Wednesday, January 27, 2016

Noon-toon


Hillary Clinton’s Tax Plan Will Shrink the Economy and Lose Jobs, According to New Study | TheBlaze.com

Hillary Clinton’s Tax Plan Will Shrink the Economy and Lose Jobs, According to New Study | TheBlaze.com:

"A new analysis of Hillary Clinton’s tax plan offers no positive news for the Democratic presidential front-runner, projecting a 1 percent reduction in economic growth, fewer jobs and lower wages.

According to a study by the Tax Foundation released Tuesday, Clinton’s plans to hike taxes on high earners and on companies would likely reduce the number of full-time jobs by 311,000 over 10 years and reduce wages by 0.8 percent."

Are Schools Increasingly Becoming Re-Education Camps?

Are Schools Increasingly Becoming Re-Education Camps? | Intellectual Takeout
Apparently the new government of the Canadian province of Alberta has decided that its schoolchildren need to be re-educated about what ‘family’ means.
As Charlotte Allen quips: “It used to be: ‘Heather has two mommies.’ Now, it's: ‘Heather has two non-gendered and inclusive caregivers.’”
Allen continues:
Here's the pertinent language from the rainbow-adorned ‘Guidelines for Best Practices’ that the high-minded, progressive NDP government issued last week:
“School forms, websites, letters, and other communications use non-gendered and inclusive language (e.g., parents/guardians, caregivers, families, partners, ‘student’ or ‘their’ instead of Mr., Ms., Mrs., mother, father, him, her, etc.).”
The purpose of the guidelines, according to the text, is to create “learning communities” that “respect diverse sexual orientations, gender identities, and gender expressions.”
This is but one more manifestation of where things have been going in our culture.
Sexual autonomy—even to the point of deciding what one’s sex is—trumps natural, biological relationships. 
And when it doesn’t, people should be forced to pretend that it does. 
Because if they don’t, some people’s feelings will be hurt.
Or something.
Hence the Soviet-style rewriting of texts and reshaping of language itself.
There are countless examples of it, especially on secular college campuses.
A few have even been discussed on this site.
How have things come to this pass?
...But the process is reaching the point where reality itself is seen as an oppressive limitation on human freedom. 
...Identity politics hinges on treating certain inheritances—such as one’s race or traditional culture—as features of the individual that must be respected or even privileged for the benefit of those individuals who choose to embrace them as features of their identity. 
And many individuals do so embrace them, because their personal narrative hinges on seeing themselves as members of an oppressed race, class, or ethnic group that is struggling to liberate itself from the other sex or a different race.
Yet the narrative of liberation from oppression works a bit differently with respect to anything regarding sex or sexual identity.
As Scruton puts it:
“My pleasures are mine, and if you are forbidding them you are also oppressing me.
Hence sexual liberation is not just a release but a duty, and by letting it all hang out I am not just defying the bourgeois order but casting a blow for freedom everywhere.
Self-gratification acquires the glamor and the moral kudos of a heroic struggle. 
For the ‘me’ generation, no way of acquiring a moral cause can be more gratifying. 
You become totally virtuous by being totally selfish....”

