Rebane's Ruminations
April 2018
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Socialism is a philosophy of failure, the creed of ignorance, and gospel of envy; its inherent virtue is the equal sharing of misery.  Winston Churchill

George Rebane

George Boardman, our favorite left-leaning columnist and reader, writes a solid piece (here) in the 30apr18 Union on the effects of taxation on pot in California and our county.  He even brings up the Laffer Curve (gasp!) to illustrate how higher tax rates lower govt revenues and give rise to black markets.  As memorialized by countless citations, comments, and even vituperation in these pages, a sacrosanct tenet of progressive economic theory is that tax rates affect neither production nor consumption.  Do we have here an epiphany in the making?

The Left is now all agog about how we can and should regulate AI – in its development and uses.  The 30apr18 WSJ interviews three “AI experts” on the matter (here) who are really policy lawyers and demonstrate little understanding of AI as they counsel little to a lot of needed regulations.  No one considers that we really need no additional regulation of productized AI because they are at best decision support systems always operating under a responsible human agent for whom all existing laws apply.  It is the human who has the power to employ AI as a tool, and then be responsible for its employment under existing laws.  Things can change later when the AIs become sentient and then sapient.  (See also the post of my recent Union column on this topic.)

California’s progressive socialism has produced the state with the largest income inequality in the Union, and it’s on the rise as more and more middle-class wage earners are pulling up stakes and moving elsewhere.  Joel Kotkin assembles some of this alarming data (H/T to reader) to give perspective to the Left’s claim that California is the model for tomorrow’s America.  “Today, domestic net out-migration, even after declining in the early years of the recession, has more than doubled between 2013 and 2016. Even worse, according to a recent UC Berkeley study, over a quarter of Californians are considering a move, half of them out of the state, with the strongest proclivity found among people under the age of 50. And contrary to some progressive commentary, those leaving are not necessarily old or losers; according to IRS data, out-migrant households had a higher average income than those households that stayed, or of households that moved in to the state.” (more here)

What level of neurological deficits must a person have to still believe that Mueller's year-plus investigation has turned up the slightest evidence of Trump/Russia collusion that, if it exists, would have been leaked months ago?  Why would that lot of liberal lawyers allow their fellow Dems to look like idiots as they repeatedly squawk evidence-free allegations on the media as 'proof' of Trump's guilt? (more here)

[1may18 update]  The Mueller gauge is still on EMPTY, as the latest spate of leaks confirms.  The list of ‘questions for Trump’ first leaked to the NYT, is an embarrassing fishing expedition that seeks nothing beyond the President’s recollections of his own thoughts about this and that, guesses at what other people might have been thinking, opinions about their pre-campaign activities, notions of the meanings of this or that concept or legal construct, … .  In short, the man has found no definitive actions or occurrences involving the Trump campaign that would support the now tidal wave of lamestream allegations serving as desperate proxies for no evidence of a conspiracy with Russia to influence the 2016 election.  When this is pointed out, all the leftwing choir is able to retort can be set to Lerner and Loewe’s ‘Just you wait ‘Enry ‘Iggins’, just you wait!’

California’s school kids have been had by the unionized public school teachers and leftwing politicians, as noted here for years.  The progressives who have created this disaster refuse to even acknowledge it, guaranteeing that the future will be no better, and probably worse, than the past.  Today 65% of our 8th graders are NOT PROFICIENT in reading, and 67% of them are NOT PROFICIENT in math.  This places CA 36th nationwide in reading and math, and that itself is another disaster story – with stats like that, how did we place so high, and still have 14 states scoring lower.  Oi weh!  (H/T to reader and more here)

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88 responses to “Ruminations – 30apr18 (updated 1may18)”

  1. Walt Avatar

    Income inequality is a personal problem. Don’t have money in your pocket? Get a damned job. Mc D’s is paying over 15 bucks an hour.
    Maybe getting a degree in the LIB arts wasn’t such a hot idea.
    Sorry,, welfare checks are not going to go up any time soon.
    And BREAKING NEWS!!! There is no money in dope anymore.

