Thursday, August 30, 2012

Al Gore: Mitt Romney's policies would increase income inequality

Lyin' Ryan: Al Gore and the Current team discuss the implications of Paul Ryan's speech

Clint Eastwood

Al Gore on whether it's fair to blame George W. Bush and the ugly truth ...

Paul Ryan’s brazen lies

Paul Ryan’s brazen lies

click link

But that’s not all. He attacked Obama for failing to keep open a Janesville GM plant that closed under Bush in 2008. He hit him for a credit-rating downgrade that S&P essentially blamed on GOP intransigence. He claimed that all taxpayers got from the 2009 stimulus was “more debt,” when most got a tax cut (and the stimulus is known to have saved between 1.4 and 3.3 million jobs). He derided the president for walking away from the Simpson Bowles commission deficit-cutting recommendations when Ryan himself, a commission member, voted against those recommendations.

He blamed Obama for a deficit mostly created by programs he himself voted for – from two wars, tax cuts, new Medicare benefits and TARP.

And of course, he riffed on the tired central lie of the GOP convention: that the president said “government gets the credit” for small businesses, not the business owners themselves.
Other than that, it was a great speech.

Interestingly, for all his lies, Ryan didn’t repeat the Romney camp’s false claim that Obama did away with the welfare system’s work requirements. Maybe he ran out of time.

RNC Attendees Throw Nuts At Black CNN Camerawoman

Big Vaginas Protest Republican National Convention

Senator Rand Paul at gop convention

Senator John McCain at gop convention

Vice Presidential Candidate Paul Ryan convention

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

Workers at Bain-Owned Illinois Factory Bring Fight to Save Outsourced Jo...

Do YOU Have the 37 Food Items YOU WON'T BE ABLE TO GET after the Coming ...

Colbert on Akin

Akin on KSDK post convention interview

2012 Gop Platform

2012 Gop Platform:

click link above 2012 Gop Platform

Crazy Rape Comparison By Republican Senate Candidate Tom Smith

rick santorum's gop convention

rick is less than honest once again

Ron Paul’s army revolts, again

Ron Paul’s army revolts, again

click link

snip

Ron Paul's army revolts, againDelegates from Maine protest during the presentation of rules during the Republican National Convention in Tampa. (Credit: AP/Lynne Sladkey)
TAMPA — “In fact, we just actually had a young guy from Massachusetts physically assault a little old lady from North Dakota trying to steal the minority report from her,” said Dudley Brown, a Colorado delegate on the rules committee here at the Republican National Convention, indicating just how heated things have gotten over a rules dispute that threatens to upset the carefully choreographed event. ”I had to step in and literally grab it out of his hands and sit him down forcefully. I told him, that’s not what men do to women, especially little old ladies, from my state. I don’t know what they do in Massachusetts,” Dudley, the executive vice president of the National Association for Gun Rights, told Salon on the floor of the convention.

“Hostile takeover”: Ron Paul’s fans react

“Hostile takeover”: Ron Paul’s fans react

click link

snip

TAMPA — Chaos and turmoil may have befallen the Ron Paul delegation — members of which frantically scrambled about the Tampa convention floor Tuesday to exert their influence — but much of the party establishment seemed unmoved by their plight. For example: I spotted Sen. John Thune of South Dakota striding around the exterior ring of the building, and asked if he felt the Paul People’s grievances were legitimate. “Well, perhaps in their minds,” the senator replied. “I think that there’s a process, everyone followed it. Everyone did it according to the rules.”
Virtually every Paul supporter I have encountered thus far would stridently disagree with Thune’s assessment. Generally, they range from somewhere between perturbed to violently apoplectic over GOP insiders’ skulduggery.


New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie: "What Matters Now is What We Do"

What Chris Christie didn’t tell you

What Chris Christie didn’t tell you

click link

snip


Chris Christie, who has previously spoken about the 2016 presidential race as if it’s a foregone conclusion that there will be no incumbent Republican running and that the GOP nomination will be wide open, delivered a keynote address Monday night that reeked of personal ambition.
The praise he directed toward Mitt Romney seemed perfunctory and almost incidental, with the heart of Christie’s speech devoted to extolling his own achievements in New Jersey. His intent was the same as that of any governor with presidential ambition: to portray his own executive leadership as a refreshing model of innovation, bipartisanship and results, one that the current occupant of the White House refuses for some strange reason to emulate.
“We need politicians to care more about doing something and less about being something,” Christie said. “Believe me, if we can do this in a blue state with a conservative Republican governor, Washington is out of excuses.”
It’s a compelling premise, obviously, but it’s also very misleading. It’s not that Christie hasn’t managed to achieve anything in New Jersey. He has, and his governorship has been unusually consequential. But almost nothing about how this has happened applies to the current situation in Washington.

