Category Archives: President Obama

Mike Pence votes against budget deal. Roll call

 

I am still upset with Congressman Mike Pence for saying that he was going to stick to his guns concerning the removal of federal funding of Planned Parenthood before he would vote to increase the debt ceiling on April 8th and then he went and voted yes on that day anyway.

David Boaz makes some great points in his article, “Not the Biggest in history. Not by a long shot,”April 11, 2011:

Pundits and politicians are all in agreement: Those were some big budget cuts in Friday night’s deal. “The largest annual spending cut in our history,” President Obama said. Speaker of the House John Boehner called it the “largest real dollar spending cut in American history.” Saturday’s front-page, upper-right headline in the Washington Post proclaimed:

BIGGEST CUTS
IN U.S. HISTORY

The story went on to say that Obama “said the cuts would be painful but necessary.”

NPR’s Andrea Seabrook reported, “The Republicans got big, big cuts.” “Slashing government,” agreed the Los Angeles Times. The Washington Post added the big picture:

an ascendant Republican Party has managed to impose its small-government agenda on a town still largely controlled by Democrats.

And in a separate story:

Obama and his party felt pressure to show they heard the message that many Americans believe the government spends too much and that deficits are unsustainable.

AP added:

Republican conservatives were the chief winners in the budget deal that forced Democrats to accept historic spending cuts they strongly opposed. Emboldened by last fall’s election victories, fiscal conservatives have changed the debate in Washington. The question no longer is whether to cut spending, but how deeply.

Please. It’s a cut of $38 billion in a budget of $3,819 billion. That’s 1 percent. That’s a rounding error in federal budgeting.

Have you ever seen people so self-congratulatory over such a minor accomplishment? Here’s one graphic representation of the budget cuts—showing the House’s original proposed cut of $61 billion—compared to annual spending and the annual deficit. Here’s another, depicting the $61 billion cut in the context of the rapid growth of spending over the past decade. In fiscal year 2001, which ended in September 2001 but was mostly set in place before President Bush took office, the federal government spent $1,863 billion. After seven years of Bush and a Republican Congress, spending was more than a trillion dollars higher—$2,983 billion in FY2008. Then the financial crisis, TARP, the stimulus, and the omnibus spending bill came along, and FY2011 spending is estimated at $3,819 billion—$836 billion more than just three years earlier, and $1,956 billion more than when Bush took office a decade ago.

So this cut—not of $61 billion but of $38 billion—is a lot of money anywhere except Washington. In Washington, it’s 1 percent of what the federal government will spend this year. It’s less than 5 percent of the three-year spending increase. It’s 10 percent of this year’s spending increase, the increase from 2010 to 2011.

Is it nevertheless the “the largest annual spending cut in our history,” as President Obama says? Not hardly. My Cato Institute colleague Chris Edwards notes:

This federal budget table shows total federal spending since 1901. Total spending fell in 22 years out of the last 110 years. In 19 of those 22 years, spending was cut by more than 1 percent.

And what about the downsizing of the federal government after World War II? That same budget table shows that federal spending fell from $92.7 billion in 1945 to $55.2 billion in 1946, to $34.5 billion in 1947, and to $29.8 billion in 1948 (and all without any of the job losses that we’re told would result from modest reductions today). Check out also the drop in spending from 1919 to 1922, even larger in percentage terms.

The president might be technically correct in this sense: In none of those years did federal spending fall by as much as $38 billion in nominal dollars. But any real comparison would use inflation-adjusted dollars or percentage of the budget, and by those standards there are no “big, big cuts” here. (Boehner specifically called it the “largest real [that is, inflation-adjusted] dollar spending cut in American history,” which is so clearly wrong that it must surely have been a misstatement.)

The fundamental point here is that federal spending rose by more than a trillion dollars during Bush’s first seven years, and then by almost another trillion in barely three fiscal years. And then we had a titanic battle over whether to trim $38 billion.

These figures above have really got me mad. It is true though that Mike Pence at least did not vote for this new budget. Below is the role call.

Complete Roll Call

Download a CSV file of these votes

All States Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming All PartiesDemocratsIndependentsRepublicans

Yes Votes (260)