The Climate Snow Job

The Climate Snow Job - WSJ:
An East Coast blizzard howling, global temperatures peaking, the desert Southwest flooding, drought-stricken California drying up—surely there’s a common thread tying together this “extreme” weather.
There is.
But it has little to do with what recent headlines have been saying about the hottest year ever.
It is called business as usual.
Surface temperatures are indeed increasing slightly:
They’ve been going up, in fits and starts, for more than 150 years, or since a miserably cold and pestilential period known as the Little Ice Age.
Before carbon dioxide from economic activity could have warmed us up, temperatures rose three-quarters of a degree Fahrenheit between 1910 and World War II.
They then cooled down a bit, only to warm again from the mid-1970s to the late ’90s, about the same amount as earlier in the century.
Whether temperatures have warmed much since then depends on what you look at.
Until last June, most scientists acknowledged that warming reached a peak in the late 1990s, and since then had plateaued in a “hiatus.”
There are about 60 different explanations for this in the refereed literature.
That changed last summer, when the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) decided to overhaul its data, throwing out satellite-sensed sea-surface temperatures since the late 1970s and instead relying on, among other sources, readings taken from the cooling-water-intake tubes of oceangoing vessels.
The scientific literature is replete with articles about the large measurement errors that accrue in this data owing to the fact that a ship’s infrastructure conducts heat, absorbs a tremendous amount of the sun’s energy, and vessels’ intake tubes are at different ocean depths. 
...There are two real concerns about warming, neither of which has anything to do with the El Niño-enhanced recent peak.
How much more is the world likely to warm as civilization continues to exhale carbon dioxide, and does warming make the weather more “extreme,” which means more costly?
Instead of relying on debatable surface-temperature information, consider instead readings in the free atmosphere (technically, the lower troposphere) taken by two independent sensors: satellite sounders and weather balloons).
As has been shown repeatedly by University of Alabama climate scientist John Christy, since late 1978 (when the satellite record begins), the rate of warming in the satellite-sensed data is barely a third of what it was supposed to have been, according to the large family of global climate models now in existence.
Balloon data, averaged over the four extant data sets, shows the same.
It is therefore probably prudent to cut by 50% the modeled temperature forecasts for the rest of this century.
Doing so would mean that the world—without any political effort at all—won’t warm by the dreaded 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit by 2100 that the United Nations regards as the climate apocalypse.
The notion that world-wide weather is becoming more extreme is just that: a notion, or a testable hypothesis.
As data from the world’s biggest reinsurer, Munich Re, and University of Colorado environmental-studies professor Roger Pielke Jr. have shown, weather-related losses haven’t increased at all over the past quarter-century.
In fact, the trend, while not statistically significant, is downward.
Last year showed the second-smallest weather-related loss of Global World Productivity, or GWP, in the entire record.
Without El Niño, temperatures in 2015 would have been typical of the post-1998 regime.
And, even with El Niño, the effect those temperatures had on the global economy was de minimis.

Anger in Italy after authorities cover up nude Roman statues of goddesses so as not to offend Iranian president


From Bill Warner, Phd "This is what dhimmitude looks like." (look it up)
Anger in Italy after authorities cover up nude Roman statues of goddesses so as not to offend Iranian president - Telegraph:
Anger in Italy after authorities cover up nude Roman statues of goddesses so as not to offend Iranian president
Hassan Rouhani is on a tour of Italy and France to drum up trade and diplomatic links after his country signed historic deal to limit its nuclear ambitions
Italy covered up marble statues of nude Roman goddesses in order to spare the blushes of the visiting president of Iran, who is on a visit to Europe to rebuild relations with the West after the recent deal on restricting its nuclear ambitions lifted years of economic sanctions.
With Italian businesses signing deals worth around 17 billion euros with Iranian companies, much was at stake and Rome was anxious not to offend the sensibilities of Hassan Rouhani.
But the decision to encase the statues of Venus and other female figures from antiquity prompted outrage from some commentators and politicians.
The act of self-censorship took place at the Capitoline Museums, one of Rome’s richest repositories of classical art, which the president visited with Matteo Renzi, the prime minister.
The offending statues lined a corridor along which the Iranian delegation passed before holding a press conference..."

Good read-----Mizzou Madness

Mizzou Madness | HeterodoxAcademy.org:
This is a guest post by Marty Rochester, Curators’ Distinguished Teaching Professor of political science at the University of Missouri–St. Louis.
"As a faculty member of the four-campus University of Missouri system, I watched with a mixture of amazement and horror at the events that unfolded last fall, when a relatively small group of student protestors at UM-Columbia, joined by the school’s football team, forced the resignation of UM president Tim Wolfe as well as UMC Chancellor R. Bowen Loftin.
Amazement, because perhaps never before have so few students been able to get so many college administrators to display so much cowardice over so little provocation, as the Mizzou protests have emboldened the radical left to hold campuses hostage to threats of disruption all across the country.
Horror, because perhaps never before have we seen quite this combination of totalitarianism and stupidity at work on college campuses, making a mockery of so-called higher education.
The late 1960s also saw campus demonstrations, but they at least could be understood as reactions to the vilest forms of racism, along with anger over the Vietnam War.
Although there remain legitimate concerns about racial and social justice today, we clearly now live in a much more inclusive society and there is no major war taking the lives of hundreds of thousands of Americans.
Notwithstanding ongoing challenges we face, things are arguably getting better and better, even as we feel worse and worse.
...The same collegians who utter obscenities at university officials and their peers claim a right not to be “offended” or made “uncomfortable” by even the slightest counterpoint to their worldviews, their psyches so fragile as to require “trigger warnings” in advance of any ideas that might deny them a “safe space.” 
A growing number of commentators, both liberals and conservatives (from Nicholas Kristof to Roger Kimball), have criticized these sophomoric types as “snowflakes,” “Little Robespierres,” and “crybullies...”
Read on and re-think where you educate your children.