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  2. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Concerning the update on school test scores.
    A national disaster and embarrassment. I hope the students don’t hear about the test results, otherwise it would make them feel sad. One can only hope. Nah, they will feel victimized by the white privileged system. Maybe the test sores are a thinly disguised microaggression. Heck, can’t we just hold the unlearned back a year or three?
    Once again, can anyone out there tell me why, since the school daze of Boardman and Crabbman, we have gone from teaching Latin and Greek in high school to teaching Remedial English in college? Anyone?
    Seems like we reached the point of diminishing returns awhile ago.

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  3. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Punchy 439pm
    There has been a recent reiteration that Trump remains (of that date and time) NOT a target of the Mueller investigation.
    That reinforces the lack of any leaked juicy titbit of something that hints of the treasonous behavior we were assured was at the bottom of the Trump evil deeds… ohmygod ohmygod ohmygod! To the point of anyone not jumping on the bandwagon were called on their suborning of treason.

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  4. Walt Avatar

    This is Ca. for ya’.
    We were told,,”33 billion”… Now, lets just call it an even Trillion.
    http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2018/05/01/feds-could-be-coming-for-californias-over-budget-bullet-train.html
    But lets whine about income inequality.

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  5. jon smith Avatar
    jon smith

    George r 4:35-
    I may be WAY off base, but my shallow understanding is that your career was based on federal grants and government military contracts. You dedicated your life to making weapons of war that were sold to the world’s armies to kill people and blow stuff up. Fun and rewarding enough for certain types, but you couldn’t have put food on the table and enjoyed a healthy retirement without getting paid (even if second off) with tax dollars from the government. Is that really a form of free market capitalism?

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  6. Scott Obermuller Avatar

    “Is that really a form of free market capitalism?”
    First off jonnie boy – you need to learn what free market capitalism is.
    Then you wouldn’t need to ask the question.
    You can certainly have govt expenditures for needed goods and services and have free market capitalism. They are hardly mutually exclusive. And the free market companies can bid for govt contracts.

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  7. George Rebane Avatar

    jons 507pm – It is indeed, since we capitalists did it better, cheaper, and faster than could the government wonks. And our efforts not only saved your ass, but cost you less in the bargain. And BTW, that was only the first half of my career – in the second half I started companies, provided good paying jobs, and contributed to the technology that we all enjoy here.
    PaulE 439pm – And how robust is your story line?

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  8. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Toes 442pm
    There are no simple answers to the question of what the hell happened to K-12 education in California. One is that the good old days weren’t as good as we remember but compared to today, things were pretty damn good when I was a kid.
    One thing I can point to are capital “R” Romantic notions of how children learn and should be taught, both language and mathematics. I thrived learning to read with phonics… in Kindergarten, there were games around the names of letters and letter sounds. In first grade, learning to read was attacked. The Dick and Jane books were horrible, but I recall trying to read harder text and knowing the word in print was a word that I probably kinda knew, if only I could decode the letter combinations well enough to sound it out.
    My little sister never did dig herself out of the hole that “see and guess” reading instruction put her in. My father on his deathbed expressed regret at backing down when she was struggling with reading (dad was a teacher, later a counselor and administrator) in the district and later, at the very school. He also used that experience to encourage me to fight the math teacher who screwed over my son at NUHS, and the administrator (Mathiesen) who conspired with him to head me off from getting a real parent conference.
    (as a further aside, Dan Miller was one of the Trustees of the NJUHSD who let the guilty off easy in that kerfuffle, so I’m not inclined to send $100 his way which is what I was considering when I read his bio today)
    Local control is a phantom… the state Dept. of Ed calls the shots, except for what passes for local control, which generally means the teacher’s unions get their way.
    And teachers are generally from the bottom of the academic barrel. To teach math, many districts don’t require degrees in math to teach the subject in the high schools. Including Ghiddotti (intentionally misspelled to give the FUE something to huff about)
    The “Common Core State Standards”, which California didn’t have a hand in developing, remain in place, and they are the proximate cause of today’s K-12 meltdown in the State.
    Enough of my rant for now.

