Local news around Kalamazoo.
New sheriff Richard Fuller seeks Kalamazoo County Jail expansion
Oshtemo to fight truck-route ruling, explore city status
The Kalamazoo County Board of Commissioners sets arena discussions for June 2
Former state Rep. Lorence Wenke files to run for state Senate
Kalamazoo College expects $1 million shortfall, possible cuts
Western Michigan University program offers hope for grown foster children
Howard Dean touts Obama health-care plan in Kalamazoo speech
Saturday, May 30, 2009
Friday, May 29, 2009
Forum of Discontent
The County government is busy dreaming up new ways to spend money it doesn't have. Its latest scheme is a new arena in downtown Kalamazoo funded by a tax increase.
The Kalamazoo County Board of Commissioners sets arena discussions for June 2
Government never ceases looking for ways to get bigger.
The Kalamazoo County Board of Commissioners sets arena discussions for June 2
KALAMAZOO -- The Kalamazoo County Board of Commissioners is expected to begin public discussion June 2 on the possible construction of a downtown Kalamazoo arena and proposals for new hospitality taxes to finance it.Who would use the arena?
Officials say the development of the arena -- a subject of privately financed studies for more than five years -- is far from a done deal because of uncertainty about costs, financing, users and project partners.
But preliminary studies have been encouraging, said Kalamazoo County Board Chairman David Buskirk.
Speculation rose in 2006 when Kalamazoo-based Greenleaf Holdings LLC announced that it was purchasing the Wings Stadium complex and the Kalamazoo Wings. Earlier downtown-arena feasibility studies indicated that the project would require booking commitments by one or more users, and speculation was the K-Wings could play there.Certainly such a wonderful plan would generate nothing but profits.
Such a move could free the Wings Stadium property at Interstate 94 and Sprinkle Road for other development. Also, arena traffic might benefit the downtown Radisson Plaza Hotel & Suites, which is owned by Greenleaf.
In addition, Greenleaf's development of a new downtown office building for primary tenant Miller, Canfield, Paddock and Stone, a law firm, resulted in the legal group transferring ownership of its West Michigan Avenue office building and several other nearby properties to DTI.
He said the county could consider putting a proposal for new restaurant, bar and rental-car surcharges, plus a rise in the county's hotel tax, on the November ballot for voters to decide.Or not.
According to an October 2008 preliminary feasibility draft, one plan calls for developing a 7,000-to- 8,000-seat, multipurpose arena with a estimated construction cost of about $40 million. The proposed location is a 9-acre site at the west end of the Arcadia Creek development, bounded by Westnedge Avenue on the west, Michigan Avenue on the south, Rose Street on the east and Kalamazoo Avenue on the north.Taxes on tourism are popular with local governments because they generate less public opposition since their constituents don't pay them directly. Of course, the taxes hurt local businesses and their employees.
"The choices are: It's not feasible; or it's feasible and there's support for it; or it's feasible but we don't support it," said Kenneth Nacci, president of Downtown Kalamazoo Inc., which spearheads central-city development.
Officials said project funding wouldn't come from a property-tax increase or general-fund dollars from the county or city of Kalamazoo.
Instead, Kalamazoo County Administrator Peter Battani said, the funding largely could be generated by a new 1 percent county sales tax on car rentals and food and drinks sold at restaurants and bars. Currently there is no local food and beverage tax for restaurants and bars.
Also, the county's current 5 percent tax on hotel rooms, used to promote tourism, could be increased to generate revenue for an arena.
County commissioners have until Aug. 11 to decide whether to place a countywide tax request for new surcharges on the November ballot. Commissioners are scheduled to discuss the arena project, and how to proceed with soliciting public feedback, at their June 2 meeting.He would love to make us pay for it.
"Ultimately, if we're going to go forward with it, the people of the community will have to pay for it in their bills," Battani said. "I would love to see an arena downtown.
But we need to proceed very deliberately and very carefully, and thoroughly review it and hear from the public."
Development catalysts soughtSo the plan is to tax restaurants, putting a few out of business, to create restaurants?
A downtown arena is one of seven "transformative" development projects proposed by DKI under a 10-year plan that the Kalamazoo City Commission adopted last week.
Others include creating a downtown life-sciences campus, a new mixed-use development along the Kalamazoo River and expanded two-way traffic downtown.
Nacci said those projects could spur other downtown development.
"An arena for the sake of an arena is not the right thinking," Nacci said. "It has to be something that satisfies the Southwest region. An entertainment venue like an arena has to be able to position itself to spin off things like restaurants and residential opportunities. It has to be the driver that makes other things feasible."
Buskirk said a temporary authority or committee could be formed this summer to get public feedback on the project and more closely examine funding options. Later, if the arena was built, a permanent arena authority could be created to operate it.Is Van Andel funded by taxes? The Grand Rapids metro area is three times as large as Kalamazoo.
Grand Rapids' Van Andel Arena was developed and operates under an authority, and a similar independent board now runs the Kalamazoo/Battle Creek International Airport.
Kalamazoo Regional Chamber of Commerce President Steward Sandstrom said the chamber would consider new taxes on hotel, restaurant and rental-car fees to pay for an arena. But he cautioned that the plan must not raise prices to levels that would hurt the county's tourism trade.Change happens on the margin, Steward.
Potential arena usersAt least they got that right. Moving WMU sports to downtown would make no sense. WMU is about one mile from downtown, which would make to difference to people who drive to games. If they aren't going out to eat downtown, it's because they don't like downtown. But it would be too far for WMU students to walk to the games.
Western Michigan University could be a prime user of an arena.
"The university is very interested and has been a part of the discussion," said Robert Miller, WMU associate vice president for community outreach. "A possibility might be that WMU athletic teams would play games in an arena ... but absolutely no decisions have been made other than the university is clear it would not own, operate or manage such a facility."
Government never ceases looking for ways to get bigger.
Governor Candidate Forum
Governor hopefuls offer preview of '10 race
Mackinac Island -- In the first preview of next year's race for governor, some of the candidates argued at a debate Thursday night about raising taxes, the need for a part-time Legislature, whether prisoners should be released to curb the state budget and what Michigan needs to start generating jobs again.
...
Of all the candidates only one, Cox, would sign a no-tax pledge.
Land said she could not say she would not raise taxes as governor, but acknowledged changes are needed in the way the state raises revenue. "We have to do something," she said. "We need to create jobs."
Mackinac Island -- In the first preview of next year's race for governor, some of the candidates argued at a debate Thursday night about raising taxes, the need for a part-time Legislature, whether prisoners should be released to curb the state budget and what Michigan needs to start generating jobs again.
...
Of all the candidates only one, Cox, would sign a no-tax pledge.
Land said she could not say she would not raise taxes as governor, but acknowledged changes are needed in the way the state raises revenue. "We have to do something," she said. "We need to create jobs."
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Mike Cox Runs for Governor
Attorney General Cox joins field for governor
The field for the 2010 governor's race continues to take shape, as Attorney General Mike Cox officially jumped into the fray on Wednesday, saying, "I'm mad as hell about what's happening to Michigan."
While it's still early, political pundits say the GOP primary is boiling down to Cox against U.S. Rep. Pete Hoekstra of Holland, who announced his entry into the contest in March.
"No one other than Cox and Hoekstra appear to be really serious about this," said Bill Ballenger, editor of the Inside Michigan Politics newsletter.
Ann Arbor businessmen Rick Snyder and David Brandon could be factors if they're willing to spend millions of dollars building up name identification. It's highly unlikely both would get in.
Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land, who is running third among Republicans in the polls, also could be a formidable candidate. She has formed an exploratory committee but has not committed to run, and some doubt she will partly because she and Hoekstra would be fighting over the same west Michigan base.
...
In the Republican primary, Hoekstra leads Cox by a point, 27 percent to 26 percent, and Land is running third at 19 percent in the News poll of 400 voters taken May 18-21 by EPIC/MRA. No one else cracks 2 percent.
Mike Cox joins governor's race saying he plans to cut $2 billion in taxes
Attorney General Mike Cox has a simple formula for fixing Michigan: Cut, then cut some more.
In announcing his candidacy for governor in 2010 Wednesday, Cox underlined his plan to cut $2 billion in taxes, including $1.3 billion from the Michigan Business Tax and repeal of $700 million in personal income tax increases approved in 2007.
Cox insisted that increased revenues stimulated by the tax cuts would help Michigan close a projected 2010 budget deficit of $1.6 billion.
...
In an exclusive interview with The Press, Cox:
• Rejected Granholm's proposal to change Michigan's flat 19-cent levy on each gallon of gas to a fixed percentage of the wholesale price. It would raise more money as gas prices rise.
"I wouldn't do that," Cox said.
Cox proposed that part of Michigan's 6 percent tax on gasoline be allocated for roads instead.
• Pushed for more nuclear and coal plants.
"I think we ought to aim to be the energy capital of America," Cox said.
"Nuclear is one way we could be more competitive in the long run. In the long run, that's a way to diversify our economy."
He noted he backs a $2 billion, 800 megawatt Consumers Energy "clean coal" operation in Essexville.
The field for the 2010 governor's race continues to take shape, as Attorney General Mike Cox officially jumped into the fray on Wednesday, saying, "I'm mad as hell about what's happening to Michigan."
While it's still early, political pundits say the GOP primary is boiling down to Cox against U.S. Rep. Pete Hoekstra of Holland, who announced his entry into the contest in March.
"No one other than Cox and Hoekstra appear to be really serious about this," said Bill Ballenger, editor of the Inside Michigan Politics newsletter.
Ann Arbor businessmen Rick Snyder and David Brandon could be factors if they're willing to spend millions of dollars building up name identification. It's highly unlikely both would get in.
Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land, who is running third among Republicans in the polls, also could be a formidable candidate. She has formed an exploratory committee but has not committed to run, and some doubt she will partly because she and Hoekstra would be fighting over the same west Michigan base.
...
In the Republican primary, Hoekstra leads Cox by a point, 27 percent to 26 percent, and Land is running third at 19 percent in the News poll of 400 voters taken May 18-21 by EPIC/MRA. No one else cracks 2 percent.
Mike Cox joins governor's race saying he plans to cut $2 billion in taxes
Attorney General Mike Cox has a simple formula for fixing Michigan: Cut, then cut some more.
In announcing his candidacy for governor in 2010 Wednesday, Cox underlined his plan to cut $2 billion in taxes, including $1.3 billion from the Michigan Business Tax and repeal of $700 million in personal income tax increases approved in 2007.
Cox insisted that increased revenues stimulated by the tax cuts would help Michigan close a projected 2010 budget deficit of $1.6 billion.
...
In an exclusive interview with The Press, Cox:
• Rejected Granholm's proposal to change Michigan's flat 19-cent levy on each gallon of gas to a fixed percentage of the wholesale price. It would raise more money as gas prices rise.
"I wouldn't do that," Cox said.
Cox proposed that part of Michigan's 6 percent tax on gasoline be allocated for roads instead.
• Pushed for more nuclear and coal plants.
"I think we ought to aim to be the energy capital of America," Cox said.
"Nuclear is one way we could be more competitive in the long run. In the long run, that's a way to diversify our economy."
He noted he backs a $2 billion, 800 megawatt Consumers Energy "clean coal" operation in Essexville.
Wednesday, May 27, 2009
Guilty by Ann Coulter
Guilty: Liberal "Victims" and their Assault on America
by Ann Coulter
Guilty is Ann Coulter's seventh book, and her most recent bestseller. This book is loosely organized around the theme of liberal 'victims' and covers a number of recent political controversies.
The first chapter outlines Coulter's thesis. Victimhood has become bizarrely fashionable in contemporary America. People can achieve a higher social status the worse off they are, or are perceived to be. This has led to the bizarre spectacle of people fabricating hardships to make themselves appear worse off.
In earlier times, success and achievement was admired. Today's victims would simply have been seen as losers or worse. People would better backgrounds and achievements, not worse.
Liberalism is not only part of the cause of this phenomenon, but it has exploited it for its own agenda. There are certainly real victims who deserve our sympathy. But liberals laud 'victims' who are not only phony, but actually create real victims in largely unrecognized ways. Liberals use victims to advance their political agenda and stifle debate, as Coulter previously showed in Godless.
Coulter cites a number of examples, including a string of phony 'hate crimes' on college campuses that were actually committed by the purported 'victims' themselves. Such controversies are trumpeted by the media. The media also has very different standards for homosexuals, lauding those whose politics they like while outing and attacking those with whom they disagree.
The second chapter of Guilty received the most media attention, and for good reason, as it is the most significant. Its topic is single motherhood.
By 'single mother', Coulter specifies women who choose to have children out of Wedlock. Coulter details the evidence that single motherhood is terrible for children. Around 60-70% of prison inmates, juvenile murders, rapists, "teenage births, dropouts, suicides, runaways, juvenile delinquents, and child murderers" come from single mothers. The primary cause of poverty is single motherhood, but government welfare programs have actually encouraged both. The alternative to single motherhood, aside from monogamy, is adoption. Adopted kids don't have the same list of social problems.
Liberals have glamorized single motherhood in movies and television. Dan Quayle was severely attacked for criticizing Murphy Brown for having a child out of wedlock. (Coulter doesn't mention that the child soon disappeared from the show. Apparently even taking care of a fictional child was too much work. After Quayle was safely out of office, there were a string of 'Dan Quayle was right' articles in the media.)