Member Party Dist.
Robert B. Aderholt R AL-4
Todd Akin R MO-2
Rodney Alexander R LA-5
Jason Altmire D PA-4
Robert E. Andrews D NJ-1
Steve Austria R OH-7
Joe Baca D CA-43
Spencer Bachus R AL-6
Lou Barletta R PA-11
John Barrow D GA-12
Charles F. Bass R NH-2
Dan Benishek R MI-1
Rick Berg R ND-1
Shelley Berkley D NV-1
Howard L. Berman D CA-28
Judy Biggert R IL-13
Brian P. Bilbray R CA-50
Gus Bilirakis R FL-9
Rob Bishop R UT-1
Timothy H. Bishop D NY-1
Sanford D. Bishop Jr. D GA-2
Diane Black R TN-6
John A. Boehner R OH-8
Jo Bonner R AL-1
Mary Bono Mack R CA-45
Dan Boren D OK-2
Leonard L. Boswell D IA-3
Charles Boustany Jr. R LA-7
Kevin Brady R TX-8
Mo Brooks R AL-5
Vern Buchanan R FL-13
Larry Bucshon R IN-8
Ann Marie Buerkle R NY-25
Michael C. Burgess R TX-26
Dan Burton R IN-5
Ken Calvert R CA-44
Dave Camp R MI-4
John Campbell R CA-48
Francisco Canseco R TX-23
Eric Cantor R VA-7
Shelley Moore Capito R WV-2
Dennis Cardoza D CA-18
Russ Carnahan D MO-3
John Carney D DE-1
John Carter R TX-31
Bill Cassidy R LA-6
Kathy Castor D FL-11
Ben Chandler D KY-6
David Cicilline D RI-1
Howard Coble R NC-6
Mike Coffman R CO-6
Tom Cole R OK-4
K. Michael Conaway R TX-11
Gerald E. Connolly D VA-11
Jim Cooper D TN-5
Jim Costa D CA-20
Jerry F. Costello D IL-12
Joe Courtney D CT-2
Rick Crawford R AR-1
Ander Crenshaw R FL-4
Mark Critz D PA-12
Henry Cuellar D TX-28
John Culberson R TX-7
Geoff Davis R KY-4
Susan A. Davis D CA-53
Peter A. DeFazio D OR-4
Jeffrey Denham R CA-19
Charlie Dent R PA-15
Scott DesJarlais R TN-4
Mario Diaz-Balart R FL-21
Norman D. Dicks D WA-6
John D. Dingell D MI-15
Robert Dold R IL-10
Joe Donnelly D IN-2
David Dreier R CA-26
Sean Duffy R WI-7
Renee Ellmers R NC-2
Jo Ann Emerson R MO-8
Anna G. Eshoo D CA-14
Blake Farenthold R TX-27
Chaka Fattah D PA-2
Stephen Fincher R TN-8
Michael G. Fitzpatrick R PA-8
Chuck Fleischmann R TN-3
Bill Flores R TX-17
Jeff Fortenberry R NE-1
Virginia Foxx R NC-5
Rodney Frelinghuysen R NJ-11
Elton Gallegly R CA-24
Jim Gerlach R PA-6
Bob Gibbs R OH-18
Chris Gibson R NY-20
Robert W. Goodlatte R VA-6
Paul Gosar R AZ-1
Kay Granger R TX-12
Sam Graves R MO-6
Tim Griffin R AR-2
Mike Grimm R NY-13
Frank Guinta R NH-1
Brett Guthrie R KY-2
Ralph M. Hall R TX-4
Colleen Hanabusa D HI-1
Richard Hanna R NY-24
Gregg Harper R MS-3
Vicky Hartzler R MO-4
Doc Hastings R WA-4
Nan Hayworth R NY-19
Joe Heck R NV-3
Martin Heinrich D NM-1
Jeb Hensarling R TX-5
Wally Herger R CA-2
Jaime Herrera Beutler R WA-3
Jim Himes D CT-4
Rubén Hinojosa D TX-15
Tim Holden D PA-17
Steny H. Hoyer D MD-5
Randy Hultgren R IL-14
Duncan D. Hunter R CA-52
Jay Inslee D WA-1
Steve Israel D NY-2
Darrell Issa R CA-49
Lynn Jenkins R KS-2
Bill Johnson R OH-6
Hank Johnson D GA-4
Sam Johnson R TX-3
Walter B. Jones R NC-3
Bill Keating D MA-10
Mike Kelly R PA-3
Dale E. Kildee D MI-5
Ron Kind D WI-3
Peter T. King R NY-3
Adam Kinzinger R IL-11
Larry Kissell D NC-8
John Kline R MN-2
Steven C. LaTourette R OH-14
Leonard Lance R NJ-7
Jeff Landry R LA-3
Jim Langevin D RI-2
James Lankford R OK-5
Rick Larsen D WA-2
Tom Latham R IA-4
Robert E. Latta R OH-5
Sander M. Levin D MI-12
Jerry Lewis R CA-41
Daniel Lipinski D IL-3
Frank A. LoBiondo R NJ-2
Nita M. Lowey D NY-18
Frank D. Lucas R OK-3
Blaine Luetkemeyer R MO-9
Cynthia M. Lummis R WY-1
Dan Lungren R CA-3
Donald Manzullo R IL-16
Kenny Marchant R TX-24
Tom Marino R PA-10
Jim Matheson D UT-2
Carolyn McCarthy D NY-4
Kevin McCarthy R CA-22
Betty McCollum D MN-4
Mike McIntyre D NC-7
Howard P. McKeon R CA-25
David McKinley R WV-1
Cathy McMorris Rodgers R WA-5
Pat Meehan R PA-7
John L. Mica R FL-7
Michael H. Michaud D ME-2
Gary G. Miller R CA-42
Jeff Miller R FL-1
James P. Moran D VA-8
Tim Murphy R PA-18
Sue Myrick R NC-9
Richard E. Neal D MA-2
Kristi Noem R SD-1
Richard Nugent R FL-5
Devin Nunes R CA-21
Alan Nunnelee R MS-1
Pete Olson R TX-22
Bill Owens D NY-23
Steven Palazzo R MS-4
Bill Pascrell Jr. D NJ-8
Erik Paulsen R MN-3
Ed Perlmutter D CO-7
Gary Peters D MI-9
Collin C. Peterson D MN-7
Tom Petri R WI-6
Joe Pitts R PA-16
Todd R. Platts R PA-19
Mike Pompeo R KS-4
Bill Posey R FL-15
Tom Price R GA-6
Nick J. Rahall II D WV-3
Tom Reed R NY-29
Jim Renacci R OH-16
Reid Ribble R WI-8
David Rivera R FL-25
Martha Roby R AL-2
Phil Roe R TN-1
Harold Rogers R KY-5
Mike D. Rogers R AL-3
Mike Rogers R MI-8
Dana Rohrabacher R CA-46
Todd Rokita R IN-4
Tom Rooney R FL-16
Ileana Ros-Lehtinen R FL-18
Peter Roskam R IL-6
Mike Ross D AR-4
Steven R. Rothman D NJ-9
Ed Royce R CA-40
Jon Runyan R NJ-3
C.A. Dutch Ruppersberger D MD-2
Paul D. Ryan R WI-1
John Sarbanes D MD-3
Steve Scalise R LA-1
Adam B. Schiff D CA-29
Bobby Schilling R IL-17
Aaron Schock R IL-18
Kurt Schrader D OR-5
Allyson Y. Schwartz D PA-13
Austin Scott R GA-8
David Scott D GA-13
F. James Sensenbrenner R WI-5
Pete Sessions R TX-32
Terri Sewell D AL-7
Brad Sherman D CA-27
John Shimkus R IL-19
Heath Shuler D NC-11
Bill Shuster R PA-9
Mike Simpson R ID-2
Albio Sires D NJ-13
Adam Smith D WA-9
Adrian Smith R NE-3
Christopher H. Smith R NJ-4
Lamar Smith R TX-21
Jackie Speier D CA-12
Cliff Stearns R FL-6
Steve Stivers R OH-15
John Sullivan R OK-1
Lee Terry R NE-2
Glenn Thompson R PA-5
Mike Thompson D CA-1
William M. Thornberry R TX-13
Pat Tiberi R OH-12
Niki Tsongas D MA-5
Michael R. Turner R OH-3
Fred Upton R MI-6
Chris Van Hollen D MD-8
Peter J. Visclosky D IN-1
Tim Walberg R MI-7
Greg Walden R OR-2
Tim Walz D MN-1
Debbie Wasserman Schultz D FL-20
Daniel Webster R FL-8
Lynn Westmoreland R GA-3
Edward Whitfield R KY-1
Robert J. Wittman R VA-1
Frank R. Wolf R VA-10
Steve Womack R AR-3
Rob Woodall R GA-7
C. W. Bill Young R FL-10
Don Young R AK-1
Todd Young R IN-9

No Votes (167)

