SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Liberalism: Do You Agree We've Had Enough of It? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101963)3/26/2011 7:22:29 AM
From: tonto3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224706
 
Correct. Less profits equal less taxes. Add the Obama tax breaks with the recession and we have this expected result.

What is surprising to me is how stupid people continue to be regarding this issue. The changing of corporate status has caused corporate taxes to be shifted to personal returns. That is always overlooked by dishonest people or the ignorant posters.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101963)3/26/2011 8:14:59 AM
From: lorne4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224706
 
kenny..this cant be good for hussein obama's illegal votters.

Across country, GOP pushes photo ID at the polls
Associated Press
Mike Baker,
Fri Mar 25
news.yahoo.com

RALEIGH, N.C. – Empowered by last year's elections, Republican leaders in about half the states are pushing to require voters to show photo ID at the polls despite little evidence of fraud and already-substantial punishments for those who vote illegally.

Democrats claim the moves will disenfranchise poor and minority voters — many of whom traditionally vote for their candidates. The measures will also increase spending and oversight in some states even as Republicans are focused on cutting budgets and decreasing regulations.

Tennessee Secretary of State Tre Hargett, a Republican, said he believes his state's proposed photo ID law will increase citizen confidence in the process and combat fraud that could be going undetected.

"I can't figure out who it would disenfranchise," Hargett said. "The only people I can think it disenfranchises is those people who might be voting illegally."

Hargett said the measure currently moving through Tennessee's legislature — now controlled by Republicans — would accommodate people who don't have IDs by having them sign oaths of identity, which provide more prominent warning to potential fakers than the standard name-signing.

Party leaders advanced several ID proposals this week with successful votes in Alabama, Arkansas, Kansas, Ohio and Texas.

About half of states are considering measures to create or strengthen ID requirements this year, according to the National Conference of State Legislatures. Many are considering stringent controls that would mirror laws in Georgia and Indiana, which require voters who don't have photo ID at the polls to return to election offices within days and produce that kind of identification in order to get their votes counted.

In the South, the issue comes with a burden of history for black residents who recall past barriers to voting such as violence, literacy tests and other methods. The Voting Rights Act still requires a number of Southern states to get Justice Department approval of redistricting efforts to ensure that minorities' voting strength is upheld.

William Barber, president of North Carolina's chapter of the NAACP, said the photo ID measure amounts to "nothing but nuanced, 21st Century Jim Crow."

Henry Frye recalled the literacy test he failed in 1956, after he'd returned from serving in the Air Force and tried to register to vote. One of the questions asked him to name a U.S. president — the 13th, if he remembers correctly.

Frye, who eventually became North Carolina's first black Supreme Court justice, spent 14 years as a lawmaker in the General Assembly and focused much of his time trying to make it easier for people to register and vote. He said the photo ID measure appears to be a first step back in the wrong direction.

"I think we need to do what we can to encourage voting rather than discourage voting," Frye said.

Elections officials in North Carolina said most of the voting fraud allegations they investigate turn out to be unfounded. Over the past five years, the state has referred about 350 cases to district attorneys for investigation, mostly in cases of felons who cast a ballot without first getting their voting rights restored. There are more than six million registered voters in the state.

States already have ways to check the identity of voters when they register and when they go to cast a ballot. North Carolina's current law requires residents to provide documents proving their name and address in order to register to vote. Those who register improperly can be charged with a felony.

At the polls, North Carolina voters must declare their valid name and address in order to get their ballot. Impersonating another registered voter is also a felony, as is voting more than once in an election.

In Georgia, which has had a strict voter ID law on the books for years, Republican Secretary of State Brian Kemp said he's not aware of anyone caught committing fraud. He argues that the rules help prevent people who try to file improper votes from having them counted.

Republican Secretary of State Brian Kemp said he's not aware of anyone caught committing fraud because of the law but argued that it has helped make elections more secure.

Kemp said about two-thirds of people who cast provisional ballots because of missing photo IDs — there were about 1,200 during the 2008 presidential election — do not return to election offices. He suspects those people either knew the outcome of the election and didn't feel the need to confirm their vote, or they were trying to commit fraud. He doesn't see any signs that minorities or any other people are participating less because of the law.

"I don't think it's created any kind of burden for our citizens," Kemp said.

