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Bailing out the Bailout (Bumped)

You needn't be a Michael Moore Lunatic to believe the Democratic House WANTS the economy to collapse.  The worse the economic situation, the the better off the democrats think they will be in November.  So what that it is the Democratic policies that got us here in the first place.  So what if it was a democratic bailout bill that was torpedoed by a democratic Speaker of the House because she could not/would not get 13 extra votes out of the 95 democrats that voted "no".  It's Bush's mess, they say.  So what if the economy was purring like a kitten for 6 years of Bush policies.  So what if we had sustainable slow growth until the "Let's give everyone a mortgage" chickens and the "Don't drill here, not now, not ever" chickens came home to roost.  So what if the bad news started when the Democrats took over.  It's gotta be Bush's fault.

Don't vote for any congressional democrat.  Work to defeat every congressional democrat.  Tell them that their election trickery doesn't work.  Show them that the American people aren't as gullible as they think were are.  Teach them never to promote their party at the expense of the American People ever again! Defeat the Dems!

Reading Michael Moore's rant referenced above, you might notice Mickey is still pouting over the "selected" president.  That the US Supreme Court forced Florida to follow its own election laws doesn't seem to ring a tone of fairness to Mickey's people.  No wonder they were still working out the rules of their primaries when they were almost concluded.

He does make an interesting point.  He says the number one cause of bankruptcies is medical bills.  Interesting.  Not that it has anything to do with foreclosures, which is what this is all about, but interesting nonetheless.  Now, of course, sometimes you will have both.  One might lead to the other.  But having medical bills being the number one cause of bankruptcies does not make it the number one cause of foreclosures.  If he could prove that one, then he would have something.  Otherwise, why all of these foreclosures all at once.  Why not four years ago?  Five years ago? Three years ago?  Why were all of these people getting so many medical bills all at the same time?  They weren't of course.  The problem with the housing bubble is not that people got sick all at the same time.  That doesn't make sense.  Although this all did begin about the time that Michael Moore's Sicko came out . . .  (maybe people got sick from watching it.  Nah.  No one watched it.)  The problem that caused the bubble was rising interest rates.  And all of those adjustable mortgages . . . . Adjusted.  Up.  All at once.  So all of these people who so creatively got into their new house with creative financing found that they hadn't been creative enough to conceive that their interest rates would adjust upward, increasing their monthly payments to a level they could not afford.  Their mortgage payments.  Not the doctor bills.

Here is another question.  What kind of person lays out tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars as downpayment for a mortgage, promises to pay thousands of dollars a month for their mortgage, and, yet, doesn't spend $500 a month or so for medical insurance?  Why does he believe that the only way people can get health insurance is through the government?  If you can afford a house and you don't buy health insurance . . .  I would finish that sentence, but the rules of Townhall prohibit me from expressing my thought in writing.  And, yet, that is what Michael Moore wants you to believe.  That all of these thousands or millions of people bought a house but didn't buy health insurance.

Don't believe Mickey.  His success lies in, well, lying.  Lying well.  Include just enough truth to make it believable.  There are enough liberals out there that will believe it.

So watch for The American Carol when it comes out.  It will be fun seeing Michael get a taste of his medicine.  And he won't have to go to Cuba to get it.

Even if Michael Moore and the Pelosi Democrats have their way, you may still have enough money in your 401K or 403B to be able to buy a ticket.

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25 percent of apples and 3 percent of oranges

There are three kinds of liars, we are told, liars, statisticians and democrats.

How many times have you heard something like, "We can't drill our way out of this.  We have 3% of the worlds oil reserves, but we consume 25 percent of production."

Apples and oranges.

The oil reserves are much larger than the amount that is produced every year.  If this wasn't true, then the world would run out of oil within one year. In fact, since we've been drilling for a century, and expect to be drilling for quite a while longer, I would say the reserves are vastly greater than annual production.  It may even be true (it probably is) that 3% of the worlds reserves is much, much greater than 25 percent of the oil production.

