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Politics : Just the Facts, Ma'am: A Compendium of Liberal Fiction -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Peter Dierks who wrote (77350)2/9/2010 1:14:59 AM
From: Sully-1 Recommendation  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 90947
 
Interior Department bureaucrats bury 2-1 public support for more off-shore drilling in comments on proposed rule

02/06/10 8:15 AM EST

Remember the "Drill More, Drill Now" flap in the summer of 2007 over the expiration of legislative and executive branch bans on off-shore drilling for oil in the U.S. Outer Continental Shelf (OCS)?

Gas was selling at $4 and more per gallon across the country and big majorities of the public were demanding that the government get out of the way of producing more energy supplies from America's vast untapped domestic natural resources like the OCS.

President Bush left office after allowing the executive branch ban to expire. And the democratic majority in Congress failed to renew the legislative ban that had been included every year for two decades.

But then last year along came the U.S. Department of Interior, led by President Obama's Interior Secretary, Ken Salazar, the former Colorado Democratic senator, with a rule-making proposal to open up the OCS. Such proposed rules typically require a public comment period of 90 days, and those comments must be analyzed by federal officials, compiled and published.

The comment period for the proposed Interior OCS rule ended months ago, but Salazar has rebuffed all requests for information about the results, saying the comments had not yet been fully analyzed and compiled.

Now, thanks to Americans for Solutions for Winning the Future, the advocacy group formed by former House Speaker Newt Gingrich, what is likely to be the real reason for Salazar's foot-dragging is known - the comments favor by about a 2-1 margin opening up the OCS for new exploration and drilling.

But the Obama administration opposes allowing more drilling in the OCS, or anywhere else in America
, according to many critics in the energy industry, so the delay in moving the proposed rule forward creates a substantial political problem for Salazar and the White House.

Turns out the "solution" is to obfuscate, delay, and suppress.
Interior Department emails obtained by Americans for Solutions via a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request turned up an Oct. 27, 2009, email from Liz Birnbaum, who directs Interior's Minerals Management Service, in which she explains to Salazar's chief of staff and other senior Interior officials that she had told the Interior head that the public comments favor increased OCS energy production by a 2-1 margin.

As a result, Vince Haley, American Solutions' vice-president for policy, released this blistering statement criticizing Obama and Salazar:

<<< "It's sad and pathetic that Secretary Salazar and his team knew way back in late October the breakdown of the comments but have yet to announce the results to the public three months later. It is now abundantly clear that all of President Obama and Secretary Salazar's talk about openness and transparency and wanting to know what the American people think about offshore development is a complete charade.

"It's also now increasingly clear that this administration's repeatedly expressed openness to offshore energy development is also a complete pretense.
Instead, we have an administration that can only be understood as ideologically committed to stifling offshore energy development of oil and natural gas while they offer up platitudes and a p ose of openness. Holden Caulfield had a word for this behavior: 'phony.'

"Public opinion polls already measure near 70% support for offshore drilling, so the results from a public comment period that reflect the same public sentiment should not be surprising. But after all this talk of wanting the public's input, Secretary Salazar and his team must find it a real stumbling block to have to explain all their anti-energy development actions in light of the comment period results to which they previously attached such great importance.

"Here's the bottom line political reality:
Ten percent of Americans are out of work and more have stopped trying to find work; the President just submitted a budget that projects trillion dollar annual deficits for the next ten years and a near tripling of the national debt by 2020; and the President has said his number one priority is jobs and his administration has stated that anything that contributes to job creation is on the table.

"But the foot dragging at DOI on something as simple and seemingly small as announcing results of the public comment period on offshore drilling is the latest indication that everything is NOT on the table when it comes to job creation.

"According to the American Energy Alliance, a robust development of our offshore oil and natural gas resources over the next three decades would create over one million jobs and generate more than $270 billion in annual economic growth, including $54 billion annually in federal tax receipts that could help lower the federal deficit and the national debt.

"These extraordinary benefits of job creation and economic growth - all without requiring any federal spending - are, sadly, not on the Obama Administration's agenda, notwithstanding all their phony rhetoric to the contrary." >>>

Haley has more on Drillgate here.

washingtonexaminer.com



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (77350)2/9/2010 2:41:17 AM
From: Sully-1 Recommendation  Respond to of 90947
 
Lashing Out Beats Accountability

Posted by David Limbaugh
February 8, 2010 05:03 PM

Conservatives understand that liberals often demonize their opponents rather than debate the merits of the issues because the tactic works. But you have to wonder whether another reason they lash out is that they are angry that reality doesn't cooperate with their ideologically driven solutions and it's easier to blame others than to face up to the unpleasant truth of their failed ideas.

It's not just the tirades of liberal talk show host Ed Schultz, who said he would cheat to keep Scott Brown from winning his Senate election, or Chris Matthews, who said Republicans indoctrinate their members in the same way Cambodian communists re-educated their subjects, or the nasty outbursts of presidential adviser Rahm Emanuel.

I was also reminded of this, on a subtler level, when reading a Washington Post piece on David Plouffe, Barack Obama's presidential campaign manager, who recently returned to the Obama camp to quarterback the Democrats' election efforts in 2010 and beyond.

