At times I feel like it's just me against the world...

  • Carmelo Junior

    Not even 100 days and Obama ship is already sinking. Approval numbers slowly going down. And now even one of the most staunchest Obama supporters Aryanna Huffintgton is seeing the light and is opposing Geithner’s plan to seize the banks. I think this lady is a conservative pro capitalism/free market democrat at heart.

  • dahut

    No surprise here. Obama has said he believes that it’s the job of government to take control to solve our problems.

    Uh, hello!? That’s not governments job under the Republican form…. In case you’ve forgotten, let me remind you of this line in our pledge:
    “….And to the Republic for which it stands…”
    =========================================================
    NOTE: Hollywood, it makes no mention of pledging to Obama.
    =========================================================
    Under the republican form of organization, governments’ most important job is to enable the parts of the Republic (The States) to do what they need to in order to prosper. It is like the hub of a wagon wheel; the central core that supports the spokes so they can do the work of moving the wheel forward.

    It’s other core function is to concern itself with building citizens of character, who can act independently for the greater good… without government intervention.

    What we are seeing, instead, is a spreading belief in the “need” for government to control things. This has been happening since wage taxation started and paid politicians had a coffer from which to pay for their control programs.

    Here’s a little something for you to ponder:

    “…1. Some advocate nationalization of the means of production, distribution, and exchange;
    2. others advocate state control of capital within the framework of a market economy.
    3. Still others rally for the selective nationalization of key industries in mixed economies, tax-funded welfare programs and the regulation of markets.”

    This is the text-book description of SOCIALISM, number 3 describes Socialist Democrats. Sound familiar? Remind you of someone??

    As long as we allow ourselves to be lulled by pseudo-truths, we will happily forget that we are able take care of ourselves.

  • Sparky

    Great outline dahut. Couldn’t agreee with you more.

    and…..WELCOME ABOARD!

  • Carmelo Junior

    FLASH! Centrist democrats and abandoning Obama ship by the hundreds per day. At this pace Obama will only have the support of 95% of blacks and 70% of other minorities by 2011.

  • Sparky

    CJ – they are even abandoning him in Congress.

    Obama’s Budget Fight Starts with His Own Party
    By Jay Newton-Small / Washington Thursday, Mar. 26, 2009

    http://www.time.com/time/politics/article/0,8599,1887748,00.html

    This article below is even better – It’s from the Boston Globe:

    Conservative and moderate Democrats flex muscles
    By Andrew Taylor
    Associated Press Writer / March 19, 2009
    Email| Print| Single Page| Yahoo! Buzz| ShareThisText size – + WASHINGTON—Conservative and moderate Democrats are flexing their muscles on Capitol Hill, demanding significantly lower spending for domestic programs as well as automatic budget cuts if tax cuts and new programs would increase the deficit.

    A group of 51 so-called “Blue Dog” House Democrats released their roster of budget demands Thursday, calling for cutting more than $40 billion from domestic programs funded by Congress each year.

    At the same time, they said that President Barack Obama’s controversial bill to fight global warming should not be permitted to advance under rules that shut off the right of Senate Republicans to filibuster the measure.

    The Blue Dogs, a coalition of moderate and conservative Democrats, many of them from the South, control a critical bloc of votes needed to pass the congressional budget blueprint. It is the first legislative response to Obama’s $3.6 trillion budget for next year.

    Of greatest importance to the group is putting in place a legally binding “pay as you go” system governing new tax cuts and benefit programs such as Obama’s health reform initiative.

    Under such a regimen, legislation cutting taxes, establishing new benefit programs or making current programs more generous must be “paid for” with higher revenues or benefit cuts elsewhere. If the rule is broken, it would trigger across-the-board cuts in other benefit programs, with Social Security exempted.

    Such a statutory pay-as-you-go system, or “paygo,” was in place for years in the 1990s and early this decade, though the law was simply “switched off” when Congress passed President George W. Bush’s 2001 tax-cut bill.

    “We’re trying to be constructive in a way that allows the president to get an acceptable budget,” said Rep. Charlie Melancon, D-La., “but at the same time get paygo statutorily put in place.”

    While the group hasn’t drawn any lines in the sand, some of their demands are likely to be met, especially regarding global warming. Opposition from the Blue Dogs likely ensures that Obama’s controversial “cap-and-trade” plan to limit greenhouse gases won’t advance in a fast-track budget bill that could avoid a GOP filibuster in the Senate.

    Under cap-and-trade, the government would establish a market for carbon dioxide by selling credits to companies that emit greenhouse gases. The companies can then invest in technologies to reduce emissions to reach a certain target or buy credits from other companies that already have met their emission reduction goals. The cost of the credits would be passed on to consumers.

    The demands by moderates to curb the growth of domestic agency budgets by limiting the increase for next year to inflation will face great resistance from senior lawmakers and the administration.

    Obama sought a $51 billion, 9 percent increase for non-defense programs, a figure that’s probably too high to pass, especially with Congressional Budget Office estimates on Friday expected to show that the worsening economy with produce significantly higher deficits than predicted by Obama’s budget.

    “I’m going to show that we’ve made many adjustments in the budget in light of CBO’s re-estimates,” said Senate Budget Committee Chairman Kent Conrad, D-N.D.

    Administration allies such as House Appropriations Committee Chairman David Obey, D-Wis., are pressing for budget increases well above those sought by moderates.

    The looming battle over how much to devote to annual domestic agency budgets is important because unlike other elements of the congressional budget plan — they are often more symbolic than substantive — the annual caps on appropriations have real impact on programs.