But make no mistake: The value of that piece of paper is nothing more than it is perceived to be. Thus, if the proprietor’s confidence in that perception becomes diminished, he may begin to think such a piece of paper is worth only half its face value, or perhaps nothing at all.

And if my paper is perceived to have no value, I will not be able to do commerce in this or any other store.

For two decades, our confidence in the perceived value of pieces of paper called mortgages has been growing rapidly, and because the prevailing perception has been that a house will be worth more tomorrow than it is today, financial institutions have aggressively enabled buyers to assume mortgages to purchase houses. (Actually, mortgages are now traded electronically as binary data—value that!)

However, in recent years, confidence in the perceived value of real estate has outpaced reality, as mortgage defaults have trended upward. That realization has resulted in what now has become a precipitous erosion of confidence in the value of real estate, and consequently, housing market values have collapsed in many areas of the country where they were unduly inflated.

While perception can be shaped and molded, reality is finite. The reality, in this case, is that a house and its outstanding mortgage are worth not a nickel more than a buyer is willing to and capable of paying for it.

Thus, the devaluation of mortgages has had an enormous financial impact on institutions that trade in “packaged mortgages,” and consequently, on other institutions that trade with them, and, well you get the picture. The dominos have begun to fall.

Moreover, in an effort to keep their domino standing, because of the potential that any new lending would result in additional foreclosure exposure if the housing market continues to decline, banks have tightened lending in order to preserve the capital necessary to cover the cost of a growing number of foreclosures. This constriction of the money supply extends far beyond the housing markets, as loans for business development and expansion are also drying up.

This combination of events creates the perfect economic storm, and it has dire consequences for all Americans.

Consequences of cascading confidence

Confidence in the perceived value of financial instruments, which are the foundation of our economy, is calculated minute by minute by indices such as Dow Jones, Standard and Poor’s, and other measures of financial markets. These measurements amount to investor confidence indices, polls of investor perception about the strength and stability of the economy. The stability and direction of these indices are a good indication of investor confidence.

If the indices indicate significant instability of investor confidence, that instability can cause the financial markets to collapse in a single day. (See: “Great Depression.”)

Here, it’s important to note that the vast majority of Americans are among the “investor class.” This isn’t just about “the rich.” Whether you trade millions of dollars in securities daily or like cream in your coffee, you are a shareholder in our economy.

Thus, the plan proposed by President George W. Bush and Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson—waiting for majorities in Congress to determine the details—is an effort to stabilize investor confidence by authorizing up to $700 billion in guarantees for institutions holding mortgages. In effect, this will relieve lenders of liability for mortgages considered to be at risk of default—about five percent of all mortgages.

It is hoped that Republicans can succeed in crafting legislation that is more workout than bailout, the former requiring much more market accountability, as proposed by Sen. McCain and former House Speaker Newt Gingrich.

President Bush addressed the nation Wednesday evening with a concise explanation of the current crisis:

“This is an extraordinary period for America’s economy. Over the past few weeks, many Americans have felt anxiety about their finances and their future. I understand their worry and their frustration. We’ve seen triple-digit swings in the stock market. Major financial institutions have teetered on the edge of collapse, and some have failed. As uncertainty has grown, many banks have restricted lending. Credit markets have frozen. And families and businesses have found it harder to borrow money. We’re in the midst of a serious financial crisis… So I’ve proposed that the federal government reduce the risk posed by these troubled assets, and supply urgently needed money so banks and other financial institutions can avoid collapse and resume lending. This rescue effort is not aimed at preserving any individual company or industry—it is aimed at preserving America’s overall economy. It will help American consumers and businesses get credit to meet their daily needs and create jobs. And it will help send a signal to markets around the world that America’s financial system is back on track.”

What about a free-market solution?

I concur, of course, with the principled objections from free-market advocates and hope that free-market solutions will be re-implemented in conjunction with the necessary mortgage backup. If not, the cure may be worse than the disease. After all, it was the suspension of free-market principles that got us into this mess.

But I agree with President Bush’s comments regarding the necessity of intervention: “I’m a strong believer in free enterprise. So my natural instinct is to oppose government intervention. I believe companies that make bad decisions should be allowed to go out of business. Under normal circumstances, I would have followed this course. But these are not normal circumstances. The market is not functioning properly. There’s been a widespread loss of confidence. And major sectors of America’s financial system are at risk of shutting down.”