Monday, August 27, 2012

More videos from TheYoungTurks (playlist)

RNC ad: Barack Obama, Outsourcer-in-Chief

RNC ad: Barack Obama, Outsourcer-in-Chief

http://bcove.me/33rjw7bv

Karl Rove predicts historic loss for Todd Akin - Jennifer Haberkorn - POLITICO.com

Karl Rove predicts historic loss for Todd Akin - Jennifer Haberkorn - POLITICO.com

click link


TAMPA, Fla.— Karl Rove on Monday predicted Rep. Todd Akin will lose by the widest margin of any Republican candidate in modern history if he remains in his Missouri Senate race against Sen. Claire McCaskill.
“What he said was indefensible and the way he handled it made it worse,” Rove told POLITICO’s Mike Allen at the first POLITICO Playbook Breakfast at the Republican National Convention.


Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0812/80193.html#ixzz24oGe8Leb

Missouri delegates angry at Mitt Romney over Todd Akin - Manu Raju - POLITICO.com

Missouri delegates angry at Mitt Romney over Todd Akin - Manu Raju - POLITICO.com:

click link

snip


TAMPA — Missouri GOP delegates are rejecting the heavy-handed push by Mitt Romney and national Republicans to boot Todd Akin from their state’s Senate race, revealing a split among Republicans that could imperil the party’s effort to take back the chamber in the fall campaign.
In interviews with POLITICO, delegates argued that Akin could still win the race in the conservative state, pushing back against the notion that his remarks on rape were a death blow to his Senate candidacy. Several delegates here in Tampa seemed angry at the national party, saying the decision to withhold millions of dollars in campaign funding is the real impediment in their effort to oust Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill in November.


Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0812/80203.html#ixzz24oGLCy6p

Herman Cain: Nine questions with Mr. 999

Ron Paul Supporters Seek to Assert Presence at RNC and Influence Long Te...

Michael D Higgins v Michael Graham (Newstalk 106-108fm, 2010)

oldie, but goodie

Romney talks about Bain slave labor

[LEAKED VIDEO] Mitt Romney talks about using Chinese slave labor to profit Bain Capital Mitt Romney Talks about Using Chinese Slave Labor to Profit His Bain Capital Company. It's Called "The Bain Way" and Mitt Romney wants to apply the same ideas to fix the American economy.

Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan: The Do-Over - ConventionReinvention.com

Sensata Workers Respond to Leaked Video On Bain/Romney Business Model

Republican Women for Obama

Saturday, August 25, 2012

#DropHuck: Akin's Last Defender

More videos from TheYoungTurks (playlist)

Free Flu Shots at Barnes-Jewish - 2011

note: been going here for years. pretty much truth and not a long wait expect same in 2012 am going with some of the soar folks hopefully after monthly meeting

Social Security Online History Pages is social security just another tax?

Social Security Online History Pages:

click link

Fleming vs Davis  ruled the following.  yes, congress can change the rules and if they wish to eliminate, make private or anything; they can do so

one suggests folks pay close attention to the upcoming elections.  one can say same of medicare or any other social program

Fleming vs Nester and others pretty much say the same




[Flemming v. Davis, 363 U.S. 603, 609 (1960)]


     3. Furthermore, payments made by employers for each of their
employees are  NOT matching  to be credited to the account of the
employee, but constitute an EXCISE TAX on the employer's right to
do  business.   Consequently,  his so-called  "contributions"  go
directly into the general fund of the treasury.


    4. People participating in Social Security payroll deductions
do NOT  acquire property  rights or  contractual  rights  through
their payments, as they would if they were paying on an insurance
policy or contributing to an annuity plan.  Simply put, there are
no guarantees!   The Congress does have power to deny benefits to
citizens even, though they had paid S.S. taxes. Also, the amounts
of benefits  granted are  at the option of Congress.  Flemming v.
Nestor, 363 U.S. 603, 610 (1960).


