Wednesday DigestTHE FOUNDATION"We should never despair, our Situation before has been unpromising and has changed for the better, so I trust, it will again." --George WashingtonGOVERNMENT AND POLITICSStrategic Blunders Cost GOP
The Republican strategy is
a mess -- so much so that Tuesday night the House GOP abandoned its
proposal to fund the government through Dec. 15 and raise the debt
ceiling through Feb. 7 in exchange for stripping the medical device tax
from ObamaCare and forcing members of Congress and their staffers to
live with the law. Speaker John Boehner's plan was similar to the
Senate's version, but many Republicans objected to getting too few
concessions on ObamaCare. The Senate proposal, which is also a temporary
measure, includes just one ObamaCare tweak: An effort to verify incomes
for subsidy seekers. The bottom line is that real concessions will not
come until the GOP wins the White House.
The Obama Treasury Department says the nation has until Thursday before it sort of runs out of money, but as we've noted previously,
that's an overblown fear even if it does have markets on edge. Yet
Fitch Ratings, the third-largest credit agency, threatened to downgrade
the U.S.'s AAA rating due to "political brinksmanship and reduced
financing flexibility."
It's unfortunate that at the very moment of ObamaCare's Hindenburg-like launch, Republicans stole the spotlight with ill-considered strategy.
House Republicans did manage post-shutdown to pass numerous partial
measures putting Democrats on the spot, but it shouldn't have come to
that. All they had to do was get out of the way. Since the launch of
Healthcare.gov on Oct. 1, the news cycle should have been dominated with stories
of its outrageous cost, the overall technical disaster, no enrollees in
several states and made-up ones in others, sticker shock for the few
who successfully navigated the site and condemnation even from Obama
allies. Instead, GOP infighting over strategy and tactics became the
focus. And the end result will be that the government reopens and
ObamaCare lumbers on.
ECONOMYSupreme Court to Consider EPA Regulations
The Obama administration
has been zealously waging its "war on coal" through EPA regulations on
carbon emissions that will both endanger plans for new coal plants and
effectively shutter existing ones because the plants can't meet
emissions standards. In June 2012, a three-judge panel of a federal
appeals court in Washington, DC, upheld every contention the
administration made to defend its regulations -- from the assumption
that greenhouse gases are causing global warming to the authority of the
EPA to basically do whatever it wants to combat it. Now the U.S.
Supreme Court will weigh in.
Unfortunately, the High Court is only considering the part of the
appeals court ruling dealing with permitting requirements; they are
leaving in tact the lower court's finding on emissions and climate
change, which, as we often recount in this space, is dubious at best.
But SCOTUS found in 2007 that the Clean Air Act, which doesn't define
CO2 as a pollutant, nevertheless gives the EPA broad authority to
regulate carbon emissions, so it's not surprising that the Court is
leaving that issue alone. That earlier ruling focused on vehicles and
mileage standards, while this latest case deals with the question of
power plants and other stationary facilities.
Though the administration
urged the Court to reject the case, EPA chief Gina McCarthy applauded
the justices' decision on a narrow hearing, which she said "confirms
that EPA has the authority to protect public health by reducing carbon
pollution." Such Orwellian spin is hard to take from an agency that
shackles the U.S. economy with incredibly burdensome regulations. Expect
a decision in the case by June 2014.
NATIONAL SECURITYWarfront With Jihadistan: Iraq's UndoingYet less than five years later the nation is once again in the grip of a religious sectarian war, with al-Qaida targeting Shi'ites, the Islamic sect mainly represented in the current Iraqi government. Since American troops left the country in 2011, the pace and scope of violence -- including car and suicide bombings, prison breaks freeing hundreds of formerly detained al-Qaida members, and other random violence -- has accelerated to a point where 700 or more Iraqis have perished each month in attacks since April. Moreover, al-Qaida is strongest in the western part of the country, affording the group easy access to intercede in the Syrian war as well. Obviously the vacuum left by the departure of American troops has been filled by al-Qaida, which as a group was "on a path to defeat," according to Barack Obama. If that path meanders through the undoing of what thousands of American troops accomplished at the cost of much blood and treasure, Obama doesn't seem to mind. Under this regime, America is quickly transitioning to the position of weakness we had prior to 9/11; meanwhile, Iraqis, once optimistic, are still looking for stability after a decade. It's a sad state of affairs for a country that had such high hopes half a decade ago. CULTUREVillage Academic Curriculum: NCLB Deadlines Loom
Twelve years ago, No Child
Left Behind set out to ensure that by 2014, all students would reach
proficient levels on state tests. With the big deadline just around the
corner, eight states are far from ready,
with up to 74% of schools in these states missing the mark. Not that
the other 42 states and DC are prepared -- no, they opted to get waivers
from the mandate.
