• Del.icio.us Links

    links for 2010-11-08

    • Basically, .. After talking a good game about fiscal conservatism for months, the GOP is going to take its cues in the Senate from a guy who basically doesn't give that much of a crap, and very likely empower a guy in the House whose top priorities have previously included money pit swimming pools into which he likes to dump massive, great, heaping piles of your hard-earned cash because, hey, he's in charge here, dammit.

      I don't like it; you don't like it. Let's hope that by some miracle, folks calling the shots up on the Hill might possibly be paying attention to what everyone from the Tea Partiers to me, your local candy-ass RINO, thinks: Quit with the earmarks, and let's not just empower the people who pursued them with zeal last time the GOP was in charge, because well screw it, we won… kind of…

      Please… for the love of God… the GOP should be capable of getting some basic stuff right for at least a couple months before we descend into the usual silliness, shouldn't we?

    • Less than an hour after the period began for filing bills for consideration in the 2011 Legislative session, State Rep. Debbie Riddle (R-Tomball), a leader of the newly muscular conservatives in the Legislature, filed an 'Arizona style' measure that would crack down on illegal immigration, 1200 WOAI news reports.

      Riddle says her measure is a response to what she says is the escalating violence caused by Mexican and Latin American gangs in Texas.

      "It is absolutely out of control with the gang related crime, which is going through the roof, so, yes, we are addressing this, and quite frankly, I am not worried about political correctness," Riddle told 1200 WOAI news.
      +++++++
      About damn time.

    • More Utahns want Sen. Orrin Hatch replaced than want to see him re-elected to another six-year term, according to a Salt Lake Tribune poll of likely voters conducted the week before Tuesday’s vote.

      The survey noted that Hatch isn’t up for re-election until 2012, but asked if the vote were held today, would voters back him or someone else? Forty percent of likely voters would give him a seventh term, while 48 percent say they were inclined to favor another candidate. Twelve percent remained unsure. The poll, conducted by Washington, D.C.-based Mason-Dixon Polling & Research Inc. had a margin of error of 4 percentage points.

      Hatch — who knows he’s a potential target by tea party Republicans on the right and someone like Democratic Rep. Jim Matheson on the left — is confident past supporters will return to the fold.
      ++++++
      A seventh term?

      Orrin Hatch should retire.

      (tags: Orrin_Hatch)
    • The recession and housing bust have accomplished what no other economic slump has managed to in the past century: end Nevada's population-growth streak.

      The USA's fastest-growing state for 19 consecutive years until 2006 will see its population drop an estimated 70,000 or 2.6% this year to 2.64 million, Nevada's state demographer predicts. It would be the largest annual drop for a state since thousands of Louisiana residents were displaced by Hurricane Katrina, slicing that state's population 5.7% to 4.2 million in 2006.
      +++++++
      Folks are just leaving – can you blame them?

      (tags: Nevada)
    • An eerily prescient report by CQ-Roll Call prior to the election predicted that the RNC's GOTV decision would cost the party several seats:

      "We will lose races because of this," said one senior Senate GOP aide, referring to the Republican National Committees inability to coordinate the traditional 72-hour GOTV effort for House and Senate races. Though its name implies a three-day deployment, in past years Capitol Hill staffers left as soon as Congress adjourned in order to help in tight races.

      Contrary to the conventional wisdom that unfit candidates caused the GOP to forfeit several Senate seats, it appears that a party-wide failure to fund and implement previously successful GOTV efforts was the true cause of the Republican party's inability to capture a larger share of the U.S. Senate.
      ++++++
      And, in California, I never did see Meg Whitman's supposed superior ground operation.

      (tags: GOP)
  • Animals

    Should the GOP Push Illegal Immigration Border Security?

    Illegal immigrants crossing into the United States

    The short answer is YES.