Member Party Dist.
Gary L. Ackerman D NY-5
Sandra Adams R FL-24
Justin Amash R MI-3
Michele Bachmann R MN-6
Tammy Baldwin D WI-2
Roscoe G. Bartlett R MD-6
Joe L. Barton R TX-6
Karen Bass D CA-33
Xavier Becerra D CA-31
Marsha Blackburn R TN-7
Earl Blumenauer D OR-3
Robert A. Brady D PA-1
Bruce Braley D IA-1
Paul Broun R GA-10
Corrine Brown D FL-3
G. K. Butterfield D NC-1
Lois Capps D CA-23
Michael E. Capuano D MA-8
André Carson D IN-7
Steven J. Chabot R OH-1
Jason Chaffetz R UT-3
Judy Chu D CA-32
Hansen Clarke D MI-13
Yvette D. Clarke D NY-11
William Lacy Clay D MO-1
Emanuel Cleaver II D MO-5
James E. Clyburn D SC-6
Steve Cohen D TN-9
John Conyers Jr. D MI-14
Chip Cravaack R MN-8
Joseph Crowley D NY-7
Elijah E. Cummings D MD-7
Danny K. Davis D IL-7
Diana DeGette D CO-1
Rosa DeLauro D CT-3
Ted Deutch D FL-19
Lloyd Doggett D TX-25
Mike Doyle D PA-14
Jeffrey Duncan R SC-3
John J. Duncan Jr. R TN-2
Donna Edwards D MD-4
Keith Ellison D MN-5
Eliot L. Engel D NY-17
Sam Farr D CA-17
Bob Filner D CA-51
Jeff Flake R AZ-6
John Fleming R LA-4
J. Randy Forbes R VA-4
Barney Frank D MA-4
Trent Franks R AZ-2
Marcia L. Fudge D OH-11
John Garamendi D CA-10
Cory Gardner R CO-4
Scott Garrett R NJ-5
Phil Gingrey R GA-11
Charlie Gonzalez D TX-20
Trey Gowdy R SC-4
Tom Graves R GA-9
Al Green D TX-9
Gene Green D TX-29
Morgan Griffith R VA-9
Raúl M. Grijalva D AZ-7
Luis V. Gutierrez D IL-4
Andy Harris R MD-1
Alcee L. Hastings D FL-23
Dean Heller R NV-2
Brian Higgins D NY-27
Maurice D. Hinchey D NY-22
Mazie K. Hirono D HI-2
Rush Holt D NJ-12
Michael M. Honda D CA-15
Tim Huelskamp R KS-1
Bill Huizenga R MI-2
Robert Hurt R VA-5
Jesse L. Jackson Jr. D IL-2
Sheila Jackson-Lee D TX-18
Eddie Bernice Johnson D TX-30
Timothy V. Johnson R IL-15
Jim Jordan R OH-4
Marcy Kaptur D OH-9
Steve King R IA-5
Jack Kingston R GA-1
Dennis J. Kucinich D OH-10
Raul Labrador R ID-1
Doug Lamborn R CO-5
John B. Larson D CT-1
Barbara Lee D CA-9
John Lewis D GA-5
Dave Loebsack D IA-2
Zoe Lofgren D CA-16
Billy Long R MO-7
Ben Ray Lujan D NM-3
Stephen F. Lynch D MA-9
Connie Mack R FL-14
Carolyn B. Maloney D NY-14
Edward J. Markey D MA-7
Doris Matsui D CA-5
Tom McClintock R CA-4
Thaddeus McCotter R MI-11
Jim McDermott D WA-7
Jim McGovern D MA-3
Patrick T. McHenry R NC-10
Jerry McNerney D CA-11
Brad Miller D NC-13
Candice S. Miller R MI-10
George Miller D CA-7
Gwen Moore D WI-4
Mick Mulvaney R SC-5
Christopher S. Murphy D CT-5
Jerrold Nadler D NY-8
Grace F. Napolitano D CA-38
Randy Neugebauer R TX-19
Frank Pallone D NJ-6
Ed Pastor D AZ-4
Ron Paul R TX-14
Donald M. Payne D NJ-10
Steve Pearce R NM-2
Nancy Pelosi D CA-8
Mike Pence R IN-6
Chellie Pingree D ME-1
Ted Poe R TX-2
Jared Polis D CO-2
David E. Price D NC-4
Ben Quayle R AZ-3
Mike Quigley D IL-5
Charles B. Rangel D NY-15
Denny Rehberg R MT-1
Silvestre Reyes D TX-16
Laura Richardson D CA-37
Cedric Richmond D LA-2
Scott Rigell R VA-2
Dennis Ross R FL-12
Lucille Roybal-Allard D CA-34
Bobby L. Rush D IL-1
Tim Ryan D OH-17
Linda T. Sanchez D CA-39
Loretta Sanchez D CA-47
Jan Schakowsky D IL-9
Jean Schmidt R OH-2
David Schweikert R AZ-5
Robert C. Scott D VA-3
Tim Scott R SC-1
José E. Serrano D NY-16
Louise M. Slaughter D NY-28
Steve Southerland R FL-2
Pete Stark D CA-13
Marlin Stutzman R IN-3
Betty Sutton D OH-13
Bennie Thompson D MS-2
John F. Tierney D MA-6
Scott Tipton R CO-3
Paul Tonko D NY-21
Edolphus Towns D NY-10
Nydia M. Velázquez D NY-12
Joe Walsh R IL-8
Maxine Waters D CA-35
Melvin Watt D NC-12
Henry A. Waxman D CA-30
Anthony Weiner D NY-9
Peter Welch D VT-1
Allen West R FL-22
Frederica Wilson D FL-17
Joe Wilson R SC-2
Lynn Woolsey D CA-6
David Wu D OR-1
John Yarmuth D KY-3
Kevin Yoder R KS-3

Did Not Vote (6)

Member Party Dist.
Gabrielle Giffords D AZ-8
Louie Gohmert R TX-1
Michael McCaul R TX-10
Gregory W. Meeks D NY-6
John W. Olver D MA-1
Dave Reichert R WA-8

Present (0)

Member Party Dist.

Potential Republican Presidential Candidates Huckabee and Pawlenty disagree on Boehner budget deal

Gov. Tim Pawlenty discusses entitlement reform, 2012, and the president’s agenda on Fox & Friends, April 13, 2011.

Two potential Republican Presidential Candidates took off in two different directions recently concerning the budget deal that John Boehner came up with Democratic leaders. Mike Huckabee endorsed it and Tim Pawlenty criticized it. I find myself leaning towards Pawlenty in this case because I really do not appreciate the way they can call $38 billion a cut when actually it is a cut out of the projected growth in government.

