BUT now, overweight, tobacco using, drug abusing, processed food eaters can get free healthcare that will cost everyone else billions. Kum ba ya. Let's all hold hands and sing together.
Welfare, food stamps, and section 8 housing. Now free healthcare. Don't need no job. The experiment didnt work. Time to drain the swamp. Time to fumigate the WH. Kum ba ya.
Ya, rather than have that dirty ol' food stamp/healthcare money circulating aroun' America, clogging up the pipes, and such, lets git it back to the Caymans where it belongs.
Whatever we do, lets don't go back to the Clinton Tax Rates, and Increasing Median Family Income (the Only period of Rising Family Incomes in the last 24 years.)
His name was Bubba, he was from Georgia ... And he needed a loan, So... He walked into a bank in New York City and asked for the loan Officer. He told the loan officer that he was going to Paris for an International redneck festival for two weeks and needed to borrow $5,000and that he was not a depositor of the bank. The bank officer told him that the bank would need some form of security for the loan, so the Redneck handed over the keys to a new Ferrari. The car was parked on the street in front of the bank.
The Redneck produced the title and everything checked out. The loan officer agreed to hold the car as collateral for the loan and apologized for having to charge 12% interest.
Later, the bank's president and its officers all enjoyed a good laugh at the Redneck from the South for using a $250,000 Ferrari as collateral for a $5,000 loan. An employee of the bank then drove the Ferrari into the bank's private underground garage and parked it.
Two weeks later, the Redneck returned, repaid the $5,000 and the interest of $23.07. The loan officer said, "Sir, we are very happy to have had your business, and this transaction has worked out very nicely, but we are a little puzzled. While you were away, we checked you out on Dunn & Bradstreet and found that you are a Distinguished Alumni from The University of Georgia, a highly sophisticated investor and Multi-Millionaire with real estate and financial interests all over the world. Your investments include a large number of wind turbines around Sweetwater,Texas. What puzzles us is, why would you bother to borrow $5,000?"
The good 'ole boy replied, "Wheah else in New York City can I park my car for two weeks for only $23.07 and expect it to be there when I return?"
A redneck was stopped by a game warden in Central Mississippi recently with two ice chests full of fish. He was leaving a cove well-known for its fishing.
The game warden asked the man, "Do you have a license to catch those fish?"
"Naw, Sir," replied the redneck. "I ain't got none of them there licenses. You must understand, these here are my pet fish."
"Pet fish?"
"Yeah. Every night, I take these here fish down to the lake and let 'em swim 'round for awhile. Then, when I whistle, they jump right back into these here
ice chests and I take 'em home."
The warden said, "That's a bunch of hooey! Fish can't do that."
The redneck looked at the warden for a moment and then said, "It's the truth Mr. Government Man. I'll show ya. It really works."
"O. K.," said the warden. "I've got to see this!"
The redneck poured the fish into the lake and stood and waited.
After several minutes, the warden said, "Well?"
"Well, what?," said the redneck.
The warden replied, "When are you going to call them back?"
George W Bush and Barack Obama somehow ended up at the same barber shop.
As they sat there, each being worked on by a different barber, not a word was spoken. The barbers were even afraid to start a conversation, for fear it would turn to politics. As the barbers finished their shaves, the one who had Obama in his chair reached for the aftershave.
Obama was quick to stop him saying, 'No thanks, my wife Michelle will smell that and think I've been in a whorehouse.'
The second barber turned to Bush and said, 'How about you sir?' Bush replied, 'Go ahead; my wife doesn't know what the inside of a whorehouse smells like.'
Romney is a real horses’s ass showing up in London at the opening of the games after the Brits spent 14 billion quid on their Olympics and he offers his concerns. It will blow over but doesn’t bode well.
Romney said NOTHING wrong. He answered the question asked. Howard Dean (D) suggested that he was not "into" politics since he answered the question asked instead of answering what he wanted to say regardless of the question.
The fact is the Olympics are troubled by several issues.
1. Security company was vastly understaffed 2. Thousands of troops had to be called in to help 3. Governmental workers strike at this time very unhelpful 4. London is the western capital of islamic terrir.
The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Friday shows Mitt Romney attracting 49% of the vote, while President Obama earns support from 44%. Three percent (3%) prefer some other candidate, and four percent (4%) are undecided.
Electoral College count tabulated by RealClearPolitics, as of today puts Obama ahead, by more than 4%. It's over a 20% lead, in the vote that counts. Ask Al Gore how little it means to win the popular vote.
Obama 231 Toss Ups 126 Romney 181 ~~~~~~~~~~~ Toss up States
Colorado (9) Florida (29) Iowa (6) Michigan (16) Missouri (10) Nevada (6) New Hampshire (4) North Carolina (15) Ohio (18) Virginia (13)
SOLID STATES OBAMA (142) California (55) Delaware (3) District of Columbia (3) Hawaii (4) Illinois (20) Maryland (10) Massachusetts (11) New York (29) Rhode Island (4) Vermont (3)
Romney better release those 2009 tax returns and get "it" behind him. I mean, really, 40% of US didn't pay income tax, that year. Though most DID pay payroll taxes.
