"If you like your plan, you can keep your plan, period." That
sentence was perhaps the biggest Presidential lie since the end of the Vietnam
War, which our Dear Leader told knowingly and repeatedly like a mantra. The Big
Lie was used to sell Obamacare, which was the Chicago Machine Prodigy's biggest
and most important priority. The grossly false character of the statement
became obvious as Obamacare rolled out. It wasn't even on the same planet as
the truth. At that point people began to look at all of the other lies the
Smartest President Ever was also spouting from his prepared, teleprompter
remarks. People doubted all of his excuses for all of his scandals. His
constant pattern of not knowing anything about the scandals until he read about
them in the papers was repeated for every succeeding scandal. The excuses came
to be seen as evading responsibility through lies. Then came the realization
that his excuses for Benghazi were lies specifically crafted to get through the
2012 election without making any real explanation of anything. The
Administration even withheld where the President was and what he was doing
during the 13 hour attack that left 4 Americans dead. Voters felt that the 2012
election win was based on a pack of lies. They felt cheated. At this point, the
falsity of almost everything Barry the Magnificent said or promised in 2012
means anything he says now is not believed or trusted. The President has a
built up a deep well of distrust which will mean he can accomplish almost
nothing in the rest of his term. Nobody will make a deal with the Punahou
Prince, because they will be almost certain he won't keep any of his promises.
Translate
A Call for Healing
Nov 23, 2014
Cap and Trade For Bureaucratic Regulations
I don't think it will take 30 years to halt the growth of the regulatory
state. A single cap and trade bill and a slight change in court regulatory
rules will do it. First, limit the total volume of government regulations and
force bureaucrats to bargain with each other over which regulations are most
important. If the government wants to add new regulations, they have to remove
old regulations to make room for them. In addition, there needs to be a legal
change in the deference federal courts give to regulatory agencies. Right now,
regulations are given almost no court review because the regulatory agency is
assumed to know what they are doing. The law should be instead that regulatory
agencies deserve review on the relevance of the regulations to the original law
authorizing the regulations. Regulators should be required to demonstrate that
the effects of the new regulations will be to solve the problem they are
supposed to solve at a reasonable cost compared to the benefits. Obviously,
court injunctions would be allowed to delay the imposition of new regulations
until they can be reviewed. With these two innovations, we will be using two of
the Liberals' favorite mechanisms to restrain regulation. Liberals designed cap and trade to destroy conventional energy production. They have always used the courts to stall construction projects with endless environmental lawsuits. Under my scheme, when the regulatory
process grinds to a halt, it will fall on the bureaucrats and courts.
Aticle I reacted to:
Aticle I reacted to:
Zombies are a Key Demographic For Chicago Democrats
Zombies are a key voting demographic for Democrats here in Chicago. They
are no information voters and also eat other voters' brains. You guys down in
Louisiana should watch out in the coming Senate Runoff Election.
Time for Targeted Sanctions Against Rogue U.S. Regime
Now that President Obama is leading a regime that is not bound by law, I
think targeted economic sanctions are in order.
To set this up, the continuing resolution should fund the government
only until February, 2015. Once the new Congress is sworn in, it should be
possible to impose pay cuts or a pay ceiling on all political appointees, in
the White House, the Department of Justice and all of the organizations in Homeland
Security involved with Immigration as part of a continuing resolution to fund
the government through October, 2015. We should be stop paying the President
anything at all, because he is no longer faithfully executing the law. However,
I think it would be politically easier to sell if we imposed an across the
board 30% pay cut on all of the above mentioned political appointees as well as
the President himself. The pay can be
restored once the administration stops violating the law, with no back pay
allowed. There should be a provision making it a felony for any of the
employees covered by the pay cuts to accept private contributions to supplement
their government pay, with a statute of limitations of 10 years. George Soros can't be allowed to bribe political appointees that Congress is sanctioning. Congress needs to set
an aggressive precedent to stop this behavior forever. The alternative is the end of Constitutional government in the United States.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)