Further, he is correct in this assessment: “More banks could fail, including some in your community. The stock market would drop even more, which would reduce the value of your retirement account. The value of your home could plummet. Foreclosures would rise dramatically. And if you own a business or a farm, you would find it harder and more expensive to get credit. More businesses would close their doors, and millions of Americans could lose their jobs. Even if you have good credit history, it would be more difficult for you to get the loans you need to buy a car or send your children to college. And ultimately, our country could experience a long and painful recession.”

It is worth noting that $700 billion is a bargain compared to the implications for taxpayers if the economy spirals into a severe recession—or worse.

Can any of this colossal expense be recovered?

Fortunately, there are real assets backing up these mortgages—bricks and mortar, and the land upon which the foundations rest—but this is no “deal for taxpayers.”

While much of this mortgage backing may be recovered, as was the case with the savings and loan bailout of 1989, to suggest that the “taxpayers will be paid back” is ludicrous.

Congress is going to serve as the “watchdog” over the dispensing and recovery of these funds? Can you say, “fox in the henhouse”?

Even if Congress sets up a “trust fund” in order to use recovered funds to pay down the debt incurred to back financial institutions, we should consider that “lockbox” to be as safe as the Social Security Trust Fund lockbox. Every dime paid into Social Security has been spent on government programs, leaving that fund with a bunch of IOUs.

No doubt, every dime recovered from the private sector will be treated as revenue to expand government programs, and the debt will be left on the books.

To pay for the bailout, Democrats are sure to demand higher taxes from “the rich Wall Street fat cats who got us into this mess.” While this mess clearly ended on Wall Street, it didn’t start there, but, undeterred, the Democrats will always bank on this observation from George Bernard Shaw: “A government which robs Peter to pay Paul can always depend on the support of Paul.”

And, of course, if the current plan to restore economic confidence does not succeed, you know the Demos have “Plan B.” Don’t ask…

What role have politicians played?

One staple of the Democrats’ political playbook is the use of scare tactics to rally constituencies. Indeed, Obama and other Demos have been dishing out a steady stream of dire economic rhetoric in order to keep their constituents in line. Undoubtedly, all that economic hyperbole has influenced public perception of our economy and confidence in our economy. High on the list of issues President Bush discussed with candidates McCain and Obama Thursday was a request that they (read: “Obama”) cease and desist using the economic problems as political fodder.

It is our hope that the candidates will, indeed, arrive for debate in Oxford, Mississippi, this evening and begin the debate with a unified statement on economic recovery; then Sen. McCain can proceed to eviscerate Obama on foreign policy.

Footnote: There are significant, albeit unspoken, national security implications of a precipitous economic decline in the U.S. Where the our economy goes, the world economy follows, and their will be significant national security consequences. For example, if China’s economy contracts more rapidly than at present, keeping pace with U.S. economic decline, the consequences will likely be some significant internal and external “mischief” scripted by the Communist Party. As for India and Pakistan…you get the picture.

Tomorrow the House votes on the measure, and I truly hope that this doesn’t become good money after bad. Mark Alexander is correct that there are tangible assets being discussed here (95% of the 5% of houses in question have some sort of value to them, perhaps its not nearly the amount owed but there is value) but I believe he’s also correct in saying that we’re not going to see any payback to us in whatever those assets eventually are sold for.

The post I have for lunchtime tomorrow is slightly dated because of this new financial situation but the study I cite is still valid for the points I wish to make.

Fun with Obama

I laughed, I cried, it was better than Cats (well, okay, in truth I’ve never seen the Broadway show but that’s how the phrase goes) when I was e-mailed this video from my buds at Our Country Deserves Better:

I like how they put the commercial together, placing the emphasis on experience first and then highlighting some of Barack Obama’s many gaffes, flip-flops, and misstatements. (Had they added “Slow” Joe Biden, the commercial would be another ten minutes longer – “Stand up Chuck!”)

The one drawback to this OCDB spot is that it’s pretty much destined to be an internet-only spot because of its extreme length. I understand that you can’t make a 30 second commercial out of Obama’s running mouth but perhaps they could have used some of the better highlights like the “57 states” and “above my pay grade” portions for something shorter.

