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John Cronin

Governor Romney’s Remarks to the House Republican Conference Retreat

Governor Romney today delivered the following remarks to the House Republican Conference Retreat hosted by the Congressional Institute at the Homestead in Hot Springs, Virginia.

As prepared for delivery

January 30, 2009

Thank you for the warm welcome. And thank you for the vote you took this week. You stood strong. You stood for principle. You put the best interests of the American people ahead of politics. I got some calls yesterday, after the news. They said what I feel. We want you to know that we’re proud of you.

It sure feels good to be in a room full of Republicans who came out ahead on Election Day. You can be proud of your success. And don’t be afraid to remind the President of this: you, too, won your election.

After my own campaign was over, Ann and I just wanted to get away from it all. We ended up in Beijing, about as far away as you can get. We went to the Olympic Games, and one of the events we attended was women’s beach volleyball. I noticed a lot of people looking in our direction, pointing toward us and taking pictures. It’s always nice to be recognized, and I told Ann, let’s be sure to smile and look our best. Ann said, they might like us even more if we got out of the way—Kobe Bryant is standing right behind you.

A few months have passed since the election. It’s enough time to consider the outcome and take stock of our party’s future. I want to make clear that I’m optimistic: our ideas are good, our agenda will make America stronger, and your action this week showed that we have the kind of leaders who will stand up for what they believe in.

I have often been asked what I think the Republican Party must do to recover. What I’ve said is this: My first concern isn’t about our party—it’s about our country.

In fact, the two are closely related. The best way for us to advance the prospects of our party is to do what we know is right for the country. This is what the American people expect of us. And that’s what we should expect of ourselves.

This is a time of hardship and uncertainty for millions of Americans. The question is: whose leadership and ideas will turn things around. And in such a moment, it’s our job to offer the clear answers, the proven solutions, and resolute leadership that will make this country strong again.

The new President and the Congressional majority are having a difficult time doing that. After all, they have a lot of campaign rhetoric to make good on. And they’ve got plenty of special interests to pay back. As the opposition party, we’re entirely free to do what is right for the country. There are certain advantages to that kind of freedom, and I suggest we make the most of them.

That begins with a clear analysis of what’s needed to get the economy moving again. Predictions that we are almost out of the woods, based on the length of prior recessions, are wishful thinking. Americans have lost some 11 trillion dollars in net worth. That translates into about 400 billion dollars less annual consumer spending in the economy.

There’s something else people don’t talk much about: The pool of investment capital—all the money available for new investments, business start-ups, business expansions, capital expenditures, and new hiring. The size of that pool has shrunk by trillions of dollars. This was a huge loss in value, and the effect could be felt for years—in businesses that don’t start up or grow, in jobs that don’t get created.

Given these extraordinary conditions, I am convinced that a stimulus is needed.

So why not just spend and borrow with reckless abandon? Because we’re in a very delicate situation that could easily get worse if Washington does the wrong thing. The package which passed the House is a huge increase in the amount of government borrowing. And we’ve borrowed so much already, that if we add too much more debt, or spend foolishly, we could invite an even bigger crisis. We could precipitate a worldwide crisis of confidence in America, leading to a run on the dollar … or hyper-inflation that wipes out family savings and devastates the middle class.

We’re on an economic tightrope. That’s why it is so important to exercise extreme care and good judgment.

So far, the Democratic leadership hasn’t shown a great deal of that. They’ve passed 355 billion in infrastructure spending, 60% of which won’t be spent by the end of 2010. Billions for electronic medical health records—it’s a fine idea, but it won’t produce jobs for years and years.

Even worse are the liberal payoffs—50 million dollars for the National Endowment for the Arts, hundreds of millions of dollars to the states for STD prevention and education. Until your loud protests got it dropped from the bill, there even was 200 million dollars for the DC Mall. That might have grown some grass, but it wouldn’t have grown the economy. And they’re doing this when the economy is on a tightrope.