Estimated costs vary for states to implement the changes and provide picture IDs for those who don't already have a driver's license or other qualifying identification. North Carolina estimates a cost of more than $3 million in the first year and about $400,000 each year going forward. Missouri estimates that a proposal in that state could also cost millions. Texas would spend $2 million in the coming year to implement the law there.

Tennessee's law wouldn't require the state to provide IDs, so Hargett believes the cost would be minimal.

Many of the state efforts are coming due to increased GOP influence, as Republicans now control 25 state legislatures and 29 governor's offices. In Kansas, for example, the GOP-controlled Legislature approved a photo ID bill three years ago but then-Democratic Gov. Kathleen Sebelius vetoed it. The state's new Republican governor, Sam Brownback, supports the photo ID rules, which are advancing through the Legislature now.

South Carolina is moving forward to require photo IDs, strengthening a law which already requires voters to show either driver's licenses, voter registration cards or DMV-issued ID cards. The topic has been racially divisive in Mississippi for years and will now be on the ballot as an initiative after a petition authored by a Republican lawmaker got enough signatures. The new Republican majority in the Alabama Legislature is hoping to push a photo ID law through after years of discussing it.

"I think most citizens think it's common sense," Kemp said. "I think it's important for people, not only from a fraud perspective, but to make sure that people have confidence in the system."



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101963)3/26/2011 8:17:21 AM
From: lorne2 Recommendations  Respond to of 224706
 
Mass. job fair canceled because of lack of jobs
By Associated Press
Friday, March 25, 2011
bostonherald.com

TAUNTON - A Massachusetts employment organization has canceled its annual job fair because not enough companies have come forward to offer jobs.

Richard Shafer, chairman of the Taunton Employment Task Force, says 20 to 25 employers are needed for the fair scheduled for April 6, but just 10 tables had been reserved. One table was reserved by a nonprofit that offers human services to job seekers, and three by temporary employment agencies.

Shafer tells the Taunton Daily Gazette the lack of employers means the task force won’t have enough money to properly advertise the fair.

The task force has been organizing the job fair nearly every year since 1984.

Shafer says the cancellation reflects the current economy - even though things are getting better, companies are still cautious about hiring full-time workers.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101963)3/26/2011 11:51:20 AM
From: JakeStraw8 Recommendations  Respond to of 224706
 
A low corporate income tax rate is vital for economic growth in the global marketplace.




To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101963)3/26/2011 5:43:55 PM
From: tonto1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224706
 
The atrocities being commuted in Afghanistan reminds us all of the poor job Obama is doing.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101963)3/27/2011 10:10:05 AM
From: chartseer1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 224706
 
Does that include payroll taxes and sales taxes?

citizen chartseer



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101963)3/27/2011 4:46:46 PM
From: lorne4 Recommendations  Respond to of 224706
 
Ayers admits (again) he wrote Obama bio
Weather Underground terrorist speaks to new generation of SDS
: March 26, 2011
By Jerome R. Corsi
© 2011 WorldNetDaily
wnd.com

NEW YORK – Bill Ayers has once again suggested he was the author of Barack Obama's celebrated autobiography, even though the admission could be explained away as a mocking irony designed only to goad Ayers's critics by yet another false admission he was the president's ghostwriter.

At the conclusion of a speech sponsored by the Students for a Democratic Society at Montclair State University in New Jersey, the former Weather Underground bomber gleefully claimed credit for writing Obama's "Dreams from My Father: A Story of Race and Inheritance."

As shown in a video clip on YouTube, Ayers, responding to a question about "Dreams," said, "Did you know that I wrote it, incidentally?"

Here is the transcript of the exchange between Ayers and a member of the audience asking about "Dreams":

Bill Ayers: One more, one more (question)

Question: Thank you sir, thank you, thank you. Time magazine columnist Joe Klein wrote that President Obama's book, "Dreams from My Father," quote: "may be the best written memoir ever produced by an American politician."

Ayers: I agree with that.

Question: What is your opinion of Barack Obama's style as a writer and uh …

Ayers: I think the book is very good, the second book ("The Audacity of Hope") is more of a political hack book, but uh, the first book is quite good.

Question: Also, you just mentioned the Pentagon and Tomahawk …

Ayers: Did you know that I wrote it, incidentally?

Question: What's that?

Ayers: I wrote that book.

Several audience members: Yeah, we know that.

Question: You wrote that?