But you can show this one in 60 seconds, and what makes it better is that Hillary Clinton does a lot of the dirty work:

This may be why a lot of Democrats who supported Hillary are lukewarm at best about Obama, and why Operation Chaos was such fun as it unfolded during the spring. This is actually the more effective spot in many ways, unfortunately Hillary has fallen out of the limelight a little bit. I must say though she’s not exactly gung-ho for Obama and it’ll be interesting to see how much help HillPAC is to him as opposed to their other chosen Congressional candidates, who I added to my watch list.

Last weekend I interviewed OCDB spokesperson Deborah Johns (who you saw in the Hillary spot) and earlier this week we may have found out one reason why she omitted the lone Maryland stop on her original itinerary – a Rasmussen poll had Barack Obama leading John McCain by 23 points in our state (h/t Danny Reiter at PolitickerMD.) It’s not completely unexpected with a heavily minority population that Obama would do well here but I was hoping it was a little closer than that. However, we still have a little over five weeks to go and Barack has plenty more opportunities to trip over his tongue again (and again, and again…) Unfortunately, it’s freeing up Maryland Democrats to work in Virginia and Pennsylvania – on the other hand they’re not toiling for Frank Kratovil. (That must be what the DCCC’s million dollar ad buy is for, let TV do the shoe leather work. Go right ahead.)

I’m all for letting the Democrats think they have things in the bag, though. It makes for nastier surprises for them on November 4th. Our side has been given the lower expectations all along by the partisan media so if the Democrats lose we’ll have a ball listening to their excuses.

WCRC meeting – September 2008

For the most part our club stepped away from partisan politics last night and looked at one of the other key issues we in Maryland will decide come November 4th. Last night we heard from Harry Shaw, a representative of Marylanders United to Stop Slots.

Of course we didn’t entirely abandon the business at hand, getting reports from the Central Committee, Young Republicans, and the campaigns of Andy Harris for Congress and John McCain. Since that portion of the agenda was first I’ll begin with those accounts.

Wicomico County Republicans are unlike their state counterparts, noted county Chair Dr. John Bartkovich, in that we have endorsed a NO vote on both the slots and early (and often) voting Constitutional amendments. The state party didn’t take a position on slots, but we chose to. We’re also going to continue our practice of sign waving for another few weeks at our present location before moving to another better-lit location in October. John also exhorted us to “keep the excitement up”; the excitement being the enthusiastic response to the addition of Sarah Palin to the ticket. (I got my “Sarah Palin for Vice President” sticker yesterday as well.)

In the meantime, Mark Biehl told us that two new members were in the fold because of the Palin effect and announced the Lower Shore YR’s are preparing for their debut as a team in Wicomico County Relay for Life this weekend. (I’m part of that team, you can donate to my cause here.) They were about 70 percent of the way to their donation goal and right on the edge of the top 10 teams overall. Later this year, they’ll turn their attention to a canned food drive.

Dustin Mills, speaking on behalf of the Andy Harris Congressional effort, noted that the race between Harris and Democrat opponent Frank Kratovil was “tighter” than previously, placing the polling difference at 3-5 points. In the offing were several chances to help out, with phone banking, door knocking, and an upcoming fundraiser on October 12 co-hosted by Wicomico County Sheriff Mike Lewis. The biggest upcoming event is the first debate between Harris, Kratovil, and Libertarian officeseeker Richard James Davis – it will be held September 30 at Holloway Hall at Salisbury University. I’ll be there taking notes and hopefully sneaking in a question or two.

The final report came from Wicomico County for McCain co-chair Bonnie Luna, who thanked the club for its support of the Wicomico GOP headquarters. Her head count back on the 6th was 103 people, which is outstanding given the conditions at the time (that little windstorm called Tropical Storm Hanna.) So far it’s been a “huge success” and we “can’t keep up with the demand” for McCain/Palin signs and bumper stickers. A portion of that is being the only area county to have a headquarters this time around so we’ve become a regional hub of activity. Bonnie also reported that preparations are underway for a McCain/Palin rally on October 4th with around 300 to 400 expected to attend. I’ll be there, just don’t make too much of a mess for me to clean up!