Coulter cites feminist author Barbara Ehrenreich, who has explicitly advocated single motherhood and attacked the family. She also cites a string out court decisions weakening the family. Courts broke up adoptive families in favor of lowlife unwed fathers who suddenly wanted their biological children years after conception, and they did it in the name of 'the interests of the child'. Incredibly, in 1989, the Supreme Court came within one vote of ruling that adulterers would have rights to children conceived under adultery.
Coulter advocates returning to the standard that worked, and that liberal judges dismantled. Namely, unwed fathers have no right to their children, and unwed mothers have no right to child support. Instead, rewarding single motherhood has led to lots more of it.
Coulter makes a powerful and compelling case for socially discouraging single motherhood rather than rewarding it with praise.
The rest of the book is less important, but still entertaining. Coulter debunks a number of liberal myths, particularly those created or promoted by the liberal media. One of the biggest is the 'Republican attack machine', which essentially doesn't exist. The only real 'attack machine' is the media. When liberals attack each other, they often do so by purporting to fear what the 'Republican attack machine' will say about their opponent. Coulter covers the media treatment of Obama during the campaign, particularly his political alliances with Jeremiah Wright and Bill Ayers. She tells the truth about the Swift Boat Veterans and the media's attacks on them.
Coulter documents the phenomenon of Republicans who seek fame and fortune by denouncing their party. She considers the case of former Bush spokesmen Scott McClellan. She shows how presidential biographies treat Republicans and democrats, including one by former southwest Michigan congressman and Reagan budget director David Stockman attacking Reagan. (Years later Stockman's former aide and current 6th district congressman would run for office as a 'Reagan Republican'.) She reviews the raft of books by Bush administration officials and bureaucrats attacking Bush.
One point that Coulter fails to make is that most, if not all of the turncoats were not movement conservatives, they were just hacks who were working for Bush because it was the best job they could get at the time. When a better opportunity came along, they took it and denounced him. Hiring conservatives who actually believe in something would do a lot to ameliorate this problem.
Coulter contrasts the media's treatment of Republican and democrat 'sex scandals' and claims of privacy. The media investigated every detail of Sarah Palin's family life. The media had earlier managed to unseal the divorce records of both of Barack Obama's opponents in his 2004 senate race. The media did the best it could to cover up John Edwards' affair. It created a phony controversy over George Allen's 'macaca' statement while ignoring real anti-Semitic flyers made by his opponent, Jim Webb.
Coulter reviews the many serious scandals of the Clinton administration with the phony scandals of the Bush administration. Finally, Coulter documents the media fawning over liberals for everything from 'beauty' and 'eloquence' to 'courage'.
Critics of the liberal media will never run out of material. But Coulter makes her points persuasively and effectively. Guilty is well worth reading.
Previous:
If Democrats Had Any Brains...
Godless: A Review
by Ann Coulter
Guilty is Ann Coulter's seventh book, and her most recent bestseller. This book is loosely organized around the theme of liberal 'victims' and covers a number of recent political controversies.
The first chapter outlines Coulter's thesis. Victimhood has become bizarrely fashionable in contemporary America. People can achieve a higher social status the worse off they are, or are perceived to be. This has led to the bizarre spectacle of people fabricating hardships to make themselves appear worse off.
In earlier times, success and achievement was admired. Today's victims would simply have been seen as losers or worse. People would better backgrounds and achievements, not worse.
Liberalism is not only part of the cause of this phenomenon, but it has exploited it for its own agenda. There are certainly real victims who deserve our sympathy. But liberals laud 'victims' who are not only phony, but actually create real victims in largely unrecognized ways. Liberals use victims to advance their political agenda and stifle debate, as Coulter previously showed in Godless.
Coulter cites a number of examples, including a string of phony 'hate crimes' on college campuses that were actually committed by the purported 'victims' themselves. Such controversies are trumpeted by the media. The media also has very different standards for homosexuals, lauding those whose politics they like while outing and attacking those with whom they disagree.
The second chapter of Guilty received the most media attention, and for good reason, as it is the most significant. Its topic is single motherhood.
By 'single mother', Coulter specifies women who choose to have children out of Wedlock. Coulter details the evidence that single motherhood is terrible for children. Around 60-70% of prison inmates, juvenile murders, rapists, "teenage births, dropouts, suicides, runaways, juvenile delinquents, and child murderers" come from single mothers. The primary cause of poverty is single motherhood, but government welfare programs have actually encouraged both. The alternative to single motherhood, aside from monogamy, is adoption. Adopted kids don't have the same list of social problems.
Liberals have glamorized single motherhood in movies and television. Dan Quayle was severely attacked for criticizing Murphy Brown for having a child out of wedlock. (Coulter doesn't mention that the child soon disappeared from the show. Apparently even taking care of a fictional child was too much work. After Quayle was safely out of office, there were a string of 'Dan Quayle was right' articles in the media.)
Coulter cites feminist author Barbara Ehrenreich, who has explicitly advocated single motherhood and attacked the family. She also cites a string out court decisions weakening the family. Courts broke up adoptive families in favor of lowlife unwed fathers who suddenly wanted their biological children years after conception, and they did it in the name of 'the interests of the child'. Incredibly, in 1989, the Supreme Court came within one vote of ruling that adulterers would have rights to children conceived under adultery.
Coulter advocates returning to the standard that worked, and that liberal judges dismantled. Namely, unwed fathers have no right to their children, and unwed mothers have no right to child support. Instead, rewarding single motherhood has led to lots more of it.
Coulter makes a powerful and compelling case for socially discouraging single motherhood rather than rewarding it with praise.
The rest of the book is less important, but still entertaining. Coulter debunks a number of liberal myths, particularly those created or promoted by the liberal media. One of the biggest is the 'Republican attack machine', which essentially doesn't exist. The only real 'attack machine' is the media. When liberals attack each other, they often do so by purporting to fear what the 'Republican attack machine' will say about their opponent. Coulter covers the media treatment of Obama during the campaign, particularly his political alliances with Jeremiah Wright and Bill Ayers. She tells the truth about the Swift Boat Veterans and the media's attacks on them.
Coulter documents the phenomenon of Republicans who seek fame and fortune by denouncing their party. She considers the case of former Bush spokesmen Scott McClellan. She shows how presidential biographies treat Republicans and democrats, including one by former southwest Michigan congressman and Reagan budget director David Stockman attacking Reagan. (Years later Stockman's former aide and current 6th district congressman would run for office as a 'Reagan Republican'.) She reviews the raft of books by Bush administration officials and bureaucrats attacking Bush.
One point that Coulter fails to make is that most, if not all of the turncoats were not movement conservatives, they were just hacks who were working for Bush because it was the best job they could get at the time. When a better opportunity came along, they took it and denounced him. Hiring conservatives who actually believe in something would do a lot to ameliorate this problem.
Coulter contrasts the media's treatment of Republican and democrat 'sex scandals' and claims of privacy. The media investigated every detail of Sarah Palin's family life. The media had earlier managed to unseal the divorce records of both of Barack Obama's opponents in his 2004 senate race. The media did the best it could to cover up John Edwards' affair. It created a phony controversy over George Allen's 'macaca' statement while ignoring real anti-Semitic flyers made by his opponent, Jim Webb.
Coulter reviews the many serious scandals of the Clinton administration with the phony scandals of the Bush administration. Finally, Coulter documents the media fawning over liberals for everything from 'beauty' and 'eloquence' to 'courage'.
Critics of the liberal media will never run out of material. But Coulter makes her points persuasively and effectively. Guilty is well worth reading.
Previous:
If Democrats Had Any Brains...
Godless: A Review
Tuesday, May 26, 2009
Jack Hoogendyk at Campaign for Liberty
The Congressional Water Grab
Michigan, through its Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) is one of only two states in the Union that regulates wetlands with a state agency rather than through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. This has been a problem because the state guidelines are much more strict than the federal guidelines. Additionally, the DEQ has proven to be arbitrary and capricious in its decision making and has often caused long, unnecessary delays in approving permits.
While the concerns about over-regulation by a state agency are valid, they may be rendered "moot" by recent efforts in Congress. U.S. Senator Russ Feingold has introduced a bill, S787, which was sponsored by 23 other members (all Democrats including Levin and Stabenow.) Senate Bill S787 is entitled, "To amend the Federal Water Pollution Control Act to clarify the jurisdiction of the United States over waters of the United States." Notice they start the description with the words "pollution control." That makes it sound caring and good, doesn't it?
--------------
Read it all.
Michigan, through its Department of Environmental Quality (DEQ) is one of only two states in the Union that regulates wetlands with a state agency rather than through the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. This has been a problem because the state guidelines are much more strict than the federal guidelines. Additionally, the DEQ has proven to be arbitrary and capricious in its decision making and has often caused long, unnecessary delays in approving permits.
While the concerns about over-regulation by a state agency are valid, they may be rendered "moot" by recent efforts in Congress. U.S. Senator Russ Feingold has introduced a bill, S787, which was sponsored by 23 other members (all Democrats including Levin and Stabenow.) Senate Bill S787 is entitled, "To amend the Federal Water Pollution Control Act to clarify the jurisdiction of the United States over waters of the United States." Notice they start the description with the words "pollution control." That makes it sound caring and good, doesn't it?
--------------
Read it all.
Monday, May 25, 2009
Saturday, May 23, 2009
Obama's Awful Auto Plan
Barack Obama's plan to destroy America's automakers, and Michigan with them, deserves mention.
Obama to Government Motors: 'Let's Roll'
Karen DeCoster's article above provides a good overview of what the government has done to the automakers. After being strangled for decades by government regulations and government-backed union rules, GM and Chrysler were on the verge of bankruptcy. Rather than allow this to occur, and let the companies be restructured more efficiently, the government stepped in with a taxpayer-funded 'bailout'. But later, the government decided to allow a bankruptcy anyways, only to rig the proceedings so that the government and UAW union would take over the companies, rather than the bondholders who rightfully owned them.
Obama's Emission Policy Kills 800 more Americans a Year
Now, Obama is mandating higher CAFE standards, just two years after they were increased before. They mandate that the average fuel economy of all models produced by an automaker be above a certain number of miles per gallon. Since government cannot magically change the laws of physics, this will mean that cars and trucks that fall below the average will need to be priced so high that most people can't afford to buy them, or discontinued altogether.
This will force people into smaller, lighter cars, which are also less safe. The main way of increasing the fuel economy of an existing model is to reduce the weight by making panels thinner. This will also make cars less safe. CAFE standards have been shown to kill more than a thousand people each year. Obama's new standards may kill an additional 800 people per year.
Liberals love arbitrary government mandates. Don't you conservatives believe the free market can do anything? Why not mandate that cars all get 40 miles per gallon? Conservatives don't believe that the free market can do anything, we believe that it is the best way to distinguish between what can be done, and what can't, and achieve the good things that can be done.
Liberals love to cite the moon landing, but there is a long history of arbitrary government mandates that were trumpeted when announced and quietly repealed years later when people realized how irrational they were. California provides several excellent examples: California’s Potemkin Environmentalism
This mandate is also terrible for the domestic automakers. For years, American automakers have lost over a thousand dollars per car sold. They managed to stay in business thanks to sales of trucks and SUVs. Presumably they kept making cars so they could meet the CAFE standards. Obama's new rules will end the vehicles that made Detroit money and make the ones that were already losing money much worse.
The automakers will never make money again as long as they are controlled by the government. Government-run businesses can't make money even when they are monopolies like AMTRAK and the Post Office. The automakers will require a never-ending string of billion-dollar bailouts to stay in business. When they don't have to satisfy the customer to survive, vehicle quality and service will decline. That means sales will decline further, requiring bigger bailouts.
If you need a car that can hold your whole family and isn't a death trap, you had best get shopping. Or don't buy American.
Previous:
Obama Screws Michigan
Big Three Bailout?
CAFE Carnage
Obama to Government Motors: 'Let's Roll'
Karen DeCoster's article above provides a good overview of what the government has done to the automakers. After being strangled for decades by government regulations and government-backed union rules, GM and Chrysler were on the verge of bankruptcy. Rather than allow this to occur, and let the companies be restructured more efficiently, the government stepped in with a taxpayer-funded 'bailout'. But later, the government decided to allow a bankruptcy anyways, only to rig the proceedings so that the government and UAW union would take over the companies, rather than the bondholders who rightfully owned them.
Obama's Emission Policy Kills 800 more Americans a Year
Now, Obama is mandating higher CAFE standards, just two years after they were increased before. They mandate that the average fuel economy of all models produced by an automaker be above a certain number of miles per gallon. Since government cannot magically change the laws of physics, this will mean that cars and trucks that fall below the average will need to be priced so high that most people can't afford to buy them, or discontinued altogether.
This will force people into smaller, lighter cars, which are also less safe. The main way of increasing the fuel economy of an existing model is to reduce the weight by making panels thinner. This will also make cars less safe. CAFE standards have been shown to kill more than a thousand people each year. Obama's new standards may kill an additional 800 people per year.