Last Saturday night on the Huckabee Show, Mike Huckabee stated:

The Democrats originally wanted no cuts, then they put 4 billion on the table then 6 billion, then 33  billion before settling on 38 1/2 billion… Now to get more than first offered (by the Democrats) seems a victory to me, but not to some who want it all or nothing. Let me give you a dose of reality. Democrats control 2 of the 3 moving parts of this deal, the Senate and the White House. The Republicans only control the House. You don’t have to be a math major to understand that Republicans will not all they want. We got far more that the President and Harry Reid wanted them to have…. The more important battle is going to be about the more bold and ambitious plan crafted by Congressman Paul Ryan which doesn’t trim a few billion, but trillions of dollars of  federal spending and then balances the budget in a decade.

According to the NY Times article, “Pawlenty criticizes budget agreement,” April 13, 2011:

 

Tim Pawlenty, the former governor of Minnesota who is exploring a presidential bid, said Wednesday that he opposed the spending agreement that was reached late last week between President Obama and Speaker John A. Boehner. Even though it averted a government shutdown, Mr. Pawlenty said the $38 billion cuts in this fiscal year were insufficient.

“The more we learn about the budget deal,” Mr. Pawlenty said, “the worse it looks.”

In a statement after the president’s speech, Mr. Pawlenty said the administration’s plan to cut spending “was nothing more than window dressing.” He also used the moment to align himself with other fiscal conservatives and some members of the Tea Party movement who said the deal did not go far enough.

It is the latest rightward move from Mr. Pawlenty, who is scheduled to speak at weekend Tea Party rallies commemorating Tax Day.

Mr. Boehner has been widely praised for his work on the budget agreement that came less than two hours before the government was set to shut down late Friday. He was not mentioned in the statement released by Mr. Pawlenty on Wednesday.

“The fact that billions of dollars advertised as cuts were not scheduled to be spent in any case makes this budget wholly unacceptable,” Mr. Pawlenty said. “It’s no surprise that President Obama and Senator Reid forced this budget, but it should be rejected. America deserves better.”

It has been 150 years since the beginning of the Civil War that started in April of 1861 at Ft Sumter.

(Something below I pulled off the internet)

Thursday, November 1, 2007

The Appeal of Masonic Research


Lying nearly forgotten in the archives at Wichita State University in Wichita, Kansas, are the personal papers of John Grimes Walker. Walker was a naval officer who fought in the Civil War – later going on to become an admiral. He was born in New Hampshire, and relocated as a young man to Iowa – his uncle was governor of the state – before attending Annapolis on the eve of war. Wichita State purchased his personal papers at auction in the 1970’s, and the collection – consisting of ten folio-sized boxes – comprised the correspondence and personal stamp collection of the admiral, who was an avid philatelist and by all appearances a faithful correspondent.

But Walker was also at the center of a mystery. During the war, he was the second, and last, captain of the U.S.S. Baron De Kalb, the mysterious Masonic Ironclad.

At a Masonic speaking engagement recently, I came upon a photo of this ship – part of the Union’s brown-water navy – which bore a Masonic emblem between her stacks. I was not aware of any other ship, tank, aircraft or other implement of war so decorated, and I decided to investigate the matter for the Scottish Rite Journal. This post is a preview of that article which will appear in SRJ in the near future.

The U.S.S. Baron De Kalb was named in honor of Baron Johann de Kalb, a German officer who served as a major general in Washington’s Army during the American Revolutionary War and a Freemason. The ship was laid down in 1861 and was originally named the U.S.S. St. Louis. Upon the discovery that another ship, operating off the East coast, had already been named St. Louis, she was re-christened U.S.S. Baron De Kalb September of 1862.

De Kalb was the first “City” class gunboat, a class of ironclads that are sometimes referred to as “Pook turtles” after their designer, Samuel M. Pook. In addition to the De Kalb, the Carondelet, Cincinnati, Louisville, Mound City, Cairo, and Pittsburgh were built and these 500 ton workhorses were the backbone of the Federal river fleet. Armed with two 8 inch smooth bore cannon, four 42 pounder rifles, and seven 32 pounder smooth bores, De Kalb was a formidable foe, but a slow one. Sporting armor plate in excess of 100 tons, her top speed was a stately nine miles an hour. De Kalb saw action on the Tennessee, the Cumberland, the Yazoo, and the Mississippi rivers during her tour of duty before she was finally sunk by a rebel mine below Yazoo City on July 13, 1863.

De Kalb actually had two captains during her brief career. Her first captain, Cmdr. (later Admiral) John Ancrum Winslow (who went on to command the U.S.S. Kearsarge during her famous fight with the C.S.S. Alabama) contracted malaria on the river, and was granted a furlough to return home to recuperate on November 1, 1862. His Masonic affiliation is not known. Her second, and final captain, was John Grimes Walker, at that time a Lieutenant Commander. Preliminary research indicated that no Grand Lodge records existed in Iowa, Maryland, or Washington DC, that prove Walker was a Freemason, and I had come to Wichita in the vain hope that his correspondence would include something, anything, of Masonic significance.

After several hours sorting through stamps and postcards, old letters and financial records, I had very little to show for myself. In the ninth box, however, I came upon a folder bearing the notation “Code book.” Inside the folder was a small notebook about the size of a pack of playing cards, bound in blue leatherette. It was dated July 15th, 1859, and Grimes had written his name on the inside cover.

“That is an old code book,” the reference assistant told me, “probably a military code.”

I looked through it for a moment and then contradicted her.

“It’s not a military code,” I said, “it is a Masonic cipher.” And to prove it, I read off a few of the more innocent sentences which had the effect of a parlor trick. This discovery was of limited value, however. Although I now had proof that Capt. Walker was a Mason, I was still no nearer to any contemporary evidence proving that the mysterious symbol between De Kalb’s stacks was anything to do with Masonry.

The search continues, however; and the astonishment of the reference librarian was a thing of palpable joy.

Posted by Wayfaring Man

Pat Lynch: Need to raise taxes on rich (Real Cause of Deficit Pt 6)(Famous Arkansans, Wayne Jackson)

 

The liberal Pat Lynch in his article “Worry Inc.” Arkansas Democrat- Gazette, April 4, 2011 commented:

While the budget cutters are busy going after programs that help mere citizens, any notion of bringing taxrates for the wealthy back to the levels of the Clinton era, when there was a federal surplus, is off the table.

Liberals always think they can raise the taxes on the rich and everything else will take care of itself. The problem with our deficit is not that the politicians need more money but they need to spend less. I heard Congressman Tim Griffin say that on Monday.

Brian Riedl of The Heritage Foundation discusses the newly released budget by President Bush.