American hero: Obama’s military a ‘girly man outfit’

American hero: Obama’s military a ‘girly man outfit’:

"The serious accusation leveled against Barack Obama comes from retired Army Maj. Gen. Patrick Brady, a recipient of the Medal of Honor, who told WND bluntly, “Obama loathes the military.”

“His goal is to reduce the military to impotence,” Brady said in an interview. “That way, during his reign, which, thank God, is almost over, he could point to an emasculated military and say he didn’t have the capability to [do] anything about it. If it came to a confrontation, I don’t think he would fight.”


History for January 27


History for January 27 - On-This-Day.com:
Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart 1756, Lewis Carroll 1832, Hyman Rickover 1900 


William Randolph Hearst Jr. 1908, David Seville (Chipmunks) 1919, Donna Reed 1921 


1606 - The trial of Guy Fawkes and his fellow conspirators began. They were executed on January 31. 


1880 - Thomas Edison patented the electric incandescent lamp. 


1945 - Soviet troops liberated the Nazi concentration camps Auschwitz and Birkenau in Poland. 


1948 - Wire Recording Corporation of America announced the first magnetic tape recorder. The ‘Wireway’ machine with a built-in oscillator sold for $149.50. 


1951 - In the U.S., atomic testing in the Nevada desert began as an Air Force plane dropped a one-kiloton bomb on Frenchman Flats. 


1967 - At Cape Kennedy, FL, astronauts Virgil I. "Gus" Grissom, Edward H. White and Roger B. Chaffee died in a flash fire during a test aboard their Apollo I spacecraft. 


1998 - U.S. First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton appeared on NBC's "Today" show. She charged that the allegations against her husband were the work of a "vast right-wing conspiracy." 


2010 - Steve Jobs unveiled the Apple iPad.


Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Obama May Have Gone Too Far: He Just Got Blasted With A Major Lawsuit That Could Hurt...

Obama May Have Gone Too Far: He Just Got Blasted With A Major Lawsuit That Could Hurt...:

"The first lawsuit has been filed challenging the constitutionality of President Barack Obama’s executive actions concerning gun control, which he announced earlier this month.

Conservative attorney Larry Klayman filed a suit in federal district court in Florida which accuses the president of seeking to circumvent the legislative process and invent new gun laws in violation of the Constitution’s separation of powers.

“The president states that he is doing so purely because he does not like the legislative decisions of the Congress,” argues Klayman, the founder of Freedom Watch. "



Demolition begins at failed Wayne Co. horse track

Demolition begins at failed Wayne Co. horse track:
Horse track property lists for $8 million
Demolition is under way on a failed $50-million horse racing track that was one of Wayne County's biggest economic development debacles of the past decade.
The abandoned Pinnacle Race Course near Detroit Metro Airport, which opened in 2008 and closed in 2010, saw its main pavilion ripped apart Monday by excavating equipment.
...A real estate listing online shows the property for sale with an $8-million asking price.
The property's unpaid tax bill is at least $2.3 million, county officials said.
..."Everyone knows that this was a terrible business deal," Bridges said.
...But years earlier, the Pinnacle track was a celebrated economic development project for Wayne County, which invested $26.6 million in sewer and other infrastructure improvements to get the thoroughbred track up and running.
The Wayne County Land Bank also sold the entire 320-acre property to Campbell and other racetrack investors for $1.
In exchange for the $1 deal, the track's corporation promised to create or retain 1,100 construction jobs and 1,200 full-time permanent jobs or suffer financial penalties based on the estimated market value of the land, at the time $8.6 million.
The Pinnacle track struggled financially almost immediately upon opening and fell behind on property taxes.
Financial records show the track lost $2.5 million in 2009 and $4.8 million in 2010.  
Efforts to revive the track by creating a “racino” with slot machines failed.
Some local officials were surprised when the county signed off on documents that said Pinnacle created or retained more than 1,500 full-time jobs (not including construction) during just its first year. 
A subsequent 2011 report by the Wayne County Auditor General said the land bank’s bookkeeping was so shoddy that auditors couldn’t accurately tally the Pinnacle job numbers, which counted UPS delivery persons as full-time jobs..."

