Archive for ‘Politics’

May 25, 2012

Obama Foreign Policy our enemies can count on.


Charles Krauthammer on Obama’s foreign policy failures and
how he has politicized them at the expense of U.S. security.

Medvede, Obama, Putin, Ahmadinejad – Global Government

Obama Foreign Policy: Anyone out there who helps us on the war on terror will be sacrificed for political purposes.

Obama Foreign Policy: Any CIA undercover agent will be sacrificed for political purposes.

Obama Foreign Policy: If a freedom movement rises up against an oppressive tyrannical government, Obama will say nothing in order to score points with the regim with whom he is negotiating.

Obama Foreign Policy: Reset relationships with archenemies and give them everything they want at the expense of burgeoning constitutional governments.

Obama Foreign Policy: Get ride of Billionaire Dictators that can interfere with his global domination plans. i.e. Mubarak, Gaddafi, Osama & Ben Ali of Tunisia.

May 17, 2012

Obama’s Bio: “Born in Kenya and raised in Indonesia and Hawaii” Well, are you or aren’t you telling the truth Mr. President?

EDITOR”S NOTE: We at PopModal Videos do not ascribe to the notion that Obama is not a U.S. citizen. However, this evidence should go to Obama’s character in regards to his ability to lie without remorse and for political manipulation of the New York Time, LA Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, ABC, NBC, and CBS.
Jeffers M. Dodge – Editor

 

Breitbart News has obtained a promotional booklet produced in 1991 by Barack Obamas then-literary agency, Acton & Dystel, which touts Obama as “born in Kenya and raised in Indonesia and Hawaii.” The booklet, which was distributed to “business colleagues” in the publishing industry, includes a brief biography of Obama among the biographies of eighty-nine other authors represented by Acton & Dystel. It also promotes Obamas anticipated first book, Journeys in Black and White–which Obama abandoned, later publishing Dreams from My Father instead.

via The Vetting – Exclusive – Obamas Literary Agent in 1991 Booklet: Born in Kenya and raised in Indonesia and Hawaii.

May 12, 2012

Congressional Progressive (Marxist) Caucus Members List

Caucus Members Co-Chairs
Keith Ellison (Islamist)
Raúl Grijalva

Vice Chairs
Tammy Baldwin
Judy Chu
William “Lacy” Clay
Sheila Jackson-Lee
Chellie Pingree

Whip
Hank Johnson
Senate Member
Bernie Sanders

House Members
Karen Bass
Xavier Becerra
Earl Blumenauer
Corrine Brown
Michael Capuano
Andre Carson
Donna Christensen
Yvette Clarke
Emanuel Cleaver
David Cicilline
Steve Cohen
John Conyers
Elijah Cummings
Danny Davis
Peter DeFazio
Rosa DeLauro
Donna Edwards
Sam Farr
Chaka Fattah
Bob Filner
Barney Frank
Marcia Fudge
Luis Gutierrez
Janice Hahn
Maurice Hinchey
Mazie Hirono
Rush Holt
Michael Honda
Jesse Jackson, Jr.
Eddie Bernice Johnson
Marcy Kaptur
Dennis Kucinich
Barbara Lee
John Lewis
David Loebsack
Ben Ray Lujan
Carolyn Maloney
Ed Markey
Jim McDermott
James McGovern
Brad Miller
George Miller
Gwen Moore
Jim Moran
Jerrold Nadler
Eleanor Holmes Norton
John Olver
Frank Pallone
Ed Pastor
Jared Polis
Charles Rangel
Laura Richardson
Lucille Roybal-Allard
Bobby Rush
Linda Sanchez
Jan Schakowsky
Jose Serrano
Louise Slaughter
Pete Stark
Bennie Thompson
John Tierney
Nydia Velazquez
Maxine Waters
Mel Watt
Peter Welch
Frederica Wilson
Lynn Woolsey

via Congressional Progressive Caucus : Caucus Members.

May 7, 2012

Joel Kotkin: The Great California Exodus – How the progressive apparatchiks are declaring war on the middle class.

‘California is God’s best moment,” says Joel Kotkin. “It’s the best place in the world to live.” Or at least it used to be.

A summary by Jeffers M. Dodge

The following is a summary of Mr. Klokins discussion with Allysia Finley of the Wall Street Journal.