It’s still early in the administration of President Obama. Like everyone who loves this country, I want him to adopt correct principles and then to succeed. He still has a chance to step in and insist on spending discipline among the members of his own party. It’s his job to set priorities. I hope for America’s sake that he knows that a Chief Executive can’t vote “present.” He can’t let others run the show. He has to say yes to some things and no to a lot of others.

We need to stimulate the economy, not the government. A true stimulus package, one that respects the productivity and genius of the American people, could lift this country out of recession. And experience shows us what it should look like.

First, there are two ways you can put money into the economy, by spending more or by taxing less. But if it’s stimulus you want, taxing less works best. That’s why permanent tax cuts should be the centerpiece of the economic stimulus. Even Christine Romer, the President’s own choice to lead the Council of Economic Advisors, found in her research that tax cuts are twice as effective as new spending.

Second, any new spending must be strictly limited to projects that are essential. How do we define essential? Well, a good rule is that the projects we fund in a stimulus should be legitimate government priorities that would have been carried out in the future anyway, and are simply being moved up to create those jobs now.

As we take out non-essential projects, we should focus on funding the real needs of government that will have immediate impact. And what better place to begin than repairing and replacing military equipment that was damaged or destroyed in Kuwait, Iraq and Afghanistan?

Third, sending out rebate checks to citizens and businesses is not a tax cut. The media bought this line so far, but they’ve got it wrong. Checks in the mail are refunds, not tax cuts. We tried rebate checks last year and they did virtually nothing to jump-start the economy. Disposable income went up, but consumption hardly moved. Businesses aren’t stupid. They’re not going to invest in equipment and new hires for a one time, short term blip.

You know, by proposing tax rebates, the Democrats are admitting that relief to families and employers works. Why can’t they shed their ideological bias and give the American people the kind of permanent, broad based tax relief that even they must know will relieve the suffering our country is going through?

Fourth, if we’re going to tax less and spend more to get the economy moving, then we have to make another commitment as well. As soon as this economy recovers, we have to regain control over the federal budget, and above all, over entitlement spending. This is more important than most people are willing to admit. I mentioned the economic tightrope before. There is a real danger that with trillions of additional borrowing—from the budget deficit and from the stimulus—that world investors will begin to fear that the dollars won’t be worth much in the future. They may fear hyper-inflation. It is essential that we demonstrate our commitment to maintaining the value of the dollar. That means showing the world that we will put a stop to runaway spending and borrowing. Senator Judd Gregg is rightly proposing a new bipartisan approach. It should be part of this bill.

Fifth, we must begin to recover from the enormous losses in the capital investment pool. And the surest, most obvious way to get that done is to send a clear signal that there will be no tax increases on investment and capital gains. The 2001 and 2003 tax cuts should be extended permanently, or at least temporarily.

And finally, let’s exercise restraint in the size of the stimulus package. Without restraint, it may grow as the days go by. Last year, with the economy already faltering, I proposed a stimulus of 233 billion dollars. The Washington Post said, and I quote: “Romney’s plan is way too big.” So what critique do they have for the size of the Democrat’s package? I’m afraid they’ve caught a bad case of liberal laryngitis. It’s everywhere these days.

In the final analysis, we know that only the private sector—entrepreneurs and businesses large and small—can create the millions of jobs our country needs. The invisible hand of the market always moves faster and better than the heavy hand of government.

The difference between us and the Democrats is this: they want to stimulate the government, and we want to stimulate the economy.

Government does have an obligation to address some of the abuses we’ve seen in the markets, particularly in the mortgage finance market and the mortgage guarantee sector. But when markets work as they should, when they are effectively and efficiently regulated, free markets create jobs and boost incomes.

As Republicans, we remain the confident voice of limited government and free enterprise. These principles are going to face another test when it comes to healthcare.

We should be first to propose a Republican plan to bring health insurance to all Americans, one based on market dynamics, free choice, and personal responsibility. I think what we did in Massachusetts is a good model to start from, but whatever direction we take, let’s not simply react to what the Democrats do. Their own plan would undoubtedly create a vast new system of costly entitlements and bureaucratic dictates, burdening the people and threatening the economy. Americans will be looking for a better alternative. Let’s give it to them.