The most fascinating aspect of the 2012 presidential campaign has become Mitt Romney’s incredible shrinking campaign-relevant biography. Seriously, think about it: his entire strategy is to keep the focus on unhappiness with the performance of the economy under Barack Obama’s stewardship, and then glide to victory after easily crossing the invisible threshold of acceptability that challengers to struggling incumbents supposedly need to navigate.
Yet the number of items from his resume that he is willing and able to talk about in order to cross that threshold is close to the vanishing point. His governorship of Massachusetts? No way; it’s loaded with base-angering heresy and flip-flops. His Bain Capital tenure? Not any more, particularly now that he can’t even establish when he left that company. His “success” as measured by his fabulous wealth? Not so long as he won’t release his taxes. His clear, lifelong identification with a coherent ideology? Not applicable! His party’s agenda, as presented most comprehensively in the Ryan Budget? Don’t wanna go there! His values as expressed in his strong personal faith? You gotta be kidding!
What was left until this week as the one untarnished moment of Mitt Romney’s adult life was, of course, his triumphant stewardship of the 2002 Olympic Games. And now, having been talked by his staff into coordinating his obligatory pre-election international trip with the opening of the 2012 Games in London, that decision is looking hourly like less and less of a good idea. And we haven’t even gotten to the dressage competition.
Agriculture Secretary Vilsack Announces Support for Producers to Grow Renewable Feedstocks for Advanced Biofuels
Part of the Administration's 'All of the Above' Energy Strategy
WASHINGTON, July 27, 2012 — Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced payments for 125 advanced Biofuel producers across the country to support the production and expansion of advanced biofuels from a wide variety of non-food sources, including waste products.
"Advanced biofuels are a key component of President Obama's 'all-of-the-above' energy strategy to reduce the Nation's reliance on foreign oil and take control of America's energy future," said Vilsack. "These payments represent help spur an alternative fuels industry using renewable feedstocks grown in America, broadening the range of feedstock options available to biofuels producers, helping to create an economy built to last."
The funding is being provided through USDA's Bioenergy Program for Advanced Biofuels, which was established in the 2008 Farm Bill. Under this program, payments are made to eligible producers based on the amount of biofuels a recipient produces from renewable biomass, other than corn kernel starch. Examples of eligible feedstocks include but are not limited to: crop residue; animal, food and yard waste material; vegetable oil; and animal fat. Through this and other programs, USDA is working to support the research, investment and infrastructure necessary to build a biofuels industry that creates jobs and broadens the range of feedstocks used to produce renewable fuel.
For example, in Somerset, Ky., Somerset Hardwood Flooring will receive a $7,040 payment for producing wood pellets from residual sawdust from its hardwood flooring manufacturing process. The company produces about 40 tons of wood pellets annually. FPE Renewables, LLC, based in Lyden, Wash., generates nearly two million kilowatt hours of electricity annually. The firm will receive a payment of $9,612 for producing biogas primarily from dairy waste, which is converted to electricity. In West Point, Va., Virginia Biodiesel Refinery, LLC, will receive a payment of $7,900 for making biodiesel from recycled cooking oil and soybean oil.
Increased biofuel production plays a relatively minor role in retail food price changes because the growing diversity of feedstock used to produce biodiesel allows for flexibility and helps relieve market pressures. Biodiesel is made from an increasingly diverse mix of non-food feedstocks, including recycled cooking oil, agricultural oils and animal fats, allowing most biodiesel producers to select from a choice of feedstocks if prices rise or supplies are limited. Therefore, the industry's impact in commodity markets is significantly reduced. As the market expands for home-grown renewable energy, American farmers and producers will create even more good-paying jobs that can't be exported. The biofuels industry in the U.S. currently employs about 400,000 people and is expected to employ around a million people in the U.S. by 2022.
USDA today is announcing $19.4 million in payments to 125 local producers and business-owners. Below is a complete list of the 111 producers (by state) receiving payments of more than $500 for production of advanced biofuels. (Producers receiving payments in the amount of $500 or less are not included in the list.)
Last I looked Rasmussen had Obama up 2 in Ohio. Quinnipiac has Obama up 9. I'm sticking with Rasmussen. PPP has Obama up by 3 and PPP is usually notorious in its samplings.
RCP average puts Obama up 5 in Ohio. As stated upstream Rasmussen has Obama up by two at 47, We Ask has him at 48. The difference is in Romney's standing, Ras has Mitt at 45, We Ask has him at 40.
WeAsk used a larger sample, 1115 likely voters compared to Ras, who used 500 of them.
it would be nice to think all of these polls do it in the same way but everyone of them handles things different. The party mix, eligible vs likely, the way they word the questions, and unfortunately the political orientation of the pollsters or who they are being paid buy.
When you have a 10 point various between polls, you know something is goofy with the system. Right now, the polls are pretty much merely talking points for stirring up the troops.
Rasmussen always seems to lean 3 or 4 points to the right until the last month or so. That said, it looks like Romney has taken a one, or two, point lead in the National rating. Whether that will be enough to win the Electoral College, though, might be problematic.