It was one of our longer business sessions, so we kept Harry waiting awhile to say his piece. Speaking for MUSS, he maintained that slots were “not a partisan issue” but that many Democrats were afraid to speak out against them for fear of crossing Governor O’Malley, who Shaw felt was backing away from the issue somewhat as polls have shown support for the amendment declining. Harry also brought up the $2 million dumped into the pro-slots side by a Canadian firm, MI Developments. A subsidiary of theirs operates two horse racing tracks in the state.

Shaw also pointed out that several state newspapers had come out against the effort, most recently the Easton Star-Democrat. Moreover, adding slots to the state Constitution would require further changes to be made via referendum each time something new was desired.

But the main argument advanced by Harry was to follow the money. Originally the rationale behind video slot machines was to save Maryland’s dying horse racing industry, but then the pro-slots focus shifted to providing dollars for education. One handout Shaw brought with him was the fiscal note for the slots legislation (it was SB3 in the 2007 Special Session, here’s the full .pdf version) and what it shows clearly is that slots will do nothing to fix the state’s FY2010 (the budget year starting July 1, 2009) problems and little to assist in FY2011. Not until fiscal 2012 would video slots impact the budget to the tune of just over $1 billion – assuming the projections are correct and generally revenue projections from the beancounters in Annapolis have been through rose-colored glasses lately. In short, Shaw and MUSS say the dollars “won’t do the job.” He added, “practically speaking, (slots) won’t solve our (financial) problems.”

While much of Harry’s argument was on the financial side (he is retired after 13 years with the Office of Management and Budget in Washington and an Army career before that), he also briefly mentioned the moral side, asserting that video slots are the “crack cocaine of gambling” and again wondering why the Democrats aren’t talking about the issue in their forums. (While I can’t say for sure, my guess is that Shaw’s a registered Democrat – he claimed to be a fiscally conservative liberal.) He also related briefly about his frequent testimony against slots, dating back to the Ehrlich Administration.

On a personal level, I’m astounded that the judges who decided the ballot language wasn’t misleading after adding one word (so that the amendment will read licenses will be primarily for the purpose of raising revenue for education) could say that with a straight face when in truth as little as 48.5% could be allocated to school funding. Up to 1/3 goes to the video slot operators for their cut, with the rest divided between the horse racing industry (one passionate supporter in the room was in that industry but abandoned it because of the poor purses in Maryland compared to Delaware), local government, state lottery operations, and minority business investment. My question to Shaw was whether there was any guarantee that the percentages couldn’t change in the future, since the Constitutional amendment does not lock those figures in stone. No doubt the majority in the General Assembly can and probably will tweak those numbers after passage in order to buy whatever votes they need in 2010.

I’ll ask the same question next month and see if I can stump the pro-slots speaker, Tom Saquella of the Maryland Retailers Association. That meeting comes eight days before the election on October 27th.

Ten Questions for – Blue Star Mom Deborah Johns

Last week I devoted part of a post to the my interview subject, who as I reported was preparing to embark on a two-week barnstorming tour of America; a tour intended to point out the deficiencies of Barack Obama as Commander-in-Chief. She’s a Blue Star Mom who’s proud to support the military and has been termed by FOX News as one of their favorite military moms.

Today I bring back my Ten Questions (even though I actually asked a few more) feature with Deborah Johns, spokeswoman for the pro-troop organization Our Country Deserves Better and soon to be political tourist. As part of her sixth such effort, she will be in the region as her tour wraps up in Washington, DC on October 29th.

monoblogue: According to the press release that brought your upcoming national tour to my attention, you thought it was worth giving up two weeks of your life to defend the honor of your fellow Blue Star Mom, Vice-Presidential nominee Governor Sarah Palin. Were you a John McCain supporter beforehand or did the Palin selection and subsequent fallout goad you into action?

Johns:  I supported John McCain since the primary and have been even more energized with Senator McCain’s selection of Gov. Palin to be his vice presidential candidate. I can’t tell you how proud I am to see a Blue Star Mom on the verge of making it to the White House!

monoblogue: In looking at the planned route, you’ve scheduled a pretty ambitious 14 day agenda which will cover a number of swing states, including ones your PAC is running ads in. How is the fundraising going for the trip, and is the schedule pretty much set now?