Let’s also defend the rights of workers—against coercion and intimidation. The working people of this country should be able to unionize the way their fathers and mothers did – by free choice and secret ballot. The Democrats’ plan to take away those rights would result in economic calamity. More than that, it’s an insult to the dignity and common sense of working people. We’re going to defend the freedom of workers and the rights of labor. Interesting, isn’t it, which party stands up for workers and which one jumps for union bosses.

Ours is the party of freedom and enterprise, and we are the party of life. I know that I’m not alone in wondering why our new president, in the earliest hours of his administration, directed that international groups that promote and provide abortions be funded with American taxpayer dollars. Is that really what the world needs, more abortions?

In our party, we don’t have perfect agreement on the life issue. But with an administration that is firmly on the side of abortion, that answers to the most extreme wing of the abortion lobby, our duty is clear. We should be a voice for moderation and compassion. And even if the administration will say nothing on behalf of the child waiting to be born, we must take the side of life.

The new administration has also gained the favor of liberal commentators by pledging what it calls reform in the treatment of detainees who have taken up arms against America. And of course, President Obama says he will close Guantanamo.

But I wonder if he noticed that some of the men already released from Guantanamo have turned up in new al Qaeda tapes? I also wonder where the President now intends to send the terrorists we capture. Will he send them to nations that will release them to kill Americans? Or will he send them to US prisons, to infect our own criminal population?

There may be more steps like closing Guantanamo—and they will receive the predictable applause from law professors, editorial boards, and others who have no responsibility for protecting American lives. The Washington Post last week announced President Obama’s actions with this headline: “Bush’s War on Terror Comes to a Sudden End.” I hope this President knows that the terrorists are still fighting and killing Americans, and that they plan to keep killing Americans.

Here, too, our party will speak confidently. We have no greater duty than a vigilant defense.

This great party of ours has seen setbacks before. They have never defined us. For our party, I believe this will be remembered as the time when we demonstrated the strength of our convictions, when we defended the foundations of America’s prosperity, security and liberty.

America will be tested. It’s not for us to choose every new test that may arise. But we’re entirely free to choose how we will face those tests. We’ll face them as you did this week. And we’ll face them as Republicans have done before in our finest moments—with the clarity and the confidence of those who put their country first.

That is the work you have undertaken as Republican members of the 111th Congress. You gather in smaller numbers than last year, but you have ideas, energy, and convictions—and the resolve to lead America to a better future. The comeback for our nation and for our party starts with you. You can count me as an ally in the work ahead. Thank you.

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Steve Andrew

Do, Something!

January 30th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in Mitt Romney

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Hey guys, hope everything is going well for everybody. I hope everyone ushered in the New Year right (haha). Not too much has happened politically. What most people predicted (including us), came to be right. The liberals are on a out-of-control spending spree, giving money to whoever raises their hand. At the beginning of the 2008 Presidential Race,  I believed the best outcome would be one where any Republican candidate would win in November.

Boy, am I glad that didn’t happen. Now, more than ever, every able bodied conservative, Republican, who whichever individual who believes that country over party is more important, than they should join us in fighting for the right set of values, in order to preserve our very young country.

Right now, my dad and I are planning to attend a Republican luncheon here in Austin to listen to Gov. Rick Perry. But, that is only one thing you can do as a Republican. You could volunteer locally or nationwide to any organization that fights for conservative principles.

All in all, what we must do now is band together, for the sake of our country. It is not when times are good for our party that we think about the short memories of many countrymen. Remind them of what is great, what is good, and what is American!

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RNC Chairman Michael Steele’s Acceptance Speech

January 30th, 2009 | 6 Comments | Posted in RNC Chair, Republican Party, Republicans

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Republican Romney Criticizes Obama on Abortion

January 30th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in Economic Stimulus Plan, Mitt Romney

Gov. Romney is helping to keep Republican morale high this weekend at a retreat for lawmakers after their stunning rebuke to President Obama and his $819 billion pork-o-rama bill.