Plouffe said: "Politics is a comparative exercise. This isn't just a referendum on Democrats. ... It's a choice. ... Republicans right now are just sitting back and slinging arrows. We need to ... shine some light over their side of the fence."

Plouffe said he would remind voters that Democrats have spent two years trying to fix problems, whereas Republicans want to wheel a "Trojan horse" into Washington and spill out bankers and health insurance executives. Sure, why not vilify bankers and insurers when it helps your guy avoid accountability for his policies?

It's shamelessly Machiavellian of Democrats to accuse the GOP of going negative, when Democrats use Saul Alinsky's "Rules for Radicals"
(e.g., "Pick the target, freeze it, personalize it, and polarize it") as an instruction manual. But hey, they're out of fresh ideas, so what other choice do they have?

Notice how liberal Democrats frame almost any issue: stressing their supposedly good intentions and the Republicans' alleged lack of compassion to avoid a genuine debate and scrutiny of their policies. Consider:


On welfare, Democrats insist on ever-greater redistributionist programs with the ostensible goal of "ending" poverty. Nearly a half-century and $5 trillion since the war on poverty was initiated, we've barely made a dent in poverty. In fact, prior to the Republicans' Contract with America in 1994, we were losing ground in all relevant categories -- with black families, particularly black children, being the hardest hit.

Despite the evidence, Bill Clinton had to be dragged kicking and screaming into signing the welfare reform bill, for which, of course, he claimed full credit. But sadly, the manifest successes of the reforms -- which saw significant improvements in poverty and the rate of illegitimacy, especially among blacks -- didn't keep uber-liberal Barack Obama from rolling them back with a vengeance, something the public has barely noticed. These liberals cannot afford to allow success to stand, lest they be with fewer victims to exploit and conservatives to demonize.

On tax policy, the overwhelming successes of supply-side economics at improving the lots of all income groups without a loss in tax revenues didn't prevent liberals from falsely depicting the policies as sops for the rich and blaming them for the spending-induced deficits. More revealing was Obama's damning revelation that he favors capital gains tax increases as "a matter of fairness" despite admitting they result in decreases in revenue. Here he can't even credibly claim noble intentions. Instead of helping the poor, he's willing to hurt them, as long as everyone else is hurt, too. Class envy trumps results, which is really twisted when you think about it.

On education, liberals refuse to support school vouchers, the result being that many poor people, especially minorities, remain locked in inner-city schools without a key. Otherwise, liberals wouldn't be able to demand endless tax dollars for public education, which only they can "deliver."

On homosexual "marriage" and "don't ask, don't tell" policies for the military, liberals absurdly impugn conservatives as "homophobes" instead of addressing their valid interest in protecting traditional marriage as one of society's pillars and preserving the cohesiveness of the military unit, respectively.

On abortion, liberals refuse to consider mounting scientific evidence that the unborn are live human beings (as if further evidence were needed to confirm what we already know), because it forces them into moral accountability. Instead, they falsely declare the matter unknowable and, worse, try to co-opt the moral high ground as champions of women's rights while condemning their life-advocating opponents as bigots.

On man-made global warming, they cling to their flat-earth alarmism while refusing to discuss the evidence and accusing their opponents of willful blindness. Surreal on stilts!

On health care, they demand socialist solutions to achieve "universal coverage," when such solutions have failed everywhere they've been tried and will, studies show, leave millions uninsured.

But they're still superior because they care. Or do they?


davidlimbaugh.com



To: Peter Dierks who wrote (77350)2/10/2010 2:49:59 AM
From: Sully-  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 90947
 
Will Dems try and slip card check legislation into upcoming jobs bill?

By: Mark Hemingway
Commentary Staff Writer
02/09/10 12:58 PM EST

A cursory reading of this Las Vegas Sun report, "Prospects For Organized Labor's Legislative Agenda Rapidly Fading," suggests -- and not without evidence -- that Big Labor isn't seeing any payoff for their huge investment in the Obama campaign and Democrats generally in the last election. Specifically, unions had hoped for Democrats to pass "card check" legislation, which would effectively end secret ballots in union elections and encourage unions to pressure, intimidate and even bully workers who don't want to unionize. But buried in the Sun article is this bombshell -- Democrats may try and slip card check legislation into an impending jobs bill:

<<< On labor law, Bill Samuel, the AFL-CIO’s legislative director, said the union would try to enlist moderate Republicans but acknowledged the difficulty of achieving a bipartisan bill. He said the federation might consider “other tactics,” meaning the card-check legislation or key parts of it could be placed into a larger jobs bill this year. >>>

Republicans would have to stay especially vigilant to keep this from happening, and it's galling to think that Democrats would slip such a major piece of legislation in through the back door. It's pretty clear that the public supports secret ballots, and for good reason.

Senaking in card check legislation seems like an unlikely possibility for Democrats, but there's also tremendous pressure to pay back one of their most important consituencies. Labor leaders were angered over the "Cadillac Tax" in the Senate health care bill and more recently have been 'fuming' about Democrats inability to vote Craig Becker, a radical, pro-union lawyer on to the National Labor Relations board. Democrats might be willing to support unions -- by any means necessary.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: washingtonexaminer.com