This is not to say that we can drill our way out of this, but the assertion often made by the democrats is that we could only ever produce one eight of our oil consumption (3%/24%) is not supported by the statistic.  Saying that we have one thirtieth of the worlds reserves doesn't prove that we can't increase our production to 50% or 80% of our consumption.

World reserves are irrelevant.  US reserves are relevant only to the extent that they inform how much we might increase production.   The only truly relevant numbers are our consumption, our current production and how much we might be able to produce if we were able to explore on oil fields where we're currently prevented from exploring.

So until they start comparing consumption to current and potential production, we need to call them on it every single time until their apples and oranges comparison is seen as the statisticians lie that it truly is.

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What is good for the goose . . .

But what about what isn't good for the goose?

In the last election cycle, some emails came to the notice of some republican staffers.  I don't know that much hacking was involved, as the emails are all kept on the same server.  Among the emails were missives to prominent politicians (one of whom may be a Massachusets Senator whose name is not John) from assorted special interest groups giving the politicians marching orders.  I don't know if you would call this quid pro quo, but one suggested that some upcoming confirmations of federal judges should be delayed until after certain cases were adjudicated.  What was the result of uncovering all of this malfeasance? The republicans cowered to democratic charges that the emails were improperly acquired.

Now, the liberals hack into Palins personal email.  How do they respond to the implication that the emails were acquired illegally?  "What are you going to do?  Blow up the internet?"

It boggles the mind.

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Reponse to Obama

From WashingtonPost.com Convention Update: (my responses are not from WashintonPost.com)

Advance Excerpts: Obama's Speech
The Obama campaign has released advance excerpts of his remarks, "The Promise of America," set for delivery later tonight. He is expected to say:

"Four years ago, I stood before you and told you my story - of the brief union between a young man from Kenya and a young woman from Kansas who weren't well-off or well-known, but shared a belief that in America, their son could achieve whatever he put his mind to.

<Of course, if they believed in America, you might expect they would raise him in America, not Indonesia>

"It is that promise that has always set this country apart - that through hard work and sacrifice, each of us can pursue our individual dreams but still come together as one American family, to ensure that the next generation can pursue their dreams as well.

<Nothing here about government handouts.  Interesting.  Check out Michael Medved>

"It is why I stand here tonight. Because for two hundred and thirty two years, at each moment when that promise was in jeopardy, ordinary men and women - students and soldiers, farmers and teachers, nurses and janitors -- found the courage to keep it alive.

<Again, the American Dream is about the American people, their hard work and courage, not the government giving you what you want.>

"We meet at one of those defining moments - a moment when our nation is at war,

<We've been at war for quite a while.  Whether you start counting from 9-11, the USS Cole, the African Embassies, the Lebanese Embassy bombing, the first bombing of the twin towers or even back to Jefferson and the Barbary Pirates, we've been at war for quite a while.  The only difference is that now, we have been fighting back.  Finally.>

 our economy is in turmoil,

<Two reasons for our economic problems.  Energy, caused by our inability to drill at home and to build refineries and not to mention nuclear power plants, and Housing, caused by our well intentioned efforts to make sure everyone can afford to buy their own home.  Well, not everyone can afford to buy a home and what happens when you buy a home you can't afford?  You lose your house.  The effect of this is overstated.  The rate of foreclosures is not that much higher than before.  The rest is panic and misguided consumer sentiment.  Who kept us from drilling, building refineries, building nuclear power plants and getting people buying homes they can't afford?  This is when the American Dream took a left turn.  Well, the republicans may have cooperated, but that is republicans acting like democrats.  The answer to that is NOT more democrats.>


and the American promise has been threatened once more.

<The American promise is being threatened by an appealing radical many people think can be president>

"Tonight, more Americans are out of work and more are working harder for less.

<I like the quantification here.  More out of work from when?  From the unsustainable technobubble of the 90's?  From the depression?  Whatever Obama wants to say, he can't refute the fact that we are still at an enviable 5% unemployment.  The Dems are talking about our economic mess, but no one is giving any numbers other than comparing where we are now to the technobubble.>

More of you have lost your homes and more are watching your home values plummet.