Buy Ammo

Buy Ammo - Kurt Schlichter
I have never, ever had anyone tell me that he had too much ammunition.
Not in a combat zone, not in a civil disaster, not even in peacetime.
Never.
Nor have I lived through a time where our governing class was so deeply corrupt, so utterly foolish, and so dangerously focused on the perpetuation of its own power that it risked bringing down everything we have built not merely in the United States but in the entire West.
Right now, if you are watching the news, you have questions about the future.
And the answer to all of them is to buy ammo.
Buying ammo is a no-lose proposition.
Look, the worst thing that happens if you buy more ammo is that you have more ammo.  
Plus, much of our consumer ammo is made by hardworking Americans, and many of those ammo makers are located in red states where the right to keep and bear arms is celebrated and respected.
So you’re helping fellow conservative Americans, which is good.
And you’re infuriating people like that sanctimonious, Second Amendment-hating incompetent infesting the White House, which is great.
...Right now we have a president who thinks he can ignore or modify the law unilaterally, justifying it with the baffling argument that he shouldn’t have to ask Congress because Congress will just say “No” – which I always thought was kind of the point of checks and balances.  
So what happens when President Clinton, who identified you and me and the 50% of Americans who aren’t her supporters as her enemies, decides she gets to make her own laws because, well, she knows better and feels like it?  
Nothing good.
But deterrence is a wonderful thing.
An armed, trained populace is not only prepared for when things go bad, but the fact that it is armed and trained makes it much less likely that things will go bad in the first place.
Last year, Americans voted for liberty by buying well over 15 million new guns.
That’s roughly 40,000 a day, every day.
That’s enough to arm three infantry divisions.
Every.
Single.
Day.
Just don’t forget to buy ammo."

Here’s What Citizens in a Massachusetts City Must Do to Apply for a Handgun License | TheBlaze.com

Here’s What Citizens in a Massachusetts City Must Do to Apply for a Handgun License | TheBlaze.com:

"Outraged critics in Lowell, Massachusetts, are denouncing the city’s new law that will require those applying for a license to carry handguns to submit a personal “essay” and pay roughly $1,100 toward a set of training classes."



New Swimming Pool "Rules" Poster Shows How Sick Life With Muslim Refugees Really Is

PHOTO: New Swimming Pool "Rules" Poster Shows How Sick Life With Muslim Refugees Really Is
We are often told by President Barack Obama and his fellow progressives that there is nothing to worry about when it comes to the waves of Muslim migrants and “refugees” flooding into Europe, and to a lesser extent, the U.S.
Yet European women are suffering from an incredible spike in sexual harassment, physical assaults and rapesat the hands of those allegedly harmless and innocent Muslim men.
In fact, the instances of sexual harassment and assault have increased so much that public swimming pools in Munich have resorted to posting cartoon-like posters informing men that it is not OK to touch a woman’s body without permission, no matter what she may or may not be wearing.
The German news site The Local reported on the comic strip-style posters teaching Muslim migrants about proper swimming pool etiquette, which have been translated from German into French, Arabic, Pashto and Somali.
One panel of the poster in particular features a blond woman in a bikini with a hand reaching for her rear end.
The universally understood red circle with a backslash over the hand make it perfectly clear that men are not allowed to grab a woman’s butt.
This follows the recent news from the German town of Bornheim, near Cologne. 
Bornheim just banned all adult male Muslim migrants from its public pool due to a flurry of complaints about sexual harassment and assaults, according to the BBC.
The Munich pool rules posters were actually first designed more than two years ago, revealing that the current issues facing the German people are nothing new, but have found a resurgence recently due to the massive influx of migrants over the past year.
“The ground rule of respect for women – whatever clothing they’re wearing – is unfortunately not respected by all our swimmers.
That’s why there is an explicit indication about it,” a spokesman for Munich’s city government said in a statement.
Is this what our world is coming to, that we must post reminders to men that they aren’t allowed to simply grab and grope whatever women they want, whenever they want, wherever they want?
Furthermore, if these Muslim migrants and “refugees” were really as harmless and innocent as Obama and others purport them to be, would these kinds of signs really be necessary?

Bills Impose Accountability on Powerful Historic Districts

Bills Impose Accountability on Powerful Historic Districts [Michigan Capitol Confidential]:
Current law lets handful of activists restrict property owners' choices
For nearly a half century, small numbers of architectural preservation activists have used a device called study commissions to get portions of Michigan communities designated as historic districts. These commissions tend to be dominated by the activists and often make decisions that infringe the private property rights of many people.
But the rules of the game may soon change.
...Among other things the legislation would raise the threshold for creating a historic district: Two-thirds of the affected property owners would have to give their assent.
The bills would expand individual rights in several other ways as well.
...Under current law, once a historic district is created it becomes nearly permanent, regardless of whether people in the community support it. 
Also, the district boundaries can be altered and even expanded by Lansing bureaucrats — without notice to or input from affected property owners.
The the current law was well-meant when it was adopted back in 1970, but over the decades, it has morphed into something that often lacks common sense.
This legislation will provide that common sense by enhancing local control and increasing the rights of property owners...”

