Friday, January 27, 2012

California Taxes Rank Worst in Country

mohandasgandhi:

Via @WLLegal
Former CIA Officer John Kiriakou Charged with Disclosing Covert Officer’s Identity and Other Classified Information to Journalists and Lying to CIA’s Publications Review Board
From Greenwald:

This is all accomplished by characterizing disclosures in American  newspapers about America’s wrongdoing as “aiding the enemy” (the alleged  enemy being informed is Al Qaeda, but the actual concern is that the  American people learn what their government is doing). As The New York Times‘ Charlie Savage wrote this morning, Obama has brought “more such cases than all previous  presidents combined,” and by doing so, has won the admiration of the CIA  and other intelligence agencies which, above all else, loathe  transparency (which happens to be the value that Obama vowed to provide more of than any President in history).

There’s so much I’d love to say about this but I don’t want to sound even a little bit like a conspiracy theorist, so let’s just see where this goes.

mohandasgandhi:

Via

Former CIA Officer John Kiriakou Charged with Disclosing Covert Officer’s Identity and Other Classified Information to Journalists and Lying to CIA’s Publications Review Board

From Greenwald:

This is all accomplished by characterizing disclosures in American newspapers about America’s wrongdoing as “aiding the enemy” (the alleged enemy being informed is Al Qaeda, but the actual concern is that the American people learn what their government is doing). As The New York Times‘ Charlie Savage wrote this morning, Obama has brought “more such cases than all previous presidents combined,” and by doing so, has won the admiration of the CIA and other intelligence agencies which, above all else, loathe transparency (which happens to be the value that Obama vowed to provide more of than any President in history).

There’s so much I’d love to say about this but I don’t want to sound even a little bit like a conspiracy theorist, so let’s just see where this goes.

Ron Paul Highlights 1/26/12

Three Supreme Court Cases to Watch

Anybody else think there should be cameras in the Supreme Court?

Thursday, January 26, 2012
thenoobyorker:

PSA.

Hey now, don’t be so sure.
Wednesday, January 25, 2012
Tuesday, January 24, 2012

<Insert comment on State of the Union>

I didn’t watch it. He said nothing new. The same old tired rhetoric.

File under cartoons my kids will watch.

theweekmagazine:

Obama’s top 5 successes

The president will surely boast of his accomplishments during tonight’s State of the Union address. So what exactly are they? Paul Brandus tells us:

5. Getting out of Iraq
Keeping one’s promise is good currency for any politician, and this was a big one that Obama delivered on. The numbers: 4,484 Americans killed, 32,200 wounded, $806 billion spent (with an estimated $1 trillion needed for future medical care for war veterans through 2050, says a Brown University study) — all for a war that began under a pretext (finding weapons of mass destruction) that never panned out. Instead, it evolved into a costly, 105-month grind that damaged America’s image in the world and, it could be argued, strengthened Iran’s standing in the region. On top of all this, the war wasn’t paid for. Yes, it toppled Saddam Hussein. But other Mideast dictators have been overthrown pretty much on their own during the Arab Spring; historians can only ponder how Saddam might have fared. Obama opposed the war all the way back in 2002 — and promised repeatedly on the campaign trail in 2008 that he’d end the conflict. Mission accomplished.

4. Improving America’s image abroad
America was showered with goodwill after the September 11 attacks. A few years and a couple of wars later, that goodwill had largely vanished. The war in Iraq led to brutal coverage around the world that screamed of secret U.S. prisons, torture, and images from Abu Ghraib. Fair or not, the Bush administration was perceived in some quarters of the globe as a unilateralist, my-way-or-the-highway bully. By 2008, America’s standing in the world had fallen, sometimes sharply. Even staunch American allies were unhappy: Just 53 percent of Britons had a favorable opinion of the U.S., along with 46 percent of Australians, and just 31 percent of Germans. Today, those numbers are up in every region of the world — thanks in no small part to President Obama’s effort to treat our allies as true partners. There is one important and ironic exception to this uptrend, however: The Muslim world. Just 12 percent of Pakistanis, 20 percent of Egyptians, and 13 percent of Jordanians had a favorable opinion of us last year — all down in the Obama years, despite opponents who accuse him of tilting toward the Muslim world (if not actually being a secret Muslim).