Liberals love arbitrary government mandates. Don't you conservatives believe the free market can do anything? Why not mandate that cars all get 40 miles per gallon? Conservatives don't believe that the free market can do anything, we believe that it is the best way to distinguish between what can be done, and what can't, and achieve the good things that can be done.
Liberals love to cite the moon landing, but there is a long history of arbitrary government mandates that were trumpeted when announced and quietly repealed years later when people realized how irrational they were. California provides several excellent examples: California’s Potemkin Environmentalism
This mandate is also terrible for the domestic automakers. For years, American automakers have lost over a thousand dollars per car sold. They managed to stay in business thanks to sales of trucks and SUVs. Presumably they kept making cars so they could meet the CAFE standards. Obama's new rules will end the vehicles that made Detroit money and make the ones that were already losing money much worse.
The automakers will never make money again as long as they are controlled by the government. Government-run businesses can't make money even when they are monopolies like AMTRAK and the Post Office. The automakers will require a never-ending string of billion-dollar bailouts to stay in business. When they don't have to satisfy the customer to survive, vehicle quality and service will decline. That means sales will decline further, requiring bigger bailouts.
If you need a car that can hold your whole family and isn't a death trap, you had best get shopping. Or don't buy American.
Previous:
Obama Screws Michigan
Big Three Bailout?
CAFE Carnage
POLITICAL UPDATE--Sovereignty
This update focuses on sovereignty. Global elitists are trying to create a world currency. They are also trying to integrate the US and European Union (EU).
William Jasper: Dumping the Dollar for Global Currency
William Jasper: U.S., Russia "Reset" the Convergence Agenda
James Perloff: EU-U.S. Integration: Unattractive Union
William Jasper: Global Fusion: The G20, IMF, and World Government
William Jasper: Somali Pirates : An Excuse to Ratify LOST?
William Jasper: “Conspiracy Theorists” Not So Crazy After All
Thomas Kilgannon: Will Obama (Inter)Nationalize the Banks?
Jerome Corsi: Canada joins Transatlantic Union effort
Joseph Farah: Out of chaos, a new world order
More information:
United Nations: Eagle Forum: United Nations
North American Union: Eagle Forum Stop SPP
Trans-Texas Corridor: Corridor Watch
William Jasper: Dumping the Dollar for Global Currency
William Jasper: U.S., Russia "Reset" the Convergence Agenda
James Perloff: EU-U.S. Integration: Unattractive Union
William Jasper: Global Fusion: The G20, IMF, and World Government
William Jasper: Somali Pirates : An Excuse to Ratify LOST?
William Jasper: “Conspiracy Theorists” Not So Crazy After All
Thomas Kilgannon: Will Obama (Inter)Nationalize the Banks?
Jerome Corsi: Canada joins Transatlantic Union effort
Joseph Farah: Out of chaos, a new world order
More information:
United Nations: Eagle Forum: United Nations
North American Union: Eagle Forum Stop SPP
Trans-Texas Corridor: Corridor Watch
Tom George's Health Care Plan
State Sen. Tom George's plan would revamp health care: Governor hopeful seeks to make coverage affordable for more
Insurance is part of the problem with health care: Our Crazy Health-Insurance System
KALAMAZOO -- State Sen. Tom George is spearheading an ambitious, comprehensive overhaul of Michigan health care that would include creation of two new programs for the uninsured -- one that would expand Medicaid to the working poor and another for middle-class families.More government programs.
George, a Texas Township Republican who is running for governor, said Monday that the programs would be subsidized by an increase in the hospital-bed tax, an annual assessment paid by Blue Cross Blue Shield and a tax paid by insurers on all of their health claims.Higher taxes.
One of two physicians in the Michigan Legislature, George said the plan would be a step toward universal health-care coverage without going to a one-payer system and would incorporate strategies promoting healthier lifestyles that could reduce health-care costs.Government regulation of personal behavior.
"We're ripe for reform," George said, pointing out that more than 1.2 million Michigan residents lack health insurance. "If more people have access (to health insurance), it would lead to a healthier Michigan."Government monitoring of personal behavior.
George also is pushing for changes in regulations of individual policies purchased by Michigan residents, which is one of the most contentious areas of health insurance. Those policies can be difficult and expensive to obtain for the people who need them most.
George chaired a bipartisan Senate task force to consider ways to make health insurance more affordable and accessible. The task force's work led to four bills that were introduced in the Senate last week, with George as the lead sponsor.
One bill would create a program called MI Access that would cover households with incomes of up to 200 percent of the federal poverty guidelines, which is about $20,000 for a single adult and $40,000 for a family of four. It would dovetail with MI Child, which provides health insurance for children from low- and moderate-income families. George estimates that up to half of the uninsured adults in Michigan would be eligible for MI Access.
The premiums would be capped at 5 percent of income, and George said they would be lower for people who have healthy lifestyles, such as nonsmokers and those who are not overweight.
MI Access would qualify for federal Medicaid dollars, George said, "money that Michigan is now leaving on the table."More federal control.
The other program, MI Coverage, would cover uninsured families with incomes of up to 300 percent of the federal poverty guideline -- about $60,000 for a family of four.Higher taxes, higher taxes, higher taxes.
MI Coverage would offer a "stripped-down" policy for a monthly premium of $50 to $60, George said. It would provide some doctor visits, prescription coverage and hospitalization. As with MI Access, George said, the premiums costs would be lower for those with healthy lifestyles.
State funding for the program would come from an increase in the state hospital-bed tax; a tax of up to 1.8 percent on insurance claims, which would be paid by insurers; and an assessment paid by Blue Cross in exchange for allowing the insurer to keep its nonprofit status even as the state enacts reforms that lessen the company's burden as the insurer of last resort.
The other two bills are specifically designed to help level the playing field between Blue Cross and other insurers.More regulation, higher premiums for policyholders.
One bill would require insurance companies to renew polices of individual policyholders even if they get sick. It also would limit policy cancellations for technical reasons and shorten the period in which companies may exclude coverage.
Currently, companies other than Blue Cross can refuse to cover an individual for any conditions that existed within a year of buying a policy; that period would be shortened to six months, the same as Blue Cross.Higher taxes.
The other bill would create a reinsurance pool to reimburse insurance companies for individual claims of more than $25,000, which would lower the incentive for insurance companies to send their most expensive clients to Blue Cross. The pool would be financed by a fee on all individual policies.
Insurance is part of the problem with health care: Our Crazy Health-Insurance System
Monday, May 18, 2009
Schuitmaker for Senate
Schuitmaker announces plans to run for state Senate
PORTAGE -- State Rep. Tonya Schuitmaker said Monday she intends to run in 2010 for the 20th District state Senate seat currently held by state Sen. Tom George.
The 20th District covers all of Kalamazoo County, including Antwerp and Paw Paw townships in Van Buren County. George cannot seek for re-election in 2010 because of term limits and said he is planning a run for governor.
Schuitmaker is the second Republican to indicate interest in the 20th District. Former state Rep. Lorence Wenke recently told the Kalamazoo Gazette he is thinking about running for the seat.
Schuitmaker, R-Antwerp Township, was first elected to the Michigan House in 2004. She represents the 80th District, covering Van Buren County, the city of Otsego and the townships of Otsego and Watson in Allegan County. She is currently Republican assistant minority floor leader and minority vice chair of the House.
Schuitmaker said she planned to file paperwork Monday to form a campaign committee and "will be taking the next year to meet with the residents of the greater Kalamazoo Valley as we work together to develop creative solutions and ideas to make Michigan better."
" The economic indicators in Michigan are not positive," she said in a statement announcing her Senate plans.
"Michigan, with its abundance of natural resources, universities and talented workforce, has been leading the nation for far too long in unemployment, decreased property values, crumbling infrastructure, and students who leave after graduating from our universities."
PORTAGE -- State Rep. Tonya Schuitmaker said Monday she intends to run in 2010 for the 20th District state Senate seat currently held by state Sen. Tom George.
The 20th District covers all of Kalamazoo County, including Antwerp and Paw Paw townships in Van Buren County. George cannot seek for re-election in 2010 because of term limits and said he is planning a run for governor.
Schuitmaker is the second Republican to indicate interest in the 20th District. Former state Rep. Lorence Wenke recently told the Kalamazoo Gazette he is thinking about running for the seat.
Schuitmaker, R-Antwerp Township, was first elected to the Michigan House in 2004. She represents the 80th District, covering Van Buren County, the city of Otsego and the townships of Otsego and Watson in Allegan County. She is currently Republican assistant minority floor leader and minority vice chair of the House.
Schuitmaker said she planned to file paperwork Monday to form a campaign committee and "will be taking the next year to meet with the residents of the greater Kalamazoo Valley as we work together to develop creative solutions and ideas to make Michigan better."
" The economic indicators in Michigan are not positive," she said in a statement announcing her Senate plans.
"Michigan, with its abundance of natural resources, universities and talented workforce, has been leading the nation for far too long in unemployment, decreased property values, crumbling infrastructure, and students who leave after graduating from our universities."
Saturday, May 16, 2009
POLITICAL UPDATE--The Economy
This update focuses on the economy. Bailouts and government regulations continue. Government monetary policy bears much blame for the present crisis.
Tim Carney: Pro-Liberty vs Pro-Business
William Hoar: Printing and Spending Our Way to Prosperity
Charles Scaliger: The New GM: Government Made
James Perloff: Our Monetary Mayhem Began With the Fed
Charles Scaliger: Creating "Wealth": The Fed Shows No Reserve
Steve Sailer: Thomas Woods’ Meltdown And The Diversity Depression
Gary North: Is George Soros an Austrian?
Phyllis Schlafly: Will the Real Secretary Geithner Please Stand Up?
Don Devine: Transformational Obama Budget
See also:
The Recession Reader
The Bailout Reader
Tim Carney: Pro-Liberty vs Pro-Business
William Hoar: Printing and Spending Our Way to Prosperity
Charles Scaliger: The New GM: Government Made
James Perloff: Our Monetary Mayhem Began With the Fed
Charles Scaliger: Creating "Wealth": The Fed Shows No Reserve
Steve Sailer: Thomas Woods’ Meltdown And The Diversity Depression
Gary North: Is George Soros an Austrian?
Phyllis Schlafly: Will the Real Secretary Geithner Please Stand Up?
Don Devine: Transformational Obama Budget
See also:
The Recession Reader
The Bailout Reader
Huntsman to China
Jon Huntsman, the Republican governor of Utah, has been appointed by President Obama as ambassador to China. He recently toured Michigan for a round of fundraising events.
Reports: Utah GOP Gov. Huntsman to resign, become Obama’s China ambassador
Utah GOP governor is Obama's pick as China envoy
Reports: Utah GOP Gov. Huntsman to resign, become Obama’s China ambassador
Utah GOP governor is Obama's pick as China envoy
With the selection, Obama may have sidelined a potentially formidable moderate Republican from the 2012 presidential field. For Huntsman, it's a chance to burnish his credentials and position himself as a viable hopeful - perhaps for 2016 if Obama is seen as a strong candidate for a second term in 2012.What terrible analysis.
Huntsman recently made headlines for encouraging his party to swing in a more moderate direction if it wants to bounce back from the 2008 elections, angering some conservatives.Why would any conservative not want people like Obama ambassador Huntsman running the party?
He has drawn the most attention for stating he favors civil unions for gay couples even though he backed a state constitutional amendment passed in 2004 that prohibited same-sex marriage.Previous: Huntsman Event
Huntsman's comments on civil unions drew the ire of conservatives in Utah and elsewhere. Officials in Michigan last month canceled a GOP county fundraiser where Huntsman was to speak, saying he had abandoned important party principles.
Thursday, May 14, 2009
Wenke Supports Hate Crimes Law
Rep. Robert Jones seeks broader, tougher hate-crime law
Previous:
Gazette on Wenke
Wenke for Senate in Kalamazoo
Robert Jones Attacks Free Speech
LANSING -- A Kalamazoo lawmaker is looking to expand Michigan's hate-crime legislation and impose steeper penalties when crimes target a victim's race, religion, sexual orientation, disability or military status.More confirmation that the real target of this legislation is speech.
A bill authored by state Rep. Robert Jones, D-Kalamazoo, to give "law enforcement and prosecutors more tools to deal with hate crimes" was reported out of the House Judiciary Committee on Wednesday.
A similar bill was approved by the Democrat-controlled House in the last legislative session, but it failed to pass the Senate, which is majority Republican. Jones and then-state Rep. Lorence Wenke, R-Comstock Township, were co-sponsors for that bill.
AFAM officials also contend the bill could be used to prosecute as accessories "pastors and others who speak out against the homosexual agenda ... any time a violent crime is committed against an individual who's involved in homosexual behavior or cross-dressing."Why mention 'verbal harassment', which is just speech they don't like, unless the goal of the law is to ban it.
Jones called that charge untrue.
"What family doesn't have someone with a disability or an ancestry of different national origins, ethnicity, race or religions, members with different veteran's status or sexual orientation?" Jones said. "All hate crime is wrong, and if we cannot say that or we want to exclude someone, I'm not for that."
Locally, the Kalamazoo Alliance for Equality says studies show that 40 percent of transgender people report experiencing physical abuse or violence, 80 percent say they have been verbally abused or harassed, and nearly half claim they regularly feel unsafe.