Ayers: Yeah, yeah. And if you help me prove it, I’ll split the royalties with you. Thank you very much.

Laughter and Applause

A close reading of the transcript from the Montclair State speech on Friday shows that Ayers again volunteered he was the ghost writer of "Dreams," even though he had not been asked that question.

Jack Cashill's literary investigation uncovers revelations galore about Obama's alleged life narrative. Order the new book "Deconstructing Obama: The Life, Love and Letters of America's First Post-Modern President"

WND reported Oct. 8, 2009, that Ayers had given a similar taunting answer to a National Journal reporter who posed the question at a national book conference.

Ayers declared to the National Journal reporter, "Yes, I wrote 'Dreams from My Father.'"

"Here's what I'm going to say," Ayers said according to a report in Talking Points Memo. "This is my quote. Be sure to write it down: 'Yes, I wrote 'Dreams from My Father.' I ghostwrote the whole thing. I met with the president three or four times, and then I wrote the entire book."

TPM reported that Ayers then released the National Journal reporter's arm, beamed "in Marxist triumph," and said, "And now I would like the royalties."

Then, in a second encounter with conservative blogger Anne Leary at Reagan National Airport who did not even ask the question, Ayers declared, "Yes, I wrote 'Dreams From My Father' … Michelle [Obama] asked me to."

Describing the encounter, Leary wrote that she was sitting in Reagan National, sipping a coffee by the United counter before going through security, when she saw Bill Ayers.

Leary described her conversation with Ayers as follows:

"Then, unprompted he [Ayers] said – I wrote 'Dreams from My Father.' I said, oh, so you admit it. He said – Michelle asked me to. I looked at him. He seemed eager. He's about my height, short. He went on to say – and if you can prove it, we can split the royalties. So I said, stop pulling my leg. Horrible thought. But he came again – I really wrote it, the wording was similar. I said I believe you probably heavily edited it. He said – I wrote it. I said – why would I believe you, you're a liar.

"He had no answer to that. Just looked at me and walked off, and said again his bit about my proving it and splitting the proceeds."

That Ayers is the author of Obama's autobiography is a major theme of WND columnist Jack Cashill's work and his new bestselling book "Deconstructing Obama: The Life, Loves and Letters of America's First Postmodern President."

In an email to WND, Cashill said that Ayers's face looked relaxed at first when he answered the question.

"This time, I think Ayers was making a serious admission," Cashill told WND. "I think it took a split second for him to realize where this was going. Then, as he pulls away, his face assumes a smile rictus. It’s not a full-face smile, but a false smile – only the mouth, not the eyes."

Cashill noted that Ayers was answering a question not about ghostwriting Obama's autobiography, but about the current U.S. military involvement in the war in Libya.

"The subject of the Libyan war came up earlier in Ayers' speech," Cashill noted, "and Ayers said he thought the expenditure of money for Tomahawk missiles would be better spent for education."

Cashill said he believes Ayers is sending a message to the White House.

"Ayers is a very smart guy and he was careful to couch his comments with irony," Cashill noted. "But Ayers was not aiming his irony at critics like me. He was aiming his irony at the White House, letting Obama know that he could blow Obama out of the water, if he gets serious about it."

What damage could Ayers do Obama?

"Ayers is very anti-war and he is upset about our military involvement in Libya," Cashill answered. "All Ayers would have to do is give a press conference in which he demonstrated he was the principle craftsman behind 'Dreams' and the whole myth of Obama's literary genius would come crashing down."

Jack Cashill's literary investigation uncovers revelations galore about Obama's alleged life narrative. Order the new book "Deconstructing Obama: The Life, Love and Letters of America's First Post-Modern President"

Christopher Anderson, in his 2009 book "Barack and Michelle: Portrait of an American Marriage," reported that a desperate Obama in the mid-1990s, facing a second canceled book contract, sought the help of Ayers.

"In the end, Ayers contribution to Barack's "Dreams from My Father" would be significant," Anderson wrote on page 165 of "Barack and Michelle," "so much so that the book's language, oddly specific references, literary devices, and themes would bear a jarring similarity to Ayers' own writings."

Anderson credited Ayers with providing the assistance Obama needed to complete his unfinished autobiography.

"Thanks to help from the veteran writer Ayers, Barack Obama would be able to submit a manuscript to his editors at Times Brooks," Anderson continued on page 166. "With some minor cuts and polishing, the book would be on track for publication in the early summer of 1995."