3. Passing health-care reform
“I will sign a universal health-care bill into law by the end of my first term as president,” candidate Obama said in 2008. He certainly made good on that pledge — at considerable political cost to himself and his party. In some ways, the true success of this accomplishment is hard to judge, since most major provisions of the president’s Affordable Care Act don’t go into effect until 2014. Plus, the constitutionality of the law’s central provision — a government mandate that all Americans have health insurance — will be debated by the Supreme Court this spring, with a decision coming as early as June. Until then, though: Promise made, promise kept. This is one of the most consequential pieces of legislation since LBJ’s Great Society. Among the provisions of this piece of legislation already in place is a rule prohibiting insurance companies from rescinding coverage based on the flimsiest of pretexts, and lifetime limits on insurance coverage — which have sent many a citizen to the poorhouse — have been eliminated.

Obama’s top 2 accomplishments here

5. Obama begrudgingly stuck to the time table Bush set. That’s right. Obama tried to stay in Iraq longer than Bush wanted to. Oh, and thousands of military contractors are still there.

4. I’m not surprised the rest of the world is happy we’ve embraced Keynesianism at the expense of economic growth and freedom. But I just can’t think why countries in the Middle East don’t like him…

3. I have an entired tag dedicated to the epic fail that is Obamacare. I also compiled a pretty big list of it’s follies on it’s first birthday. Needless to say the Patient Protection Affordable Care Act did nothing to protect patients or make healthcare more affordable. I think a more fitting name would be Big Pharmacy Protection Affordable Bonus Act.

2. “Getting Osama bin Laden.” Great! Now we can come back from Afghanistan right? Right?…..

1. “Preventing a depression”

Wow look at how well he avoided it!

Good thing Obama was elected or else we would have really been in bad shape. </sarcasm>

The fundamental policies that cause the depression and recessions are being continued by Obama. The Fed hasn’t changed, the government is still intervening, and still overspending.

Compare this depression (because in all reality it was) to the depression of 1921 and 1929. In this depression and the depression of 1929 the government was heavily involved prior to the crash and played a pivotal role in the exacerbation of it. In 1921 though, Harding used a hands off approach and the economy was back in shape within 18 months.

Obama’s first term was a joke. I feel bad for him almost. Almost.

We have a solution called the Megakey that will allow artists to earn income from users who download music for free. Yes that’s right, we will pay artists even for free downloads. The Megakey business model has been tested with over a million users and it works. You can expect several Megabox announcements next year including exclusive deals with artists who are eager to depart from outdated business models.

You need to understand that some labels are run by arrogant and outdated dinosaurs who have been in business for 1000 years. These guys think an iPad is a facial treatment, the Internet is the devil, and wired phones are still hip. They are in denial about the new realities and opportunities. They don’t understand that the rip-off days are over. Artists are more educated than ever about how they are getting ripped off and how the big labels only look after themselves.

MegaUpload CEO Kim Dotcom a month before his site was shutdown by the federal government for “copyright violations.”

It’s stuff like this that makes me so interested in politics. The emerging and burgeoning internet market place is just one component of the new Digital Age. It’s also interesting to view the parallels between this economic transformation and those of the past. We are moving from the industrial revolution into the digital age in the same way we developed out of the agricultural era into the industrial one. The government will always be used as shelter from the ever changing economic landscape.

(Source: mysunwolf)

no-belgium-no-problem:

That awkward moment when a Supermodel understands money and inflation more than all the governments of Europe and America.

no-belgium-no-problem:

That awkward moment when a Supermodel understands money and inflation more than all the governments of Europe and America.