<How many people have lost their homes when they bought homes they could actually afford?  If you buy a home you can't afford, you are going to lose it.  The rest is panic.>

More of you have cars you can't afford to drive,

<Well, I could never understand the infatuation with huge SUVs, the rest is fuel prices.  See above.>

credit card bills you can't afford to pay

<Well who is holding a gun to your head?  If you can't afford it, don't buy it. And don't EVER keep a balance on your credit cards.>

and tuition that is beyond your reach.

<I went to a state school.  Where did Obama go to school?  It didn't seem that skyrocketing tuition was beyond his reach.  But of course, he is better that the average man.>

"These challenges are not all of government's making. But the failure to respond is a direct result of a broken politics in Washington and the failed presidency of George W. Bush.

<The response is more damaging that the challenges.  The "failure to respond" may be noted by history as some of Bush's greatest actions.>

"America, we are better than these last eight years. We are a better country than this."

<True.  But we are also a better country than the socialist country Obama dreams of.>

***

"This moment - this election - is our chance to keep, in the 21st century, the American promise alive.

<And we will, as long as the government doesn't muck with it.>

Because next week, in Minnesota, the same party that brought you two terms of George Bush and Dick Cheney will ask this country for a third.

<Better a Bush third than a Carter second>

And we are here because we love this country too much to let the next four years look just like the last eight. On November 4th, we must stand up and say: "Eight is enough."

<High flying rhetoric comes down crashing and burning with a reference to an old sitcom.  Obama and I are remarkably alike in age, and I also used to watch "Eight is Enough."  But not even Dick van Patten ever actually said, "Eight is enough.">

"Now let there be no doubt. The Republican nominee, John McCain, has worn the uniform of our country with bravery and distinction, and for that we owe him our gratitude and respect.

<We are going to be hearing this until next November.  There is as much sincerity in this as in the Clintons' declarations that Obama is qualified to be President.>

And next week, we'll also hear about those occasions when he's broken with his party as evidence that he can deliver the change that we need.

<This has never endeared McCain to republicans.  But at least he HAS been bipartisan.  The only claims that Obama has to bipartisanism is his work on the Ethics bill.  But, a) that assumes that ethics is not something democrats want (they finally admit it) and b) this bipartisanship ended when Obama was taken aside by party leaders and told not to cooperate.  After that, he didn't.  How disingenuous is it to claim to have gone against your party when you worked on something but then you quit when you were told to by your party>

"But the record's clear: John McCain has voted with George Bush ninety percent of the time.

<Well, this is a good thing, except that some issues in that missing ten percent were biggies.>

Senator McCain likes to talk about judgment, but really, what does it say about your judgment when you think George Bush was right more than ninety percent of the time?

<What does it say about judgment when whenever you say something substantial, you need to clarify your statement the next day.  Whose judgment would you prefer to emulate, Bush or Resko, Jeremiah Wright and Bill Ayers?>

I don't know about you, but I'm not ready to take a ten percent chance on change."

<I'm not even sure what this means.  But let me say something about change.  There is a scene in Stand and Deliver where Escalante is driving Pancho's car.  Pancho has decided to leave the calculus class so that he can work in his uncle's auto shop making real money.  Escalante asks Pancho where he should turn.  Excited and agitated, Pancho finally tells him turn right here.  They end up at a dead end.  Escalante tells him that that is his problem.  Always concerned about the next turn, never on the destination.  Change for change's sake is bad.  Movies and TV shows agree with common sense.  People who want a change because "Things couldn't get any worse," find out to their misery that they always can.>
***

"You see, we Democrats have a very different measure of what constitutes progress in this country.

<Yes and no.  When you measure progress by what people who work hard can achieve, as when they talk about the personal histories of Mr. and Mrs. Obama and Biden and the Clintons, then that is exactly the measures republicans would use.  When they talk about what the government should do for people, then, yes, they do have a different measure.  Trouble is, why are they applying the republican measure to themselves and a different measure for everyone else?>

"We measure progress by how many people can find a job that pays the mortgage; whether you can put away a little extra money at the end of each month so that you can someday watch your child receive her diploma.