The SDS invitation for the Ayers event at Montclair State described the speech as "Education and the New Activism: How Did Bill Ayers Evolve From Radical Activist to Educator?"



Cashill first raised questions about the possibility of Ayers' ghostwriting for Obama during the 2008 campaign. Sen. John McCain had questioned Obama's relationship with Ayers – a story broken by WND's Aaron Klein – during debates. Obama dismissed his relationship with Ayers as casual, referring to him as "just a guy in the neighborhood."

Ayers served as one of the leaders of the Weather Underground terrorist group that sought to overthrow the U.S. government and took responsibility for bombing the U.S. Capitol in 1971. His wife, Bernardine Dohrn, was suspected of planting a bomb in a San Francisco police station that killed one officer. The pair emerged from more than a decade underground in 1980. Dohrn, once on the FBI's most wanted list, was fined $1,500 and served three years probation. Ayers was never convicted of anything.

The Ayers speech at Montclair State was attended by between 125-150 people. Including answering questions, Ayers spoke for approximately two hours.



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101963)3/28/2011 9:03:27 AM
From: lorne4 Recommendations  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 224706
 
ken..Just bet you are so very proud of hussein obama and the way he is destroying America so he and soros can remake it in their own image?

My eyes ain't lyin'
: March 28, 2011
Roger Hedgecock
wnd.com


Bombing people to save them is not new to recent American history. Years ago, it was said that a village in Vietnam had to be destroyed to save it.

Now Obama leads us in a noble kinetic military exercise to kill Libyans to save them; to bomb Gadhafi Libyans to save al-Qaida Libyans. How humanitarian. Yet how tragically limited.

What about the brave Islamic jihadis dying at the hands of the dictators' goons in the streets of Yemen and Syria and Bahrain? Don't we owe them bomb strikes and a no-fly zone, too? Why only Libya?

If Obama is committed to spend treasure we don't have and blood he doesn't respect in Libya, why not bomb dictators everywhere in the Muslim East until the bright dawn of the Caliphate? It's Obama and al-Qaida, hand-in-hand.

I think I have the Obama foreign policy figured out. If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.

That foreign policy pairs well with a domestic policy that looks down its nose at we the peasants and declares: Who you gonna believe, me or your lying eyes?

The "too big to fail" banks increase dividends, pay fat bonuses and brag about a return to profitability. Based on what? Based on American taxpayers' yet unborn shouldering an unpayable national debt burden to guarantee the banks' bad debts and underwrite unlimited credit to the banks to buy Treasury debt and (with George Soros as a principal investor) gobble up "failing" competitors.

The president who would "not be president for the fat cats" is, in fact, their enabler. Oh my lyin' eyes.

The near trillion-dollar Recovery Act stimulated millions, nay gazillions, of jobs "saved and created." I don't know anybody with such a job, but it must be true. My president told me so.

The "job creator in chief" works tirelessly on job creation. He says so nearly every day. But he never mentions job destruction. There have been 13,000 jobs lost in the Gulf states as Obama bans offshore oil drilling in American waters.

Then Obama travels to Brazil to announce a $2 billion "investment" in Petrobras (the Brazilian oil company whose biggest single stockholder is George Soros) for deep water offshore oil drilling in Brazil. "We'll be your best customer," he assures his grinning Brazilian hosts.

Banning oil drilling in the U.S. while using U.S. taxpayer money to subsidize it in Brazil seems the act of an anti-American president to these eyes. No lie.

Obama doesn't pump his own gas, but I do. This week, gas prices surged over $4 a gallon at my local gas station. "Best customer"? Why can't we be the best producer, keep the jobs and investment in the U.S. and, oh by the way, bring down the price of gas? My lyin' eyes again.

Wait! say the Obama acolytes. The solution to high gas prices is more ethanol. We don't have to be so dependent on foreign oil. We can burn corn likker in our cars!

Nearly 40 percent of the U.S. corn crop this year will be siphoned off for ethanol. The price of corn has skyrocketed, along with all the food items at the store that contain corn. Food riots are spreading throughout the world. My lyin' eyes tell me we would be better off with corn for food.

Finally, the Fukushima nuclear power plant stored its spent fuel rods on site because Japan lacks a central safe storage. A breach of the storage pool drained the water, exposed the fuel rods and produced dangerous radioactivity.