    That policy ought to begin with serious steps towards border security and the completion of the fence that has been first delayed, then proposed in an unworkable “virtual” form, and now at approximately 650 miles of 2,000 along the southern border.  Until the border is secured and the visa program made enforceable, the issue of what to do about the millions of illegal aliens in the country cannot be resolved because of the continued migration of hundreds of thousands each year across a porous border.  80 to 90% of the country agrees on the basics of immigration policy, but the consequences of the paralysis engendered by the extremes is first and foremost a national security threat that gets worse every month.

    I don’t know about the completion of a border fence as a cornerstone of a revised immigration policy but certainly enhanced employer sanctions and enforcement are areas where quick change can be facilitated.

    What might happen to the GOP, if illegal immigration is ignored? Well, look what happened in the Southwest where massive number of illegal aliens have been tolerated and/or encouraged for decades vis a vis elections.

    A look at the electoral map shows that, outside selected parts of the Southwest, few Republican candidates this year paid a price for adopting a hard-line immigration stance.

    The reason is that most of the historic wave that swept Democrats from office last week was in Midwestern or Rust Belt states, where Latinos make up only a fragment of the voting population. For example, Democrats lost five House seats, a Senate seat and the governorship in Pennsylvania, where only 3% of eligible voters are Latino.

    Jennifer Duffy, a senior editor at the Cook report who tracks congressional races, has a message to activists who contend immigration is the Democrats’ salvation: Don’t hold your breath.

    “You’ve got to have states where [immigration] matters, where that Latino vote is enough to tip races,” Duffy said. “Those states are in the West.”

    Although Latinos have been moving to more remote parts of the country in recent years, many may be too young to vote or may lack citizenship status. That makes it even tougher to replicate the Western experience in places such as Pennsylvania, she said.”Not only do they not have the Latino vote to help, they have an illegal immigrant problem,” Duffy said of Democrats. “It’s a double whammy.”

    But, although Midwestern and Southern states GOP do NOT now have an electoral problem. They will, if the issue is ignored. Look at the balkinization of the recent US Senate race in California.

    Illegal immigration has been ignored in California for decades. While many immigrants from Mexico, Central and South American were encouraged to illegal cross into the United States to work as cheap labor in agriculture, meat packing, domestic/service industries and construction, their numerous children were born here and became American citizens who can vote – and who vote 2 or 3 to 1 for Democratic candidates. Much like the African-American voters who vote almost 4 or 5 to 1 Democratic, the Latino/Hispanic voting block has started to influence elections in the Western United States – to the detriment of the GOP.

    So, obviously, it is to the benefit of the GOP to stop the in-flow of illegal immigrants who will squeeze them in elections in the decades to come.

    The GOP House in January should immediately hold hearings and attach border securing riders to major appropriations bills. Forget about the “Anchor Baby” nonsense and pass tough employer sanctions on illegal alien supporting industries, including California agriculture. When agri-business starts to scream because their supply of cheap labor dries up, then a “Guest Worker” program can be passed with the provision and emphasis on “Guest.”

    The Congress can force the building of more walls and other hard asset border securing methods. They can fund grants to states for additional law enforcement efforts along the border since Obama will probably never order more National Guard or Army to protect the Mexican border.

    Once the Mexican border is secure and tough enforcement of immigration laws occurs, then and only then should the Congress deal with the issue of illegal immigrants who remain. I bet most will self-deport themselves, in any case, since there will be few jobs available for them.

    The illegal immigration problem can no longer be ignored and should be a priority for the GOP when the new Congress convenes in January.

  • Afghanistan,  Barack Obama,  Day By Day

    Day By Day November 8, 2010 – Last Dance

    Day By Day by Chris Muir

    Chris, President Obama’s Afghanistan/Taliban/Pakistan policy is failing and his July 2011 deadline for withdrawal looms. I know Zed is an outstanding operative but sending him into the combat arena in Afghanistan is a waste since Obama will be withdrawing all troops within six months anyway.

    As American’s economy has crash and burned under Obama, his foreign policy of blaming Bush and America has been equally a disaster.

    In the meantime, the President dances is India and is planning to visit a Mosque in Indonesia where Obama was raised.

    Wonderful…..

    Previous:

    The Day By Day Archiv