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  9. Scott Obermuller Avatar

    Mary-Lynn Rock Head at 3:43 – you might want to actually read the article.
    ” They argue that the drastic rise in wealth inequality has occurred for the same reasons as income inequality; namely, the trend of making taxes less progressive since the 1970s, and a changing job market that has forced many blue collar workers to compete with cheaper labor abroad. But wealth inequality specifically is affected by a lack of saving by the middle class. Stagnant wage growth makes it difficult for middle and lower class workers to set aside money, but Saez and Zucman argue that the trend could also be a product of the ease at which people are able to get into debt…”
    First of all taxes are not less progressive. An increasingly smaller number of people pay an increasingly larger share of all taxes collected. More people than ever pay no income tax at all.
    The middle class has in fact turned away from saving and go into debt for goodies and toys at an ever increasing rate. I saw it first hand by seeing what folks in my office bought. A lot of the crash of 08 was greedy idiots cashing in on their home equity and buying expensive toys, kitchen remodels and luxury vacations. They reset the clock on their mortgage and thought somehow the party would never end. Citizens love to go into debt and love to vote for pols who make sure it’s easy to do.
    We also have govts that love to go into debt to buy votes.
    Then there are the folks that save, invest and buy bonds. They live within their means and only go into debt for solid assets that they can afford even if the assets go down in value.
    As far as income is concerned, we are now solidly in an age when there will be increasing differences in what peoples’ skills will bring in. There is no good to come from forcing companies to pay people more than what their skills are worth. That skews the market, increases the amount of off-shoring jobs and hastens the advent of automation that completely eliminates jobs in this country. But you lefties want that – so don’t complain about income inequality.
    I will be the first to tell you that we do have a looming crises in jobs for humans. But you will never solve it with govt programs or artificially mandated wages. Govts know they will need to somehow jack wages upward to pay for the debt crises that is now upon us. But without a commensurate rise in value, we are doomed. Look at Venezuela.

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  10. George Rebane Avatar

    Archie, stifle yourself. No one has said that the US has a perfect society, just one that everyone in the world is trying to make their new home. And the Gini Index is not the final arbiter of a beneficial society (except for know-nothing socialists). It all depends on what the overall GDP is which then impacts the QoL of the lowest echelons. We can have a country with a perfect Gini = 0 and a puny per capita GDP, and everyone is guaranteed to be miserable (i.e. they would move if they could). You really ought to do a little studying before waltzing into these discussions and attempting salvage your point by putting self-serving words into people’s mouths.
    This is what RR readers have known for years.
    http://rebaneruminations.typepad.com/rebanes_ruminations/2009/03/our-new-course-is-declared.html

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  11. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    Archie sez:
    “”Income inequity was much higher than it is (or was) in the West.” – ok, so you are saying there is inequity in both capitalism and socialism….(and then some other stuff)”.
    Yes, that’s correct. One of those odd but true facts is that there isn’t anything particularly egalitarian about socialism, at least the way that it has been practiced in the 100 years or so that the idea has been around in the large scale.
    As a practical matter, I think it’s best to view socialism (as practiced) as corporatism with one very large company. It can be run in any way you like, but will bend in the direction of most organizations in terms of inequity.
    I mostly mention this because I think people (well, people that wear black masks and attack cops on May 1st) genuinely believe that communist states had some variety of built-in equality. If you could calculate an accurate GINI score for the USSR, I expect that it would be similar to feudal Europe.