Brian Riedl is the author of the article “The Three Biggest Myths About Tax Cuts and the Budget Deficit,” (Heritage Foundation, June 21, 2010), and the next few days I will be sharing portions of his article

Riedl’s budget research has been featured in front-page stories and editorials in The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post and The Los Angeles Times. He has discussed budget policy on NBC, CBS, PBS, CNN, FOX News, MSNBC, and C-SPAN. He also participates in the bipartisan “Fiscal Wake-Up Tour,” which holds town hall meetings across America focusing on the looming crisis in Social Security, Medicare, and Medicaid.

____________________________________________________

In my last post I included this:

Myth #2: Future deficits are “the result of not paying for two wars, two tax cuts, and an expensive prescription drug program.”

Fact: These policies play a relatively minor role in the growth of future deficits. 

During his 2010 State of the Union Address, President Obama asserted:

At the beginning of the last decade, America had a budget surplus of over $200 billion. By the time I took office, we had a one-year deficit of over $1 trillion and projected deficits of $8 trillion over the next decade. Most of this was the result of not paying for two wars, two tax cuts, and an expensive prescription drug program.[7]

In other words, according to President Obama, the massive budget deficits are President Bush’s fault, but the data do not support this assertion. President Bush implemented the three policies mentioned by President Obama in the early 2000s. Yet by 2007—the last year before the recession— the budget deficit had stabilized at $161 billion. Since the combined annual cost of these three Bush-era policies is now relatively stable, they cannot have suddenly caused a trillion-dollar leap in budget deficits beginning in 2009.[8]

_________________________________________________

However, the larger problem is that the President’s entire methodology fails basic statistics. With Washington set to collect $33 trillion in taxes and spend $46 trillion over the next decade, how does one determine which spending programs “caused” the $13 trillion deficit? By the President’s methodology, one could blame any $13 trillion group of spending programs (or tax cuts) for the entire budget deficit. For example, the President could have blamed much of the 10-year budget deficit on Social Security (10-year cost of $9.2 trillion), antipoverty programs ($7 trillion), net interest on the debt ($6.1 trillion), or non-defense discretionary spending ($7.5 trillion).[12] (See Chart 3.) There is no legitimate, mathematical reason for President Obama to ignore all of these more expensive policies and single out the $4.7 trillion in tax cuts, the funding for the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, and the Medicare drug entitlement. A better methodology would focus on which program costs are actually growing and pushing the deficit up.

Finally, there is some hypocrisy at work. President Obama criticizes President Bush for “not paying for two wars, two tax cuts, and an expensive prescription drug program.” Yet he would extend $4 trillion of these policies (while repealing $700 billion in tax cuts) without paying for them either. By his own faulty logic, he is almost as irresponsible as President Bush.

_______________________________________

This is part of the series I am doing on Famous Arkansans. This is part two on Wayne Jackson who grew up in West Memphis.

Elvis “In the Ghetto”

EIN – You had worked with so many of the great soul singers so did the booking for an Elvis session cause you any anxiety?

W.J – To be honest with American Studios and the Elvis sessions, they were just plain recording sessions. The “Gods from Heaven” did not come down & there was no fire & brimstone either. It was just a recording session that just happened to be with Elvis. There was of course a lot more magic in recording Elvis than there was in recording a nobody but American studios had some great talent going through it at the time.

The first time I actually heard Elvis sing ‘In the Ghetto’ however I was quietly sitting with my horn and looking at the music. I hadn’t heard any of it yet and I suddenly realised that this was really special stuff. I just got a chill up my spine hearing that. I knew that it was going to be a landmark record for Elvis because it was about such a current topic. I thought “My God, here we all are genuinely in the ghetto!” There really was a guy with an automatic rifle on the roof in case of something bad happened – especially after Martin Luther King died.

You see American Studios was in the worst part of town. Stax was a little nearer Graceland, but American & Hi studios, all of them were in the worst parts of town. ‘Suspicious Minds’ was also an emotional subject for Elvis at that time as well and it was a thrill to be involved in those songs, knowing that they would be so important to his future career as they were.

EIN – Interestingly Dusty Springfield’s fabulous LP ‘Dusty In Memphis’ was released on the same day January 13, 1969 that Elvis came in to American Studios to record! Featuring the same line up as Elvis’ band wasn’t ‘Son Of A Preacher Man’ a stunner?

W.J – It was one of the best of the era. There was so much music and also a lot of poverty and we all worked to earn something extra and I was one of those people.

EIN – Were you brought in for sessions or did you play for whoever came along.

W.J – Chips Moman produced Stax’s big early hit ‘Last Night’ and I played on that. He liked my horn sound and so anytime they needed horns at American they’d call us up. We also worked Muscle Shoals studios too!
At the time I’d known Elvis for lots of years and recently he had been singing those poor “Movie Songs” which we were not that excited about since we’d recently been recording three number 1 records each a week! But the songwriters really had their day with him, including Mark James and ‘Suspicious Minds.’ In fact Mark James is a good friend of mine and we wrote some songs together.

EIN – How did Chips Moman’s session work out since there were a lot of overdubs. Were you there when Elvis recorded the vocals?

W.J – Next door was a restaurant & upstairs there was kid of a holding area. Because the studio was so small we would often go off with the Backing singers while the rhythm section worked out the backbone of the songs. We would be playing poker upstairs while they were cutting tracks downstairs. Then we would come down and Elvis would be singing and we’d put the horns in with the track. Elvis liked to sing with the horns and hear them together with the background vocals. So although we did overdub the horns on ‘In The Ghetto’ Elvis actually sang with us while we overdubbed those. You’ve got to understand that the studio was surprisingly small so that there was not much room for the band plus the horns & back-up voices.

EIN – Like Sun Studios?

W.J – Did you visit Sun Studios? Well it was just like that room – which still has all the magic hanging around in there. Sun Studios is probably the most important place in the world for Rock’n’roll and you can certainly feel that something very important happened in that room. I reckon you might even feel it even if you didn’t know what it was because there are such energies left over from all that creativity. But that all happened before I got into the business. I never got to play at Sun until Johnny Rivers did a session, Rufus Thomas too. We also worked with U2 when they recorded there in 1988 to produce their ‘Rattle & Hum’ album.

Just like 1986 can miracle happen to Univ of Ark Little Rock in NCAA Playoffs?

This story ran in Saline Courier today

Could Lightening strike twice for UALR Trojans?

Coach Mike Newell in the 1986 NCAA Basketball Tournament led his 14th seededUniversity of Arkansas at Little Rock (UALR) Trojans to a 90-83 victory over the 3rd seededNotre Dame Fighting Irish coached by Digger Phelps, now a college basketball analyst for ESPN. Next the Trojans took the North Carolina State Wolfpack, coached by Jim Valvano, to double overtime before being eliminated from the tournament.