      5. Benefits granted under Social Security are therefore NOT
considered earned by the worker, but simply constitute a gratuity
or gesture of charity.  As the Court states:

     "Congress included  in  the  original  Act,  and  has  since
     retained a  claim expressly  reserving to it  the  right  to
     alter, amend, or repeal any provision of the Act".

                [Flemming v. Nestor, 363 U.S. 603, 610-11 (1960)]

corporations are people Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific R. Co. - 118 U.S. 394 (1886) :: Justia US Supreme Court Center

Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific R. Co. - 118 U.S. 394 (1886) :: Justia US Supreme Court Center

click link

snip from wiki==other source

Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad
Seal of the United States Supreme Court.svg
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued January 26–29, 1886
Decided May 10, 1886
Full case name Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad Company
Citations 118 U.S. 394 (more)
6 S. Ct. 1132, 30 L. Ed. 118
Prior history Error to the Circuit Court of the United States for the District of California
Holding
The railroad corporations are persons with the intent of the Fourteenth Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.
Court membership
Case opinions
Majority Harlan, joined by unanimous court
Laws applied
14 Stat. 292, §§ 1, 2, 3, 11, 18 (an Act of 1866 giving special privileges to the Atlantic and Pacific Railway Corporation)
Santa Clara County v. Southern Pacific Railroad Company, 118 U.S. 394 (1886) was a matter brought before the United States Supreme Court - but not decided by the court - which dealt with taxation of railroad properties. A report issued by the Court Reporter claimed to state the sense of the Court - without a decision or written opinions published by or of the Court. This was the first time that the Supreme Court was reported to hold that the Fourteenth Amendment equal protection clause granted constitutional protections to corporations as well as to natural persons, although numerous other cases, since Dartmouth College v. Woodward in 1819, have recognized that corporations were entitled to some of the protections of the Constitution. In the opinion, the Court consolidated three separate cases:

Editorial: After Akin, then what? GOP needs moderating influence : Stltoday

Editorial: After Akin, then what? GOP needs moderating influence : Stltoday

click

snip

That's a question that should be pondered by U.S. Sen. Roy Blunt, and former Sens. John Ashcroft, Christopher "Kit" Bond and John C. Danforth. Those four men, the elder statesmen of the Missouri Republican Party, urged Mr. Akin to leave the race against Democratic incumbent Claire McCaskill in the aftermath of Mr. Akin's horribly wrong statement about what he called "legitimate rape."

The cynic would see their failed attempt to push Mr. Akin out of the race as pure political survival, separating their party from the albatross that Mr. Akin has become to save the rest of their statewide ticket.

Missourians, whatever their political persuasion, should hope there's more to it than that. These four men have records of leadership far different than the extremism of Mr. Akin and the demagoguery embodied by many others in their party today.

-----

bipartisanism is a myth.  only in true crisis mode does this occur.

Friday, August 24, 2012

More videos from TheYoungTurks (playlist)

Uploaded videos (playlist)

Clear Evidence That Romney-Republican LIES on Medicare are Not Working

The Lost Decade of the Middle Class | Pew Social & Demographic Trends

The Lost Decade of the Middle Class | Pew Social & Demographic Trends:

click link above   this is study that caused media flap yesterday

snip

Falling Behind, Moving Ahead

When middle-class Americans size up their personal economies, they see themselves as both moving ahead and falling behind. It all depends on the time frame. Over the short term, their evaluations tilt negative. Over the span of the past decade, they’re mixed. And over the full arc of their lives, they’re positive—albeit less so now than in the past.
The Great Recession officially ended three years ago, but most middle-class Americans are still feeling pinched. About six-in-ten (62%) say they had to reduce household spending in the past year because money was tight, compared with 53% who said so in 2008.
The downbeat short-term perspective is not surprising in light of the heavy economic blows delivered by the Great Recession of 2007-2009 and the sluggish recovery since. About four-in-ten (42%) middle-class adults say their household’s financial situation is worse now than it was before the recession, while 32% say they are in better shape; an additional 23% volunteered that their finances are unchanged. Of those who say they’re in worse shape, about half (51%) say it will take at least five years to recover, including 8% who predict they will never recover.