Previous:
Gazette on Wenke
Wenke for Senate in Kalamazoo
Robert Jones Attacks Free Speech
Tuesday, May 12, 2009
Walberg for Congress?
Tim Walberg may seek to reclaim Michigan's 7th congressional district.
Michigan Democrat Fights His District’s Freshman Curse
Michigan Democrat Fights His District’s Freshman Curse
Freshman House Democrat Mark Schauer hopes his 2010 race breaks a negative streak in the congressional politics of Michigan’s 7th District. His two immediate predecessors lasted just two years in office before they were ousted by voters.
The good news for Schauer — the former leader of the state Senate’s Democratic minority — is that both of those one-term wonders were Republicans.
Joe Schwarz, a GOP moderate, won an open-seat race after defeating a crowded field of conservative rivals in the 2004 Republican primary. In 2006, he lost a one-on-one primary race with former state Rep. Tim Walberg, one of his 2004 primary opponents. But Walberg’s bruising challenge, backed by attacks against Schwarz by the conservative group Club for Growth, left such hard feelings that Walberg only narrowly defeated a little-known and underfinanced Democratic nominee.
That outcome set him up for his 2008 loss, by just more than 2 percentage points, to the better-known and experienced Schauer, who rode a national tide running in favor of the Democrats and portrayed Walberg as too conservative and too much a supporter of Bush’s unpopular administration.
The not-so-good news for Schauer is that he could face a 2010 rematch bid by Walberg in a district that, while no longer the Republican stronghold it once was, can hardly be described as safely Democratic.
Saturday, May 09, 2009
The Race for Governor
The race for Governor of Michigan is already well underway. Some candidates have declared, others are 'exploring', and others are still rumors. Let's take a look at the state of the race.
On the democrat side, Lieutanant Governor John Cherry appears to be well-positioned to receive the nomination. Other potential candidates include former Flint mayor Don Williamson, MSU Trustee George Perless, Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano, and Macomb County Sherriff Warren Evans.
The race on the Republican side is more wide open.
Attorney General Mike Cox was the first to open an exploratory committee. He was narrowly elected in 2002 and reelected by a wider margin in 2006, in a bad year for Republicans. Cox is a populist conservative and former prosecutor who has taken conservative stances on a wide range of issues. He has issued opinions as attorney general ending driver liscences for illegal aliens, requiring identification to vote, expanding gun rights, and more. He was the only top Republican official in Michigan to endorse the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative in 2006 to end racial preferrences. Cox is from the east side of the state (Wayne County) and could do better there than other candidates.
Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land won fairly easy election victories in 2002 and 2006. She was previously the Kent County Clerk. She is generally seen as a capable manager as Secretary of State. Land is generally considered conservative, but has not taken many specific positions on the issues in the relatively nonideological positions that she has held. Land strangely interpreted an opinion issued by Cox on drivers licences for illegals that required the legislature to pass an emergency bill to avoid cutting of licences for legal noncitizens. Land did not take a position on the MCRI in 2006. Land's base is West Michigan, where she will compete with Rep. Pete Hoekstra.
Rep. Pete Hoekstra has served in Congress for 16 years representing the Holland/Muskegon area and has won easy victories in the most Republican district in Michigan. He is considered a conservative, with a 90% rating from the American Conservative Union. However, he alienated some conservatives with his vote for the 700 billion dollar bailout in 2008. His service in an unpopular Congress, particularly during the Bush years, may prove a liability. Hoekstra's base is West Michigan, where he will compete with Land and Senator Tom George.
State Senator Tom George has represented the 20th Senate district, covering Kalamazoo and part of Van Buren Counties, since 2002. He previously was a state representative 2000-2002. George is widely regarded as a capable legislator and is considered a moderate conservative. He may have turned off some conservatives with his support for a sales tax increase in 2007, smoking ban, and mandating the HPV drug Gardasil for teenage girls. George will need to expand beyond his base in Kalamazoo to win the primary.
Businessman Rick Snyder has never previously held or sought elective office. His positions on most issues are unknown. He has donated to a number of Republicans, but also supported Democrat congressman John Dingell and the group that supported human embryo destruction in the 2008 election. Snyder is believed to be planning to self-fund his campaign. Self-funding candidates usually lose, as in 2004, when 24 of 25 candidates who spent more than million dollars of their own money lost, and the one who won beat one of the other 24. Self-funding businessman Dick DeVos lost the Michigan gubernatorial race in a landslide in 2006. Snyder does not have a geographical base in Michigan.
Snyder who? I'll tell you, but you're probably not going to like it...
A few notes on Rick Snyder's various (and varied) responses
Oakland County Sheriff Mike Bouchard is considering running, but has not announced yet. Bouchard has been Sheriff for several terms, usually winning comfortably. Before that he was a state senator. He was the Republican nominee for US Senate in 2006, losing to Debbie Stabenow by a wide margin. Bouchard is generally considered conservative. He opposed the MCRI in 2006. Bouchard's base is Oakland County, and he may compete with Mike Cox for support on the east side of the state.
Prominent Republicans who have announced that they will not run include businessman and 2006 nominee Dick DeVos and Oakland County Executive Brooks Patterson.
Early polls have shown Cox and Hoekstra with the best numbers among Republicans. Cox polls the best among several top Republican candidates who lead Cherry in the general election race.
On the democrat side, Lieutanant Governor John Cherry appears to be well-positioned to receive the nomination. Other potential candidates include former Flint mayor Don Williamson, MSU Trustee George Perless, Wayne County Executive Robert Ficano, and Macomb County Sherriff Warren Evans.
The race on the Republican side is more wide open.
Attorney General Mike Cox was the first to open an exploratory committee. He was narrowly elected in 2002 and reelected by a wider margin in 2006, in a bad year for Republicans. Cox is a populist conservative and former prosecutor who has taken conservative stances on a wide range of issues. He has issued opinions as attorney general ending driver liscences for illegal aliens, requiring identification to vote, expanding gun rights, and more. He was the only top Republican official in Michigan to endorse the Michigan Civil Rights Initiative in 2006 to end racial preferrences. Cox is from the east side of the state (Wayne County) and could do better there than other candidates.
Secretary of State Terri Lynn Land won fairly easy election victories in 2002 and 2006. She was previously the Kent County Clerk. She is generally seen as a capable manager as Secretary of State. Land is generally considered conservative, but has not taken many specific positions on the issues in the relatively nonideological positions that she has held. Land strangely interpreted an opinion issued by Cox on drivers licences for illegals that required the legislature to pass an emergency bill to avoid cutting of licences for legal noncitizens. Land did not take a position on the MCRI in 2006. Land's base is West Michigan, where she will compete with Rep. Pete Hoekstra.
Rep. Pete Hoekstra has served in Congress for 16 years representing the Holland/Muskegon area and has won easy victories in the most Republican district in Michigan. He is considered a conservative, with a 90% rating from the American Conservative Union. However, he alienated some conservatives with his vote for the 700 billion dollar bailout in 2008. His service in an unpopular Congress, particularly during the Bush years, may prove a liability. Hoekstra's base is West Michigan, where he will compete with Land and Senator Tom George.
State Senator Tom George has represented the 20th Senate district, covering Kalamazoo and part of Van Buren Counties, since 2002. He previously was a state representative 2000-2002. George is widely regarded as a capable legislator and is considered a moderate conservative. He may have turned off some conservatives with his support for a sales tax increase in 2007, smoking ban, and mandating the HPV drug Gardasil for teenage girls. George will need to expand beyond his base in Kalamazoo to win the primary.
Businessman Rick Snyder has never previously held or sought elective office. His positions on most issues are unknown. He has donated to a number of Republicans, but also supported Democrat congressman John Dingell and the group that supported human embryo destruction in the 2008 election. Snyder is believed to be planning to self-fund his campaign. Self-funding candidates usually lose, as in 2004, when 24 of 25 candidates who spent more than million dollars of their own money lost, and the one who won beat one of the other 24. Self-funding businessman Dick DeVos lost the Michigan gubernatorial race in a landslide in 2006. Snyder does not have a geographical base in Michigan.
Snyder who? I'll tell you, but you're probably not going to like it...
A few notes on Rick Snyder's various (and varied) responses
Oakland County Sheriff Mike Bouchard is considering running, but has not announced yet. Bouchard has been Sheriff for several terms, usually winning comfortably. Before that he was a state senator. He was the Republican nominee for US Senate in 2006, losing to Debbie Stabenow by a wide margin. Bouchard is generally considered conservative. He opposed the MCRI in 2006. Bouchard's base is Oakland County, and he may compete with Mike Cox for support on the east side of the state.
Prominent Republicans who have announced that they will not run include businessman and 2006 nominee Dick DeVos and Oakland County Executive Brooks Patterson.
Early polls have shown Cox and Hoekstra with the best numbers among Republicans. Cox polls the best among several top Republican candidates who lead Cherry in the general election race.
POLITICAL UPDATE--Liberalism
This update focuses on liberalism. We continue to learn more about Barack Obama's origins and goals. Some congressional liberals recently traveled to Cuba and fawned over Fidel Castro.
Bettina Esser: Howard Zinn's Revisionist History Text
Humberto Fontova: Why Did Congressional Black Caucus Overlook Racism in Cuba?
Rowan Scarborough: The Great Left Smear Machine
Michelle Malkin: CBC: Congressional Bootlickers for Castro
Phyllis Schlafly: Obama's 'New World Order'
Ann Coulter: Gondon Gekko is a Democrat
Ann Coulter: Are 'Hope' and 'Change' Still Tax-Deductible?
WorldNetDaily: Why leftists love tyrants and terrorists
Steve Sailer: The “Obama Bear Market” And Why He Triggered It
Phyllis Schlafly: How a Community Organizer Became President
Brian Farmer: The Employee Free Choice Act Is a Deception
Much information on liberal individuals and organizations can be found at David Horowitz's Discover the Network site.
Bettina Esser: Howard Zinn's Revisionist History Text
Humberto Fontova: Why Did Congressional Black Caucus Overlook Racism in Cuba?
Rowan Scarborough: The Great Left Smear Machine
Michelle Malkin: CBC: Congressional Bootlickers for Castro
Phyllis Schlafly: Obama's 'New World Order'
Ann Coulter: Gondon Gekko is a Democrat
Ann Coulter: Are 'Hope' and 'Change' Still Tax-Deductible?
WorldNetDaily: Why leftists love tyrants and terrorists
Steve Sailer: The “Obama Bear Market” And Why He Triggered It
Phyllis Schlafly: How a Community Organizer Became President
Brian Farmer: The Employee Free Choice Act Is a Deception
Much information on liberal individuals and organizations can be found at David Horowitz's Discover the Network site.
Gazette on Wenke
Here is the Gazette on Wenke. The comments so far aren't flattering.
Former Michigan State Representative Lorence Wenke may run for State Senate seat
GALESBURG -- Local businessman and former Republican state Rep. Lorence Wenke has designs on becoming a Michigan senator.
But Wenke told the Kalamazoo Gazette on Friday that he will wait until 2010 to run when term-limited Sen. Tom George, R-Texas Township, completes his final term representing the 20th District.
Wenke had considered running this year for the 19th District state Senate seat, which opened after Democrat Mark Schauer was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. But a run would have required Wenke to move from his Comstock Township home to a residence in the district, which covers Calhoun County and most of Jackson County.
"It's not the right time for me to run over there. I would have to move to the district and, quite frankly, my wife of 42 years said she was willing to move, but I can tell it would not be a happy event," he said.
Wenke would have had to declare by Tuesday his intention to run for 19th District state Senate seat, which has been under Democratic control. Former state Rep. Mike Nofs, a Republican, announced last month he will run for the seat.
As a homeowner in Kalamazoo County, there are no residency issues with Wenke running in the 20th District, which represents all of the county plus a small part of Van Buren County. The 63-year-old owner of Wenke Greenhouses, who represented the 63rd District until term limits ended his tenure in 2008, said he still has much to contribute as a public servant.
Wenke said Friday that in a time when Michigan's economy is struggling, his experience as a business leader is what the state needs.
Previous:
Wenke for Senate in Kalamazoo
Wenke for Senate?
Former Michigan State Representative Lorence Wenke may run for State Senate seat
GALESBURG -- Local businessman and former Republican state Rep. Lorence Wenke has designs on becoming a Michigan senator.
But Wenke told the Kalamazoo Gazette on Friday that he will wait until 2010 to run when term-limited Sen. Tom George, R-Texas Township, completes his final term representing the 20th District.
Wenke had considered running this year for the 19th District state Senate seat, which opened after Democrat Mark Schauer was elected to the U.S. House of Representatives. But a run would have required Wenke to move from his Comstock Township home to a residence in the district, which covers Calhoun County and most of Jackson County.
"It's not the right time for me to run over there. I would have to move to the district and, quite frankly, my wife of 42 years said she was willing to move, but I can tell it would not be a happy event," he said.
Wenke would have had to declare by Tuesday his intention to run for 19th District state Senate seat, which has been under Democratic control. Former state Rep. Mike Nofs, a Republican, announced last month he will run for the seat.
As a homeowner in Kalamazoo County, there are no residency issues with Wenke running in the 20th District, which represents all of the county plus a small part of Van Buren County. The 63-year-old owner of Wenke Greenhouses, who represented the 63rd District until term limits ended his tenure in 2008, said he still has much to contribute as a public servant.