Hats off to the Pubbies for hanging tough in the face of withering criticism from the usual suspects, Liberals in Congress and their MSM cheerleaders.

~~John Cronin~~

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090130/ap_on_el_ge/romney_republicans

HOT SPRINGS, Va. – Republican Mitt Romney, a potential candidate for the White House in 2012, accused President Barack Obama on Friday of answering to the “most extreme wing of the abortion lobby.” Even if the administration “will say nothing on behalf of the child waiting to be born, we must take the side of life,” the former Massachusetts governor told House Republicans at a weekend retreat, according to his prepared remarks.

The GOP lawmakers gathered two days after voting unanimously against a White House-backed economic stimulus bill, and Romney praised them for their opposition.

He said the $819 billion measure that passed the Democratic-controlled House was a plan to “spend and borrow with reckless abandon.”

That approach could worsen the current economic crisis, he said, adding, “we could precipitate a worldwide crisis of confidence in America, leading to a run on the dollar … or hyperinflation that wipes out family savings and devastates the middle class.”

Romney dropped out of the presidential race last year after losing several key primaries to Sen. John McCain of Arizona, the Republican who ran against Obama in the fall.

As a candidate, Romney worked to shed an image as a moderate former governor, and his speech touched on numerous conservative themes. Romney campaigned for governor of Democratic-leaning Massachusetts as a supporter of abortion rights — only to switch sides on that issue in time for the GOP presidential race.

His reference to abortion followed Obama’s decision earlier in the week to permit federal funding to go to international organizations that perform such operations. A ban on such funding had been in effect during the administration of former President George W. Bush.

Romney also questioned Obama’s decision to close the detention facility at Guantanamo Bay, which the Bush administration built to hold detainees in the war on terror.

The former governor said some of those released have made appearances in videotapes released by al-Qaida, and asked where Obama intended to send accused terrorists who are let go in the future.
“Will he send them to nations that will release them to kill Americans?” Romney said. “Or will he send them to U.S. prisons to infect our own criminal population?”

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Common Sense on Military Affairs from former Gov. Romney

January 30th, 2009 | 3 Comments | Posted in Governor Romney, Military, Mitt Romney

The date on this video says 2008, but that has got to be a mistake. It should be 2007, I just wanted to point that out. More reasoned and common sense policy on military affairs from former Gov. Romney.

~~John Cronin~~

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Stand Firm, Kirsten

January 30th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in Congress, Eliot Spitzer, Illegal Immigration, New York
By: Heather Mac Donald

CITY JOURNAL

What are the chances that New York’s new senator, Kirsten Gillibrand, will maintain her support for immigration enforcement after being rushed by a massive line of illegal-alien advocates and other members of the liberal elite? Gillibrand is said to harbor ambitions for much higher office. If she holds onto her immigration principles despite the intended sacking, she will have distinguished herself early on as a unique politician worthy of further attention.

Gillibrand seems to have backed just about every measure to strengthen the immigration rule of law during her single term in Congress representing an Albany-area district. She opposed amnesty and driver’s licenses for illegal aliens; she supported using local police to enforce immigration laws. She co-sponsored the SAVE Act, which would have required employers to verify the legal status of their employees, expedited deportation of illegals, and boosted border technology. She wanted to protect employers who require their workers to speak English from being sued as civil rights violators.

Needless to say, these positions are anathema to the open-borders lobby, so earlier this week, the New York Times published what was virtually a set of serial press releases from that lobby denouncing her. “Borders on xenophobia,” “extremist,” a “slap to immigrant New Yorkers,” and a “disappointing choice” were among the predictable jabs from New York City politicians, Spanish-language newspapers, and advocates. Particularly amusing was the charge from the executive director of the New York Immigration Coalition that Gillibrand’s “past positions are pretty much out of line with the rest of New York State.” Tell that to Eliot Spitzer, whose plan to give driver’s licenses to illegal aliens, which Gillibrand opposed, went up in flames just a little bit before he did himself. The New York Times, however, buttresses the conceit that Gillibrand represents just a small and irrelevant portion of New Yorkers, noting that she comes from an “overwhelmingly white district along New York’s eastern fringe,” as if only white New Yorkers support the rule of law.