Secret Bain documents reveal that Mitt Romney is rich - Salon.com

Secret Bain documents reveal that Mitt Romney is rich - Salon.com:

click link above

snip


Some of the documents lend support to a common interpretation of Mitt Romney: That he’s just playing pretend with all this conservative anti-Keynesian stuff. One fund Romney has a million or so dollars in sent its investors a letter acknowledging that the economy is “still highly dependent on fiscal support” — or, in other words, the stimulus worked. (Though that’s just what some money manager thinks. Romney picked Ryan, I think conservatives needn’t be worried.)
Oh also some of the funds in Romney’s retirement package from Bain Capital were created years after he “retired.” (One as late as 2008.) Obviously Romney’s incredibly sudden/lengthy and drawn-out ex post facto 1999/2002 Bain retirement is still a matter of some confusion, and this won’t help matters. As Cook says:
But what’s interesting about Sankaty Credit Opportunities is that, according to his 2012 financial disclosure, Romney’s interest in the entity was part of his retirement package: It was made “pursuant to an agreement with Bain Capital regarding Mr. Romney’s retirement” in 1999. But according to its audited financial statement, Sankaty Credit Opportunities didn’t exist yet when Romney retired: “Sankaty Credit Opportunities, L.P., is a Delaware limited partnership which commenced operations on August 12, 2002.” In other words, Romney’s 1999 retirement agreement included an investment in an entity created in 2002—in fact, was created in the heat of his first gubernatorial campaign in Massachusetts. When Romney explained at an October 29, 2002, debate in Massachusetts that he wasn’t responsible for Bain’s actions after his 1999 retirement, it was just 8 weeks after the creation by Bain of a fund that was part of his retirement agreement.



Thursday, August 23, 2012

Limbaugh: Obama 'Hopeful' Hurricane Will Hit Tampa During GOP Convention

More videos from Current (playlist)

More videos from Current (playlist)

More videos from Current (playlist)

The GOP jobs plan: Talking points, trickle down and unanswered questions

Larry David Wants You To Vote

"Clear Choice" - Obama for America TV Ad

Paul Krugman Attacks Newsweek Piece Trashing Obama

Share of middle class income shrinking : Stltoday

Share of middle class income shrinking : Stltoday

click link

"The job market is changing, our living standards are falling in the middle, and middle-income parents are now afraid that their children will be worse off than they are," says Timothy Smeeding, a University of Wisconsin-Madison economics professor who specializes in income inequality.

He said that many middle-income families took a big hit in the past decade as health care costs increase, mid-wage jobs disappear because of automation and outsourcing and college tuition mounts for those seeking to build credentials to get better work. Meanwhile, more-affluent families have fared better in net worth because they are less dependent than lower-income groups on home property values, which remain shriveled after the housing bust. Wealthier Americans are more likely to be invested in the stock market, which as a whole has been quicker to recover from the downturn.

"These are the disaffected middle class who work hard and play by the rules of society, but increasingly see their situation declining by forces beyond their control," Smeeding said in an interview. "No matter who is president, the climb back up for the middle class and the recovery will be slow and often painful."
The Pew study is just the latest indicator of a long-term trend of widening U.S. income inequality. The Census Bureau reported last year that income fell for the wealthiest — down 1.2 percent to $180,810 for the top 5 percent of households. But the bottom fifth of households — those making $20,000 or less — saw incomes decline 4 percent.

The new study reviewed 2010 data from the Census Bureau and Federal Reserve, defining "middle class" as the tier of adults whose household income falls between two-thirds and double the national median income, or $39,418 to $118,255 in 2010 for a family of three. By this definition, "middle class" makes up about 51 percent of U.S. adults, down from 61 percent in 1971.

Legitimate Rape

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

Flu Shot Clinic - Free Flu Shots for the Community - Barnes-Jewish Hospital

Flu Shot Clinic - Free Flu Shots for the Community - Barnes-Jewish Hospital:

click link for full listing


On-Site Locations

Sunday, September 30
9 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Adult & Pediatric vaccinations (6 months & up)
Barnes-Jewish West County Hospital, Medical Office Building 2
10 Barnes West Drive, Creve Coeur, MO 63141
Parking is available free on site.
Monday, October 1 - Friday, October 5
7 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Adult vaccinations only (18+ years old)
Barnes-Jewish Hospital, Main Floor Lobby
One Barnes-Jewish Hospital Plaza, St. Louis, MO 63110
Parking is available in the South Garage for $1.50/hr
Monday, October 1 - Friday, October 5
8 a.m. - 6 p.m.
Adult & Pediatric vaccinations (6 months & up)
Center for Advanced Medicine, 3rd Floor Lobby
4921 Parkview Place, St. Louis, MO 63110
Parking is available in the North Garage for $1.50/hr

The Romney-Ryan Economic Plan

The Choice We Face this November 6th.

Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Todd Akin 'Legitimate Rape' Fallout

Maddow on Akin | Fired Up! Missouri

Maddow on Akin | Fired Up! Missouri:

Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy
-----
Visit NBCNews.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

Please don’t go, Todd

Please don’t go, Todd

click link

comment:  todd won primary and I would stay in race were it me

snip

Conservatives are already trying to explain all this away. “No state is going to ban abortion in the case of rape even if Roe v. Wade is overruled — and even if Akin were elected to the Senate. Everyone knows this,” the National Review staff wrote in its call for Akin to step down. Really? Thanks to a purge of moderates in the last primary under the guidance of Gov. Sam Brownback and the Koch brothers, Kansas, for one, would be poised to do just that. Several states have already passed absolute bans on abortion after 20 weeks, well before viability, without exceptions for rape and incest, and the stated intent is to keep moving that line closer and closer to fertilization. Even if voters rejected “personhood” amendments in Colorado and Mississippi, that hasn’t stopped the movement from trying again and again, down to spreading falsehoods that common forms of birth control are tantamount to abortion.




Rep. Todd Akin Apologizes but Won't Abandon Race

Thank You For The Job, Mitt Romney!

Stephanie Cutter: Medicare Whiteboard

Payback

Monday, August 20, 2012

Oil and Ice: The Risks of Drilling in Alaska's Arctic Ocean

Americans Trail World in Paid Time Off as 40% Don’t Get Money - SFGate

Americans Trail World in Paid Time Off as 40% Don’t Get Money - SFGate:

click link

snip

The report underscores how the U.S. is lagging on such policies. It’s the only advanced economy without a national leave policy guaranteeing a break for employees, said John Schmitt, a senior economist at the Center for Economic and Policy Research in Washington. Austria guarantees as many as 43 paid days off, and a young German worker can take as many as 40.

“Of the 15 most economically developed countries, 14 have sick and vacation time off,” Schmitt said in a telephone interview. “We’re the outlier.”

The report shows that employees in some industries fare better than others. The 8.1 million Americans working in the financial industry in 2011 were twice as likely as the nation’s 8.7 million construction workers to have paid time off, according to the bureau’s American Time Use Survey, which attempts to track how much time U.S. residents devote to activities ranging from job-searching to dog-walking.

The lowest rates were in the leisure and hospitality sector, where fewer than one in four workers reported receiving paid vacation or sick days.


Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/business/bloomberg/article/Americans-Trail-World-in-Paid-Time-Off-as-40-3796292.php#ixzz245r7gTxA

-------

note:  when you get rid of unions what do you expect


The Real Hunger Games

Conservative Activists Call On Akin To Quit Race After ‘Legitimate Rape’ Comment | TPM2012

Conservative Activists Call On Akin To Quit Race After ‘Legitimate Rape’ Comment | TPM2012:

click link above


Conservative strategists and activists did not rally to Rep. Todd Akin’s defense Sunday after the Republican Senate nominee in Missouri said that “legitimate rape” victims have a biological defense mechanism to prevent pregnancy.
Instead, a growing chorus is calling for him to withdraw from the race.
On Twitter Sunday, many Republicans reached the conclusion that Akin is no longer a viable Senate candidate. Until Sunday, Akin was the favorite to take incumbent Democratic Sen. Claire McCaskill’s seat as Missouri grows increasingly conservative. But both sides of the aisle seem to think Akin’s rape comments could cost him the election.
Republican strategist Patrick Ruffini recommended that a new nominee be subbed in for Akin:

Todd Akin Talks About Elections, Civil Right And Voting RightsLaws | FOX2now.com – St. Louis News & Weather from KTVI Television FOX2

part two akin statement click link above ------
this is full Akin interview and one akin claims he misspoke

rape comments are a bit much and so is more


Ari Berman: The GOP War Against Voters

Friday, August 17, 2012

Kelsey Grammer's Republican Views Cost Him An Emmy?

Ryan budget would hurt poor and elderly, critics say - KansasCity.com

Ryan budget would hurt poor and elderly, critics say - KansasCity.com

click link

snip

Ryan's allies say he keeps the safety net intact through free enterprise and federalism. His critics say he shreds it.