Wenke said Friday that in a time when Michigan's economy is struggling, his experience as a business leader is what the state needs.
Previous:
Wenke for Senate in Kalamazoo
Wenke for Senate?
Friday, May 08, 2009
Wenke for Senate in Kalamazoo
From MIRS:
Wenke Going For Senate . . . Next Year
"The odds are getting better that former Rep. Mike NOFS (R-Battle Creek) won't have a primary for the 19th Senate District special election."
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"If I lose the Republican nomination over my support for our gay family members, I would consider it to be an honor."-- Former Rep. Lorence WENKE, who said today he was running for the 20th Senate District in Kalamazoo in 2010.
---------------
Yes, it's going to be that kind of campaign.
Wenke Going For Senate . . . Next Year
"The odds are getting better that former Rep. Mike NOFS (R-Battle Creek) won't have a primary for the 19th Senate District special election."
QUOTE OF THE DAY
"If I lose the Republican nomination over my support for our gay family members, I would consider it to be an honor."-- Former Rep. Lorence WENKE, who said today he was running for the 20th Senate District in Kalamazoo in 2010.
---------------
Yes, it's going to be that kind of campaign.
Thursday, May 07, 2009
Wenke for Senate?
From Gongwer:
WENKE ON FENCE ON RUNNING IN 19TH SENATE SEAT
Former Rep. Lorence Wenke said he will decide in the next day if he will run in the special election for the 19th Senate seat, but if he decides not to seek that Senate seat he is definitely considering a run for the chamber in the 2010 election.
-----------------------
Wenke does not live in the district. He lives in Kalamazoo County.
WENKE ON FENCE ON RUNNING IN 19TH SENATE SEAT
Former Rep. Lorence Wenke said he will decide in the next day if he will run in the special election for the 19th Senate seat, but if he decides not to seek that Senate seat he is definitely considering a run for the chamber in the 2010 election.
-----------------------
Wenke does not live in the district. He lives in Kalamazoo County.
Election Results
In the election Tuesday, the transportation millage passed fairly easily, and the library millage passed very easily. Election Magic has returns. See also these Gazette articles.
Election results by school district/municipality
Newcomers win seats on Portage library board; incumbent unseated
After November defeat, transportation tax passes easily in Kalamazoo County
Kalamazoo, Portage schools get new trustees: Ervin Armstrong and Randy Van Antwerp
Renewal of Kalamazoo Public Library tax passes easily
Election results by school district/municipality
Newcomers win seats on Portage library board; incumbent unseated
After November defeat, transportation tax passes easily in Kalamazoo County
Kalamazoo, Portage schools get new trustees: Ervin Armstrong and Randy Van Antwerp
Renewal of Kalamazoo Public Library tax passes easily
Saturday, May 02, 2009
Taxes on the Ballot
Tuesday, May 5 is election day. Across Michigan, there will be elections for local offices and tax proposals. The most prominent is the Detroit mayoral runoff between Dave Bing and Ken Cockrell.
In Kalamazoo County, there will be a countywide millage on the ballot to fund the bus system. The money would go to the Car-a-Van system and three low-ridership bus routes in Portage. The bulk of the bus system is expected to be funded by a millage in the city of Kalamazoo in November.
This proposal is scaled down from the massive transportation proposal that was soundly defeated last November. That proposal would have made funding for the bus system entirely countywide.
However, the current proposal would still force people, particularly in outlying parts of the county, to pay for services that they don't use. As such, it should be defeated.
Also on the ballot will be a renewal of the millage for the Kalamazoo Public Libraries. KPL is aggressively promoting renewal, with "Library Champion" signs sprouting up around town.
There will also be school board and library board positions on the ballot. The Gazette provides brief profiles of some of the races.
Southwest Michigan voters to cast ballots on transit tax, school board races
In Kalamazoo school board race, a former teacher and a volunteer compete graciously
Portage school board candidates have similar views but come from different backgrounds
9 candidates run for 3 Portage library seats in May 5 election
The 2009 Election Preview has been updated.
Previous:
Future Tax Hikes?
They Won't Take NO for an Answer
Tax Eaters Are Never Full
The bus routes have been saved
Ax the bus tax
Bus Tax: The Facts
Tax increase for busing?
In Kalamazoo County, there will be a countywide millage on the ballot to fund the bus system. The money would go to the Car-a-Van system and three low-ridership bus routes in Portage. The bulk of the bus system is expected to be funded by a millage in the city of Kalamazoo in November.
This proposal is scaled down from the massive transportation proposal that was soundly defeated last November. That proposal would have made funding for the bus system entirely countywide.
However, the current proposal would still force people, particularly in outlying parts of the county, to pay for services that they don't use. As such, it should be defeated.
Also on the ballot will be a renewal of the millage for the Kalamazoo Public Libraries. KPL is aggressively promoting renewal, with "Library Champion" signs sprouting up around town.
There will also be school board and library board positions on the ballot. The Gazette provides brief profiles of some of the races.
Southwest Michigan voters to cast ballots on transit tax, school board races
In Kalamazoo school board race, a former teacher and a volunteer compete graciously
Portage school board candidates have similar views but come from different backgrounds
9 candidates run for 3 Portage library seats in May 5 election
The 2009 Election Preview has been updated.
Previous:
Future Tax Hikes?
They Won't Take NO for an Answer
Tax Eaters Are Never Full
The bus routes have been saved
Ax the bus tax
Bus Tax: The Facts
Tax increase for busing?
Huntsman Event
Utah Gov. Huntsman tells Kalamazoo County Republicans that Michigan can lead nation again
KALAMAZOO -- Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. on Saturday brought his own "Yes We Can" message to area Republicans who say they're concerned that Michigan is "leading the way," but in the wrong directions.
Huntsman, already floated as a potential 2012 GOP presidential contender, made little mention here of positions that may distance him from some conservative Republicans -- such as his support for civil unions for gay couples.
Instead, he focused most of his remarks painting a picture of a better Michigan -- under a Republican governor -- and rebuilding the GOP nationally on ideas it can articulate to American voters.
"I feel a sense of destiny in this state," Huntsman told about 65 Republicans attending a fundraiser at the Radisson Plaza Hotel & Suites in downtown Kalamazoo to help finance a permanent Kalamazoo County GOP headquarters. "You led this nation in the Industrial Revolution. And in the 1990s, remember when everybody wanted to be like Michigan?
KALAMAZOO -- Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman Jr. on Saturday brought his own "Yes We Can" message to area Republicans who say they're concerned that Michigan is "leading the way," but in the wrong directions.
Huntsman, already floated as a potential 2012 GOP presidential contender, made little mention here of positions that may distance him from some conservative Republicans -- such as his support for civil unions for gay couples.
Instead, he focused most of his remarks painting a picture of a better Michigan -- under a Republican governor -- and rebuilding the GOP nationally on ideas it can articulate to American voters.
"I feel a sense of destiny in this state," Huntsman told about 65 Republicans attending a fundraiser at the Radisson Plaza Hotel & Suites in downtown Kalamazoo to help finance a permanent Kalamazoo County GOP headquarters. "You led this nation in the Industrial Revolution. And in the 1990s, remember when everybody wanted to be like Michigan?
POLITICAL UPDATE--Environmentalism
This update focuses on environmentalism. Belief in the global warming scam continues to decline. Congress may soon consider a 'cap and trade' plan to raise taxes and damage the economy. Environmentalists continue to hamper energy production.
Floy Lilley: Out With Windmills – In With Nuclear
Warren Mass: The High Cost of Cap and Trade
Ernest Istook: Green Jobs or Gangrene?
Terry Easton: Cap and Trade: A New Disaster Waiting to Happen in 2009
Ed Hiserodt: A Cooling Trend Toward Global Warming
Chris Horner: Is Our President a 'Carbon Communist'?
Michelle Malkin: The Shut Up and Swallow Congress
Warren Mass: Cap and Trade: A Huge, Regressive Tax
Phyllis Schlafly: Global Warming Is Running Out of Hot Air
William Hoar: Trying to Turn CO2 Into Au
Ed Hiserodt: Wind vs. Nuclear Power: Which Is Safer?
POLITICAL UPDATES are archived here.
Floy Lilley: Out With Windmills – In With Nuclear
Warren Mass: The High Cost of Cap and Trade
Ernest Istook: Green Jobs or Gangrene?
Terry Easton: Cap and Trade: A New Disaster Waiting to Happen in 2009
Ed Hiserodt: A Cooling Trend Toward Global Warming
Chris Horner: Is Our President a 'Carbon Communist'?
Michelle Malkin: The Shut Up and Swallow Congress
Warren Mass: Cap and Trade: A Huge, Regressive Tax
Phyllis Schlafly: Global Warming Is Running Out of Hot Air
William Hoar: Trying to Turn CO2 Into Au
Ed Hiserodt: Wind vs. Nuclear Power: Which Is Safer?
POLITICAL UPDATES are archived here.
Colleges Flunk Economics Test
Colleges Flunk Economics Test as Harvard Model Destroys Budgets
Another long article on the plight of colleges.
Kalamazoo College is featured extensively in the article.
----------------------
“Pell serves the neediest students, but our middle-class families need help too right now,” says Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran, president of Kalamazoo College, a liberal arts school in Michigan.
...
Kalamazoo College, with 1,340 students, has told professors to increase class sizes so it can boost tuition revenue.
...
At Kalamazoo College, the main cafeteria, which the school renovated as part of $14.5 million in spending on the student center last year, lets students pick among pizza, hamburgers, grilled vegetables, make-your-own salads and a dozen other choices.
...
Kalamazoo College, 240 miles to the east, is scrambling to slash $2.8 million in costs. It needs to compensate for the 28 percent decline in its $157 million endowment and the expected increase in financial aid it will have to dole out next year.
On this sunny March day, Kalamazoo’s tree-lined campus is bustling with people walking to class and studying on the lawn. Students, mainly from Michigan, and faculty mostly know each other by first name. Classes range from 1 person in an upper- level Italian course to 40 in some introductory classes. For the small classes and personal attention, students pay $38,166 a year, including room and board.
Saving Money
Saving money is a campus-wide affair. On this day, about 40 students, professors and staff gather in a wood-paneled conference room. The group calls out suggestions, and students write them on easels lined with blank white paper: Dorm hall lights shouldn’t be on 24/7; videoconferencing instead of travel; rent classrooms to companies.
While those ideas will help, the only savior for a school like Kalamazoo is more paying students. Last year, it had six fewer than anticipated, which means it will lose about $1 million over four years, says Jeffrey Haus, a professor of religion and history who’s on the admissions committee.
“They’re asking us to increase the size of attendance,” Haus says. “Larger classes work against the mission of a small liberal arts college.”
Amanda West, a first-year Kalamazoo student from Los Angeles, says she might transfer to a bigger school that costs less and offers more.
“I’m worried that my experience here won’t be as rich as it could be,” she says.
Another long article on the plight of colleges.
Kalamazoo College is featured extensively in the article.
----------------------
“Pell serves the neediest students, but our middle-class families need help too right now,” says Eileen Wilson-Oyelaran, president of Kalamazoo College, a liberal arts school in Michigan.
...
Kalamazoo College, with 1,340 students, has told professors to increase class sizes so it can boost tuition revenue.
...
At Kalamazoo College, the main cafeteria, which the school renovated as part of $14.5 million in spending on the student center last year, lets students pick among pizza, hamburgers, grilled vegetables, make-your-own salads and a dozen other choices.
...
Kalamazoo College, 240 miles to the east, is scrambling to slash $2.8 million in costs. It needs to compensate for the 28 percent decline in its $157 million endowment and the expected increase in financial aid it will have to dole out next year.
On this sunny March day, Kalamazoo’s tree-lined campus is bustling with people walking to class and studying on the lawn. Students, mainly from Michigan, and faculty mostly know each other by first name. Classes range from 1 person in an upper- level Italian course to 40 in some introductory classes. For the small classes and personal attention, students pay $38,166 a year, including room and board.
Saving Money
Saving money is a campus-wide affair. On this day, about 40 students, professors and staff gather in a wood-paneled conference room. The group calls out suggestions, and students write them on easels lined with blank white paper: Dorm hall lights shouldn’t be on 24/7; videoconferencing instead of travel; rent classrooms to companies.
While those ideas will help, the only savior for a school like Kalamazoo is more paying students. Last year, it had six fewer than anticipated, which means it will lose about $1 million over four years, says Jeffrey Haus, a professor of religion and history who’s on the admissions committee.
“They’re asking us to increase the size of attendance,” Haus says. “Larger classes work against the mission of a small liberal arts college.”
Amanda West, a first-year Kalamazoo student from Los Angeles, says she might transfer to a bigger school that costs less and offers more.
“I’m worried that my experience here won’t be as rich as it could be,” she says.
Thursday, April 30, 2009
Robert Jones Attacks Free Speech
State Rep. Robert Jones has introduced a 'hate crimes' bill in the State House. Since real crimes, 'hate' or otherwise are already illegal, 'hate crimes' bills serve to punish 'hate', i.e. thoughts and opinions that liberals don't like, whether or not there is anything hateful about them.
