Hypocrisy Transparent As Obama Prepares To Meet With Chamber of Commerce
Posted: 19 January, 2011 Filed under: Cap and Tax, Economy, Elections, Heath Care, Politics, Recession, Recovery, Stimulus Spending, Taxes, Union Deals | Tags: campaign finance tag, chamber of commerce tag, midterm election, obama, reelection Comments OffAlthough the sea of socialist rhetoric and hypocrisy through which Barack Obama makes us wade is routinely deep, I found a news blurb this morning that I found particularly hypocritical. Barack Obama is meeting with the US Chamber of Commerce to see what he can do to help create jobs. Obama also wants to assure the business community he supports them. Read the rest of this entry »
Turning America Around: Part One
Posted: 31 December, 2010 Filed under: Economy, Politics, Recession, Recovery, Taxes | Tags: Economy, elections, health care debate, health care reform, liberal agenda, redistribution of wealth, Tea Party Comments OffA great American philosopher once said: It’s Déjà vu all over again. Although it’s a great line, my intent here is not to wax philosophic by quoting Yogi Berra. The malaise in which America now flounders is Déjà vu all over again, as it is eerily reminiscent of the America of 1980 and the malaise in which the country was mired at that time. Because the last thing they want are parallels being drawn between Barack Obama and Jimmy Carter, liberals will disagree, but the similarities are so striking they’ll have to split hairs to do it. Very much the way Jimmy Carter split hairs over the definition of recession while debating Ronald Reagan in 1980. Read the rest of this entry »
Financial Reform Bill Does Not Get Wall Street: It Hammers Main Street
Posted: 25 July, 2010 Filed under: Economy, Media, Politics, Recession, Taxes | Tags: demographics tag, economics, housing, housing inventory, housing market, housing market research, lexington development, market, market conditions, market trends, scott schaefer 1 Comment »
Our elected officials in Washington have struck again. Just months after passing a tax-raising, job-killing health care bill, Congress approved and the socialist who resides in the White House has signed financial regulatory reform legislation that lacks – ironically enough – any actual reform. Proponents of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act will undoubtedly hail it as a triumph of Main Street over Wall Street, but they have it backward. It will be small businesses and families shouldering the brunt of this legislation through higher fees, less choice, and fewer opportunities to responsibly access credit.
So what does the Dodd-Frank Act do? For one thing, it calls for more than 350 regulatory rule-makings, 47 studies, 74 reports, and counting. This tsunami of new rules and studies will cause tremendous uncertainty—making it harder for businesses to raise capital, make investments, and create jobs. To put this effort into context, the Sarbanes-Oxley Act required 16 rule-makings and 6 studies—which took more than two years to complete. In the meantime, businesses must contend with a bill of which Sen. Christopher Dodd (D-CT), one of its chief architects, remarked, “No one will know until this is actually in place how it works.” If that’s not a recipe for confusion, uncertainty, and litigation, I don’t know what is!
The complications don’t end there. The Chamber believes that you can’t have real reform without reforming the regulators. So it comes as a disappointment that the Dodd-Frank Act creates even more regulatory agencies on top of a fundamentally flawed, outdated system, instead of fixing the system itself. These new bodies include the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, a sprawling new bureaucracy with unchecked and far-reaching powers that could potentially regulate hundreds of thousands of non-financial businesses.
The Dodd-Frank Act will also put American financial firms at a disadvantage by imposing rules and regulations that haven’t been or won’t be adopted globally. In a world where capital can move easily, it will go to where it is welcome, safe, and can generate a decent return. This new legislation is the equivalent of a “keep out” sign on the front lawn, forcing legitimate business activity to foreign markets that are hungry for additional capital. This will increase the cost of capital here at home, and could further put the squeeze on small businesses.
While the passage of the Dodd-Frank Act marks a sad day for the U.S. economy, jobs, and the future of our capital markets, the fight is far from over. The Chamber will continue to work vigorously through all available avenues—regulatory, legislative, and legal—to guarantee appropriate implementation of the bill and to ensure that we have the most efficient, transparent, and well-regulated capital markets in the world.