A group critical of the plan says that 62 percent of the $5.3 trillion in non-defense budget reductions over 10 years that it calls for comes from programs to assist low-income Americans. According to the liberal Center on Budget and Policy Priorities, many of the programs targeted for $3.3 trillion in cuts, such as Medicaid, food stamps, public housing and Medicare, anchor the nation's safety net of public assistance programs for the poor, elderly and disabled.

Programs that assist middle-class families, like Pell Grants and job training, would likely face cuts as well, according to Ryan's plan.

"This budget is actually a very extreme proposal," said Paul Van de Water, a senior fellow at the center. "The extent to which it would scale back virtually all the basic functions of government, including programs that are highly important to middle-income people, like Medicare, is just something that is unparalleled."

Read more here: http://www.kansascity.com/2012/08/16/3765970/ryan-budget-would-hurt-poor-and.html#storylink=cpy

A look at who pays when health-care tax hikes kick in

A look at who pays when health-care tax hikes kick in

click link

s nip


When: 2013

"Cadillac" plans

Who pays: Insurance companies or businesses that provide plans with premiums of more than $10,200 per person or $27,500 per family, not including dental or vision coverage. Employees covered by these so-called "Cadillac" benefits probably will feel the pinch.

How much: 40 percent excise tax on any amount of premium that exceeds the threshold. Expected to raise $111 billion over five years.

The lowdown: The majority of health plans aren't affected because they don't cost enough: Workplace family coverage now averages about $15,000, including the portion paid by the employer, according to the Kaiser Family Foundation's survey.

But some middle-class workers, especially those with strong union contracts, have health plans that exceed the threshold. Also hit are corporate bigwigs whose employer-paid plans cover virtually all expenses and lots of perks, akin to tax-free income.

Some employees will pay more for their share of insurance costs because the tax will get passed along to them. In other cases, businesses will trim benefits to bring their plans under the tax cutoff.
Economists predict that many of the affected workers will get higher pay as a trade-off - but those raises would be subject to income tax.

The tax will affect more workers as time goes by. It's indexed for inflation, but rising health-care prices will probably outpace that.
When: 2018.

Thursday, August 16, 2012

The Secret Group that's about to Swift Boat Barack Obama

Devo - Don't Roof Rack Me, Bro! (Seamus Unleashed)

comment on Romney's dog

Granholm: Why you should choose to vote

'Snark Week' gets bloody as both campaigns get nasty and Biden stands hi...

Dinosaurs Lived With Man? So Says Allen Quist, GOP Candidate

'Fraudulent': Barney Frank takes on Paul Ryan's budget

Gun (lobby) Safety fiore cartoon

Smackdown! mark fiore

Paul Ryan Budget Plan Explained

Did Obama Cut Medicare?

GOP Outraged Over Biden 'Chains' Comment

Dramatic video: 71-year-old taken to the ground for questioning Paul Ryan

Paul Ryan didn’t build that!

Paul Ryan didn’t build that!

click link above

snip

Mitt Romney’s running mate, he attacked President Obama’s “you didn’t build that” remark about the role of government in supporting private innovation. But while Republicans have been clamoring to make this election a false dichotomy between the private sector and the public sector, Paul Ryan — heir to a private fortune made by building public highways — is a gaping pothole in that plan. Paul Ryan is a living, breathing GOP example of how public infrastructure and private entrepreneurship work hand-in-hand.
Paul Ryan’s great-grandfather started a construction company to build railroads and, eventually, highways. According to the Web site of Ryan Incorporated Central, the company was “founded in 1884with a single team of mules building railroad embankments in Southern Wisconsin.” And in the 1800s, railroad construction was subsidized by the federal government. Mid-century, President Lincoln signed the Pacific Railway Act into law, providing taxpayer dollars to fund the construction of a transcontinental railway. All railroads thereafter connected to, and benefited from, that public investment.
At the turn of the century, Ryan Inc. turned to road building. A subsidiary family corporation, Ryan Incorporated Southern, states on its Web site, “The Ryan workload from 1910 until the rural interstate Highway System was completed 60 years later [and] was mostly Highway construction.” The $119 billion spent by the federal government on the Interstate Highway System was, by one account, “the largest public works program since the Pyramids.”