'Hate crimes' laws in Canada and Europe have been used to silence and imprison critics of 'gay rights'. Conservative author Mark Steyn nearly had his book banned in Canada after merely quoting a Muslim laying out his agenda. Even in America, Christians in Philadelphia were arrested and charged (later dropped) for peacefully protesting during a 'gay rights' parade.
Now Robert Jones wants to bring these laws to Michigan. Have no doubt that the left does not support free speech.
-------------------
Dear AFA-Michigan supporter,
State-level "hate crime" legislation, like its federal counterpart, would provide special legal status and protection based on homosexual behavior and cross-dressing that does not apply to citizens who don't fall into a special "protected class."
This legislation, if enacted, will be the mechanism by which homosexual activists pursue their expressly-stated intent to see individuals who dare publicly oppose their political agenda be criminally tried as accessories to any violent crime committed against individuals who engage in such behavior.
We'll keep you advised as these threats to free speech and equal protection under law proceed.
Gary Glenn
AFA-Michigan
----------------------------------------------
MICHIGAN MESSENGER
Lansing, Michigan
April 24, 2009
State lawmakers introduce bias
crimes legislation in the House
by Todd A. Heywood
Dan Levy, chief legal officer of the Michigan Department of Civil Rights, announced today that two bills have been introduced in the state House to combat hate crimes. The bills, HB 4835 and HB 4836, were introduced by Rep. Robert Jones (D-Kalamazoo) and Rep. Woodrow Stanley (D-Flint), respectively.
HB 4835 will add additional sentencing for convictions on bias motivated crimes, while HB 4836 will expand the current Ethnic Intimidation Act to include such categories as handicap, gender identity and or expression, sexual orientation and political beliefs. Similar measures were introduced last session, and passed the Democratically controlled House 81-18. They were never taken up in the state Senate, and died at the end of the legislative session.“We are behind this 110 percent,” Levy said. “We have every intention of moving it along. We are hoping for June hearings to coincide with the Vincent Chin death.”
Chin, Levy said, was beaten to death on the eve of his wedding more than a decade ago because his assailants thought the Chinese man was Japanese and they were upset that Japanese cars were outselling American made vehicles.
The move also coincides with a move in Congress to pass the Matthew Shepard Act.
http://michiganmessenger.com/17667/state-lawmakers-introduce-bias-crimes-legislation-in-the-house
'Hate crimes' laws in Canada and Europe have been used to silence and imprison critics of 'gay rights'. Conservative author Mark Steyn nearly had his book banned in Canada after merely quoting a Muslim laying out his agenda. Even in America, Christians in Philadelphia were arrested and charged (later dropped) for peacefully protesting during a 'gay rights' parade.
Now Robert Jones wants to bring these laws to Michigan. Have no doubt that the left does not support free speech.
-------------------
Dear AFA-Michigan supporter,
State-level "hate crime" legislation, like its federal counterpart, would provide special legal status and protection based on homosexual behavior and cross-dressing that does not apply to citizens who don't fall into a special "protected class."
This legislation, if enacted, will be the mechanism by which homosexual activists pursue their expressly-stated intent to see individuals who dare publicly oppose their political agenda be criminally tried as accessories to any violent crime committed against individuals who engage in such behavior.
We'll keep you advised as these threats to free speech and equal protection under law proceed.
Gary Glenn
AFA-Michigan
----------------------------------------------
MICHIGAN MESSENGER
Lansing, Michigan
April 24, 2009
State lawmakers introduce bias
crimes legislation in the House
by Todd A. Heywood
Dan Levy, chief legal officer of the Michigan Department of Civil Rights, announced today that two bills have been introduced in the state House to combat hate crimes. The bills, HB 4835 and HB 4836, were introduced by Rep. Robert Jones (D-Kalamazoo) and Rep. Woodrow Stanley (D-Flint), respectively.
HB 4835 will add additional sentencing for convictions on bias motivated crimes, while HB 4836 will expand the current Ethnic Intimidation Act to include such categories as handicap, gender identity and or expression, sexual orientation and political beliefs. Similar measures were introduced last session, and passed the Democratically controlled House 81-18. They were never taken up in the state Senate, and died at the end of the legislative session.“We are behind this 110 percent,” Levy said. “We have every intention of moving it along. We are hoping for June hearings to coincide with the Vincent Chin death.”
Chin, Levy said, was beaten to death on the eve of his wedding more than a decade ago because his assailants thought the Chinese man was Japanese and they were upset that Japanese cars were outselling American made vehicles.
The move also coincides with a move in Congress to pass the Matthew Shepard Act.
http://michiganmessenger.com/17667/state-lawmakers-introduce-bias-crimes-legislation-in-the-house
Commentaries on College
This blog loves articles questioning the structure of college, and so couldn't pass up these items.
End the University as We Know It
The Problem with Graduate Education
End the University as We Know It
The Problem with Graduate Education
WMU Professor Rethinking Marxism
Vincent Lyon-Callo is a Western Michigan University professor in the Department of Anthropology. He organizing a conference on Marxism for a journal called Rethinking Marxism.
Rethinking Marxism: Organizing Team
It doesn't appear they're rethinking Marxism in a good way.
Rethinking Marxism: Organizing Team
It doesn't appear they're rethinking Marxism in a good way.
ACU Conservative Ratings Released
The American Conservative Union has released its ratings of Congress for 2008.
ACU Ratings: 2008
Here are the ratings for Michigan.
ACU Ratings: Michigan 2008
Local Congressman Fred Upton received a 44% conservative rating.
Here is a description of the votes on which he took the opposite position of ACU.
1. Housing Bill HR 3524 (Roll Call 18). The House passed a bill that authorized a 700% increase in spending on the HOPE VI Public Housing Program that has $2 billion in unspent funds and was recommended for elimination by the Bush Administration. ACU opposes this reckless spending but it passed January 17, 2008 by a vote of 271-130.TOP
2. Children’s Health Insurance Veto HR 3963 (Roll Call 22). The House sustained the president’s veto of a bill to more than double spending on the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) for poor children but prohibited HHS from requiring poor children to be covered first. The bill included a 156% increase in the federal excise tax on tobacco. ACU opposed this effort to expand government-run health care. The veto was sustained January 23, 2008, by a vote of 260-152 (under the Constitution, two-thirds of those voting are needed to override a veto, in this case 275).TOP
6. Mortgage Bailout Program HR 3221 (Roll Call 301). The House adopted a bill expanding the government-sponsored housing authorities, guaranteeing loans made by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac while reducing their capital by creating a $4 billion trust fund available to ACORN and other groups. ACU opposed the federal takeover of these entities but the bill was passed May 8, 2008 by a vote of 266-154.TOP
8. Supplemental Appropriations HR 2642 (Roll Call 330). The House passed additional appropriations for various agencies in three sections. This portion included an income tax surcharge as an offset for veterans’ benefits and prevented HHS from implementing Medicaid reforms already approved by Congress. ACU opposes this kind of “emergency” spending as well as tax increases, but the bill was adopted May 15, 2008 by a vote of 256-166.TOP
9. Tax Provision Extensions HR 6049 (Roll Call 344). The House passed a bill extending expiring and expired tax provisions. The bill extended tax credits for so-called “renewable” and alternative energy sources for one year while permanently increasing some business taxes. ACU objects to this legislative sleight-of-hand, but the bill passed May 21, 2008 by a vote of 263-160.TOP
10. Missile Defense HR 5658 (Roll Call 356). The House defeated an amendment to strengthen the nation’s immediate antiballistic missile program. ACU regards national defense as the first priority of the federal government and supported this amendment, which was rejected May 22, 2008 by a vote of 186-229.TOP
11. Farm Bill Veto Override HR 6124 (Roll Call 417). The House passed, over the president’s veto, a bill that continues subsidies for farmers making up to $2 million annually and for crops that have increased in price. ACU opposes federal interference in the nation’s agriculture, but the bill was passed June 18, 2008 by a more than two-thirds Constitutional majority vote of 317-109.TOP
12. Paid Parental Leave HR 5781 (Roll Call 428). The House passed a bill providing that four of the 12 weeks of parental leave provided by the federal government to its employees would be paid leave, and removing the requirement that employees demonstrate a medical need for sick leave used. ACU opposes liberalizing these federal leave provisions, but the bill passed June 19, 2008 by a vote of 278-146.TOP
17. Davis-Bacon Act The House rejected an amendment eliminating the “prevailing wage,” or union wage requirements on military construction projects which adds billions to the project costs. ACU opposes this Davis-Bacon Act requirement, but the amendment was defeated August 1, 2008 by a vote of 143-275.TOP
21. Tax Extensions HR 7060 (Roll Call 649). The House passed a bill extending a number of expired and expiring energy-related and other business-targeted tax breaks for one year while permanently increasing taxes on domestic energy producers and others. ACU opposed this effort, which passed September 26, 2008 by a vote of 257-166.TOP
22. “Stimulus” Spending Bill HR 7110 (Roll Call 660). The House gave final passage to a bill providing additional spending for roads and bridges, energy development, housing and nutrition assistance, and water and sewer projects. The bill also added aid to states that were in financial difficulty due to overspending. ACU objects to this kind of “emergency” appropriating, since it gives too much leeway for “earmarked” pork barrel projects. The bill passed September 26, 2008 by a vote of 264-158.TOP
23. Financial Services Industry Bailout HR 3997 (Roll Call 674). The House refused to agree to Senate amendments bailing out the financial services industry by giving sole authority to the Secretary of the Treasury to disburse $700 billion “without restriction.” ACU opposes nationalization of an industry and the bill was temporarily defeated September 29, 2008 by a vote of 205-228.TOP
24. Financial Services Industry Bailout HR 1424 (Roll Call 681). Following its first defeat of this bailout package, House leadership brought the bill back from the Senate that combined the original bill with the business tax extension bill (see #21) and a one-year modification to the Alternative Minimum Tax. ACU is opposed but in this form it passed the House October 3, 2008 by a vote of 263-171.TOP
25. Automobile Industry Bailout HR 7321 (Roll Call 690). The House voted to pass a bill bailing out the three Detroit-based auto manufacturers to the tune of more than $14 billion. ACU opposed this effort, but the House passed it December 10, 2008 by a vote of 237-170.TOP
ACU Ratings: 2008
Here are the ratings for Michigan.
ACU Ratings: Michigan 2008
Local Congressman Fred Upton received a 44% conservative rating.
Here is a description of the votes on which he took the opposite position of ACU.
1. Housing Bill HR 3524 (Roll Call 18). The House passed a bill that authorized a 700% increase in spending on the HOPE VI Public Housing Program that has $2 billion in unspent funds and was recommended for elimination by the Bush Administration. ACU opposes this reckless spending but it passed January 17, 2008 by a vote of 271-130.TOP
2. Children’s Health Insurance Veto HR 3963 (Roll Call 22). The House sustained the president’s veto of a bill to more than double spending on the State Children’s Health Insurance Program (SCHIP) for poor children but prohibited HHS from requiring poor children to be covered first. The bill included a 156% increase in the federal excise tax on tobacco. ACU opposed this effort to expand government-run health care. The veto was sustained January 23, 2008, by a vote of 260-152 (under the Constitution, two-thirds of those voting are needed to override a veto, in this case 275).TOP
6. Mortgage Bailout Program HR 3221 (Roll Call 301). The House adopted a bill expanding the government-sponsored housing authorities, guaranteeing loans made by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac while reducing their capital by creating a $4 billion trust fund available to ACORN and other groups. ACU opposed the federal takeover of these entities but the bill was passed May 8, 2008 by a vote of 266-154.TOP
8. Supplemental Appropriations HR 2642 (Roll Call 330). The House passed additional appropriations for various agencies in three sections. This portion included an income tax surcharge as an offset for veterans’ benefits and prevented HHS from implementing Medicaid reforms already approved by Congress. ACU opposes this kind of “emergency” spending as well as tax increases, but the bill was adopted May 15, 2008 by a vote of 256-166.TOP
9. Tax Provision Extensions HR 6049 (Roll Call 344). The House passed a bill extending expiring and expired tax provisions. The bill extended tax credits for so-called “renewable” and alternative energy sources for one year while permanently increasing some business taxes. ACU objects to this legislative sleight-of-hand, but the bill passed May 21, 2008 by a vote of 263-160.TOP
10. Missile Defense HR 5658 (Roll Call 356). The House defeated an amendment to strengthen the nation’s immediate antiballistic missile program. ACU regards national defense as the first priority of the federal government and supported this amendment, which was rejected May 22, 2008 by a vote of 186-229.TOP
11. Farm Bill Veto Override HR 6124 (Roll Call 417). The House passed, over the president’s veto, a bill that continues subsidies for farmers making up to $2 million annually and for crops that have increased in price. ACU opposes federal interference in the nation’s agriculture, but the bill was passed June 18, 2008 by a more than two-thirds Constitutional majority vote of 317-109.TOP
12. Paid Parental Leave HR 5781 (Roll Call 428). The House passed a bill providing that four of the 12 weeks of parental leave provided by the federal government to its employees would be paid leave, and removing the requirement that employees demonstrate a medical need for sick leave used. ACU opposes liberalizing these federal leave provisions, but the bill passed June 19, 2008 by a vote of 278-146.TOP
17. Davis-Bacon Act The House rejected an amendment eliminating the “prevailing wage,” or union wage requirements on military construction projects which adds billions to the project costs. ACU opposes this Davis-Bacon Act requirement, but the amendment was defeated August 1, 2008 by a vote of 143-275.TOP
21. Tax Extensions HR 7060 (Roll Call 649). The House passed a bill extending a number of expired and expiring energy-related and other business-targeted tax breaks for one year while permanently increasing taxes on domestic energy producers and others. ACU opposed this effort, which passed September 26, 2008 by a vote of 257-166.TOP
22. “Stimulus” Spending Bill HR 7110 (Roll Call 660). The House gave final passage to a bill providing additional spending for roads and bridges, energy development, housing and nutrition assistance, and water and sewer projects. The bill also added aid to states that were in financial difficulty due to overspending. ACU objects to this kind of “emergency” appropriating, since it gives too much leeway for “earmarked” pork barrel projects. The bill passed September 26, 2008 by a vote of 264-158.TOP
23. Financial Services Industry Bailout HR 3997 (Roll Call 674). The House refused to agree to Senate amendments bailing out the financial services industry by giving sole authority to the Secretary of the Treasury to disburse $700 billion “without restriction.” ACU opposes nationalization of an industry and the bill was temporarily defeated September 29, 2008 by a vote of 205-228.TOP
24. Financial Services Industry Bailout HR 1424 (Roll Call 681). Following its first defeat of this bailout package, House leadership brought the bill back from the Senate that combined the original bill with the business tax extension bill (see #21) and a one-year modification to the Alternative Minimum Tax. ACU is opposed but in this form it passed the House October 3, 2008 by a vote of 263-171.TOP
25. Automobile Industry Bailout HR 7321 (Roll Call 690). The House voted to pass a bill bailing out the three Detroit-based auto manufacturers to the tune of more than $14 billion. ACU opposed this effort, but the House passed it December 10, 2008 by a vote of 237-170.TOP
Wednesday, April 29, 2009
Local News
Local news from Kalamazoo and Michigan.