Johns:  The fundraising is going very well, however, on every cross-country patriotic tour I’ve been involved with (and this will be my sixth one!) we have always had to work very hard to raise the money it takes to fund the trip (renting vehicles, paying for gas, hotel rooms, etc…) and to get the word out! So many times people have heard we are passing through their city, and call frantically asking us to stop, and if our schedule will accommodate it, then we will make every effort to greet supporters.

monoblogue: Your son William’s devotion to his mission (having served three tours of duty in Iraq) is obvious but is there a military tradition he’s following in the family? Corollary to that, did you have a history of political involvement before becoming involved in the Move America Forward and Our Country Deserves Better political groups?

Johns:  I come from a long line of military family. I have uncles, great uncles and grandfathers that have served from WWII, Korean and Vietnam. They have all been in either the Army or the Navy. William is the first Marine in the family.

I have never had any political involvement prior to becoming involved with Move America Forward and/or Our Country Deserves Better. All of this was because of a request my son made and God laid this on my heart to do the right thing. Casey Sheehan was killed in April 2004 from volunteering to be a convoy driver to drive supplies to a forward Marine Unit (my son was in that forward exploratory unit), Casey’s convoy went the wrong way and his vehicle was hit by an IED. In May of 2004, Cindy Sheehan had begun to make a lot of noise against President Bush and the War. My son called home at Mother’s Day, and asked what was going on back in the states, and questioned why the American people don’t support the troops any longer. William told me about all the good things that the troops were accomplishing, and asked me, “Mom please don’t let us come home to another Vietnam.” So that is when I began to appear on talk radio shows, television news programs, and speak out at public events and rallies – to tell the stories of what the troops were doing. Things have just blossomed from there and others have been inspired to start up their own non-profit organizations to support the troops, and their families.

monoblogue: Given that you’re a military mom who’s working for a pro-troop organization, it’s inevitable there will be comparisons between you and Cindy Sheehan. What are your thoughts on Mrs. Sheehan and how she handled the death of her son? And how have you prepared yourself for that possibilty affecting your life?

Johns: I certainly do not stand in judgment on how Ms. Sheehan has handled the death of her son. The loss of a child is something I hope I never have to go through, and how someone deals with the loss of a child is different for everyone.

However, let me make it clear that I certainly do stand in judgment on how Ms. Sheehan has attacked our country and our military. I take issue with the fact that she has made statements calling the al-Qaeda terrorists, “freedom fighters from other countries.” I take issue with her attacks on U.S. troops who went to New Orleans to help in the wake of Hurricane Katrina – she declared their presence made it “occupied New Orleans.” I take issue with her endorsement of the murderer, Marxist dictator of Venezuela, Hugo Chavez, who Ms. Sheehan praised: “I admire President Chavez for his strength to resist the United States” and “I’ve always admired President Chavez for standing up to imperialism.” Finally, Ms. Sheehan has called President Bush, and U.S. troops the “real terrorists.”

Well, just as Cindy’s son, Casey, wore the uniform of the United States Army, my son wears the uniform of the United States Marines, both boys were in Iraq at the same time, and neither of them are murderers or terrorists. I am completely offended by these statements and that she had gone around the world and supported dictators like Hugo Chavez saying she wishes he was her President. Her hateful, anti-American rhetoric has inspired insurgents and terrorists to continue to pick up their weapons and kill our American Soldiers and Marines and that is Ms. Sheehan’s cross to bear. Her actions since the death of Casey and taking it out on the Soldiers and Marines who gladly serve this country are deplorable.

As for my preparing for the untimely loss of my son – William, I have had a very detailed conversation as to what I am to do if he is killed while serving his country, so all of those details are in order. However, I don’t think one can ever be prepared for the knock on the door. Each time William has been deployed, he has lost guys in his unit. I remember in January 2007 when his unit was on patrol and 2 Marines were killed. We all knew it was someone from the 21 MEW, and in a special forces unit, but we had no idea who. I was gripped with fear, tears and tons of emotions over fear that I was going to get the knock on the door. I could not leave my house for 3 days until the notifications came out. That waiting is something no one can imagine unless you have been faced with it. Then when you finally get word as to who it was, you have a split second of relief, but then you feel horrible from survivors guilt and you have even more tears and a different wave of emotions for the loss of the Marine and his family who did get the knock on the door. It is a pit in our stomach you never get over.

monoblogue: Closing the book on Sheehan, most people are aware that she’s running for Congress against Nancy Pelosi. Do you see a run for office in your future or is the involvement you already have politically enough for you?