I didn't watch all the early stuff - just the promenade of all the cute little girls in their cowboy hats, and native costumes. I think I'm starting to understand why not too many world records get set in the Olympics. Everyone's too tired to "run and jump" the next day.
Nah, Missouri even went for McCain. It's solid red. I imagine you can put NC in there, also.
But after that, it turns into a horse race; although, in all honesty, if Romney starts winning states like Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota it's a Tidal Wave.
They could save us all a lot of trouble and just have an election in Ohio, and get it all over with.
Latest polls I've seen in Mi give Romney a slight edge.
Shows the nature of the race since most people other than the west side of the state and the Grand Rapids area can't stand the guy. But other than Detroit and Flint, most don't like Obama either.
Either side could win without the Buckeye State, but I'd hate to be the campaign manager that had to explain how I wuz gonna do it.
I figure that if Romney wis Ohio, he's already won Fl, and Va. And is knocking on the door (or, is already halfway through it) in Ia, Co, and Nv. - and even threatening Minnesota, and, heaven forbid Wi.
On the other hand, if Obama wins Ohio the situation is pretty well reversed.
Ah, we're too far out to do all this bloviating. Three months in a close election? Absolutely Anything could happen.
Heard on NPR - the hunter/gatherer bands stretching across Europe and Asia, who had been wandering around there for time out of mind, and had a more cohesive 'society' than might have been previously thought, based on tool studies and DNA studies, and spent their time fighting the cold and killing the animals, were pushed back by the farmers coming up from the south, but their women saved the day of their DNA by sexing with the male farmers, and we know this through mitochondrial DNA studies, mitochondrial DNA being passed through the females only.
Campbell noted too that we have dumbed down, pointing out that Cro-Magnon had the bigger brain.
Cro-Magnons were robustly built and powerful. The body was generally heavy and solid with a strong musculature. The forehead was straight, with slight browridges and a tall forehead.[2] Cro-Magnons were the first humans (genus Homo) to have a prominent chin. The brain capacity was about 1,600 cubic centimetres (98 cu in), larger than the average for modern humans.[3] wiki
The disaster really hit when the first cities were created, and aid to women with dependent children kicked in.
Think about modern Detroit for instance, and the all pervasive idiocy prevalent there, and a man can make a living selling horoscopes, where the cranial capacity is now estimated at no more than about 500cc, about the size of a Suzuki trail bike engine.
A Suzuki is much more fun than a John Deere, faster, sportier, and with a much more efficient engine.
As for aid to dependent children (as well as white flight) that started way back in the beginning when Detroit was small and made up mainly of farmers. Everytime someone got pregnant, some farmer left town.
The Pubs say they want to cut back govt. spending, but when the govt cuts back spending, and suffers a lowering of GDP, the Pubs campaign on the "weak economy" that is a direct result of those cuts.
For instance, once you allow for the present pull-back in Defense Spending on Iraq, and Afghanistan, and for the decline in State and Local spending, the Economy Grew at 3.3% in the last year, and 2.2% in the last quarter.
You can pick and choose some variable and argue that it is the 'cause' for change in some complicated system while ignoring other factors.
And while I disagree with the GOP on most economic issues, to argue that they are the ones pushing for or responsible for defense spending is...well...it just doesn't make sense.
I'm not arguing the formula for GDP or the fact that government spending contributes to GDP. What I am taking offense at is that you are singling out the GOP for criticism while ignoring the Dems. Unless I misread you, you are pointing out the irony that the GOP asks for budget cuts but when the budget cuts occur and cause GDP to fall they complain about a poor economy. To me, the entire premise is silly. First, in totality there are no budget cuts, merely some shifting around. Second, for any of the budget cuts you mention, the GOP, should, at most, be blamed in equal proportion with the Dems. As for the GOP complaints that we have a weak economy, while those claims are a little disingenuous given that the GOP has done jackshit to try to improve the economy, it’s still obvious to anyone that the claims are true.
First, total government spending hasn't gone down. In fact, it has gone up, $200 billion at the federal level from the 2011 budget to the 2012. I went to a site called usgovernmentspending.com to get total government spending (federal, transfer payments, state and local) and they also project increased spending into the future.
Where we are right now is a bipartisan clusterfuck. Current spending is dictated by the failure of the Supercommittee (a bipartisan facade created by Congress to mask the fact that neither party has the balls or integrity to do their job) to reach a budget compromise. Now, if some kind of agreement isn't reached by the end of the year, there will be significant cuts but that has little to do with today's spending.
Likewise the two areas you chose, state and local spending and the military. In the first case, while the federal government does provide transfer payments to the states, all the payments help do is alleviate state and local fiscal problems. Of course, some states are cutting back on spending. They have to. They don't share the fed advantage of being able to print money yet they still need to balance their budgets. How you blame the GOP for that I'm not sure.
As far as military spending, if it were up to the GOP we would be increasing the military budget. You seem to be blaming the GOP for something they didn't do when you accuse them of wanting it both ways.