Lunch video-----The Video That Just May Sink Hillary's Ship...

The Video That Just May Sink Hillary's Ship... » Louder With Crowder:


This week, AmericaRising released an ad on Hillary Clinton.  I usually don’t like, nor commentate on these kinds of ads.
But this ad, is without a doubt, the most effective anti-campaign ad that I’ve ever seen.  And it shows Conservatives the blueprint on how to beat Hillary.  Attack the dishonesty.  I’ve been saying this for years. Hillary Clinton is more than a slimy politician, she’s a compulsive liar.  She lies about big things, but more importantly, she lies about little things when she thinks that nobody’s watching. For no reason!  Ignore the “sexism” claims from the left, speak freely, and focus on this. Watch below. It’s a must.



Read more: http://louderwithcrowder.com/the-video-that-just-may-sink-hillarys-ship/#ixzz3xkbY6500
Follow us: @scrowder on Twitter | stevencrowderofficial on Facebook

Noon-toon


Texas Grand Jury Indicts Center for Medical Progress Filmmakers, but Not Planned Parenthood | TheBlaze.com

Texas Grand Jury Indicts Center for Medical Progress Filmmakers, but Not Planned Parenthood | TheBlaze.com:

“The Center for Medical Progress uses the same undercover techniques that investigative journalists have used for decades in exercising our First Amendment rights to freedom of speech and of the press, and follows all applicable laws,” Daleiden said in a statement. “We respect the processes of the Harris County District Attorney, and note that buying fetal tissue requires a seller as well. Planned Parenthood still cannot deny the admissions from their leadership about fetal organ sales captured on video for all the world to see.”

“We were called upon to investigate allegations of criminal conduct by Planned Parenthood Gulf Coast,” Harris County District Attorney Devon Anderson said in a statement. "

Successful Political Speech Measures at a 4th-Grade Level

Successful Political Speech Measures at a 4th-Grade Level | Intellectual Takeout:
For those curious to know what type of books American school children are reading, look no farther than Renaissance Learning’s 2016 report What Kids are Reading.
Compiled from reading data from 9.8 million students, the report lists the top 25 most read books for each grade along with their reading level.
While some tried and true classics are in the mix, it’s not all that surprising to find Diary of a Wimpy Kid and The Hunger Games topping the charts.
More surprising, however, is the reading level at which most of the popular books register. 
On average, children in grades 6-11 fail to read material above a fifth-grade level. 
Twelfth graders do a hair better with an average reading level of mid-6th grade.
Such news is interesting, particularly in light of the current presidential race. 
Last fall, the Boston Globe measured the readability level of candidates’ political speeches. 
Donald Trump came in with the lowest score, with a readability level that a 4th-grader could understand. As the Globe pointed out:
“The utterances of today’s candidates reflect a continued decline in the complexity of political speech. President George Washington’s ‘Farewell Address’ in 1796 was written at graduate-degree levels: Grade 17.9 , while President Abraham Lincoln’s ‘Gettysburg Address’ in 1863 was at an 11th-grade level.”
In all likelihood, the complexity – or rather, simplicity – of modern political speech is keeping pace with the low reading levels maintained in today’s classrooms.
The American Republic established by the Founders required an educated citizenry in order to maintain it. 
Judging from the apparently low reading and comprehension levels which seem to be the norm, does it seem that both good education and the Republic are at risk of becoming extinct?

2016’s Best and Worst States to Retire

2016’s Best and Worst States to Retire | WalletHub®:
"...But in addition to when you want to retire, you might want to ask yourself where.
That can be an awfully difficult question to answer if you haven’t adequately planned — or been able to plan — for the rest of your life.
Even in the most affordable areas of the U.S., retirees often cannot rely on their Social Security or pension checks alone to cover all of their living expenses.
Social Security benefits increase progressively with local inflation, but they replace only about 40 percent of the amount you earned if you were an average worker, according to the Center on Budget and Policy Priorities.
If retirement is still a big question mark for you because of finances, we recommend you consider relocating to a retirement-friendly state — one that will let you keep more money in your pocket without drastically modifying your lifestyle. 
WalletHub’s analysts compared the 50 states and the District of Columbia across 24 key metrics to help you find that permanent, and affordable, place to call home when you’re ready to leave the workforce.
Of course, affordability shouldn’t be your only priority in retirement, which is why our analysis also explores health-related factors and overall quality of life. 
Scroll down for the results, additional expert commentary and a detailed methodology.