Again like 1986 both Notre Dame and UALR will be in the NCAA Tournament, and it appears they both have a good chance of being paired up again according to various websites. Could lightening strike twice?

There are two reasons I have been having fun with this bit of speculation. I am fan of UALR, my hometown team, and I have several good friends who are longtime Fighting Irish fans.

My son Wilson (14 yr old), and his friend Kahry Wright attended the Sunbelt Championship game with me in Hot Springs on Tuesday night. My son Rett (24 yr old) warned us about the potential for storms and lightening in the area, but we were determined to make it to Hot Springs. Actually we know personally one of the basketball players for UALR.

Logan Quinn is a red-shirted freshman guard who led the Arkansas Baptist High School Eagles to a Basketball State Championship in 2009 in Hot Springs. Logan has many brothers and sisters that have played ball over the years at Arkansas Baptist. My son Rett played both football and basketball with his brother Lancer in 2004-2005.

Quinn’s former coach at Arkansas Baptist, Steve Miller, congratulated him by phone after the game on Tuesday night. Miller noted that now Logan can say he was a member of two teams that won championships on that same floor. Miller is now head basketball coach and athletic director at Trinity Christian Academy in Wichita, Kansas, and he watched the game on ESPN 2. He said he got a kick out of seeing a former player in the huddles on the sideline.

Let me now tell you about my longtime Notre Dame Fighting Irish friends. Tim, Pat and Jim Monahan are brothers, and have been running Monahan Inc of Arcola, Illinois for many years. They sell handles and broomcorn, and since at Little Rock Broom Works we need those items to make brooms, we have been a customer of theirs for many years.

Two of Tim’s sons have actually played football for Notre Dame. Both fit the “Rudy” description. Out of high school they received many offers to play at the small college level, but they chose to walk-on at Notre Dame. Tom Monahan got some playing time his senior year as a blocking back in 1986, and Mark Monahan did the same as a defensive back in 1995. Former Arkansas Coach Lou Holtz coached both players.

Why did they walk on at Notre Dame? Probably it had something to do with how far back the Monahan family goes with the Fighting Irish. These boys’ grandfather Tom Monahan played for Knute Rockne from 1928 to 1931.

The Monahan’s still have in their possession a letter dated August 2, 1929 from Rockne encouraging Monahan to put on 10 to 15 lbs. He went on to write, “I think you have the potentialities to make a good center with a little more experience, and you will get that this fall.” Unfortunately,  Rockne’s life was cut short at age 43 in a plane crash in 1931.

Tuesday night it looked bad for my UALR Trojans when we trailed North Texas by 7 points with less than 90 seconds left in the game. However, after stealing the ball a few times and making our foul shots, we were able to cut the lead to one point with 48 seconds left.

Then Josh White seemed to close the door for good when he hit a three point shot with 25 seconds left to give North Texas a 4 point lead. I don’t know if lightening ever struck outside the building, but it did inside! In the final seconds UALR’s Matt Mouzy and Solomon Bozeman each made three point shots to steal the win from the Mean Green of North Texas.

The next day I heard UALR assistant coach and former NBA player Joe Kleine on the radio. Kleine said that the coaches have been telling the players all year long to keep focused on what the prize is. Kleine said he went to four NCAA tournaments as a college player and “there is nothing like it. We just kept selling the dream to these players. We told them that they will never forget their experience in the NCAA tournament.”

UALR head coach Steve Shields and assistant coach Kleine are men of unusual size. Shields is a short guy and Kleine is a 7 ft tall former NBA center. In 1998 KIeine played for the NBA Champion Chicago Bulls.

.

In 1986 the Monahan brothers saw me at a convention,  and they all three had the same basic thought: “We took the Arkansas Little Rock game for granted and they just beat us.” Can lightening strike again in 2011? We will just have to wait and see.

________________________________

Everette Hatcher is the president of Little Rock Broom Works which has been manufacturing brooms since 1900, and his political blog iswww.HaltingArkansasLiberalswithTruth.com. Everette and his wife, Jill, live in Alexander and  have four children and two grandchildren..

Kahry Wright of Little Rock and Wilson Hatcher of Bryant attended the Sunbelt Championship game in Hot Springs on Tuesday night despite the stormy weather.
___________________________________________________
 

DC Voucher program

 

I found this video from Reason TV that really tells the truth about the DC Voucher Program:

Barack Obama & the DC School Voucher Program: The president says he wants to do ‘what’s best for kids.’ So why won’t he save a proven program that helps low-income students?”

Mercedes Campbell is one of the 1,700 students in the Washington, D.C. Opportunity Scholarship Program, a school-voucher program authorized by Congress in 2004. The program gives students up to $7,500 to attend whatever school their parents choose. For kids like Mercedes, who now attends Georgetown Visitation Prep, the DC voucher program is a way out of one of the worst school districts in the country.

“It’s different, now that I go to Visitation,” says Mercedes. “I approach things differently. It’s like a whole new world, basically.”

The program is wildly popular with parents and children—there are four applicants for every available slot—and a recent Department of Education study found that participants do significantly better than their public school peers. Indeed, after three years in private schools, students who entered the program at its inception were 19 months ahead in reading of applicants unlucky enough to still be trapped in D.C.’s public schools.

Yet working with congressional Democrats and despite his pledge to put politics and ideology aside in education, the Obama administration has effectively killed the program through a backdoor legislative move. “[Education] Secretary [Arne] Duncan will use only one test in what ideas to support with your precious tax dollars,” says the president. “It’s not whether it’s liberal or conservative, but whether it works.”

That sort of doublespeak has left many Obama supporters not just puzzled but outraged. Certainly, Mercedes is. “Out of everything else they can shut down or everything else they can advocate for, they want to take this one thing away?” Adds her mother, Ingrid, “We voted for you, we walked, we went to the parade, we stood freezing. Why?…Can you get this tape over to Obama and have him answer our questions? Why, sir, why?”

“Barack Obama and the DC School Voucher Program” is approximately 5.30 minutes long and was produced by Dan Hayes and Nick Gillespie.

Brantley: Children hurt by budget cutters. Liberals will keep spending till the levee breaks? Part 1

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Today Max Brantley started whining about the children that will be hurt by all these impending budget cuts (Arkansas Times, Feb 28). I guess he always thinks the answer to everything is to throw more federal programs and money at it.