Romney’s Taxes + Ryan’s Budget = Democratic Delight - Bloomberg

Romney’s Taxes + Ryan’s Budget = Democratic Delight - Bloomberg:

click link

snip


As for helping his rich brethren, Romney, like all conservatives, favors letting taxpayers keep more of their own money and decide how to allocate it. It’s self-evident that individuals spend their own money more efficiently than the government can. Stronger growth lifts all boats. It’s a compelling argument, if Romney chooses to make it.
The Republican Party has never been good at selling ideas: powerful ideas, such as freedom, individual responsibility, opportunity, a bigger economic pie. Find people who exemplify your ideals, who pulled themselves up by their own hard work and ingenuity, who did build that business, and drag them to campaign events. Let them tell their inspirational stories.
The idea that the GOP goal is to help the rich at the expense of the poor defies logic. The party’s ideas on how to help the poor may differ from the Democrats’: better education through school choice; creating incentives to work rather than to loaf. But to endure the ordeal of a presidential campaign to help the rich get richer? They may earn the lion’s share of the income, but they don’t control a majority of the votes.
Then there’s Medicare. On Sunday, Obama (or his tweeter- designate) posted a “Twitter pic” with the following: “Fact: Paul Ryan would end Medicare as we know it by turning it into a voucher program costing seniors up to $6,350 a year more.”
The voucher part is true. But Paul Ryan isn’t going to end Medicare as we know it. Medicare is going to do that on its own. The Medicare Trust Fund has been running a cash-flow deficit since 2008 and will go bust in 2024, according to the 2012 report of the trustees of the Social Security and Medicare trust funds.


PressTV - Krugman: Ryan budget proposal 'just a fantasy'

PressTV - Krugman: Ryan budget proposal 'just a fantasy':

click link

snip

Mitt Romney, the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, announced Ryan, a Wisconsin congressman, as his running mate on Saturday. Ryan has led the Republican Party's charge to shrink the size of government, including cutting spending on welfare, Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security, while slashing taxes for the wealthiest.

Krugman wrote in another blog post published on Monday afternoon that Romney chose Ryan in order to dupe the media into making "Ryan's unjustified reputation for honest wonkery...transfer to the ticket as a whole."

Ryan has been praised as a deficit hawk, but his budget proposal would raise $2.2 trillion less in tax revenue over the next 10 years than President Obama's budget, according to the Washington Post's Brad Plumer. To offset that lost revenue, Ryan also has proposed spending $5.3 trillion less over the same time period, but has not specified exact cuts.

Ryan's budget would slash all federal spending -- outside of Medicare, Medicaid and Social Security -- by 70 percent by 2050, perhaps an unrealistic assumption considering that Romney has promised to keep defense spending above those levels, according to Washington Post columnist Ezra Klein.

Ryan also has proposed cutting individual and corporate tax rates and getting rid of taxes on corporate income, capital gains, estates, interest and dividends, according to Bloomberg. Ryan's budget proposal also promised to close tax loopholes, but declined to specify which ones.

Ryan's budget is generous to the wealthiest Americans. Romney, for example, would have paid an effective 0.82 percent tax rate in 2010 under Ryan's budget, thanks to the elimination of the tax on capital gains, the Atlantic's Matthew O'Brien notes. The Huffington Post


Mitt Romney and Paul Ryan plan to end Medicare as we know it

Monday, August 13, 2012

Mailers Mislead on ‘Obamacare’ Opt-Out Amendment

Mailers Mislead on ‘Obamacare’ Opt-Out Amendment

click link

snip


A conservative group misleads Kansas voters in campaign mailers that claim a failed proposal to amend the state’s Constitution would have allowed residents to opt-out of “Obamacare.”
No state law can do that. The U.S. Constitution’s Supremacy Clause explicitly states that federal law is the “supreme Law of the Land.”
The proposed Kansas Health Care Freedom Amendment, like several similar state proposals and laws,declared that no law can compel Kansans to buy health insurance or require them to pay a fine for lacking it.
The legislation failed in the Kansas Senate in February by one vote, preventing it from appearing on the November ballot for final voter approval. Law professors and the Congressional Research Service have said such laws would have “no effect” on the federal law.
Some of the mailers attack moderate Republican state senators who voted against the amendment. Other fliers support conservative Republican lawmakers who voted for it. Two of the mailers we received go too far in their description of what the amendment could have done for Kansans.

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note:  Missouri passed one of these symbolic measures some time ago

Does Romney Pay a Lower Rate in Taxes Than You?

Does Romney Pay a Lower Rate in Taxes Than You?