The advocates know just what is needed: reeducation. “I think she needs to be educated, frankly,” says the past president of the American Immigration Lawyers Association, who is optimistic that she will “modify” her immigration positions now that she is in the Senate.

“Frankly,” her views are even more valid today than they were two years ago, when she entered Congress. Amnesty will achieve just what it has achieved every other time it has been tried: encourage more migrants to cross the border and wait for their illegal status to be erased, thus putting further downward pressure on the labor market. The administrative costs of regularizing millions of illegals would be enormous, as they were during the 1986 amnesty, and even more burdensome at a time when government should be eliminating unnecessary expenses. Since society’s bonds face greater strain during an economic crisis, it is all the more important to buttress respect for the law. The perception that government is unable to enforce the law and maintain order has far-reaching consequences for how people conduct themselves in the public and economic realms. And low-skilled, low-educated Hispanics, who make up the vast majority of illegal aliens, consume a large share of services for the needy, including government health care and remedial education.

As a political appointee, Gillibrand will undoubtedly feel beholden to her patrons. But if she wants to be returned to the Senate in 2010, New York’s powerful patronage machine will not be enough; she will actually have to appeal to voters. Standing firm on the rule of law would give her enormous credibility, not just as she tries to hold onto her Senate seat but thereafter as well. A New York City councilman is holding a rally at City Hall today to demand that Gillibrand change her immigration positions. The public should let her know that she is not, in fact, “out of line with the rest of New York State,” despite what she will be hearing from the illegal-alien lobby.

— Heather Mac Donald is a contributing editor at City Journal and the co-author of The Immigration Solution.

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Military to Pledge Oath to Obama, Not Constitution

January 30th, 2009 | 7 Comments | Posted in Barack Obama, Drudge, Military

I have not heard about this website, “Jumping in Pools” before, so I can’t vouch for the authenticity of this article. I found the story on Drudge this morning and its my understanding from a friend who follows politics closely, that what is being referred to simply as “The Pledge” is making the rounds on the ‘Net.

If you are hearing about this from other sources as well, please weigh in with your info in the comments section of this post.

~~John Cronin~~

http://jumpinginpools.blogspot.com/2009/01/military-to-pledge-oath-to-obama-not.html

Conservative News and Reporting
“News for the Rest of Us”

Michele Chang

Secretary of Defense Robert Gates is extremely frustrated with orders that the White House is contemplating. According to sources at the Pentagon, including all branches of the armed forces, the Obama Administration may break with a centuries-old tradition.

A spokesman for General James Cartwright, the Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, states that the Obama Administration wants to have soldiers and officers pledge a loyalty oath directly to the office of the President, and no longer to the Constitution.

“The oath to the Constitution is as old as the document itself.” the spokesman said, “At no time in American history, not even in the Civil War, did the oath change or the subject of the oath differ. It has always been to the Constitution.”

The back-and-forth between the White House and the Defense Department was expected as President George W. Bush left office. President Obama has already signed orders to close Guantanamo and to pull combat troops from Iraq. But, this, say many at the Defense Department, goes too far.

“Technically, we can’t talk about it before it becomes official policy.” the spokesman continued. “However, the Defense Department, including the Secretary, will not take this laying down. Expect a fight from the bureaucracy and the brass.”

Sources at the White House had a different point of view. In a circular distributed by White House Press Secretary Robert Gibbs, the rationale for the change was made more clear.

“The President feels that the military has been too indoctrinated by the old harbingers of hate: nationalism, racism, and classism. By removing an oath to the American society, the soldiers are less likely to commit atrocities like those at Abu Ghraib.”

“We expect a lot of flak over this,” the classified memo continues. “But those that would be most against it are those looking either for attention or control.”

The time frame for the changes are unknown. However, it is more likely that the changes will be made around the July 4th holiday, in order to dampen any potential backlash. The difference in the oath will actually only be slight. The main differences will be the new phrasing. It is expected that the oath to the Constitution will be entirely phased out within two years.