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  12. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Oh Gregory, continue the rant. Much enjoyed and it saves me from going on my own rant.
    I know how it happened (well, a tiny bit), but why we allowed this to happen is another story. Blame society, I reckon. We are all to blame, not.
    Milo was right. Kindly explain that the Leftists have run public education for the last 30-40 years, so it’s the Conservstives time to run the schools for 30-40 years, just to be fair. We will help a brother out by relieving him oft that heavy burden. It’s who we are as the good guys. Thanks Lefties, now it’s time to drop the rock.
    I went to a non-union school surrounded by union schools and the teachers were headhunted out of state and the lowest paid public school teachers in darn near the whole region. When I lleft high school as a greenhorn still wet behind my ears, it was about the time CA public education hit its peak and declined steafily afterward…..as I ventured off to see what’s over that mountain. Blame me. 🙂

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  13. Walt Avatar

    Speaking of income, the DNC is in a bit of a bind.
    http://dailycaller.com/2018/05/01/dnc-refund-hillary-clinton/
    When your that deep in the red, (only 6 million in the broke) just how are you going to fund election campaigns? You have no arm twisting power anymore. No ” loan us some money,, and we will scratch your itch.. We promise.” And who in their right mind wants the jackboot of big gov. back on their necks? Trump has taken a good deal of pressure off already. And somehow you will get people to vote it back?
    Yes, Lefties,, you have some real problems to deal with before you can take back power… Care to make excuses?

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  14. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    “Black people have a tendency to focus and march when a white person kills a black person or wears a hat, but when it’s 700 kids being killed in Chicago it’s O.K.,
    Do tell!
    http://www.breitbart.com/big-hollywood/2018/05/01/kanye-west-outrage-white-police-killing-black-person-black-black-crime/
    😉

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  15. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Not Meuller, but what a difference a year of Popinjay news makes. Guess that Collusion thang is soooo yesterday. Nothing to see here, let’s look somewhere else for something else.
    https://tennesseestar.com/2018/04/30/democrats-ignore-dossier-in-russia-report-in-stark-contrast-to-their-early-rhetoric/

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  16. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    History teaches us the arrested developed are the most easily offended and manipulated.
    Red meat for those with TDS: A NYT journalist’s crush on Meuller, Clapper, Comey, and Brennan. This is almost as good as feeding Christians to the unhinged, maybe better. Overwhelming evidence of Russian-Trump Collusion!!!!! Let the feast begin.
    https://www.newsbusters.org/blogs/nb/clay-waters/2018/05/01/nyts-goldberg-overwhelming-evidence-trump-campaigns-collusion-russia

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  17. Don Bessee Avatar
    Don Bessee

    A lot of the trouble started here, Al Gore was how old in 68′ –
    Ehrlich prophesied that hundreds of millions would starve to death in the 1970s (and that 65 million of them would be Americans), that already-overpopulated India was doomed, and that most probably “England will not exist in the year 2000.”
    In conclusion, Ehrlich warned that “sometime in the next 15 years, the end will come,” meaning “an utter breakdown of the capacity of the planet to support humanity.”
    If these musings had been received for what they actually were—the wacky theories of a crackpot academic—all would have been well. But The Population Bomb sold some 3 million copies and influenced an entire generation.
    Ideas have practical consequences, and Dr. Ehrlich did not leave his followers guessing as to what they ought to be.
    In the course of his illustrious career, Ehrlich has defended mass sterilization, sex-selective abortion, and infanticide. In his call for radical population control, Ehrlich has said he would prefer “voluntary methods” but if people were unwilling to cooperate, he was ready to endorse “various forms of coercion.”
    http://www.breitbart.com/big-government/2018/05/01/williams-great-population-hoax-turns-50/
    😉

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  18. Paul Emery Avatar

    George
    My story line is stronger than yours for sure. You believe the truth has been revealed because there have been no leaks from Mueller. I believe the truth will be revealed because Mueller hasn’t yet played his hand as to the information he gained from the flippers. Flippers don’t get off easy without bringing something to the table. That something has yet to be revealed.

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  19. George Rebane Avatar

    PaulE 1030pm – Have no idea what you mean by ‘strength’ of story line. All I can say is that my characterization of what has happened and what is happening nails it. And you just confirmed it again. I have no proof of the future, only the likelihoods that I have presented. And neither have you, in spite of your continuing predictions of Trump’s guilt of something.