The GOP deserves all the blame in the world for sitting on their hands over the past four years and offering up zip in the form of reasonable suggestions to improve the economy. However, if you are trying to say our current "weak economy" should be blamed on the GOP not wanting additional spending, I would be glad to debate that with you all day long.
I would also like to know where you got the figures you quoted on GDP and exactly what they mean. For instance, are you saying that minus the 'cuts' you mentioned 2nd Quarter GDP would have been 0.2% higher, a number that if annualized would have added almost 1% to full year 2012 GDP?
Poll finds McCaskill, Obama both down in swing-state Missouri By Russell Berman - 07/28/12 12:35 PM ET
A new poll shows trouble for Democrats in the key battleground state of Missouri, with President Obama down 9 points to GOP candidate Mitt Romney and Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) trailing all three of her possible Republican opponents.
A new Mason-Dixon survey, conducted for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and News 4, finds presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney leading President Obama 51-42 percent among registered voters.
Obama holds a 51 percent unfavorable rating in the state with 34 favorable, challenging numbers three months from election day. Romney holds a 39 percent favorable rating to 27 unfavorable.
In the Senate race, the poll finds incumbent McCaskill trailing all three GOP primary contenders. McCaskill would lose a head-to-head matchup by nine points to businessman John Brunner (R), 52-41 percent, by eight points to former state Treasurer Sarah Steelman (R), 49-41 percent, and by five points to Rep. Todd Akin (R), 49-44 percent.
The only thing that will save Romney is laryngitis.
ReplyDeleteHe will be a refreshing change to the lab rat presently occupying the WH.
ReplyDeleteYou are right there and there are not many limeys that get to vote.
ReplyDeleteAbsolutely, we have to make the world safe for Billionaires, and their Swiss Overseas Tax Dodges.
ReplyDeleteAnd, their 15% Effective Tax Rates.
DeleteMedian Family Income Declined under Bush I, and Bush II. We just gotta have us some o' dat Bush III.
ReplyDeleteGlen Hubbard (remember him?) said so.
Median Family Income
Increasing GDP, and Declining Median Family Income - Don't you just love it when a "Plan" comes together?
ReplyDeleteHmm, lessee, if GDP is increasing, and Median Family Income is Decreasing, where did de money go . . . . . . ?
DeleteWait, don' tell me;
I'll figure it out;
jes gimmee a minute.
Jes a minnit . . . .
DeleteDem 'publicans got the answer; dey gonna trickle down on our heads -
DeleteAll de way from Bermuda.
Dem 'publicans is tricklin' experts.
BUT now, overweight, tobacco using, drug abusing, processed food eaters can get free healthcare that will cost everyone else billions. Kum ba ya. Let's all hold hands and sing together.
ReplyDeleteWelfare, food stamps, and section 8 housing. Now free healthcare. Don't need no job. The experiment didnt work. Time to drain the swamp. Time to fumigate the WH. Kum ba ya.
Ya, rather than have that dirty ol' food stamp/healthcare money circulating aroun' America, clogging up the pipes, and such, lets git it back to the Caymans where it belongs.
ReplyDeleteWhatever we do, lets don't go back to the Clinton Tax Rates, and Increasing Median Family Income (the Only period of Rising Family Incomes in the last 24 years.)
ReplyDeleteDid you pay more taxes than what was required? no, I didnt think so. Kum ba ya.
ReplyDeleteNo, an' I never got me none o' dat 15% tax rate, either. Kumbaya yo dam' self. :)
DeleteThe fact o' da matter is, I don't think we should tax Romney at all.
DeleteI mean if 15% is good, Zero would be Great, Right?
A bunch of whiny ass liberal tightwads.
ReplyDeleteLookin' at a Trillion Dollar Deficit.
DeleteHis name was Bubba, he was from Georgia ... And he needed a loan, So... He walked into a bank in New York City and asked for the loan Officer. He told the loan officer that he was going to Paris for an International redneck festival for two weeks and needed to borrow $5,000and that he was not a depositor of the bank. The bank officer told him that the bank would need some form of security for the loan, so the Redneck handed over the keys to a new Ferrari. The car was parked on the street in front of the bank.
ReplyDeleteThe Redneck produced the title and everything checked out. The loan officer agreed to hold the car as collateral for the loan and apologized for having to charge 12% interest.
Later, the bank's president and its officers all enjoyed a good laugh at the Redneck from the South for using a $250,000 Ferrari as collateral for a $5,000 loan. An employee of the bank then drove the Ferrari into the bank's private underground garage and parked it.
Two weeks later, the Redneck returned, repaid the $5,000 and the interest of $23.07. The loan officer said, "Sir, we are very happy to have had your business, and this transaction has worked out very nicely, but we are a little puzzled. While you were away, we checked you out on Dunn & Bradstreet and found that you are a Distinguished Alumni from The University of Georgia, a highly sophisticated investor and Multi-Millionaire with real estate and financial interests all over the world. Your investments include a large number of wind turbines around Sweetwater,Texas. What puzzles us is, why would you bother to borrow $5,000?"
The good 'ole boy replied, "Wheah else in New York City can I park my car for two weeks for only $23.07 and expect it to be there when I return?"