Johns:  Sheehan running for Congress – I gave it great consideration to run for Congress against both Cindy Sheehan and Nancy Pelosi. However, I would have had to uproot my 2 sons at home and move to the Bay Area, which is something I was unwilling to do. Although I feel I could have been a formidable opponent to both of them, as a single parent my sons have to come first. This may be a consideration in 3 years when my youngest graduates from High School.

monoblogue: Getting back to your national tour, what sort of press reception are you expecting for your message? Do you anticipate any negative reaction from Obama supporters like protests or threats on your safety? (I see you have a stop scheduled in his hometown, that should be interesting.)

Johns:  Well the press obviously has a biased opinion when it comes to reporting fair and balanced events from McCain to Obama. The press is doing everything they can to distort things against the McCain/Palin campaign. Cindy Sheehan always had way more press than I did when John Kerry was running and she was their poster child. I do expect that we will have some press coverage, but it is anyone’s guess as to how much local and/or national press coverage we will get.

As for Obama supporters etc. – I have gotten death threats when I spoke out against Cindy Sheehan. I do expect to get them again with this campaign, and some of the staff has already had some breach of privacy from Obama supporters. They are very ruthless, and will stop at nothing to get what they want by intimidation, up to and including physical harm.

monoblogue: It’s also worth asking with your connection to Move America Forward (whose PAC is supporting a number of Congressional candidates) whether you’ll be coordinating your efforts with those candidates, or is this simply a “stop Obama” tour?

Johns: Currently this is a “Stop Obama” tour. There is probably no doubt that we will probably end up doing some joint support work with good candidates who can make change happen in Washington.

monoblogue: President Eisenhower once noted, “Politics ought to be the part-time profession of every citizen who would protect the rights and privileges of free people and who would preserve what is good and fruitful in our national heritage.” Obviously you were an average mom who took it upon herself to get involved, much like Governor Palin. What advice would you give to someone who would like to get involved in the world of political advocacy?

Johns:  Anyone wishing to get involved in the world of political advocacy needs to have a passion for their cause. If you are not passionate about it, then you will come off as a fake. You need to be genuine, authentic, articulate and well informed about what you are speaking about. You also have to have a thick skin, because the media critiques everything about you from your hair, clothes, shoes, weight, what you say and your family and then they say very nasty things about your family, then death threats if they really don’t like you. So you have to be strong, and don’t let them see you sweat.

monoblogue: Final question. If, despite your efforts to the contrary, Barack Obama takes the Presidential Oath of Office next January, will you remain in the political realm and if so where would you channel your efforts?

Johns: Well I don’t think I will have to worry about Obama taking that oath of office in January, because I am confident it will be John McCain taking the oath of office. But just for the sake of answering your question, I will probably remain in the political realm working with the Veterans Administration helping our veterans and advocating for their benefits and helping them transition from active duty to civilian life.

**********

I’d like to thank Deborah for her participation. As she noted in one of her answers, there’s always a demand to place a stop on her route and I made my play for a stop here on the Eastern Shore – however, they revised the tour slightly to exclude a couple Virginia stops and she’ll arrive in Washington from the north.

I’ll leave you with her closing comment from the correspondence she sent to answer my question:

I would love to try to get to the Eastern Shore of Maryland to see you and your great supporters, hopefully we can work that out.

Thank you again for your interest in Our Country Deserves Better, because it does, it deserves John McCain and Sarah Palin.

Semper Fi

No, Deborah, thank you, and best of luck for your tour and your family.

WCRC Crab Feast 2008 in pictures and text

Unquestionably there’s a lot going on in the national political arena but today’s post shows one example of the grassroots element of politics. From Lincoln or Reagan Day dinners (or their Democrat counterpart, Jefferson/Jackson dinners), to booths at the county fair, to opening the county headquarters just before the election, to the average political club meeting, millions of Americans participate in the political process not just by voting but taking time out of their lives for a social get-together where they can meet their elected officials and candidates. Today was one such occasion here.

What I’m going to do from this point will mostly be a photo essay on the get-together we had today. Just hold the mouse over the photo for the explanatory caption.