RightMichigan Exclusive: An Interview with Representative Jase Bolger (R-Marshall)
Utah GOP Gov. Jon Huntsman, supporter of civil unions to speak in Kalamazoo
Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman's canceled meeting with local GOP draws response
Kent County Republican Party cancels speech by Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman over his support of civil unions
Kalamazoo may adopt gay-protection rules
9 candidates run for 3 Portage library seats in May 5 election
Portage voters may be pivotal in bus tax vote
New Western Michigan University students will pay more to live in dorms
Check that: Anonymous donor actually gave $2 million to Kalamazoo College
Special election appealed, Knappen is WSA president
Kalamazoo’s Tax Day Tea Party
Nordstrand named WSA president
FIRE through the night
High-speed Kalamazoo-Niles rail link planned
RightMichigan Exclusive: An Interview with Representative Jase Bolger (R-Marshall)
Utah GOP Gov. Jon Huntsman, supporter of civil unions to speak in Kalamazoo
Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman's canceled meeting with local GOP draws response
Kent County Republican Party cancels speech by Utah Gov. Jon Huntsman over his support of civil unions
Kalamazoo may adopt gay-protection rules
9 candidates run for 3 Portage library seats in May 5 election
Portage voters may be pivotal in bus tax vote
New Western Michigan University students will pay more to live in dorms
Check that: Anonymous donor actually gave $2 million to Kalamazoo College
Special election appealed, Knappen is WSA president
Kalamazoo’s Tax Day Tea Party
Nordstrand named WSA president
FIRE through the night
High-speed Kalamazoo-Niles rail link planned
Tuesday, April 28, 2009
Who is James Tyler?
A candidate has declared for the 20th district state senate seat currently held by Tom George, who is term-limited.
http://www.jamestyler.org/
What an amazing candidate.
http://www.jamestyler.org/
What an amazing candidate.
Election Vindicated
Special election appealed, Knappen is WSA president
(Actually, that still isn't quite right. A majority is greater than 50%. If there are three voters, then 50% + 1 is 2.5 votes, but > 50% is > 1.5 votes = 2 votes assuming votes are whole numbers.)
Nate Knappen and Janine Putnam are now the president and vice-president elect of the Western Student Association, ending a six-week controversy.What caused the problem?
On Thursday, April 23, the Judicial Committee of the WSA held a public hearing to hear the Knappen / Putnam campaign’s appeal of the Election Control Board’s decision that the results of the special election did not yield a winner.
The JC found that there was a misunderstanding of the percentage of the popular vote that made up a victory. In the special election, it was assumed that it was 51 percent of the popular vote. The JC ruled that it was really 50 percent plus one vote.Fools.
(Actually, that still isn't quite right. A majority is greater than 50%. If there are three voters, then 50% + 1 is 2.5 votes, but > 50% is > 1.5 votes = 2 votes assuming votes are whole numbers.)
The peculiar 2009 election began after the ECB contested the original election results on March 20 after allegations surfaced that the Knappen / Putnam campaign violated terms of the Student Election Code. The JC found Knappen / Putnam campaign guilty.The WSA is still a joke, but at least the election winners actually won.
In the first election, Knappen / Putnam received 1,200 votes, or 60 percent, Nordstrand / Dunsmore got 38 percent with 800 votes, and 40 votes were write in candidates making two percent.
Those results were nullified and the JC scheduled a special election to take place from April 13-15. The election was open to new candidates and Sasha Acker and Chris Caloia joined the race. 1,225 students voted, of which Knappen / Putnam received 614 votes, Nordstrand / Dunsmore 388 votes, and Acker / Caloia 209 votes.
According the JC report, four write-in candidates were eliminated, giving Knappen a 50.29 percent margin. But a victory, at the time, was considered to be 51 percent.
The duty to elect the president was then sent to the senate, as stated in the constitution, and following hours of debate, Nordstrand / Dunsmore was elected with 21 of the 36 votes, the other 15 going to Knappen/Putnam. Nordstrand and Dunsmore were immediately sworn in as president and vice president.
“The concept that minimum threshold for majority vote was 51 percent, arose extraneously per miscommunication of the procedures of the Special Election,” reads the same JC report.
“It was unnecessary and an error because of the time crunch,” former justice Alexander Smith said. “We felt we had to have a president elected.”Smith added that the 51 percent victory margin came about through miscommunication with the ECB.
“The Election Control Board acted in good faith, but alas in error, in ruling the Special Election failed to produce majority-threshold result, based on a misunderstanding that the minimum threshold for majority vote was 51percent,” reads the JC report.
“No one wants to admit where the number came from,” Freye said, adding that he never believed the majority was 51 percent, but went along with what the JC dictated.
“There was serious miscommunication,” Freye said, “but I wouldn’t go so far as say it was a misunderstanding.”
Freye went on to say that he probably should have submitted his disagreement to the JC in writing.
“Mistakes were made, there were oversights, but why did it take him [Knappen] losing to take issue with the 51 percent?” he asked. “This whole situation is very detrimental to WSA.”
Nate Knappen said he and Putnam submitted their contention the day after the election, on April 17.
For now, at least, it looks like things are going to settle down for the WSA.
Smith said that the J.C. did everything they could to make sure there was nothing to be appealed in their ruling. “Technically, Stacy and Courtney have a window to appeal,” Smith said. “Those appeals would be circular and lack merit.”
While Knappen may be president-elect, there is no census on who is actually the president of WSA now.
“I assume I am kind of the acting president,” Andrew Ladd said, speaker of the senate.
There is really little happening as to official WSA business over the summer. “There really is no function for the president [until the fall],” Smith said.
For the candidates, the first election, then re-election, one president and then another has been a roller coaster.
“For us, it is unfortunate,” Nordstrand said. “We followed the process and didn’t do anything wrong along the way. Whoever leads WSA has a lot to do. Good luck.”
Knappen said the first thing he will do as president is to revise the bylaws of the WSA to weed out any ambiguities.
“[The election] shows that WSA is willing to admit mistakes and go about things in the right way,” Knappen said. “We hope students feel welcome to voicing their concerns with us.”
The question that remains is how WSA will be viewed by students who left in the spring thinking Nordstrand was their president, and coming back in the fall to see Knappen.
“It looks bad on our part to do it retroactively,” Ladd said. He wants everyone to know that everything happened the way it was laid out. “Everything happened the way it should have and as transparent as possible.”
“We’re not professional politicians,” he added. “We are rolling with it and doing the best we can.”
Knappen will be sworn in as president at a special assembly of WSA in Lansing, as part of WMU Day at the Capitol on May 27.
Bill Steffen Versus Global Warming Nuts
WOOD tv 8 weatherman Bill Steffen criticizes global warming fearmongering.
MSNBC vs. local weatherman
MSNBC vs. local weatherman
MSNBC is running a four-part series entitled Future Earth. On their website they say you can “find out why Earth’s climate machine — the North Pole — is melting alarmingly fast. Learn about our planet’s future, and how you can stop its decline.”He must not have heard about the SCIENTIFIC CONSENSUS.
First, the North Pole is not “Earth’s Climate Machine”. There is far more heat and area in the Tropics than at the North Pole. Second, YOU can’t stop it’s decline (assuming it’s declining)! Nature is big - you personally are insignificant compared to nature. Don’t you wish you had the power to control icecaps!
[...]
The Antarctic icecap (which is much bigger than the Arctic icecap) has been growing. In Sept. 1979 (first year of satellite data) the Antarctic icecap was 18.4 million sq. km. In Sept. 2008, the Antarctic icecap was at 19.2 million sq. km. That’s a 30-year trend. By comparison, Michigan is 151,586 sq. km, so that’s an increase in icecover of over five times the area of Michigan.
MSNBC could instead be doing a story on the trend of cooling in Antarctica and possible falling sea levels due to ice accumulation in Antarctica. Keep in mind that if the Polar icecap (without Greenland) melted…it would hardly cause sea level to rise, because the icecap is currently displacing water in the Arctic Ocean.
Club for Growth Ratings
The Club for Growth has released its 2008 ratings of Congress.
The 2008 Congressional Scorecard - House
The 2008 Congressional Scorecard - Senate
Democrat Senators Carl Levin scored 3% and Debbie Stabenow scored 13%.
Republican Congressman Fred Upton scored 39%.
The 2008 Congressional Scorecard - House
The 2008 Congressional Scorecard - Senate
Democrat Senators Carl Levin scored 3% and Debbie Stabenow scored 13%.
Republican Congressman Fred Upton scored 39%.
Sunday, April 26, 2009
POLITICAL UDPATE--The Culture War
This update focues on the culture war. Liberals, elitists, and judicial activists continue to undermine traditional American culture. Abortion, marriage, and immigration are just some of the salient issues.
Selwyn Duke: According to Kinsey, Deviancy Is the New Normal
Phyllis Schlafly: Ginsburg's Judicial Activism Goes International
Don Devine: Capitalist Moral Hazard
Selwyn Duke: Obama: Rescuing Dogs and Rending Babies
Phyllis Schlafly: Yes, Marriage Can Be Saved From the Gay Lobby
Steve Sailer: Demography Is Destiny. And Our Destiny (Courtesy Of Immigration Policy) Is Disastrous
Terry Jeffrey: Obama's Carefully Crafted Cloning Contradiction
Phyllis Schlafly: The Court's One-Two Punch
John McManus: Why America's Culture Is Being Undermined
Patrick Krey: Is Conservatism Dead?
POLITICAL UPDATES are archived here.
Selwyn Duke: According to Kinsey, Deviancy Is the New Normal
Phyllis Schlafly: Ginsburg's Judicial Activism Goes International
Don Devine: Capitalist Moral Hazard
Selwyn Duke: Obama: Rescuing Dogs and Rending Babies
Phyllis Schlafly: Yes, Marriage Can Be Saved From the Gay Lobby
Steve Sailer: Demography Is Destiny. And Our Destiny (Courtesy Of Immigration Policy) Is Disastrous
Terry Jeffrey: Obama's Carefully Crafted Cloning Contradiction
Phyllis Schlafly: The Court's One-Two Punch
John McManus: Why America's Culture Is Being Undermined
Patrick Krey: Is Conservatism Dead?
POLITICAL UPDATES are archived here.
Monday, April 20, 2009
POLITICAL UPDATE--News from Abroad
This update focuses on news from abroad. Increasing violence in Mexico threatens American interests. Trouble continues in Somalia, Zimbabwe, and elsewhere.
Robert Spencer: The Somali Pirates Are Jihadists
Warren Mass: From Riches to Rags: Inflation & Poverty in Zimbabwe
Bay Buchanan: Mexico Meltdown II -- Are We Serious Yet?
Alex Newman: Violence in Mexico
Warren Mass: Clinton Meets with Abbas
Warren Mass: Russia's Puzzling Role in Afghan Theater
Allan Wall: Memo From Middle America: Wargaming Mexico—Will The U.S. Have To Invade?
Jed Babbin: State of the War
Brenda Walker: More On Mexico’s Meltdown: Bush Team's Parting Assessments Should Alarm Obama
POLITICAL UPDATES are archived here.
Robert Spencer: The Somali Pirates Are Jihadists
Warren Mass: From Riches to Rags: Inflation & Poverty in Zimbabwe
Bay Buchanan: Mexico Meltdown II -- Are We Serious Yet?