REDNECK'S PET FISH.
ReplyDeleteA redneck was stopped by a game warden in Central Mississippi recently with two ice chests full of fish. He was leaving a cove well-known for its fishing.
The game warden asked the man, "Do you have a license to catch those fish?"
"Naw, Sir," replied the redneck. "I ain't got none of them there licenses. You must understand, these here are my pet fish."
"Pet fish?"
"Yeah. Every night, I take these here fish down to the lake and let 'em swim 'round for awhile. Then, when I whistle, they jump right back into these here
ice chests and I take 'em home."
The warden said, "That's a bunch of hooey! Fish can't do that."
The redneck looked at the warden for a moment and then said, "It's the truth Mr. Government Man. I'll show ya. It really works."
"O. K.," said the warden. "I've got to see this!"
The redneck poured the fish into the lake and stood and waited.
After several minutes, the warden said, "Well?"
"Well, what?," said the redneck.
The warden replied, "When are you going to call them back?"
"Call who back?"
"The FISH," replied the warden.
"What fish?," replied the redneck.
George W Bush and Barack Obama somehow ended up at the same barber shop.
ReplyDeleteAs they sat there, each being worked on by a different barber, not a word was spoken. The barbers were even afraid to start a conversation, for fear it would turn to politics. As the barbers finished their shaves, the one who had Obama in his chair reached for the aftershave.
Obama was quick to stop him saying, 'No thanks, my wife Michelle will smell that and think I've been in a whorehouse.'
The second barber turned to Bush and said, 'How about you sir?' Bush replied, 'Go ahead; my wife doesn't know what the inside of a whorehouse smells like.'
: )
DeleteRomney is a real horses’s ass showing up in London at the opening of the games after the Brits spent 14 billion quid on their Olympics and he offers his concerns. It will blow over but doesn’t bode well.
ReplyDeleteAs the krautscammer said, "I just don't get it."
DeleteRomney said NOTHING wrong. He answered the question asked. Howard Dean (D) suggested that he was not "into" politics since he answered the question asked instead of answering what he wanted to say regardless of the question.
ReplyDeleteThe fact is the Olympics are troubled by several issues.
1. Security company was vastly understaffed
2. Thousands of troops had to be called in to help
3. Governmental workers strike at this time very unhelpful
4. London is the western capital of islamic terrir.
It's a slow news day and a lot of sound and fury over nothing.
DeleteWon't be remembered by anyone next week.
Unless of course there is a terror attack and then he will look prescient.
DeletePOLL: ROMNEY PULLS TO 5 POINT LEAD...
ReplyDeleteFriday, July 27, 2012
The Rasmussen Reports daily Presidential Tracking Poll for Friday shows Mitt Romney attracting 49% of the vote, while President Obama earns support from 44%. Three percent (3%) prefer some other candidate, and four percent (4%) are undecided.
Nice way to end the week.
Blow out a comin' in November.
.
ReplyDeleteI didn't make the cut for being part of the 1%; but at least, I am comfortably ensconced within the 3%.
.
You and me both.
DeleteElectoral College count tabulated by RealClearPolitics, as of today puts Obama ahead, by more than 4%.
ReplyDeleteIt's over a 20% lead, in the vote that counts.
Ask Al Gore how little it means to win the popular vote.
Obama 231
Toss Ups 126
Romney 181
~~~~~~~~~~~
Toss up States
Colorado (9)
Florida (29)
Iowa (6)
Michigan (16)
Missouri (10)
Nevada (6)
New Hampshire (4)
North Carolina (15)
Ohio (18)
Virginia (13)
SOLID STATES
OBAMA (142)
California (55)
Delaware (3)
District of Columbia (3)
Hawaii (4)
Illinois (20)
Maryland (10)
Massachusetts (11)
New York (29)
Rhode Island (4)
Vermont (3)
Leans Obama (52)
Minnesota (10)
New Mexico (5)
Oregon (7)
Pennsylvania (20)
Wisconsin (10)
SOLID STATES
ROMNEY (76)
Alabama (9)
Alaska (3)
Arkansas (6)
Idaho (4)
Kansas (6)
Kentucky (8)
Louisiana (8)
Mississippi (6)
Nebraska (5)
Oklahoma (7)
Utah (6)
West Virginia (5)
Wyoming (3)
Leans Romney (50)
Arizona (11)
Georgia (16)
Indiana (11)
Montana (3)
South Carolina (9)
Romney better release those 2009 tax returns and get "it" behind him.
I mean, really, 40% of US didn't pay income tax, that year.
Though most DID pay payroll taxes.
With no Toss up States, he who polls best, today, is given the State
ReplyDelete332 Obama
206 Romney
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2012/president/2012_elections_electoral_college_map_no_toss_ups.html
With 102 days to go.
ReplyDeleteMr Romney is out of the country, establishing his foreign policy bona fines.
ReplyDeleteWhile Mitt claims Mr Obama went on an
Apology Tour,
he himself is on the
Insult the Allies Tour
Mitt proving himself "Not Ready for Prime Time",
if those tax returns are as poisonous as they certainly seem to be.