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snip


A new ad from the Obama campaign claims that Mitt Romney “paid only 14 percent in taxes—probably less than you.” That depends. Romney paid a federal income tax rate that is higher than the income tax rate paid by 97 percent of tax filers. But if you include a combination of income taxes and payroll taxes — which make up the bulk of federal taxes for most taxpayers — the ad is accurate.
The ad, called “Stretch,” is the first to feature a report from the Tax Policy Center that concluded a plan like Romney’s proposal for across-the-board tax cuts, together with the goal of remaining revenue neutral, would ultimately raise taxes on people making less than $200,000 a year. The ad contrasts those findings with data from Romney’s 2010 tax return.

Is Romney to Blame for Cancer Death?

Is Romney to Blame for Cancer Death?

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snip

As we have written repeatedly in the past, Romney left day-to-day operations at Bain Capital in early 1999 to head up the Salt Lake City Organizing Committee, and we have criticized the Obama campaign for blaming Romney for the offshoring of jobs by Bain-controlled companies after that time. But this case is a little different. Although the steel company declared bankruptcy in 2001, the debt was incurred at GS Industries under Romney’s leadership.
Was it the debt load that doomed the company? Some analysts cited by Reuters said it certainly didn’t help. Others blamed the union or competition from Asia. In a 1999 filing with the Securities and Exchange Commission, the company stated, “Distressed economic conditions in other countries, particularly Asia, have resulted in record levels of imported steel products into the domestic market causing dramatic declines in selling prices industry-wide.”
It was a very bad time in general for the steel industry in the United States. A 2003 report from the U.S. International Trade Commission found that between 1999 and 2003, “31 steel companies producing products subject to the safeguard measures [including tariffs on foreign imports] have filed for bankruptcy protection.”
In short, whether Romney or Bain is responsible for the demise of the company is a matter for legitimate debate.


Saturday, August 11, 2012

Mitt Romney chooses Paul Ryan as running mate

Mitt Romney chooses Paul Ryan as running mate

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NORFOLK, Va. – Mitt Romney unveiled Saturday morning Representative Paul Ryan as his choice for running mate, a bold move that comes at the end of an intense selection process and is likely to shake up a presidential race out of the summer doldrums.

Romney sent out the announcement, which began to leak early this morning, through a smart-phone application, alerting supporters simply: “Mitt’s Choice for VP is Paul Ryan.”

Romney and Ryan are slated to appear together on the waterfront here, with the USS Wisconsin serving as the backdrop. Lines formed in the early hours of the morning, with supporters snaking around the Nauticus Museum where the announcement was scheduled to take place.

Romney’s campaign also sent out a press release branding Romney and Ryan as “America’s Comeback Team” and providing a brief biography of Ryan, who has been a prominent seven-term congressman but is also relatively untested on the national stage.

Too Big To Jail: Goldman Sachs Avoids Criminal Charges

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Wizards of I.D. | Fired Up! Missouri

Wizards of I.D. | Fired Up! Missouri:

Todd Akin: Ban the morning-after pill "totally, for everyone"

Top Companies Paid 9% U.S. Tax Rate On Average

Dying Daughter's Health Insurance Cut By Wells Fargo?

Death by China Documentary Film - Official Trailer

Fighting Voter Suppression? There's an App for That!

Mitt Romney Lies Again

President of United Steelworkers supports President Obama - Full Court Press with Bill Press // Current TV

President of United Steelworkers supports President Obama - Full Court Press with Bill Press // Current TV:

Could Romney’s Effective Tax Rate Really Be Zero? | TPMDC

Could Romney’s Effective Tax Rate Really Be Zero? | TPMDC:

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snip


That’s according to Ed Kleinbard, a tax law professor at the USC School of Law who earlier this year participated in a conference call organized by the DNC. He thinks the literal reading of Reid’s allegation is unlikely.
“We know that by 2010, he had lots of other income,” Kleinbard said. “[H]e had something like $20 million in other income…. What [the TPM reader] wrote is may be true but it has nothing to do with the $20 million on the return in 2010.”
That year, Romney paid a nearly 14 percent effective rate on his taxes. But those numbers likely understate the degree to which Romney’s financial circumstances improved that year. It wouldn’t account for the appreciation of assets he decided not to sell in 2010, and if Bain bought company shares back from Romney’s IRA, that money wouldn’t show up anywhere.
“What’s in the IRA is invisible on the return,” Kleinbard says.
Other experts largely agree.