<Well, this sounds pretty good.>

We measure progress in the 23 million new jobs that were created when Bill Clinton was President - when the average American family saw its income go up $7,500 instead of down $2,000 like it has under George Bush.

<One word.  Technobubble.  What use is creating 23 million jobs if they are bound to disappear BEFORE the end of your term?  Obama may find it very hard to replicate the 23 million new jobs unless he can invent a new internet.  Hey, if Bill and Al can do it, why not Obama?  And the millions of new jobs created under George Bush will be around for a long time.  Longer if Obama doesn't get his hands on them.>

"We measure the strength of our economy not by the number of billionaires we have or the profits of the Fortune 500, but by whether someone with a good idea can take a risk and start a business, or whether the waitress who lives on tips can take a day off to look after a sick kid without losing her job - an economy that honors the dignity of work.

<You don't honor the dignity of work by paying people a living wage not to work.  You don't honor the dignity of work by giving people almost as much money for not working as for working.  You don't honor the dignity of work by taking money away from those who are working to pay for someone in the company half of their salary because they choose not to work so they can bond with their new baby.   You don't honor the dignity of work by taking a bigger tax bite so people will have less take home pay for the same work.>

"The fundamentals we use to measure economic strength are whether we are living up to that fundamental promise that has made this country great - a promise that is the only reason I am standing here tonight."

<Well he is standing there because of a superb speech he gave at the convention four years ago, but never mind.>
***

"That's the promise we need to keep. That's the change we need right now. So let me spell out exactly what that change would mean if I am President.

<That would be nice (if you excuse the expression) for a change.>

"Change means a tax code that doesn't reward the lobbyists who wrote it, but the American workers and small businesses who deserve it.

<Lobbying is not strictly a republican sin.  And, although many people would like to change this, Don Quixote would look at this windmill and give up.  Certainly the freshman senator from Illinois won't be able to do this.>

"Unlike John McCain, I will stop giving tax breaks to corporations that ship our jobs overseas, and I will start giving them to companies that create good jobs right here in America.

<So the companies will give up taking jobs overseas and move there altogether to avoid the increased tax burden that Obama is promising.  Net result:  fewer jobs in America>

"I will eliminate capital gains taxes for the small businesses and the start-ups that will create the high-wage, high-tech jobs of tomorrow.

<Of course during the primaries, after being told that increasing capital gains taxes does not result in an increase in revenue, Obama said that he would increase capital gains taxes anyway, not out of a need for revenue, but as a matter of fairness.  I should be pleased that he wants to eliminate certain capital gains taxes for some companies, but a) this is probably one of those promises (preceded by flowers and chocolates) that are promises you don't intend to keep.  In any case by the time small businesses and start-ups actually have capital gains, they probably would no longer be considered small businesses or start-ups>

"I will cut taxes - cut taxes - for 95% of all working families. Because in an economy like this, the last thing we should do is raise taxes on the middle-class.

<First of all, for all of the spending he is promising and all of the tax cuts he wants us to believe he will propose, he will need additional revenue.  What he would discover (as all democrats need to discover) is the problem with taxing the top 5%.  Taxing the top 5% (beside the lack of fairness) doesn't get that much revenue because the tax base has so few people.  You can't expect the top 5% to provide all of the revenue that they will need for all that they want to provide for the remaining 95%,  95% is a lot.  5% is very little.  In addition to the fact that most middle class Americans are amazed to find out how low the income threshold for 5% really is.  Ultimately, the only way you can finance all that the democrats promise is to raise taxes on the middle class.  Which will Obama (and his democratic congress) give up first:  the promise not to tax the middle class, or their pet projects?>

"And for the sake of our economy, our security, and the future of our planet, I will set a clear goal as President: in ten years, we will finally end our dependence on oil from the Middle East.

<If he really meant this, he would allow drilling and he would allow us to build more nuclear power plants.  You can't do this with everything else alone.>

"Washington has been talking about our oil addiction for the last thirty years, and John McCain has been there for twenty-six of them. In that time, he's said no to higher fuel-efficiency standards for cars, no to investments in renewable energy, no to renewable fuels. And today, we import triple the amount of oil as the day that Senator McCain took office.