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Homeland Secretary Wants Criminal Aliens Out of US

January 29th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in Illegal Immigration

Forgive me if I am a little skeptical, considering Ms. Napolitano’s track record in her own state, but I can only hope somebody gets serious about our southern border before a tragedy befalls the citizens of this country.

One thing is for sure, no one in the government can say they weren’t warned.

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20090129/ap_on_go_ca_st_pe/immigration_deportations

By EILEEN SULLIVAN, Associated Press Writer

WASHINGTON – If you’re a criminal and you’re not entitled to be in the United States, Homeland Security Secretary Janet Napolitano wants you out of the country. Napolitano wants what she calls “criminal aliens” off American streets. She is looking at existing immigration enforcement programs to see if taxpayers are getting the most bang for their buck.

“That sounds very simple, but it’s historically not been done,” Napolitano said, speaking to reporters and senior Immigration and Customs Enforcement officials Thursday.

About 113,000 criminals who were in the U.S. illegally were deported last year, Immigration and Customs Enforcement said. The agency estimates there are now as many as 450,000 criminals in federal, state and local detention centers who are in the country illegally.

Napolitano said she wants to improve data-sharing among local, state and federal facilities. So far, there are jails in 26 counties across the country with computer systems that can talk instantly with immigration systems.

The goal, Napolitano said, is for federal immigration officials to know whether an inmate is in the country illegally immediately after he is processed into a detention facility. After the criminal serves his or her sentence, immigration officials can be ready to deport that person right away.

ICE spokesman Richard Rocha said the agency plans to expand this connectivity to all state and local detention centers over the next four years.

Napolitano, whose job includes overseeing immigration laws, says she also will go after criminal fugitives who are in the country illegally.

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Nancy Pelosi, Family Planning and $819 Billion in Pork

January 29th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in Economic Stimulus Plan, Mitt Romney, Nancy Pelosi

Although she has been washing her face since Sunday’s appearance on ABC News, the internationally acclaimed rocket scientist, Nancy Pelosi, can’t seem to get the egg off. The media’s interest in the story is ongoing, as witnessed by this Politico video.

Her jaw dropping opinion that Family Planning funds needed to be included in the so called “stimulus” bill ( since removed from the bill under public pressure ) because the states’ budgets were in deficit and if poor people didn’t have children, the states could economize by not having to provide social services to their children and this cost saving would have the effect of stimulating the economy. Contracepting your way to prosperity!

~~John Cronin~~

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Contact Your US Senator Today, Ask Them to Vote No on the Pork Bill

January 29th, 2009 | 4 Comments | Posted in Congress, Economic Stimulus Plan

While there is still time, please contact your US Senators and respectfully ask them to vote No on the Senate’s version of the so-called “stimulus” bill. The Senate version is $100 billion more expensive and more wasteful of your money than the House version was.

The Senate will vote on their bill Monday, so time is very short. You can just type in www.U.S. Senate.gov and click on your state and the URL for your two senators will pop up. It is simple and easy to do. Take a couple of minutes now to contact them, so that you, your kids and your grandkids won’t be stuck paying this oinker off for the next several decades.

~~John Cronin~~

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Winston Churchill’s “We Shall Fight Them on the Beaches” YouTube

January 29th, 2009 | 1 Comment | Posted in Mitt Romney

To respectfully parody Sir Winston Churchill’s World War II rhetoric as it might apply to the Republican’s fight against the Democrat’s “Parade of Pork” bill being passed off as a “stimulus” bill:

We shall fight them in the House, we shall fight them in the Senate, in the corridors of public opinion, on our websites, on talk radio and in our newspapers. We shall never surrender.

~~John Cronin~~

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Romney: We Have Answers That Will Help Us

January 28th, 2009 | Comments Off | Posted in Economic Stimulus Plan, Fox News, Mitt Romney

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Pork

January 28th, 2009 | 3 Comments | Posted in Congress, Pork, Spending
Pork is the culinary name for meat from the domestic pig (Sus domesticus), often specifically the fresh meat but can be used as an all-inclusive term. It is one of the most commonly consumed meats worldwide,[1] with evidence of pig husbandry dating back to 5000 BC.