Alex Newman: Violence in Mexico
Warren Mass: Clinton Meets with Abbas
Warren Mass: Russia's Puzzling Role in Afghan Theater
Allan Wall: Memo From Middle America: Wargaming Mexico—Will The U.S. Have To Invade?
Jed Babbin: State of the War
Brenda Walker: More On Mexico’s Meltdown: Bush Team's Parting Assessments Should Alarm Obama
POLITICAL UPDATES are archived here.
Stolen Election?
Something looks bad at the WSA.
Nordstrand named WSA president
So there was a special election.
Based on the comments, it appears that the Judicial Council simply made up a wrong definition of 'majority', requiring 51% rather than >50%.
Even by the low standards of the WSA, this is bad.
Previous: WSA Follies
Nordstrand named WSA president
The Western Student Association inaugurated a new president and vice president in their last meeting of the year.Let's review. Knappen Putnam won the first election by a vote of 1200 to 800 (60% to 40%). The results of the election were thrown out on the highly dubious grounds that it was a major election crime to encourage people to vote and make it easy for them to do so. (Specifically, by providing a laptop to vote online.)
WSA senators elected Stacy Nordstrand and Courtney Dunsmore president and vice president April 15 during a special election by senators. The election was held because no party held the majority after the special election April 13.
So there was a special election.
In the special election held April 13, Knappen-Putnam received 50 percent of the vote, 614 votes out of 1,225 votes total. Nordstrand-Dunsmore received 32 percent and Acker-Caloia received 17 percent.For some reason, despite the results of the special election, in which Knappen/Putnam won a bare majority of 50.1%, the WSA Senate then voted on the issue.
WSA senators elected Stacy Nordstrand and Courtney Dunsmore president and vice president April 15 during a special election by senators. The election was held because no party held the majority after the special election April 13.What was the point of having elections?
Nordstrand and Dunsmore defeated Nate Knappen and Janine Putnam by 21 votes to 15 out of the 36 votes from non-abstaining senators. Knappen-Putnam received more votes in the two previous WSA elections.
Based on the comments, it appears that the Judicial Council simply made up a wrong definition of 'majority', requiring 51% rather than >50%.
Even by the low standards of the WSA, this is bad.
Previous: WSA Follies
Sunday, April 19, 2009
Will Feminists Ever Stop Lying?
WMU takes back the night
“One in four women have been sexually assaulted, which means we all know someone who has been affected,” Jones said. “Sexual assault won’t end unless we do something about it. It’s our responsibility.”Not True: Take Back the Nonsense
“We are doing this to stand with others and to raise awareness. We don’t approve of violence against women, and we’re going to do something about it,” said Dave Jones, an advisor to FIRE! The program will feature live jazz music performed by WMU’s sophomore jazz guitarist, Brad Hatfield.All the feminists' jazz concerts, as well as poetry, drawings, paintings, and more never seem to solve the problem of 'violence against women' because that's not the goal. The goal is to smear men as rapists and abusers.
Sunday, April 12, 2009
POLITICAL UPDATE--Health Care
This update focuses on health care. The left is eager to impose government control on health care. That would mean less freedom, higher taxes, and worse health care.
William Hoar: Taxing Our Health
Mac Johnson: Reimporting Socialism, Not Drugs
Walter Williams: Sweden's Government Health Care
Kurt Williamsen: SCHIP of State
Terry Jeffrey: What Obama Is Doing With Your Medical Records
Phyllis Schlafly: Obama Gives What the Doctor Did Not Order
Jane Orient: Stay Healthy: Government Healthcare May Be Coming
POLITICAL UPDATES are archived here.
William Hoar: Taxing Our Health
Mac Johnson: Reimporting Socialism, Not Drugs
Walter Williams: Sweden's Government Health Care
Kurt Williamsen: SCHIP of State
Terry Jeffrey: What Obama Is Doing With Your Medical Records
Phyllis Schlafly: Obama Gives What the Doctor Did Not Order
Jane Orient: Stay Healthy: Government Healthcare May Be Coming
POLITICAL UPDATES are archived here.
Saturday, April 11, 2009
The Need for Government
State: Yoga schools must be licensed
Thank God the government will put a stop to the scourge of unliscenced yoga instructors.
Thank God the government will put a stop to the scourge of unliscenced yoga instructors.
Local News
Local news around Kalamazoo.
Heyl Scholarships for Kalamazoo College expand to include all graduates of the Kalamazoo Area Mathematics & Science Center
City Commissioner Stephanie Moore completes probation
Two 18-year-olds bound over for trial in beating of bicyclist
Kalamazoo County voters to decide future of local mass transit
State Rep. Robert Jones faces esophageal cancer fight, will undergo chemotherapy
State Rep. Robert Jones diagnosed with esophageal cancer; plans to stay in office
Western Michigan University adds manager to assess troubled students
Students participate in annual 'Take Back the Night' march at Western Michigan University
WMU takes back the night
WSA supports public transportation millage
WMU’s Earth Week begins Monday with guest speaker
Harik ends term as WSA president
Heyl Scholarships for Kalamazoo College expand to include all graduates of the Kalamazoo Area Mathematics & Science Center
City Commissioner Stephanie Moore completes probation
Two 18-year-olds bound over for trial in beating of bicyclist
Kalamazoo County voters to decide future of local mass transit
State Rep. Robert Jones faces esophageal cancer fight, will undergo chemotherapy
State Rep. Robert Jones diagnosed with esophageal cancer; plans to stay in office
Western Michigan University adds manager to assess troubled students
Students participate in annual 'Take Back the Night' march at Western Michigan University
WMU takes back the night
WSA supports public transportation millage
WMU’s Earth Week begins Monday with guest speaker
Harik ends term as WSA president
Monday, April 06, 2009
Libertarian Speaker at WMU
WMU’s Earth Week begins Monday with guest speaker
Monday marks the beginning of Earth Week 2009. This is a week put on by Students for a Sustainable Earth, as well as other organizations around campus.
...
On Monday night, Students for a Sustainable Earth and Western Michigan’s RSO College Republicans welcome Joel Salatin, a holistic farmer and author of “You Can Farm” and “Salad Bar Beef.”
The topic of Salatin’s discussion is “Everything I Want To Do Is Illegal,” and is about current laws and legal regulations that are harmful to small farmers and beneficial to farming corporations.
This presentation is from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Shaw Theater.
Monday marks the beginning of Earth Week 2009. This is a week put on by Students for a Sustainable Earth, as well as other organizations around campus.
...
On Monday night, Students for a Sustainable Earth and Western Michigan’s RSO College Republicans welcome Joel Salatin, a holistic farmer and author of “You Can Farm” and “Salad Bar Beef.”
The topic of Salatin’s discussion is “Everything I Want To Do Is Illegal,” and is about current laws and legal regulations that are harmful to small farmers and beneficial to farming corporations.
This presentation is from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the Shaw Theater.
Crime Alert
Sheriff's office seeks gunmen after pair of Oshtemo incidents
OSHTEMO TOWNSHIP -- The Kalamazoo County Sheriff's Office is seeking information in a pair of armed confrontations that occurred early Sunday morning in Oshtemo Township.
Residents of a home in the 5500 block of Croyden Avenue told police they were sleeping at 2 a.m. when the front door of their apartment was kicked in and they confronted a man with a black handgun. He was described as a black male, 6 feet tall in his 20s with an Afro and a goatee. He was dressed in dark clothing.
Police said he ran from the apartment without taking anything.
At about 4:15 a.m. Sunday, deputies were called to KL Avenue near Mount Royal Drive, a few miles from Croyden, where two people said they were walking home when confronted by a male with a handgun who demanded cash.
The victims could only describe the assailant as a black male wearing a hooded sweatshirt and dark pants.
Police ask anyone with information to call the sheriff's department.
OSHTEMO TOWNSHIP -- The Kalamazoo County Sheriff's Office is seeking information in a pair of armed confrontations that occurred early Sunday morning in Oshtemo Township.
Residents of a home in the 5500 block of Croyden Avenue told police they were sleeping at 2 a.m. when the front door of their apartment was kicked in and they confronted a man with a black handgun. He was described as a black male, 6 feet tall in his 20s with an Afro and a goatee. He was dressed in dark clothing.
Police said he ran from the apartment without taking anything.
At about 4:15 a.m. Sunday, deputies were called to KL Avenue near Mount Royal Drive, a few miles from Croyden, where two people said they were walking home when confronted by a male with a handgun who demanded cash.
The victims could only describe the assailant as a black male wearing a hooded sweatshirt and dark pants.
Police ask anyone with information to call the sheriff's department.
Sunday, April 05, 2009
POLITICAL UPDATE--Civil Liberties
This update focuses on civil liberties. Missouri recently withdrew a report branding conservatives as potential terrorists. President Obama supports a 'national service' plan that could reinstate the draft.
William Jasper: Profiling and Criminalizing Political Dissent
James Perloff: Tenth Amendment Movement: Taking On the Feds
Jacob Hornberger: Two Checks on Tyranny
John Eidsmoe: The Militia: In History and Today
Jerome Corsi: Bill creates detention camps in U.S. for 'emergencies'
Ron Paul: On Reinstating the Draft
Patrick Krey: Any Volunteers for National Service?
Patrick Krey: At Uncle Sam's Service
POLITICAL UPDATES are archived here.
William Jasper: Profiling and Criminalizing Political Dissent
James Perloff: Tenth Amendment Movement: Taking On the Feds
Jacob Hornberger: Two Checks on Tyranny
John Eidsmoe: The Militia: In History and Today
Jerome Corsi: Bill creates detention camps in U.S. for 'emergencies'
Ron Paul: On Reinstating the Draft
Patrick Krey: Any Volunteers for National Service?
Patrick Krey: At Uncle Sam's Service
POLITICAL UPDATES are archived here.
Saturday, April 04, 2009
Free-Market Economist at WMU
Private solutions to public disasters
April 2, 2009
KALAMAZOO--Dr. Peter Boettke, professor of economics at George Mason University, will discuss "Private Solutions to Public Disasters: Self Reliance and Social Resilience," from 3 to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 8, at Western Michigan University.
The talk in Room 3508 of Knauss Hall is the final of a series of lectures addressing the economics of disasters, both natural and man-made. The 2008-09 Werner Sichel Lecture Series event is free and open to the public.
In addition to being a professor at George Mason, Boettke is also deputy director of the James M. Buchanan Center for Political Economy and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center. His fields of interest include transition economies, the history of economic thought, public choice and law and economics.
Boettke earned a doctoral degree in economics from George Mason University. Before joining the George Mason faculty in 1998, he held faculty positions at Oakland University, Manhattan College and New York University. He was a national fellow at the Hoover Institution in 1992-93 and has been a visiting professor or scholar at the Russian Academy of Sciences, the Max Planck Institute, the Stockholm School of Economics and Central European University.
Boettke is the author of several books on the history, collapse and transition from socialism in the former Soviet Union, including "Why Perestroika Failed: The Economics and Politics of Socialist Transformation" and "Calculation and Coordination: Essays on Socialism and Transitional Political Economy." He also is editor of "Socialism and the Market: The Socialist Calculation Debate Revisited" and "The Legacy of F.A. Hayek: Politics, Philosophy, Economics."
Now in its 45th year, the annual Sichel Series is organized by the WMU Department of Economics and named in honor of longtime WMU economics professor, Dr. Werner Sichel, who retired in 2004. The series is cosponsored by the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research.
For more information, contact the Department of Economics at (269) 387-5535.
April 2, 2009
KALAMAZOO--Dr. Peter Boettke, professor of economics at George Mason University, will discuss "Private Solutions to Public Disasters: Self Reliance and Social Resilience," from 3 to 4:30 p.m. Wednesday, April 8, at Western Michigan University.
The talk in Room 3508 of Knauss Hall is the final of a series of lectures addressing the economics of disasters, both natural and man-made. The 2008-09 Werner Sichel Lecture Series event is free and open to the public.
In addition to being a professor at George Mason, Boettke is also deputy director of the James M. Buchanan Center for Political Economy and a senior research fellow at the Mercatus Center. His fields of interest include transition economies, the history of economic thought, public choice and law and economics.
Boettke earned a doctoral degree in economics from George Mason University. Before joining the George Mason faculty in 1998, he held faculty positions at Oakland University, Manhattan College and New York University. He was a national fellow at the Hoover Institution in 1992-93 and has been a visiting professor or scholar at the Russian Academy of Sciences, the Max Planck Institute, the Stockholm School of Economics and Central European University.
Boettke is the author of several books on the history, collapse and transition from socialism in the former Soviet Union, including "Why Perestroika Failed: The Economics and Politics of Socialist Transformation" and "Calculation and Coordination: Essays on Socialism and Transitional Political Economy." He also is editor of "Socialism and the Market: The Socialist Calculation Debate Revisited" and "The Legacy of F.A. Hayek: Politics, Philosophy, Economics."
Now in its 45th year, the annual Sichel Series is organized by the WMU Department of Economics and named in honor of longtime WMU economics professor, Dr. Werner Sichel, who retired in 2004. The series is cosponsored by the W.E. Upjohn Institute for Employment Research.
For more information, contact the Department of Economics at (269) 387-5535.
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