The most fascinating aspect of the 2012 presidential campaign has become Mitt Romney’s incredible shrinking campaign-relevant biography. Seriously, think about it: his entire strategy is to keep the focus on unhappiness with the performance of the economy under Barack Obama’s stewardship, and then glide to victory after easily crossing the invisible threshold of acceptability that challengers to struggling incumbents supposedly need to navigate.
ReplyDeleteYet the number of items from his resume that he is willing and able to talk about in order to cross that threshold is close to the vanishing point. His governorship of Massachusetts? No way; it’s loaded with base-angering heresy and flip-flops. His Bain Capital tenure? Not any more, particularly now that he can’t even establish when he left that company. His “success” as measured by his fabulous wealth? Not so long as he won’t release his taxes. His clear, lifelong identification with a coherent ideology? Not applicable! His party’s agenda, as presented most comprehensively in the Ryan Budget? Don’t wanna go there! His values as expressed in his strong personal faith? You gotta be kidding!
What was left until this week as the one untarnished moment of Mitt Romney’s adult life was, of course, his triumphant stewardship of the 2002 Olympic Games. And now, having been talked by his staff into coordinating his obligatory pre-election international trip with the opening of the 2012 Games in London, that decision is looking hourly like less and less of a good idea. And we haven’t even gotten to the dressage competition.
USDA Office of Communications.
ReplyDeleteRelease No. 0254.12
Contact:
Weldon Freeman (202) 690-1384
Agriculture Secretary Vilsack Announces Support for Producers to Grow Renewable Feedstocks for Advanced Biofuels
Part of the Administration's 'All of the Above' Energy Strategy
WASHINGTON, July 27, 2012 — Agriculture Secretary Tom Vilsack today announced payments for 125 advanced Biofuel producers across the country to support the production and expansion of advanced biofuels from a wide variety of non-food sources, including waste products.
"Advanced biofuels are a key component of President Obama's 'all-of-the-above' energy strategy to reduce the Nation's reliance on foreign oil and take control of America's energy future," said Vilsack. "These payments represent help spur an alternative fuels industry using renewable feedstocks grown in America, broadening the range of feedstock options available to biofuels producers, helping to create an economy built to last."
The funding is being provided through USDA's Bioenergy Program for Advanced Biofuels, which was established in the 2008 Farm Bill. Under this program, payments are made to eligible producers based on the amount of biofuels a recipient produces from renewable biomass, other than corn kernel starch. Examples of eligible feedstocks include but are not limited to: crop residue; animal, food and yard waste material; vegetable oil; and animal fat. Through this and other programs, USDA is working to support the research, investment and infrastructure necessary to build a biofuels industry that creates jobs and broadens the range of feedstocks used to produce renewable fuel.
For example, in Somerset, Ky., Somerset Hardwood Flooring will receive a $7,040 payment for producing wood pellets from residual sawdust from its hardwood flooring manufacturing process. The company produces about 40 tons of wood pellets annually. FPE Renewables, LLC, based in Lyden, Wash., generates nearly two million kilowatt hours of electricity annually. The firm will receive a payment of $9,612 for producing biogas primarily from dairy waste, which is converted to electricity. In West Point, Va., Virginia Biodiesel Refinery, LLC, will receive a payment of $7,900 for making biodiesel from recycled cooking oil and soybean oil.
Increased biofuel production plays a relatively minor role in retail food price changes because the growing diversity of feedstock used to produce biodiesel allows for flexibility and helps relieve market pressures. Biodiesel is made from an increasingly diverse mix of non-food feedstocks, including recycled cooking oil, agricultural oils and animal fats, allowing most biodiesel producers to select from a choice of feedstocks if prices rise or supplies are limited. Therefore, the industry's impact in commodity markets is significantly reduced. As the market expands for home-grown renewable energy, American farmers and producers will create even more good-paying jobs that can't be exported. The biofuels industry in the U.S. currently employs about 400,000 people and is expected to employ around a million people in the U.S. by 2022.
USDA today is announcing $19.4 million in payments to 125 local producers and business-owners. Below is a complete list of the 111 producers (by state) receiving payments of more than $500 for production of advanced biofuels. (Producers receiving payments in the amount of $500 or less are not included in the list.)
WeAskAmerica has Obama +8 in Ohio.
ReplyDeleteRasmussen has Romney +5 Nationally
One of these guys (or, possibly both) has to be off by quite a bit; there's no way Ohio is 13 points out of step with the rest of the country.
Last I looked Rasmussen had Obama up 2 in Ohio. Quinnipiac has Obama up 9. I'm sticking with Rasmussen. PPP has Obama up by 3 and PPP is usually notorious in its samplings.
DeleteRCP average puts Obama up 5 in Ohio.
DeleteAs stated upstream Rasmussen has Obama up by two at 47, We Ask has him at 48.
The difference is in Romney's standing, Ras has Mitt at 45, We Ask has him at 40.
WeAsk used a larger sample, 1115 likely voters compared to Ras, who used 500 of them.
It's all in the "secret sauce." The weighting. Nobody really knows what percentage of Dems/Pubs are going to turn out - until they "turn out."