Have you ever heard of the great flood of 1927. My grandfather moved to Memphis in 1927 and he told me about this flood. There was a lady named Memphis Minnie and she wrote about this flood. I always heard that there was lots of great blues music that had come out of Memphis, but I always thought that was overstated and that the Blues was not a significant form of music.

However, at the same time I was listening to groups like Led Zeppelin and the Rolling Stones, I had no idea that many of their songs were based on old Blues songs out of Memphis.

One of my favorite Led Zeppelin songs was “When the Levee breaks.” It was based on a song by Memphis Minnie. When I think about the recent increase of federal Spending and federal Deficits under President Obama, it makes me think of this song. In 1927 the rains kept coming and coming and finally the levee broke. Now the federal spending keeps coming and the deficits continue to build up and I wonder when will our government go bankrupt?

Memphis Minnie and Joe Mccoys original.

Led Zeppelin

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President Obama admits that the Federal Government is out of money but that doesn’t stop him from still borrowing more and more to keep spending it. When will our government go bankrupt? When will the levee break?

Video : Obama “We are out of money”

May 23, 2009

Evidently Drudge Report  is running a headliner stating that Obama said “We are out of money” — There is no corresponding text to it other than this.

If you think for one second that this isn’t gonna wreck havoc on every industry including advertising then you are living in an illusionary world.

‘WE’RE OUT OF MONEY’
Sat May 23 2009 10:32:18 ET

In a sobering holiday interview with C-SPAN, President Obama boldly told Americans: “We are out of money.”

C-SPAN host Steve Scully broke from a meek Washington press corps with probing questions for the new president.

SCULLY: You know the numbers, $1.7 trillion debt, a national deficit of $11 trillion. At what point do we run out of money?

OBAMA: Well, we are out of money now. We are operating in deep deficits, not caused by any decisions we’ve made on health care so far. This is a consequence of the crisis that we’ve seen and in fact our failure to make some good decisions on health care over the last several decades.

So we’ve got a short-term problem, which is we had to spend a lot of money to salvage our financial system, we had to deal with the auto companies, a huge recession which drains tax revenue at the same time it’s putting more pressure on governments to provide unemployment insurance or make sure that food stamps are available for people who have been laid off.

So we have a short-term problem and we also have a long-term problem. The short-term problem is dwarfed by the long-term problem. And the long-term problem is Medicaid and Medicare. If we don’t reduce long-term health care inflation substantially, we can’t get control of the deficit.

So, one option is just to do nothing. We say, well, it’s too expensive for us to make some short-term investments in health care. We can’t afford it. We’ve got this big deficit. Let’s just keep the health care system that we’ve got now.

Along that trajectory, we will see health care cost as an overall share of our federal spending grow and grow and grow and grow until essentially it consumes everything…

barack-obama

Written by TheFounder · Filed Under Advertising Agency News

Dan Mitchell of the Cato Institute tells how the Republicans can win the federal government shutdown fight with the Democrats. I will be posting portions his his article the next few days. Here is the first part:

With the GOP-led House and the Democratic Senate and White House far apart on a measure to pay the federal government’s bills past March 4, Washington is rumbling toward a repeat of the 1995 government-shutdown fight (actually two shutdown fights, one in mid-November of that year and the other in mid-December).

This makes some Republicans nervous. They think Bill Clinton “won” the blame game that year, and they’re afraid they will get the short end of the stick if there is a 1995-type impasse this year.

A timid approach, though, is a recipe for failure. It means that President Obama and Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid can sit on their hands, make zero concessions, and wait for the GOP to surrender any time a deadline approaches.

To put it simply, Republicans need to hold firm and fight hard.

In other words, budget hawks in the House have no choice. They have to fight.

But they can take comfort in the fact that this is not a suicide mission. The conventional wisdom about what happened in November of 1995 is very misleading.

Republicans certainly did not suffer at the polls. They lost only nine House seats, a relatively trivial number after a net gain of 54 in 1994. They actually added to their majority in the Senate, picking up two seats in the 1996 cycle.

More important, they succeeded in dramatically reducing the growth of federal spending. They did not get everything they wanted, to be sure, but government spending grew by just 2.9 percent during the first four years of GOP control, helping to turn a $164 billion deficit in 1995 into a $126 billion surplus in 1999. And they enacted a big tax cut in 1997.

If that’s what happens when Republicans are defeated, I hope the GOP loses again this year.

Candidate #1,MN Gov Tim Pawlenty: Republican Presidential Hopefuls (Part D)

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Gov. Tim Pawlenty RNC Speech Part 2 of 3

The other day I told a story about flying on Southwest Airlines from Little Rock to Florida by way of St. Louis and I ridiculed them for sending me the wrong way at first. I wanted to make it known that I really do like flying with Southwest and they do a great job. In fact, I flew one time on the same plane with the famous Democratic Senator from Illinois. No it was not the future President Obama but Paul Simon. The lady next to me said, “I know that guy. He is famous.” I told her it was Paul Simon and she thought it was the singer. Then she asked me if it was the writer of TV Shows (Neil Simon), but I finally told her it was the Senator with the bow tie. Senator Simon got a kick out of the story when I relayed it to him while getting off the plane later.

We are a great nation because we have been the most free nation of all time according to Tim Pawlenty in his speech as seen above. The heavy hand of government that President Obama endorses. Also no one should be forced to send their child to a bad school. I have spent lots of time on that with all my articles on Vouchers.

I wanted to include some posts from the article “Excerpts: Tim Pawlenty’s Courage to Stand.” Former Minnesota Governor Discusses Losing the VP Slot to Sarah Palin and How President Obama ‘Broke His Promise’ in His New Book:”

Pawlenty on the intersection of faith and politics:

“People often ask how I reconcile my faith life and my
public life and to what extent my Christian faith
influences my decision making. For any public leader
— or a leader in any arena, for that matter — our
upbringing, life experiences, values and beliefs
inevitably influence who we are and how we approach
the decisions before us. Faith is part of my
experience, and it is the cornerstone of my value
system. It is part of who I am and how I think.”

Pawlenty taking issue with the federal government’s
corporate bailouts and subsidies for public
broadcasting:

“The government is like one of those hoarders you
see on talk shows — the folks with fourteen dining
room tables in their garage, eight boxes of sweaters
in their kitchen. The federal government needs to
have a yard sale!”

Pawlenty on President Barack Obama’s first two
years in office:

“President Obama broke his promise to pay for ‘every
dime’ of new government spending. Of course, that’s
not the only promise that he has broken. He said that
health-care reform would be a transparent, bipartisan
effort; instead, the health-care bill was written behind
closed doors and passed without any Republican
support. He promised to not raise taxes on the
middle class, but he broke that pledge. This is not
change we can believe in. This is change we still can’t
believe.”