    Like

  20. Todd Juvinall Avatar
    Todd Juvinall

    With the “high school” questions Mueller is apparently asking even a yokel like me knows they are “perjury traps”. Mt recommendation to Trump is claim “Executive Privileged” and refuse to answer. My goodness have you read these ridiculous questions? “What were you thinking when you fired Comey” etc. Our poor country. And Rosenstein wrote the letter to justify firing Comey and yet Mueller is not asking him the same questions. This is all a travesty of justice.

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  21. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    “perjury traps”.
    There’s probably some truth to that. It seems to me that the best hope for a soft coup d’etat isn’t applying the full force of the surveillance state (ie. Paul’s 17 intelligence agencies) to a single man looking for something illegal, but to force a change in story to occur. Failing that, the prosecutors best friend, the ‘conspiracy’ charge will start looking for victims.
    I rather like the idea of a meta-crime. The original act, if any, isn’t illegal, but talking about it is. There’s an elegance here.

    Like

  22. Gregory Avatar
    Gregory

    Regarding the proficiency of 8th graders in English and math… look no further than our local failures, the Waldorf inspired Yuba River Charter and the Exploratory Learning Grass Valley Charter.

    Like

  23. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Well, Punchy is pounding the “sweetheart deal” drums.
    Ok, let’s look at Flynn. 3 Star General who voiced that we were not only supplying ISIS with cash, weapons, and protection, we helped formed ISIS. Much hated man by the Deep State….but I digress.
    Flynn, the designated NSA advisor by President-elect Trump, talks to the Russian Ambassador. Legal and we all would only hope that the transition team makes contacts with representatives from 100 foreign governments so any new President can hit the ground running. Nothing usual so far.
    Flynn goes to the office and the FBI meets him for the usual security clearance stuff. Nothing unusual about that, it’s protocol.. The next day the FBI comes back, Flynn is thinking its to tie up some loose ends on the paperwork.or something as he is busier than a one legged gal in a chorus line. The agents instead question Flynn about his exchange with the Russian Ambassador, of which they had the full wiretapped tapes on the Flynn-Russian Diplomat conversation. Hmmm.
    Flynn lied to the agents over a non-crime. Why? Haven’t a clue. The FBI decided not to persue it further after the FBI investigation, as Comey testified. As the FBI director stated, Flynn seemed confused on details and dates, misspoke, but the investigators did not feel Flynn lied intentionally. Case dropped. Trump fires Flynn for lying to VP Pence about the contact with the Russian Ambassafor.
    Then along comes Meuller. Slams Flynn. Flynn lost his home to cover legal fees. Flynn’s wife started nutting up under the media and public scrunity and the ensuing stress that such attacks does to a man and his entire family and loved ones.
    Then Meuller went for the jugular. He threaten to go after Flynn’s son on some totally unrelated manner and would destroy the son. What Meuller had on Flynn’s son is unknown. Drug dealing, fraud, embezzlement, who knows. I don’t. Anyway, Flynn, like some parents would do, fell on the sword to save his boy.
    Sweetheart deal? Flynn lost his house, his job, his reputation, and probably his potential for future earning. He is heavily in debt now, his life in ruins. All for lying or confusing details about a legal activity. A charge he may have beaten in court had he the funds.
    Sure, lying to the FBI is a crime. So is littering, but I don’t see people being fine $1,000 and doing 6 months in jail for littering (the full extent of the law).
    Sweetheart deal? Plead guilty to a procedural crime and stop the bleeding. Oh, when you lie to the FBI (perjury), that means you are also obstructing justice (an investigation), so Meuller hits them with both just to rub it in. Flynn will get a slap on the wrists when all is said and done, but he will forever be branded by Punchy as a LIAR!
    Hmm, so was Pascal a liar when she presented false identification (impersonating another) when lying straight to the face of LE, not confusing details, and not to mention living a lie for decades. But, yeah, she got a sweetheart deal and you won’t hear Punchy screaming at her calling her a liar, lol.
    Duplicity. I actually like and respect Pascal….just pointing out how TDS and hating all things Right blinds a man to his own actions.
    Lest we forget, Meuller investigated a innocent man for 4 years, hounded and made the man’s life a living hell, including harassing his employers about their employee (Anthrax case), then dropped it and when after another dude…a lab dude who was working with the FBI to solve the case. After 4 years of dragging an innocent man through unbelievable crushing stress and the muck, Meuller just walked away and never apologized. Never once said, “Sorry.” The taxpayers had to pay the man 4 million bucks for Meuller’s screwing him over. That’s Meuller.
    Oh, BTW, the lab guy who was helping Meuller’s FBI solve the Anthax case…the guy Meuller turned on after 4 years of harassing and ruining the reputation of the innocent man….well, when Meuller turned on the lab guy, that poor soul could not handle the stress and up and killed himself. Meuller probably offered him a sweetheart deal or something.