Pork is eaten in various forms, including cooked (as roast pork), cured or smoked (ham, including the Italian Prosciutto) or a combination of these methods (gammon, bacon or Pancetta). It is also a common ingredient of sausages. Charcuterie is the branch of cooking devoted to prepared meat products, many from pork. Pork is a taboo food item in Islam and Judaism, and its consumption is forbidden in these two religions.

The above definition of “pork” is from our friends at Wiki. They tell us that pork “is also a common ingredient of sausage.” As we all know it is also a common ingredient of run of the mill spending bills and now it is the major ingredient of the so called “stimulus” bill. Here is hoping ( with fingers, toes and eyes crossed ) that this plethora of porcine plentitude goes down to inglorious defeat.

~~John Cronin~~

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Boehner to GOP: Vote against stimulus

January 28th, 2009 | 5 Comments | Posted in Barack Obama, Congress, Nancy Pelosi, Pro-life, Republicans

Politico reports in this article that the public outcry over internationally acclaimed rocket scientist Nancy Pelosi’s dufus insistence that the state’s need to economize should cause Congress to include contraceptive funding in the “stimulus” bill has caused Obama to place a phone call to Henry Waxman, asking him to drop the provision from the bill.

It’s not that Obama is having second thoughts about paying back Planned Parenthood for helping get him elected, it’s just that putting the money into this bill is kind of, well, embarrassing.

Speaking of embarrassment, Nancy Pelosi’s tin eared call for the government to help reduce the number of poor people, not by growing the economy, but by preventing poor people from having babies, helped provide the public opinion momentum to get this funding removed from the bill.

Chalk one up for the loyal opposition and one down for an increasingly inept and amateurish administration.

~~John Cronin~~

http://www.politico.com/news/stories/0109/18024.html

It was the love affair that could never be, President Barack Obama and congressional Republicans.

The two sides came together en masse Tuesday for the first time since Obama took the oath of office. Despite the niceties, both sides walked away spurned.

In many ways, Obama told the assembled Republicans everything they would want to hear, according to people in the meetings.

He promised to make tough spending choices in his first budget blueprint — “everyone will have to take a haircut,” he said. He told them he wouldn’t increase the size of government just to increase the size of government. He even teased House Minority Leader John A. Boehner about his golf swing.

Likewise, Republicans left the meeting with kind words for the president — but still resolved to oppose him on the floor Wednesday when Democrats bring his massive economic stimulus plan up for a vote.

Beneath the polite give and take between the new president and the newly disempowered Republican caucus, there was a sense that Obama’s honeymoon had already begun to ebb. For the first time, it seems, congressional Republicans, shut out of power and seemingly cowed by the harsh verdict of voters and wild popularity of the new president, are finding their voice, rallying in large numbers against the centerpiece of Obama’s agenda.

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USMC Officer Candidate School

January 27th, 2009 | 2 Comments | Posted in United States Marine Corps

Here is a video that was brought to my attention by my son Pat, who will go to Quantico, Virginia this May to attend OCS. This is the screening process for the young men and women who have made it through a whole series of screens to get as far as they have. Several of Pat’s buddies who started the process a little earlier than he did are already at Quantico.

The motto of the Marine’s Officer Candidate School is “Ductus Exemplo,” “Leadership by example.” The goal of OCS is to train, screen and evaluate officer candidates for commissioning in the United States Marine Corps.

I know we are all very proud of our military personnel and the sacrifices they make to serve their country. Best wishes to Pat and all the candidates from the St. Louis OSO as well as the other Marine Officer Selection stations around the country.
~~John Cronin~~

Editor’s Note: [This video is from the YouTube site and the video is not in sync. The voices do not always match up with the faces on screen. If you would like to view the original video, please go to WWW.OCS.USMC.MIL]

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