Candidate #1,MN Gov Tim Pawlenty: Republican Presidential Hopefuls (Part C)

HALT:HaltingArkansasLiberalswithTruth.com

Gov. Tim Pawlenty RNC Speech Part 1 of 3

Tim Pawlenty visited Arkansas last week. In the video clip above he really jumps on President Obama for increasing wasteful spending by our government to new heights.

I wanted to include some posts from the article “Excerpts: Tim Pawlenty’s Courage to Stand.” Former Minnesota Governor Discusses Losing the VP Slot to Sarah Palin and How President Obama ‘Broke His Promise’ in His New Book:”

In his new autobiography, former Gov. Tim Pawlenty
reflects on his evolving political and personal life,
from his humble upbringing in St. Paul, Minn., to the
governor’s mansion. An evangelical Christian and a
booming voice for the Republican party, Pawlenty has
said several times he is strongly considering a
presidential bid in 2012.

Read excerpts from his book, “Courage to Stand: An
American Story,” below:

Pawlenty on preparing materials for the vice
presidential vetting process in 2008:

“It was kind of comical at times — the Governor and
First Lady in the middle of the night organizing stacks
of paper now strewn all over the computer-room
floor, trying to make tabs and get it all in the right
place, checking to see if the three-hole punch worked
and then running out to Kinko’s for photocopies.”

Pawlenty reflecting on McCain’s choice of then-
Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin as his 2008 running mate:

“Sarah Palin has become a force of nature in the
Republican Party. She inspires people in the
conservative cause. She exudes enthusiasm, and that
energy is the fuel of grassroots politics. We need that
kind of energy and fuel from people all over this
country if we want a shot at setting America back on
course. While some might still debate McCain’s
selection, the undeniable truth is that it took courage
to stand up to the critics, the pundits, and the
expectations of the media and the Washington
establishment and choose Sarah Palin in the first
place.”

Ronald Wilson Reagan Part 4 (President Obama on Reagan)

undefined
President Obama signs the Ronald Reagan Centennial Commission Act on June 2, 2009, as former first lady Nancy Reagan looks on.
REMARKS BY THE PRESIDENT
UPON SIGNING THE RONALD REAGAN CENTENNIAL COMMISSION ACT
I am going to include in my series on Ronald Wilson Reagan a group of articles from USA Today that deal with today’s politicians and what they appreciated about Reagan.
Ronald Wilson Reagan was a believer. As a husband, a father, an entertainer, a governor and a president, he recognized that each of us has the power — as individuals and as a nation — to shape our own destiny. He had faith in the American promise; in the importance of reaffirming values like hard work and personal responsibility; and in his own unique ability to inspire others to greatness.

No matter what political disagreements you may have had with President Reagan— and I certainly had my share — there is no denying his leadership in the world, or his gift for communicating his vision for America

President Reagan recognized the American people’s hunger for accountability and change — putting our nation on a bold new path toward both. And although he knew that conflicts between parties and political adversaries were inevitable, he also knew that they would never be strong enough to break the ties that bind us together. He understood that while we may see the world differently and hold different opinions about what’s best for our country, the fact remains that we are all patriots who put the welfare of our fellow citizens above all else.

It was a philosophy that President Reagan took to heart — famously saying that he and Democratic Speaker Tip O’Neill, with whom he sparred constantly, could be friends after 6 o’clock. It’s what led him to compromise on issues as contentious as Social Security and tax cuts. And it’s what allowed him to work with leaders of all political persuasions to advance the cause of freedom, democracy and security around the world, including reducing nuclear weapons and imagining a world, ultimately, without nuclear weapons.

But perhaps even more important than any single accomplishment was the sense of confidence and optimism President Reagan never failed to communicate to the American people. It was a spirit that transcended the most heated political arguments, and one that called each of us to believe that tomorrow will be better than today. At a time when our nation was going through an extremely difficult period, with economic hardship at home and very real threats beyond our borders, it was this positive outlook, this sense of pride, that the American people needed more than anything.

When the future looked darkest and the way ahead seemed uncertain, President Reagan understood both the hardships we faced and the hopes we held for the future. He understood that it is always “Morning in America.” That was his gift, and we remain forever grateful.

President Ronald Reagan’s 100th birthday anniversary

Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, then California Gov. Ronald Reagan, Bob Hope and John Wayne attend a party to benefit Reagan’s gubernatorial campaign in 1970.
Its the Master of Venom’s turn to dish out the punishment, this time its Govenor Ronald Reagan.

Mike Ross: The Best at playing politics

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Arkansas Democrat Rep. Mike Ross Explains Why He Voted For the Health Care Bill in Committee (video from Tolbert Report.com)

“I wasn’t sent to Washingon to play politics. I was sent there to do my job.” These are the words of Congressman Mike Ross after he basically got through playing politics and helped pass Obamacare by letting it get out of committee. Chairman Henry Waxman was very happy in July 2009, but I wonder what people from south Arkansas will think when Obamacare takes root and kills jobs.

Earlier I took a look at this issue with Mike Ross with John Brummett’s excellent article in which he points out:

Ross can say, quite correctly, that he voted against health care reform on the House floor the first time and that he voted against it the decisive time when it came back through the budget reconciliation process from the Senate….

I am afraid that it appears that Ross was trying to please the liberal Democrats by voting for Obamacare when it counted. He voted against it when they did not need his vote. That sounds like he was just playing politics.

_____________________________________________

oday I am profiling St lawmaker Donna Hutchinson.

Donna Hutchinson

Wed, Jan 7, 2009

LegislatorsRepresentative

mug-donna-hutchinsonR-Bella Vista
House District 98
Second term
Committees: Joint Budget; Education; State Agencies.
Special connections: Mother of two former state legislators: Tim and Jeremy Hutchinson. Of Native American descent. Professional mediator.
How to reach her: House in-session number: 501-682-6211. E-mail: hutchinsond@arkleg.state.ar.us. “I have to turn off my cell phone while the House is in session and committees are meeting, which means it’s off most of the day.” E-mail is most reliable for contact on weekends. “I don’t get to go home every weekend. It may be two weeks before I get home and check my messages.”
What you should know: Wants to redirect highway money to areas that have the most congestion.
Her priority: To cut taxes. Then to make sure that lottery scholarship money goes to nontraditional students such as working adults who want to go back to college or students in need of remedial courses. “If you have to go into debt with school loans, it should be for credit-earning courses, not remediation.”
Firmest prediction: “I will be surprised if the governor gets his rainy day fund. Since we’re coming back in 2010, he really doesn’t need one. I also think the governor’s sales tax reduction on groceries will pass and tha