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Deleteit would be nice to think all of these polls do it in the same way but everyone of them handles things different. The party mix, eligible vs likely, the way they word the questions, and unfortunately the political orientation of the pollsters or who they are being paid buy.
When you have a 10 point various between polls, you know something is goofy with the system. Right now, the polls are pretty much merely talking points for stirring up the troops.
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Rasmussen always seems to lean 3 or 4 points to the right until the last month or so. That said, it looks like Romney has taken a one, or two, point lead in the National rating. Whether that will be enough to win the Electoral College, though, might be problematic.
ReplyDeleteThe National RCP average has Obama up, by 1.1%.
DeleteIt is a State by State race.
Eight States are still in the hunt.
Florida, Ohio, Michigan, North Carolina, Virginia, Colorado and Missouri.
The National number is meaningless.
I tried to watch the opening of the Olympics. Personally I found it boring, unattractive and then I fell asleep.
ReplyDeleteI'm watching it, now. For some reason I enjoy it.
Delete.
DeleteDidn't quite get the theme. Seemed a bit odd.
That being said, it was worth the time just for the production value. Pretty impressive. You can do a lot given enough money.
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I didn't watch all the early stuff - just the promenade of all the cute little girls in their cowboy hats, and native costumes. I think I'm starting to understand why not too many world records get set in the Olympics. Everyone's too tired to "run and jump" the next day.
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DeleteI don't have a lot of interest yet.
Some I want to see are:
Tennis (Serena is my girl.)
Boxing (All of them)
Swimming (To see if Phelps gets 3 medals.)
Track and Field (Bolt and the sprinters)
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DeleteAnd, of course, that Aussie girl who does the little dance warming up for the hurdles competition.
Woof.
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Missouri and North Carolina are not in the hunt.
ReplyDeleteNah, Missouri even went for McCain. It's solid red. I imagine you can put NC in there, also.
ReplyDeleteBut after that, it turns into a horse race; although, in all honesty, if Romney starts winning states like Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota it's a Tidal Wave.
They could save us all a lot of trouble and just have an election in Ohio, and get it all over with.
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DeleteLatest polls I've seen in Mi give Romney a slight edge.
Shows the nature of the race since most people other than the west side of the state and the Grand Rapids area can't stand the guy. But other than Detroit and Flint, most don't like Obama either.
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Romney can win without Ohio.
DeleteHeh, it might even end in a tie, 269 - 269.
Then we might have Romney as Pres. and Biden as Vice - Pres.
It would be entertaining to see if Biden would serve.
Then the rapid oxidation of materials in the exothermic chemical process of combustion in some cities would be a watch too.
Either side could win without the Buckeye State, but I'd hate to be the campaign manager that had to explain how I wuz gonna do it.
DeleteI figure that if Romney wis Ohio, he's already won Fl, and Va. And is knocking on the door (or, is already halfway through it) in Ia, Co, and Nv. - and even threatening Minnesota, and, heaven forbid Wi.
On the other hand, if Obama wins Ohio the situation is pretty well reversed.
Ah, we're too far out to do all this bloviating. Three months in a close election? Absolutely Anything could happen.
Sarah wearing boots made for walkin' over Rinos.
ReplyDeletehttp://hotair.com/archives/2012/07/27/video-palin-rallies-tea-partiers-for-ted-cruz-on-eve-of-texas-senate-primary/comment-page-1/#comments
It may be too much for some of you, so your "faint dead away" antidote machine should be turned on.
Heard on NPR - the hunter/gatherer bands stretching across Europe and Asia, who had been wandering around there for time out of mind, and had a more cohesive 'society' than might have been previously thought, based on tool studies and DNA studies, and spent their time fighting the cold and killing the animals, were pushed back by the farmers coming up from the south, but their women saved the day of their DNA by sexing with the male farmers, and we know this through mitochondrial DNA studies, mitochondrial DNA being passed through the females only.
ReplyDelete.
ReplyDeleteAnd thus, the beginning of the dumbing down of Europe and Asia.
(I heard farm subsidies started shortly thereafter.)
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Agreed. And food stamps soon after.
DeleteCampbell noted too that we have dumbed down, pointing out that Cro-Magnon had the bigger brain.
Cro-Magnons were robustly built and powerful. The body was generally heavy and solid with a strong musculature. The forehead was straight, with slight browridges and a tall forehead.[2] Cro-Magnons were the first humans (genus Homo) to have a prominent chin. The brain capacity was about 1,600 cubic centimetres (98 cu in), larger than the average for modern humans.[3] wiki
The disaster really hit when the first cities were created, and aid to women with dependent children kicked in.
Think about modern Detroit for instance, and the all pervasive idiocy prevalent there, and a man can make a living selling horoscopes, where the cranial capacity is now estimated at no more than about 500cc, about the size of a Suzuki trail bike engine.
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DeleteA Suzuki is much more fun than a John Deere, faster, sportier, and with a much more efficient engine.
As for aid to dependent children (as well as white flight) that started way back in the beginning when Detroit was small and made up mainly of farmers. Everytime someone got pregnant, some farmer left town.