Where is Joe The Plumber When We Need Him? Obama Announces Punitive New Tax
Posted: 15 January, 2010 Filed under: Economy, Elections, Stimulus Spending, Taxes | Tags: banks tag, class warfare tag, joe the plumber, obama lies, obamunism, punitive taxes, tax, taxation Comments Off
WASHINGTON (AP) — President Barack Obama told banks Thursday they should pay a new tax to recoup the cost of bailing out foundering firms at the height of the financial crisis. "We want our money back," he said.
All American taxpayers, myself included, wants "our money back," as the President so eloquently put it. Go get ‘em champ…protect the taxpayers. Though, you must admit it sounds somewhat absurd coming from a guy that hands out billions of dollars at a time. And yet – at this point, anyway – I still don’t disagree.
Obama then branded the latest round of bank bonuses as "obscene." and said his goal is to prevent such excesses in the future, not to punish banks for past behavior.
Here is where I have a problem. Obama’s comments from the preceding paragraph are frightening. All Americans should listen carefully, let it sink in, and then vote against every democrat for the rest of their lives.
These are the very same policies that made the former USSR such a shining example of success throughout the last century. In one paragraph Obama says (1) that profit is evil; (2) it is his goal to prevent profit in the future; and (3) that he is best suited to decide how privately owned companies should spend their money.
He further adds that he will tax you and seize your money at gunpoint in order to centrally plan and redistribute your money the way he best sees fit. The Class Warfare Obama incites when it suits him is inherently evil. But, then again, so is the race baiting at which he is so adept.
The tax, which would require congressional approval, would last at least 10 years and generate about $90 billion over the decade, according to administration estimates. "If these companies are in good enough shape to afford massive bonuses, they are surely in good enough shape to afford paying back every penny to taxpayers," Obama said. So he has singled out private companies to whom he has decided to apply punitive taxation.
Advisers believe the administration can make an argument that banks should tap their bonus pools for the fee instead of passing the cost on to consumers. So, to be perfectly clear, Obama wants to confiscate the money which belongs to – let’s say – Goldman Sachs, and distribute it differently than the way Goldman itself wants to spend it.
The president’s tone was emphatic and populist, capitalizing on public antipathy toward Wall Street. With the sharp words, he also tried to deflect some of the growing skepticism aimed at his own economic policies as unemployment stubbornly hovers around 10 percent.
The proposed 0.15 percent tax on the liabilities of large financial institutions would apply only to those companies with assets of more than $50 billion. There are approximately 50 such companies. Administration officials estimate that 60 percent of the revenue would come from the 10 biggest ones. They would have to pay up even though many did not accept any taxpayer assistance and most of those that did have repaid the loans.
"We are already hearing a hue and cry from Wall Street, suggesting that this proposed fee is not only unwelcome but unfair, that by some twisted logic, it is more appropriate for the American people to bear the cost of the bailout rather than the industry that benefited from it, even though these executives are out there giving themselves huge bonuses," Obama said. In that Obama is applying this tax to institutions that never took TARP money or who have repaid it, he is lying. No one has said these banks should slip the obligation in favor of letting the taxpayers foot the bill; except him. He is lying.
This confiscatory and punitive tax also applies to companies that never took a dime of TARP money and to companies that accepted TARP money, but have paid it all back. So all of the President’s rhetoric is just that: rhetoric. He is lying. The real truth is, he needs the money to continue funneling money to labor unions, special interests and those voting blocks that consistently vote democratic. In other words, he is doing exactly what Harry Reid did with Ben Nelson; he is buying votes.
"Politics have overtaken the economics," said Scott Talbott, the chief lobbyist for the Financial Services Roundtable, a group representing large Wall Street institutions. "This is a punitive tax on companies that repaid TARP in full or never took TARP." Even before details came out, Jamie Dimon, chief executive of JPMorgan Chase & Co., said: "Using tax policy to punish people is a bad idea."