<The last thirty years (1978-2008) includes the aftermath of the Arab Oil embargo, two years of a Carter presidency, the entire presidency of Bill Clinton and many years of democratic controlled congresses.  Of course it is McCain's fault.  In referring to the amount of oil we import, we also have to consider how much more oil we are producing and how much more oil we are consuming.  Our economy has grown tremendously.  Our production and consumption of oil has skyrocketed.  The problem is that our consumption has grown faster than our production.  But allowing drilling and nuclear power plants would have had a much greater effect in reducing our oil imports than the increased fuel efficiency standards and increased government investments in renewable energy.>

"Now is the time to end this addiction, and to understand that drilling is a stop-gap measure, not a long-term solution. Not even close.

<This is a big statement from someone who was telling us not too long ago to check the pressure on our tires.  "Stop-gap" and "not a long-term solution" are strange things to say when the democratic argument against drilling used to be that we wouldn't get a return for ten years.  But in the near future, (say twenty to twenty-five years) drilling and nuclear power will provide much more power than non-nuclear renewables.  But of course we should do both.  The choice is not one-or-the-other.  The choice is, for each alternative, whether or not we do it.  Let's say yes to all.>

"As President, I will tap our natural gas reserves, invest in clean coal technology,

<"Invest."  Good word.  It points out the lie in the democrats' energy programs.  Private industry will invest private money in anything viable.  If we need government money, it is because it is not viable.  Energy companies are investing in clean coal.  We don't need additional government investment.>

 and find ways to safely harness nuclear power.

<In splitting this up, I hope you didn't lose the subject here.  The subject (look back to verify if you don't believe me) was "I".  As in, "I will find ways to safely harness nuclear power."  On the one hand, I do not think working as a community organizer qualified someone as Nuclear Engineer.  At least Carter really was a nuclear engineer.  I suppose this is related in some way to the new internet he will invent (see above about the 23 million new jobs).  What this probably means however, is that unless we can find ways to harness nuclear power safely, he won't allow it.  This means he won't allow it.  It already is safe.  It is safer now that 30 years ago. Chernobyl was a Soviet design run by Soviet workers.  Three Mile Island, catastrophic as it may have been, killed not one person, gave no one cancer, and released very little radiation.  It already is safe.  If he is going to wait until it is safer, he is telegraphing that he will not allow nuclear power.  He just doesn't want to admit that he will not allow nuclear power.>

I'll help our auto companies re-tool, so that the fuel-efficient cars of the future are built right here in America.

<Market forces are taking care of this.  They are doing this out of self-preservation.  Did you notice that the typical hybrid is $5000 more than the comparable all-gas car? And yet there are waitinglists for many of these cars.  We do need the batteries to be built here, but, in time, any help that Obama provides will be referred to as corporate welfare.  In any case, he doesn't seem to talk about which fuel-efficient cars he talks about.  Hybrids really only provide marginally greater fuel efficiency.  Electric cars do not help if we are using fossil fuels to generate the electricity we will need to charge them.  Fuel cell cars sound great, but they are leashed to their hydrogen generating stations. And, also, we use fossil fuels to generate the electricity we need to produce the hydrogen.  As I said, if there were viable solutions on the horizon, we would not need government help.  In the meantime, I do not trust Obama or congress (or McCain or Mitt, for that matter) to decide which technologies will bear fruit and which won't.>

I'll make it easier for the American people to afford these new cars.

<More government giveaways.  More middle class tax increase.  People's hard work will achieve the American dream, but Obama wants to tell them which cars to buy.>

 And I'll invest $150 billion over the next decade

<In other words, a middle class tax increase>

in affordable, renewable sources of energy

<If it was affordable, private industry would be aboard quicker that Obama can say "change">

- wind power and solar power

<both of which require more power now than we get by running them--but, of course, Obama has the engineering expertise to know which to promote and which to abandon>

and the next generation of biofuels;

<I hope, "the next generation."  What happened to the last generation?  We needed more energy to produce and to bring these fuels to market than what we saved by using these biofuels--not to mention the problems caused by taking food out of the food markets to use them as fuel.>

an investment that will lead to new industries and five million new jobs that pay well and can't ever be outsourced."

