President Obama!

recent SCOTUS decision defining money as speech and basically nullifying decades of election law. Without the court challenge, campaign funding is radically different.
Defining the constitution is what the SCOTUS does. SCOTUS has ruled many times on the separation of church and state. For any religion to demand that their religion's law be used in the courts is quite different than Buckley v. Valeo. (1976)
 

moreluck

golden ticket member
Re: Obamanation here today

Tuesday, October 25, 2011 @ 12:20 pm | Obama Says He’ll Be Taking “Executive Actions” Without Congress On a “Regular Basis”…

Obama_pissed.jpg


In other words, screw you U.S. Constitution.
(TheDC) — President Barack Obama told an audience in Nevada on Monday that he will be regularly announcing “executive actions” his administration will take to “heal the economy” without the “dysfunctional” Congress.

“I’m here to say to all of you and to say to the people of Nevada and the people of Las Vegas, we can’t wait for an increasingly dysfunctional Congress to do its job. Where they won’t act, I will,” Obama said.

“I’ve told my administration to keep looking every single day for actions we can take without Congress, steps that can save consumers money, make government more efficient and responsive, and help heal the economy. And we’re going to be announcing these executive actions on a regular basis,” the president said.
 

moreluck

golden ticket member
Re: Obamanomics

[h=2]Obamanomics: Consumer Confidence “Unexpectedly” Plunges In October, Hits Two-Year Low…[/h]
Screen-shot-2011-10-25-at-10.53.43-AM-550x130.png

Bloomberg is back to pushing the “unexpectedly” nonsense.
Oct. 25 (Bloomberg) — Consumer confidence unexpectedly slumped in October to the lowest level since March 2009, when the U.S. economy was in a recession, as Americans’ outlooks for employment and incomes soured.

The Conference Board’s sentiment index decreased to 39.8 from a revised 46.4 reading in September, figures from the New York-based private research group showed today. This month’s reading was less than the most pessimistic forecast in a Bloomberg News survey in which the median projection was 46.
Limited job availability, deteriorating home values and the threat of a European debt default are weighing on sentiment. A drop in optimism helps explain concern among some companies like Levi Strauss & Co. that spending will falter during the holiday shopping season.

“Dysfunctional labor and housing markets and the turmoil in Europe all are drags on confidence,” Robert Dye, chief economist at Comerica Inc. in Dallas, said before the report. “Consumers are fundamentally constrained, and consumer spending won’t be leading the economy forward.”
 

moreluck

golden ticket member
Re: Obamanation here today

State Department Buys $70,000 Worth of Obama’s Memoir To Hand Out As Gifts…

Worst gift ever.
(Washington Times) The U.S. Department of State has bought more than $70,000 worth of books authored by President Obama, sending out copies as Christmas gratuities and stocking “key libraries” around the world with “Dreams from My Father” more than a decade after its release.

The U.S. embassy in Egypt, for instance, spent $28,636 in August 2009 for copies of Mr. Obama’s bestselling 1995 memoir. Six weeks earlier, the embassy had placed another order with the same book seller, Kalemat Arabia, for more than $9,000 for copies of the same book, federal purchasing records show.

Around the same time, halfway around the world, the U.S. embassy in South Korea had the same idea, spending more than $6,000 for copies of “Dreams from My Father”.

One month later, the U.S. embassy in Jakarta, Indonesia, spent more than $3,800 for hardcover copies of the Indonesian version of Mr. Obama’s “The Audacity of Hope,” records show.
 

Babagounj

Strength through joy
According to a conversation I had today with a military equipment expert, someone who collects WWII and other combat vehicles, the equipment being left { sold to Iraq } behind consists of Humvees and other vehicles that the USA will no longer be including in their inventory { outdated trucks }. All the good stuff will be redeployed.
 

UpstateNYUPSer(Ret)

Well-Known Member
This is a fairly common practice. When the USAF closed their base here in Plattsburgh, they left behind surplus equipment which both the Town and City added to their inventories.
 