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  24. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Education: Limousine Liberals where the rubber meets the road.
    Another administrator responded: “There are kids that are tremendously disadvantaged, that I would love to be able to offer — somebody mentioned $5,000-worth of tutoring for to raise their test scores. And to compare these students and say, ‘My already-advantage kid needs more advantage! They need to be kept away from those kids!’ is tremendously offensive to me.”
    https://www.dailywire.com/news/30058/yikes-white-residents-nycs-upper-west-side-lose-emily-zanotti?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social&utm_content=062316-news&utm_campaign=benshapiro

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  25. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    BillT@11:19AM
    Seriously, thanks for the run-down. My natural indication is to think of senior law enforcement and intelligence officials as having a mini-Beria inside screaming to be let out, so I’m never unduly outraged by their misdeeds.
    It’s fun to watch the local Green Libertarians cheer on the cops, never thinking that that organ of the state would ever be turned on them. After all, ‘colluding’ with Eastasia should be punished.
    As long as Trump sticks to a few matters that I consider existential threats to the West, the rest almost doesn’t matter.

    Like

  26. Russell Avatar
    Russell

    Millennials Fleeing Urban Rot
    Perhaps no region in the world is more associated with talent than the once-booming San Francisco Bay Area and Silicon Valley. In the first four years of the decade, the area netted an average of 10,000 domestic migrants annually. But by 2016, the tide had turned. About 12,000 residents fled San Francisco that year, and the net outflow for 2017 climbed to 25,000. Nor is the future prognosis particularly great. Seventy-four percent of millennials in the Bay Area are currently considering an exit, according to the Urban Land Institute.
    https://chiefexecutive.net/young-talent-leaving-silicon-valley/

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  27. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Regulating AI in a socialist progressive age.
    Don’t use self serve checkouts!, warms the buggy whip union. Gee, that does not sound very progressive. That sounds like turning the clock back.
    https://www.zerohedge.com/news/2018-05-02/afl-cio-demands-we-never-use-self-serve-checkout

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  28. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Not California, but the same. Seattle. Tax employers for each employee they hire to pay for rectifying income inequality and affordable housing?
    I am stunned at the sheer arrogance of Ms. Sawant. Unbelievable. What a socialist pig.
    “Amazon is perfectly capable of paying that, double, even four times that.”
    She also called Amazon’s tactic “extortion.”
    Sure, the avowed socialist can sit back and tell us all from her uninformed city council chambers what Amazon can afford to pay and she knows best. Reminds me of Brother Ben ranting about the Waltons having too much money and they can afford to pay blah, blah, blah.
    “Two supporters of the tax, City Council members Kshama Sawant and Mike O’Brien, seemed unmoved by Amazon’s decision.
    “I understand Amazon doesn’t like it. I’m sure they would love to go to a city that has no taxes. And maybe they will find that place,” O’Brien said.
    O’Brien said he met with Amazon officials Wednesday morning. “I want to work with you, I would love for you to continue to grow in Seattle, but I need your help solving this crisis.”
    Added Sawant, “Amazon is perfectly capable of paying that, double, even four times that.”
    She also called Amazon’s tactic “extortion.”
    City Council member Lisa Herbold has also supported the tax.
    “Who loses? Low-income people lose, and we have an increase in homelessness,” she said.
    When asked if the city loses when jobs leave Seattle, Herbold responded “Again I’m hopeful that we’re going to come out of this with not only an understanding of the problems but an understanding of the solutions.”
    http://komonews.com/news/local/amazon-fires-back-at-seattles-proposed-head-tax-pauses-construction-projects