Not surprisingly, in Congress, Democrats embraced Obama’s proposal while Republicans rejected it. The Democrats in Congress are still sufficiently distant from the mid-term elections that they fear Obama, Reid and Pelosi more than they do the voters in their home districts. This will change when they all realize that the Tea Party – a political party that didn’t even exist a year ago – has the support and momentum necessary to oust the Majority Leader from office in his final re-election bid.
"I think it is entirely reasonable to say that the industry that, A, caused these problems more than any other and, B, benefited from the activity, should be contributing," said Democratic Rep. Barney Frank of Massachusetts, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee. It is only in Massachusetts that an idiot like Barney Frank can re-elected, time and again.
At what point do you people stop believing in his Yes We Can chants and realize that Obama’s policies – his core philosophies – are un-American and critically harmful? I just hope the voters of Massachusetts do the right thing at the polls next week. But, mark my words, if by some never before seen miracle happens and a Republican is elected Senator in Massachusetts, the democrats will challenge the results or find some other reason not to seat Senator Scott Brown.
A Christmas Wish and Special Christmas Picture For All Americans
Posted: 25 December, 2009 Filed under: Cap and Tax, Elections, Global Warming, Heath Care, Media, Politics, Taxes | Tags: earmarks tag, founding fathers, george washington, harry reid, healthcare, nancy pelosi, patriots, pork, scott schaefer, senate pay-offs, Tea Party, tea party patriots Comments OffI came across this picture, of George Washington crossing the Delaware, quite by accident the other day. I didn’t do anything with it; after all, what do you do with a picture like this? Then it came to me very early this morning. This is a Christmas picture; an intensely important Christmas picture, if you’re an American. At least it should be.
This very special Christmas Picture is very different from most Christmas pictures you see, as there are no Christian icons, no Santa Claus, no elves and no Christmas trees. It is, however, Christmas. Although most Americans have a vague awareness of George Washington crossing the Delaware, their consciousness is that of a story from folklore, rather than something that really happened. But it did really happen.
Not only did it really happen, it happened on a bitterly cold, ice covered Christmas morning more than 200 years ago. George Washington, along with hundreds of volunteers, crossed the Delaware River, many in tattered clothes, during the American Revolution to insure the establishment of these United States. The move was heralded for centuries as a watershed moment in our Revolution.
So I have published this picture, a Christmas picture, for all Americans. So we all remember. I ask all Americans to remember that the men in this picture, Washington included, were willing to sacrifice everything for the good of the country they were fighting to establish. I also ask you to compare the men in this photo, our forefathers, to those who purport to lead our country now.
Compare to Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the House of Representatives, who just two weeks ago headed to Copenhagen with two – one was apparently not adequate – private jets for an historic convention on global warming. Comrade Pelosi apologized for America and tried to give away hundreds of billions of American taxpayer dollars to the rest of the world because of the mess we’ve made. And I thought the $30,000 taxpayer dollars she spent this year outfitting her office with fresh flowers was bad.
Compare to Harry Reid, who has played Lets Make A Deal for the last several weeks in an effort to pass socialized medicine in the Senate. At least Harry knew what it took to motivate his fellow democratic Senators: bribes, pay-outs and the most massive earmarks in history.
Compare to Senator Ben Nelson, who would never vote for the healthcare bill because of publicly funded abortions; unless you pay him $100 million. Compare to Senator Mary Landrieu, who was completely on-board with the healthcare bill, especially since she procured $30 billion in special entitlements for Louisiana. And, let’s not forget Joe Lieberman, that bastion of integrity from Connecticut who wouldn’t vote for the bill, until he was paid off.
Compare all of our leaders from 2009 to those men who were willing to sacrifice everything on December 25, 1776. In 2009, the most outrageous leader of them all, the man who promised transparency in government and legislation free from lobbyists and earmarks, is vacationing for ten days in Hawaii. That’s a great deal different from George Washington’s Christmas.
Oh, and please don’t forget that the events depicted in this famous Christmas painting, took place shortly after a Tea Party.

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