wkmac

Well-Known Member
Re: Obamanomics

The U.S. Congress quietly passed three “free trade” bills last week, the kind of laws that — though thoroughly characteristic of the structural problems of today’s economy — often seem unremarkable and uncontroversial. Allowing exchange of goods and services across national boundaries appears innocuous enough, permitting all regions of the world to benefit from doing what they do best.
The problem is that the economic principle enshrined in free trade treaties is the preservation of corporate privilege, not the liberation of commerce. One could, with some accuracy, say that the antecedents of contemporary free trade agreements were born of conquest and plunder — that to the political class, “free trade” has forever meant “organized monopolization by elites.”
We can look to the project of colonialism as one among the progenitors of the present day “free trade” that takes place under the watchword of globalization. Commenting on “[a]ll the different regulations of the mercantile system” that obtained in his day, Adam Smith remarked that “[m]onopoly of one kind or another … seems to be the sole engine” of that system.
Smith drew a bright line between genuine free markets and the power dynamics that “necessarily derange” the natural distribution of wealth. In particular, Smith observed that “trade to America and the East Indies” was exceptionally sullied and corrupted by the symbiotic relationship between political and economic power foci.
In and of itself, the interconnection of the globe, taking place through voluntary exchange and the social communication that accompanies it, is of course completely unobjectionable. But when we compare that notion of free trade to the one so keenly imposed upon the world by governments, the differences between the two become apparent.
Today, as in Smith’s time, the state is actively engaged in ensuring that the most powerful corporate actors are protected from “the troublesome competition of such odious and disagreeable rivals.” The U.S.-Colombia Trade Promotion Agreement, for instance, includes an Intellectual Property Rights Chapter “to ensure that American intellectual property rights are efficiently and effectively protected.”
Again, while that sounds relatively harmless, protection of American IP rights translates to handing U.S. big business the exclusive right to control, license and profit from the entire capital base of the Information Age’s “New Economy.” From software to prescription drugs — and everything in between — IP allows the rich to foist extortionate monopoly prices on society, prices that are neither related to companies’ costs nor tempered by the forces of a genuine free market.
The end result of intervention, the aggregate of all distortions created by coercive force, is to allow a small coterie of the indolent wealthy classes to skim off the top of productive activity. The moneyed, political classes of “developing” countries are quite content to betray their natural resources and their poor to the predation of the West, at least as long as they stay on the right side of the raw deal.
Instead of the neocolonialism we’re actually getting, market anarchists would have the free trade and the free markets that we are so earnestly promised by Washington — with real competition and the “level playing field” we keeping hearing about. Only then, when the global markets are truly free from the oppression of the state, will we witness the advertised advantages of free trade.

The New "Mercantile System"
 

klein

Für Meno :)

moreluck

golden ticket member
Re: Obamanation here today

[h=2]Carney: Obama Ruling Via Executive Orders Because Congress Acting As “Obstructionists”…[/h]In other words, he doesn’t want to play by the same rules as every president before him.

(RCP) — “What gives the president the right to [enact measures] by executive order,” NBC’s Mike Vaccaro asked White House press secretary Jay Carney today.

“The things [Obama] is doing administratively, through executive powers are things he can do, the things that do not require legislative action so he is exercising that power,” Carney responded.

Carney says Obama has been doing this throughout his entire presidency and it is only newsworthy at this point since it’s “obvious to everyone” that the Congress is dysfunctional and acting as “obstructionists.”

“He has done and will continue to take the kinds of actions he can, as president, without Congress, to help Americans. To help them deal with this economy. To help them deal with their debt, deal with their mortgages, and through a variety of other measures that he has taken and will take,” Carney told Vaccaro.
 

Babagounj

Strength through joy
Re: Obamanation here today

WOW, think of all the economic stimulus that $2.50 a week per adjusted student loan will create.
It's totally mind boggling.
 

Babagounj

Strength through joy
Denied final farewell; Family barred from being by father’s side while he dies

LORAIN — As Vernon Kapucinski, 60, took his final breaths yesterday morning after battling liver disease, his family was barred from being by his side at the New Life Hospice Center of St. Joseph at Mercy Regional Medical Center.
His brother, Jim Kapucinski, arrived at 5 a.m. and tried for an hour to see Vernon, but was denied access because he didn’t have the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act password.
Published: Wednesday, October 26, 2011



His brother, Jim Kapucinski, arrived at 5 a.m. and tried for an hour to see Vernon, but was denied access because he didn’t have the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act password.



Defeated by the system, he returned to his Bay Village home, only to receive an apologetic phone call from a nurse asking him to return to his brother’s side because Vernon’s condition had worsen.

But he got back too late to comfort his brother as he died.

Kapucinski wasn’t the only person denied the opportunity to be by Vernon’s side as he died.

His long-time nursing aide, Audrey Reditt, arrived about 5:10 a.m. and was also turned away because she couldn’t give the nurse the HIPAA password. In none of Reditt’s or Kapucinski’s previous visits had they been asked for the code, they said.
HIPPA is a federal law that requires health care providers to regulate medical information for safety and security reasons. It requires that family and friends have a password to see a patient.
Kapucinski said when he left the hospice at 11 p.m. on Monday, he asked the staff if he needed a code to get in early the following morning and was told no. It was a nurse none of the family is familiar with who was on duty at 5 a.m. and was the one who denied Kapucinski and Reditt entrance.

Kapucinski, his voice raised with anger yesterday afternoon, related how he tried to give them his driver’s license to show that he was related and was still denied entry.
 

klein

Für Meno :)
Baba, probably a nice conservative hospital.
No health insurance, no good service !

They are the 1% that think it's a human right.
 
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