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  29. Scott Obermuller Avatar

    DB at 7:58 – British schools are removing analog clocks from classrooms because kids can’t read.
    fixed it for you.
    What will they do when the power is out? Same as always. Don’t need the lights to be on for that.

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  30. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Don, Meuller and the courts.
    Been sitting on this all week, waiting for someone to bring it up.
    A). The Justice Department was set up by statute. Let that sink in.
    B). Meuller must operate within the constraints of practices of the DOJ as established, not outside of it.
    C). There are two DOJ memorandum that specially spell out what can and cannot be prosecuted concerning a sitting Prez. Their established Consitutional understanding. Mueller, in a perfect world, cannot drain away eneromous energy and time from the Prez doing his Constitutionally mandated duties. The 1972 (?) 17 page memorandum is the Justice Department’s legal understanding and protocol of the DOJ’s constitutional constraints and prohibitions concerning a sitting Prez. Special Investigators are bound by the DOJ’s established codes of conduct and legal nderstandings. It is up to Congress, and Congress only to remove a President and charge him/her with articles of impeachment that only the House can draw up.
    D). Bottomline is that neither an unelected Special Counsel nor an unelected Grand Jury comprising of 12 unelected citizens (in DC of all places, lol) cannot remove a sitting President. A sitting President cannot be charged for obstruction of justice since Trump can fire any FBI Director or any Attorney General for any reason he chooses, or for no reason at all. Remember, the Justice Department was established by statute. Those actions by a Prez cannot be assailed.
    Trump can tweet anything he darn well pleases any time he wishes. It’s a separation of powers issue, not a Special Prosecutor’s thang.
    We will see how that judge rules in two,weeks. More often than not, they change their minds. Right now, the judge is telling Meuller he is overstepping his bounds as per the statutes of both the DOJ and the statutes governing the Special Prosecutor’s limits.
    Separations of Powers. 3 branches, Congress has its powers as well for oversight of rogue executive branch departments.

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  31. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Oh yeah, another Bottomline: if Trumps legal team is worn their weight, we may be heading to a Constitutional showdown. Manafort has just fired the first shot back.

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  32. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    More California exodus
    There are many reasons for the housing crunch, but the lack of new construction may be the most significant. According to the report, from 2008 to 2017, an average of 24.7 new housing permits were filed for every 100 new residents in California. That’s well below the national average of 43.1 permits per 100 people.
    https://www.marketwatch.com/story/with-no-letup-in-home-prices-the-california-exodus-surges-2018-05-03

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  33. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Special Counsels: perhaps this article (opinion) piece by a guy who has been there articulates what I am trying to say about separation of powers:
    “But Rosenstein refused to produce the scope memo without redactions, arguing that it pertains to an ongoing criminal investigation. This is a weak excuse, given the flood of recent leaks about the Mueller probe.
    Congress’ constitutional oversight authority is supported by six express constitutional clauses and 18 separate laws – as well as Congress’s historic power to subpoena, grant immunity, take testimony, hold executive officers in contempt, and impeach.
    So Rosenstein is on shaky ground in telling Congress that it has no right to see what it needs to exercise oversight.”
    More:
    Aiming to put himself in the right, Rosenstein added: “We’re going to do what is required by the rule of law and any kind of threats that anybody makes are not going to affect the way we do our job.”
    Someone needs to slow this train down, or turn the burner back to simmer. No personal threats are contained in congressional insistence that executive branch officials comply with constitutional oversight. That is what the law requires. Refusing to comply doesn’t uphold the law – it ignores the law.
    http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2018/05/05/muellers-russia-probe-should-wrap-up-and-rosenstein-should-accept-congressional-oversight.html