We'll see if this sign is correct come November, but I suspect it will be.

If you judge the interest by how fast this stack of signs left the premises, you'd say we were stoked. Hey, I made sure to secure one for my front yard!

Obviously this was a political get-together, but a lot of people enjoy this aspect of the event - eating some of what Chesapeake Bay brought forth.

There were a lot of people who opted to eat under the cover of the park shelter on a pleasantly cool end-of-summer day...

...but others decided to enjoy the crabs, burgers, dogs, and some really good sweet corn under the pines in the park.

State Senator and Congressional candidate Andy Harris makes a point. Perhaps he's open-mouthed in amazement that the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee is dropping $1 million into his opponent's coffers just to buy TV time.

State Senator Andy Harris (center) is flanked by his two Lower Shore counterparts. On the left is District 38 State Senator Lowell Stoltzfus and on the right is District 37 State Senator Rich Colburn. Stoltzfus is hosting a McCain-Palin rally in 2 weeks, the next major political event. Local blogger Joe Albero (far right) was taking pictures too.

The event is also a fundraiser for the Wicomico County Republican Club, with the silent auction a key facet of it.

So we had a pretty successful day and a good turnout. Afterward I went over to our headquarters and put together signs for later distribution. Then I came home and got my road work in. I’m just throwing the last picture in because I thought it was neat, taken as the sun set on another political day on Delmarva.

Another day ends on the road to Election Day. I may use this as a background image for my computer, to me it's a great picture.

Patriotic, with ONE exception

I’m definitely an America-firster, almost to the point of telling people “love it or leave it.” But if this is Democratic Vice-Presidential candidate and incumbent Delaware Senator Joe Biden’s idea of patriotism I may have to rethink my position. Yesterday in an interview on ABC’s “Good Morning America” Biden exhorted the wealthiest among us to take one for the team, accepting a tax increase so they could cut taxes for those making under $250,000. While that sounds good in theory, there’s a reality which has to be addressed as well. This is well pointed out by writers at the Center For Individual Freedom, who state in part:

When times are tighter, a “soak the rich” agenda has a certain superficial appeal to many voters. After all, why shouldn’t fat cats pay an even greater share of the nation’s taxes, since they continue to prosper while working families struggle? While working families strain to put food on their tables and gasoline in their automobiles, why shouldn’t those in the top five percent bracket pay an even higher share of taxes?

This is an understandable sentiment.

As understandable as it may be among struggling families, however, here is the problem. Because most of those filing in the upper five percent are actually small businesses, which create most new jobs in America, many of those families will go from struggling to put food on their tables to not being able to put food on their tables at all. And they’ll go from having difficulty filling their gas tanks to not being able to fill their tanks at all.

To explain, one must understand an important – but little-known and little-discussed – fact about individual income tax filers.

Namely, that most small business owners, otherwise known as “S corporations” or “S-corps,” file taxes as individuals.

(snip)

According to Internal Revenue Service (IRS) data, fully 75% of individual tax filers in the top bracket are actually small businesses. More importantly for purposes of working Americans, small businesses create 75% of new jobs in America.

Voters should therefore ask themselves whether small businesses encountering softening economic conditions would be more willing, or less willing, to hire new workers after their taxes are raised.

A similar take by Dr. Jim Pelura, Chair of the Maryland GOP, brings the point home to Marylanders:

“Joe Biden said yesterday that paying higher taxes is a ‘patriotic act’. He also pledged that he and Barack Obama would raise taxes.  Barack Obama and Joe Biden both voted, in 2007, to raise taxes on anyone making above $40,000 a year. With our economy struggling, the last thing that our leaders in Washington and Annapolis should do is raise taxes. Marylanders have already suffered through the largest tax increase in state history last year. They can ill-afford afford additional skyrocketing taxes on income, life savings, and energy.”

“If paying higher taxes is patriotic, then Maryland citizens are possibly the most patriotic Americans in the country!”

You have that right, Jim. And bear in mind that the General Assembly earlier this spring placed into law something similar to the Obama/Biden plan, enacting what’s popularly known as the “millionaire’s tax” to replace a service tax aimed at the computer services business. Using the CFIF article as one piece of evidence, apparently the small businessman in Maryland had a target on his or her back in either case.