<I keep repeating myself.  If it is viable, it will happen without Obama's help and it will lead to new industries and five million new jobs.  If it needs his help the industry will be tiny with few reliable jobs.>

***

"We are the party of Roosevelt.

<Like we need a New Deal giveaway>

 We are the party of Kennedy.

<Except Kennedy said we would pay any price and bear any burden in defense of freedom.  Kennedy knew that tax cuts increased revenues.  Kennedy was a democrat.  Obama is a democrat.  But Obama is no Kennedy>

So don't tell me that Democrats won't defend this country.

<Democrat won't defend this country.  The legacy of FDR and Kennedy is dead>

 Don't tell me that Democrats won't keep us safe.

<Democrats won't keep us safe.  Does anyone remember the senate majority leader telling us that we had lost the war?  Does anyone remember "Willing suspension of disbelief," or "general betray-us"?>

The Bush-McCain foreign policy has squandered the legacy that generations of Americans

<We removed a vicious dictator was defying UN resolutions, corrupting UN sanctions, firing at American fighters and threatening Americans.  We also killed his sons whose greatest accomplishments were the efficiency with which they raped and tortured.  We also have not had another terrorist attack on our soil since 9-11.>

 -- Democrats and Republicans - have built, and we are to restore that legacy.

<By talking to thugs?  That doesn't work.  That never works.  It didn't work with Hitler and Chamberlain.  It didn't work with Hitler and Stalin.  It didn't work with Arafat and Camp David.  It didn't work with Arafat and Oslo.  It didn't work with George 41 and Hussein ending the first Gulf War.  It didn't work with Clinton and North Korea.  It won't work with the recent agreements  between the current administration and North Korea.  We are always talking, if indirectly.  It never works.  They will agree to what they need to agree to to get the carrot while planning ways to avoid the stick.  There is, indeed, only one word for the Obama legacy.  Appeasement.  We will get burned while we give away all our carrots.>

"As Commander-in-Chief, I will never hesitate to defend this nation,

<"Unless there is a country run by a madman dictator where all of the intelligence tells us he is building weapons of mass instruction.  Because, you see I know more than everyone else, so you can trust my judgment."  He forgot to add that.>

but I will only send our troops into harm's way with a clear mission and a sacred commitment to give them the equipment they need in battle and the care and benefits they deserve when they come home.

<This is Obama speak for "I will never send our troops into harm's way."  In other words, the only response to terrorists we can expect (and terrorist can expect--they know this) is long range ineffective cruise missles attacks and abandoning our military commitments to our allies and protectorates.>

"I will end this war in Iraq responsibly,

<Easy to say NOW. The surge has worked and the extra troops have been removed.  If Obama had had his say, we would have left Iraq before 2007--in a way that could never be called responsible.>

 and finish the fight against al Qaeda and the Taliban in Afghanistan.

<The fight is much further along now.  Al Qaeda is emmaciated.  That was Bush.  Thank you, George.  And he would finish the fight as long as he doesn't have to send American troops into harms way.  Of course, not only would he fight in Afghanistan, but follow them into Pakistan--bombing our ally.  All they while he is having a party with our enemies in Iran.>

I will rebuild our military to meet future conflicts.

<Sure.  I mean Bill Clinton was a REAL friend of the military.>

But I will also renew the tough, direct diplomacy that can prevent Iran from obtaining nuclear weapons.

<The personal force of Barack Obama's charisma will cause the Iranians to give up their nuclear weapons.  Please.>

 I will build new partnerships to defeat the threats of the 21st century: terrorism

<losing in Iraq, as Obama wanted to do a year and a half ago, would have really gone a long way toward this.>

and nuclear proliferation;

<with only the sheer power of his charisma>

 poverty and genocide; climate change and disease.

<don't forget migraines and reality television.>

 And I will restore our moral standing so that America is once more the last, best hope for all who are called to the cause of freedom, who long for lives of peace, and who yearn for a better future."
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The Audacity of Audacity

Pelosi seems not to mind taking the heat for stonewalling any energy bills in congress.  And why not?  She feels very secure in her bluest of blue California congressional districts.  This shows one big problem in California's districting procedures.