In the U.S., 104 nuclear power plants also store spent fuel rods on site, sometimes to densities five times those of the Fukushima plant.

After decades of search for a site, American taxpayers have paid billions for a safe central storage at Yucca Mountain, Nev. Obama canceled Yucca Mountain just as the facility neared completion.

The nuclear waste, 75,000 tons of it, still sit in old storage pools at nuclear power plant sites. My lyin' eyes are crying now.

Obama promises a record $1 billion campaign. He will need every dollar to convince American voters that four more years of this naked emperor and his wild tales of wardrobe splendor promise a better future for we the peasants.

I think my eyes ain't lyin'. This president is deliberately destroying everything about America that made this the "land of the free and the home of the brave."



To: Kenneth E. Phillipps who wrote (101963)3/28/2011 9:04:42 AM
From: lorne3 Recommendations  Respond to of 224706
 
INVASION USA

Obama boasts of consulting immigration radical
Union boss admitted amnesty meant to ensure 'progressive rule'
March 26, 2011
By Aaron Klein
© 2011 WorldNetDaily
wnd.com

President Obama once boasted of consulting a radical on immigration issues who later admitted that granting citizenship to millions of illegal aliens would expand the "progressive" electorate and help ensure a "progressive" governing coalition for the long term.

A widely circulated video clip of Obama making a campaign stop at an event for the Service Employees International Union, or SEIU, shows the then-candidate telling the nation's second-largest union, "Your agenda has been my agenda in the Senate."

While the video received play during the 2008 presidential election campaign, there is one section that may warrant renewed scrutiny in light of a separate, second video that recently surfaced involving the individual being referenced by Obama.

Obama boasts to the SEIU about how he consulted the group's officials while he was in the Senate.

"Before immigration debates took place in Washington, I talked with Eliseo Medina and SEIU members," Obama said.

Medina is SEIU's international executive vice-president.

In February 2010, WND posted video of Medina stating that a bill to document an estimated 12 million illegal aliens could help ensure "progressive" rule.

"We reform the immigration laws, it puts 12 million people on the path to citizenship and eventually voters," stated Medina.

Medina was speaking at a June 2009 Washington conference for the liberal America's Future Now!

Medina said that during the presidential election in November 2008, Latinos and immigrants "voted overwhelmingly for progressive candidates. Barack Obama got two out of every three voters that showed up."

"Can you imagine if we have, even the same ratio, two out of three? Can you imagine 8 million new voters who care about our issues and will be voting? We will be creating a governing coalition for the long term, not just for an election cycle."

Obama, meanwhile, told the SEIU at the 2008 campaign stop, "I'm proud of what we've done. I'm just not satisfied, because I know how much more we can accomplish as partners in an Obama administration."

"Just imagine what we could do together," stated Obama. "Imagine having a president whose lifework is your work."

The SEIU is closely linked to the controversial Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now, or ACORN. Former SEIU President Andrew Stern was the most frequently logged White House visitor during Obama's first year in office.

Medina and the SEIU are top supporters of Illinois Rep. Luis Gutierrez's Comprehensive Immigration Reform for America's Security and Prosperity Bill, which seeks to document up to 12 million illegal immigrants inside the U.S.

Just yesterday, Obama said comprehensive immigration reform, including addressing the millions of undocumented workers in the U.S., is the right thing to do. He said he will continue to push for it but acknowledged that the politics of the issue are not easy.

During the most recent presidential campaign, Medina and Gutierrez served on Obama's National Latino Advisory Council. Also on the council was Rep. Nydia Velazquez, D-N.Y., the co-sponsor of Gutierrez's immigration reform bill.

Medina was a chief lobbyist credited with a change in the longstanding policy of the AFL-CIO, the largest union federation in the U.S. The union reversed its stance against illegal immigration in February 2000, instead calling for new amnesty for millions of illegals.

The New Zeal blog documents how Medina was honored in 2004 by Chicago's Democratic Socialists of America for his "vital role in the AFL-CIO's reassessment of its immigration policy." That same year, Medina became a DSA honorary chairman.

The DSA also supported Gutierrez's 1998 bid for Congress. In the mid-1990s, Gutierrez served on the board of Illinois Public Action alongside a number of DSA members, including Obama health-care advisor Quentin Young.