And to listen to Biden, one would think that wealthy Americans aren’t paying much in taxes. However, data from The Tax Foundation shows that the 1% who are most well-off shoulder a tax burden which nearly doubles their share of income; even more telling, they pay a share of taxation which equals that of the bottom 95% of all wageearners. Maybe Obama’s plan is to eventually have the top 1% pay every dollar of taxes and redistribute that to the other 99 percent, making sure that his buddies in the federal government get a generous cut as the cash passes through.

If you want a perspective on what this would lead to just go out and get one of my favorite books, Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand. (That’s why I have the Amazon link on my site.) Instead, let’s work toward making taxes fairer and flatter, or even better encouraging saving and investment by shifting to a consumption-based tax. Would we be bailing out Wall Street firms if people had saved their money instead of overstepping their credit bounds? It’s rare that I advocate tax policy to regulate behavior, but in this case there wouldn’t be a targeted group because everyone would pay a share of this tax.

True patriotism is showing a love for country and desire to defend our national interests, not having more money stripped from your wallet because you’ve managed to become an achiever in life.

‘I have never heard of any candidate deliberately trying to get Americans killed to prove their point’

(Editor’s note: a link has been added to the New York Post story by Amir Taheri – h/t MAF PAC Blog.)

It’s a long title, but the folks at Move America Forward apparently think a New York Post story about Barack Obama’s Iraq trip hasn’t gotten enough play – at least not as much as the brouhaha over whether Governor Sarah Palin actually set foot in Iraq during her visit to that theatre of operation.

Move America Forward’s political action committee, MAF Freedom PAC, today condemned Barack Obama for “putting his own political objectives ahead of the safety of U.S. military personnel in Iraq.”

Iraqi government sources have revealed to the New York Post that Presidential candidate Barack Obama demanded Iraqi officials stop negotiations with the Bush Administration to withdraw U.S. troops from Iraq. Fearful that the success in Iraq would harm his political aspirations, Obama sought to keep U.S. troops in Iraq so he can continue attacking the Bush Administration for not imposing a timetable for withdrawal.

“If these allegations prove to be true, it should be the end of the Obama campaign,” asserted MAF Freedom PAC Chairman, Melanie Morgan. “Obama should have the decency to recognize that he lacks the moral character to serve as Commander-in-Chief, and he should withdraw from the ticket.  I have never heard of any candidate deliberately trying to get Americans killed to prove their point.”

According to the New York Post story, not only did Obama seek to get the Iraqi’s to stop negotiating with Americans on the troop drawdown, he also tried to bully General David Petraeus to agree to a hard withdrawal date.

“The hypocrisy of Barack Obama to say in the United States that he wants a speedier troop withdrawal date, while telling the Iraqis to stop negotiating is appalling. Even supporters of a quicker U.S. withdrawal must be sickened by his conduct in Iraq. If there was ever a candidate who has demonstrated the lack of character and leadership to represent the United States in foreign affairs, it is Barack Obama,” Morgan concluded.

MAF Freedom PAC is the political action arm of Move America Forward, the nation’s largest pro-troop organization.  The patriotic group is led by San Francisco pro-troop activist and renowned radio and television personality, Melanie Morgan.

Melanie Morgan certainly can write in such a manner to draw attention, but the point is valid. What makes it even more saddening is that Obama has no compunction about “bullying” one of our commanders in the field but wouldn’t extend that attitude toward our enemies, as in agreeing to meet with terrorist-sponsoring national leaders without preconditions. And didn’t we go through this with President George H.W. Bush and his supposed mission to Iran prior to the 1980 election? The story goes that Bush went to Iran and sought a deal to keep the 52 American hostages they were holding through the election so Ronald Reagan and he could more easily defeat President Carter. (Not that Reagan needed much help.) That tale was proven false, but not until after a Congressional investigation was called for. Good luck getting any such investigation in this case.

I disagree with Morgan on one point, though. Personally I think John Kerry had more of a “lack of character and leadership in foreign affairs” than Barack Obama has so far shown, but admittedly Obama is making it a close race to the bottom.

Also, I can update you on another story relating to the folks at MAF. I asked and I shall receive an interview with Blue Star Mom Deborah Johns, all that needs to be worked out is the particulars. It’s something I’m looking forward to doing sometime in the next few days.