Of the remaining states,
three -- Illinois, Iowa, and Wyoming -- have waiver applications
pending, but for the rest, the costs of not making the grade may be high
and, in some cases, unachievable. For example, while NCLB promises that
a child can choose to move to another school, in Montana, another
school may be a significant distance away. And while many schools in
states missing the deadline will need to continue providing tutors, in
rural areas state-approved tutors are harder to come by. When asked
about the consequences of missing the deadline, Education Secretary Arne
Duncan advised Montana's education head Denise Juneau to get a waiver.
Hardly comforting. Indeed, when a federal mandate is so onerous that the
government's best advice is to request exemption from it, that's a sure
sign it was a bad idea to begin with. What's next, ObamaCare waivers?
Oh, wait...
BRIEF OPINIONFor the Record
Columnist Marc A.
Thiessen: "Leaks have consequences. Just ask Libyan Prime Minister Ali
Zeidan, who was kidnapped in retaliation for allowing the United States
to carry out a special operations raid in Tripoli that captured a senior
al-Qaeda leader, Nazih Abdul-Hamed al-Ruqai, known as Abu Anas al-Libi.
How did the kidnappers know that the prime minister had approved the
raid? ... [T]he Obama administration exposed the Libyan government's
cooperation in a top-secret covert action in order to bolster the
president against domestic political criticism. It gets worse. ... [T]he
[New York] Times revealed that a second raid had been planned, but not
carried out, 'to seize a militia leader suspected of carrying out the
Sept. 11, 2012, attacks on the United States diplomatic mission in
Benghazi.' ... With the leak that the Libyans approved both raids, and
the kidnapping of the Libyan prime minister, his government probably
will not authorize more such operations for the foreseeable future. ...
Even when this administration gets something right, it can't seem to get
it right."
Essential LibertyColumnist John Stossel: "Since the 80s, there has been a 300 percent increase in disability claims for hard-to-prove illnesses like back pain, stress and other 'non-exertional restrictions.' Over the past two decades, the number of people receiving Social Security disability benefits grew from 4 million to 11 million. ... We all want to help the genuinely disabled, but a wide range of subjective ailments are affected by attitude. Labeling people victims, telling them they need help, teaches some to think like victims. Social scientists call that 'learned helplessness.' Private charities are pretty good at separating real victims from malingerers. But government is not. Its one-size-fits-all rules encourage people to act like victims. Whether people have real physical ailments or just see the economic deck stacked against them, the most damaging thing say to them is: Give up. You can't make it on your own. Wait for help. Pessimism changes what we think is possible. It shrinks our horizons. ... America is full of success stories. But if we obsess over stories about victimhood, that is what we'll get."The Gipper
"The character that takes
command in moments of crucial choices has already been determined by a
thousand other choices made earlier in seemingly unimportant moments. It
has been determined by all the 'little' choices of years past -- by all
those times when the voice of conscience was at war with the voice of
temptation, [which was] whispering the lie that 'it really doesn't
matter.' It has been determined by all the day-to-day decisions made
when life seemed easy and crises seemed far away -- the decision that,
piece by piece, bit by bit, developed habits of discipline or of
laziness; habits of self-sacrifice or self-indulgence; habits of duty
and honor and integrity -- or dishonor and shame."
For more, visit The Right Opinion.CHRONICLE QUOTESInsightAmerican author Albert Jay Nock (1870-1945): "It can not even be said that the State has ever shown any disposition to suppress crime, but only to safeguard its own monopoly of crime."Demo-goguesDNC head Debbie Wasserman Schultz: "If we put all the women, Republican and Democrat in the House together, the consensus from all of us is that we would get this [budget deal] done in a few hours."From the 'Non Compos Mentis' FileDebbie Wasserman Schultz: "We have so many dire, pressing issues that have been -- it's like we blocked out the sun when the government shut down and we almost reached default."Braying JennySen. Barbara Boxer: "I never questioned, never questioned the fact that Republicans, Democrats and independents love this country. ... But I have to say, when you start acting like you're committing domestic abuse, you've got a problem."Dezinformatsia
CNN's Piers Morgan: "I
have no problem in a country with so many guns in circulation with a
family exercising their First [sic] Amendment right to defend their
families with a handgun at home. But nobody can tell me that any
civilian in America needs a military-style assault weapon or a magazine
which has 30 to 100 bullets as we saw in Aurora or Sandy Hook."
The BIG Lie
USA Today editorial: "In
50 years, Americans are far less likely to be talking about this month's
budget follies in Washington than they are to be asking why this
generation was warned about the risks of man-made climate change and
didn't do more about them."
Short Cuts
Columnist Charlie Martin: "Fool me once, shame on you; fool me twice, shame on me; fool me for five years, I'm an Obama voter."
Semper Vigilo, Fortis, Paratus et Fidelis!
Nate Jackson for The Patriot Post Editorial Team
Join us in daily prayer
for our Patriots in uniform -- Soldiers, Sailors, Airmen, Marines and
Coast Guardsmen -- standing in harm's way in defense of Liberty, and for
their families.
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