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  34. scenes Avatar
    scenes

    BillT@5:25PM and on
    This covert war that is turning more overt over time got me to thinkin’.
    Perhaps this really isn’t about (R) vs (D) politics (or war about demography, or city vs town) but is instead just some evidence of an ongoing takeover of government by the intelligence community and national law enforcement.
    My idea here is that, over time, the surveillance state will always grow to the extent that it has the goods on everybody combined with it’s physical presence. Elements of the Washington apparatchiks v. Trump is a kind of premature battle undertaken before they had completely solidified their position…plus there was a certain degree of underestimation of the enemy I think.
    We do live in (so far) unique times in that the tools have been put in place to watch the public and manipulate it in a more scientific manner. To some extent, the machinery put in place to observe you and better sell you bath soap and pickup trucks has been repurposed, and whoever has the keys to that operation has some real power, whether it’s Facebook or a facility in Bluffdale, Utah.
    To their credit, the Russians had a more straightforward model in putting forth a member of it’s intelligence community as President-for-Life. He appears to be a gifted man, but there’s no guarantee that his successor isn’t a lot worse, and I’m not detecting a balance of power in the country as used to exist in the post-Stalin USSR. It’s hard to tell from my comfy chair in Whiteopia, CA, so there’s nothing more to be said about that.

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  35. George Rebane Avatar

    My question is a simple one – Given how they are pushed around by the DOJ, FBI, Dem caucus, … , do the Republican members of Congress have even one pair of balls to share among them?

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  36. Bill Tozer Avatar
    Bill Tozer

    Good Doc
    Nope. They lack a spine and a scrot. Well, there is perhaps one of there with three testicles, but he is known as ET the extra testical and he gets branded as a Far Right Extremist wac job not to be taken seriously. Remember Nunes and his trumped up ethics charges? Trey is leaving, Sessions is fingering himself, and the rest wilt when the kitchen gets hot.
    Why isn’t the Wall built? R’s don’t really want it. Same with the DOJ being a law unto themselves. The R’s don’t have the huevous rancheros to stand up and remind the FBI and DOJ who they report to and who they work for. Looks like this will be a court thang, since Somebody neutuered the R’s and now Trump just reaches out for a handful from the R’s and grabs one big putang.
    This Russian Collusion mass hysteria got them recusing themselves and running for the hills. Actually, they can’t even make it to the hills when you fold like a cheat suit and have the strength of a soggy pretzel.
    It is a fair question by Congress. What is the scope of the Special Counsel’s investigation? Does he have a blank check? Let’s see the memos laying it out. Fair question. Where are we in the investigation?? Kick down with the answers. They (Justice) forgot who their boss really is and it ain’t what they tell us it is. It’s what the Constitution tells all of us what the law is. There are 6 (SIX) articles in the Constitution that gives Congress oversight for a damn good reason.
    What, Congress can’t see what Flynn said? The friggin words he uttered and the questions posed to him ain’t gonna change magically. And Fylnn did the bad lying thang after the election, when it was all over and had no bearing on the 2016 election results. And what about stuff that happened in 2007 and 2006; and even 2014?.. procedure crimes. And if Congress leaks, it’s on them, not the Sacred Cow currently being worshipped by the Left. The Lefties who have had a long standing animosity and a massive case of distrust towards all things secret agent man and dirty deeds done behind closed doors.
    Yep, two judges just last week said to Meuller’s team not this time, asshats. It’s not going to be on your terms, what you want, when you want. That ain’t the way things are supposed to happen. What, trust you because you say to trust you? Don’t think so, not in my courtroom.
    I don’t know when it started, but Congress has steadily given up its authority and let the Excutive Branch do the heavy lifting for them. Like DACA. The Congressional Constitutional Authority really got surrendered (given away freely) under Barry Frosted O’s two terms. Now, Congress is surrending it’s authority to some unelected dude named Meuller.

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