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Them farmers haven't changed much, always sexing around with the local hunter/gatherers, then moving on to 'plow new fields'.
DeleteFrom the "no good deed goes unpunished" dept -
ReplyDeleteThe Pubs say they want to cut back govt. spending, but when the govt cuts back spending, and suffers a lowering of GDP, the Pubs campaign on the "weak economy" that is a direct result of those cuts.
For instance, once you allow for the present pull-back in Defense Spending on Iraq, and Afghanistan, and for the decline in State and Local spending, the Economy Grew at 3.3% in the last year, and 2.2% in the last quarter.
Private Economy doing okay
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DeleteFor instance, once you allow...
And if my dad had tits, he'd be my mom.
:)
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That didn't make any sense.
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DeleteGDP is what it is.
You can pick and choose some variable and argue that it is the 'cause' for change in some complicated system while ignoring other factors.
And while I disagree with the GOP on most economic issues, to argue that they are the ones pushing for or responsible for defense spending is...well...it just doesn't make sense.
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Delete...defense spending cuts...
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Blame your coming higher food prices on ethanol -
Deletehttp://hotair.com/archives/2012/07/28/burning-our-food-the-drought-and-the-vice-of-ethanol/
No, blame it on the drought. If it wasn't for ethanol a lot less corn would have been planted.
DeleteIt's Not "complicated" Quirk. GDP is Private Spending, plus Government Spending. You cut Government Spending, and GDP falls. It's as simple as that.
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DeleteI'm not arguing the formula for GDP or the fact that government spending contributes to GDP. What I am taking offense at is that you are singling out the GOP for criticism while ignoring the Dems. Unless I misread you, you are pointing out the irony that the GOP asks for budget cuts but when the budget cuts occur and cause GDP to fall they complain about a poor economy. To me, the entire premise is silly. First, in totality there are no budget cuts, merely some shifting around. Second, for any of the budget cuts you mention, the GOP, should, at most, be blamed in equal proportion with the Dems. As for the GOP complaints that we have a weak economy, while those claims are a little disingenuous given that the GOP has done jackshit to try to improve the economy, it’s still obvious to anyone that the claims are true.
First, total government spending hasn't gone down. In fact, it has gone up, $200 billion at the federal level from the 2011 budget to the 2012. I went to a site called usgovernmentspending.com to get total government spending (federal, transfer payments, state and local) and they also project increased spending into the future.
Where we are right now is a bipartisan clusterfuck. Current spending is dictated by the failure of the Supercommittee (a bipartisan facade created by Congress to mask the fact that neither party has the balls or integrity to do their job) to reach a budget compromise. Now, if some kind of agreement isn't reached by the end of the year, there will be significant cuts but that has little to do with today's spending.
Likewise the two areas you chose, state and local spending and the military. In the first case, while the federal government does provide transfer payments to the states, all the payments help do is alleviate state and local fiscal problems. Of course, some states are cutting back on spending. They have to. They don't share the fed advantage of being able to print money yet they still need to balance their budgets. How you blame the GOP for that I'm not sure.
As far as military spending, if it were up to the GOP we would be increasing the military budget. You seem to be blaming the GOP for something they didn't do when you accuse them of wanting it both ways.
The GOP deserves all the blame in the world for sitting on their hands over the past four years and offering up zip in the form of reasonable suggestions to improve the economy. However, if you are trying to say our current "weak economy" should be blamed on the GOP not wanting additional spending, I would be glad to debate that with you all day long.
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DeleteI would also like to know where you got the figures you quoted on GDP and exactly what they mean. For instance, are you saying that minus the 'cuts' you mentioned 2nd Quarter GDP would have been 0.2% higher, a number that if annualized would have added almost 1% to full year 2012 GDP?
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Missouri not in the hunt --
ReplyDeletePoll finds McCaskill, Obama both down in swing-state Missouri
By Russell Berman - 07/28/12 12:35 PM ET
A new poll shows trouble for Democrats in the key battleground state of Missouri, with President Obama down 9 points to GOP candidate Mitt Romney and Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) trailing all three of her possible Republican opponents.
A new Mason-Dixon survey, conducted for the St. Louis Post-Dispatch and News 4, finds presumptive GOP nominee Mitt Romney leading President Obama 51-42 percent among registered voters.
Obama holds a 51 percent unfavorable rating in the state with 34 favorable, challenging numbers three months from election day. Romney holds a 39 percent favorable rating to 27 unfavorable.
In the Senate race, the poll finds incumbent McCaskill trailing all three GOP primary contenders. McCaskill would lose a head-to-head matchup by nine points to businessman John Brunner (R), 52-41 percent, by eight points to former state Treasurer Sarah Steelman (R), 49-41 percent, and by five points to Rep. Todd Akin (R), 49-44 percent.
Read below anything you want to know about the drought from the USDA -
ReplyDeletehttp://www.usda.gov/wps/portal/usda/usdahome?navid=DISASTER_ASSISTANCE
Obama to USA Olympic Gold Medal winners:
ReplyDelete"You didn't win that Gold.....somebody else won it for you"