We need to support any and all efforts to change the districting procedures so that no congressperson feels that secure.  The whole idea is that we would always be able to Throw the Rascal Out.

We can only hope that while taking the heat, the American people blame all congressional Democrats.  If we can throw out enough of the Democrats.

We need to be reminded of an incident soon after the 2006 elections.  Senator Barbara Boxer (D-CA) was chairing a hearing where Al Gore was testifying.  She was giving him extra time to present his views--at the expense of the Republican senator whose turn it was to ask questions.  Boxer responded, "Elections have consequences."

"Elections have consequences." This is a lesson we need to learn.  Every time someone talks about punishing the republicans and hoping they'll learn their lessons needs to know "elections have consequences."  Every time a conservative talks about voting anyone other than the republican they need to know "elections have consequences."

"Elections have consequences."  A lesson we need to teach the democrats.  The hard way.

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Hugh on This Week, Issue One

Well, Hugh was on This Week this week.  This made for a fun This Week, but there were a few issues with today's installment.

The show began with an Obama supporter and a Gov. Pawlenty for McCain.  And again, an Obama supporter was pressed for an instance of when Obama ever went bipartisan--going against the party for the sake of what is better for the country.  And again, the Obama supporter came up with Ethics reform.  The subtext is if you believe in ethics, the Democratic party will be against you.  I'll take it.

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A Note For Democrats

Far be it for me to help Democrats, but there are some basic rules of fair play, negotiations and Game Theory that many of the Democrats floating proposals for dealing with the issue of Michigan and Floriday need to heed.

1.  When you bring the candidates in for negotiations, the proposals you offer cannot deterministically choose a candidate.  You cannot ask a candidate to agree to a plan that will give up his bid for a nomination.  This does not mean that you cannot offer something that will likely cause a candidate to lose.  It means you cannot offer something that will certainly cause a candidate to lose.  As an example, as of this point, a 50-50 division of delegates will likely be advantageous to Obama, but it would not certainlty doom Hillary.  If such an offer is made soon, that is fine as long as when the offer is accepted, there is still a chance for Hillary to win.  That doesn't mean that Hillary should accept such an offer; it means that the offer can be made.  Once it becomes mathematically impossible for Hillary to win with such an offer, that offer should not be made.  The subsequent elections can doom her chances, not he acceptance of the offer.  You cannot make an offer that dooms the candidtate.

2.  You cannot allow someone to benefit from breaking the rules.  The rules are made ahead of the contest.  Everyone knows the rules going in.  Everyone knows the consequences of breaking the rules.  The states knew the consequences when they scheduled their primaries.  The candidates knew this when one pulled his name from the ballot and the other did not.  Obama was justified in taking his name off the ballots in Michigan and Florida if that is what the rules required.  To allow the primary results to stand, punishes Obama for going along with the rules and rewards both the states and Hillary for breaking the rules.  Hillary may be known for breaking rules, but we don't need to reward her.  It could be argued that the expectations were that the rules would not be followed and that after some negotiating and lobbying, the results from these primaries could be honored. This argues for consistent enforcement of the rules.  The expectation that rules would be ignored is poisonous.  Otherwise, the rules mean nothing.

3.  Results of a contest where the rules were not followed are always tainted.  This goes beyond the occasional asterisk in the record books.  The results may be rendered meaningless.  It may be argued that the people made their choices and that they should be listened to.  But without Obama on the ballot, without active campaigning by both candidates, the decision is not a fair one.  Of course, if they made decisions based on strategy, that is one thing.  But if they pulled one TV spot because they were following the rules, that the campaign is tainted.  The people have not made their choice.  The people have reacted to an unfair camaign.

This means that the only fair thing to do is to have new elections.  They do have to be fair, and secure. Funny how democrats are worried more about security in their primaries that in general elections, but that is for another post.  It also may mean that the New Hampshire primary results should be attenuated to apply the rules.  It may mean that some of the Republican contests would be affected.  Whatever the rules say should be followed talmudically.

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