1. Golden State’s fastest-growing entity is government and its biggest product is red tape.

2. Nearly four million more people have left the Golden State in the last two decades than have come from other states.

3. local government restrictions on development have artificially limited housing supply and put a premium on real estate in coastal regions.

4. Moving inland from the coast has the same allure as moving to Nevada or Texas, where housing and everything else is cheaper and there’s no income tax.

5. The people pushing high-density housing themselves live in single-family homes and often drive very fancy cars, but want everyone else to live like sardines.

6. California’s cap-and-trade law AB32, will raise the cost of energy 50% higher than the national average and drive out manufacturing jobs without making even a dent in global carbon emissions.

7. Gov. Brown feels spending $100 Billion on high-speed rail is going to solve the issues of our crumbling schools, roads, bridges, the economic free fall we are in.

8. All of the subsidies the state lavishes on renewables, green jobs only make up about 2% of California’s private-sector work force—no more than they do in Texas.

9. An estimated 25 billion barrels of oil are sitting untapped in the vast Monterey and Bakersfield shale deposits.

10. “We have the richest farm land in the world and are endangering Central Valley farmers with water restrictions aimed at protecting the delta smelt fish.

11. California has the 48th-worst business tax climate where millionaires pay a top rate of 10.3%, the third-highest in the country but the middle-class workers—those who earn more than $48,000—pay a top rate of 9.3%, which is higher than what millionaires pay in 47 states.

12. A November ballot initiative would primarily hit people who make more than $250,000 a year and cause them to march out of the state while preserving the very high end of the food chain, who can afford to live in Napa, Silicon Valley, and in West L.A.

13. Welfare recipients aren’t leaving. Why would they? They get much better benefits in California or New York than if they go to Texas. In Texas the expectation is that people work.

14. Californians are now voting more based on social issues and less on fiscal ones than they did when Ronald Reagan was governor 40 years ago.

15. Gov. Brown facilitated the public-union takeover of the statehouse by allowing state workers to collectively bargain during his first stint as governor in 1977.

16. California’s politics have become left-wing with progressive policies driving out moderate and conservative members of the middle class, “the state is run for the very rich, the very poor, and the public employees.”

Please read the full article here: The Weekend Interview with Joel Kotkin: The Great California Exodus – WSJ.com.

April 26, 2012

About George Zimmerman

George Zimmerman

Business Insider put together some chronological bullet points highlighting the article’s most important points:

  • Zimmerman grew up in a mixed-race household
  • He was an altar boy at his Caltholic church from age 7-17
  • He is bilingual
  • After he finished high school, he studied for and got an insurance license
  • In 2004, Zimmerman and a black friend opened an Allstate insurance office (which soon failed)
  • Zimmerman’s 2005 arrest for “resisting arrest, violence, and battery of an officer” occurred after he shoved an under-cover alcohol control agent at a bar when the agent was trying to arrest an underage friend of his
  • Zimmerman married his wife, Shellie, in 2007. They rented a house in Twin Lakes. Twin Lakes is about 50% white, 20% Hispanic, and 20% black.
  • In 2009, Zimmerman enrolled in Seminole State College
  • In the fall of 2009, a pit bull broke free twice and once cornered Shellie in the Zimmermans’ yard. George Zimmerman asked a police officer whether he should buy pepper spray. The cop told him pepper spray wasn’t fast enough and recommended that he get a gun.
  • By the summer of 2011, Twin Lakes “was experiencing a rash of burglaries and break-ins.” In several of the cases, witnesses said the robbers were young black men
  • In July 2011, a black teenager stole a bicycle off the Zimmermans’ porch
  • In August of 2011, a neighbor of the Zimmermans, Olivia Bertalan, was home during the day when two young black men entered her house. She hid in a room upstairs and called the police. When the police arrived, the two men, who had been trying to take a TV, fled. One of them ran through the Zimmermans’ yard.
  • After the break-in, George Zimmerman stopped by the Bertalans and gave Olivia a card with his name and number on it. He told her to visit his wife Shellie if she felt unsafe.
  • The police recommended that Bertalan get a dog. She moved away instead. Zimmerman got  a second dog–a Rottweiler.
  • In September, several concerned residents of the neighborhood, including Zimmerman, asked the neighborhood association to create a neighborhood watch. Zimmerman was asked to run it.
  • In the next month, two more houses in the neighborhood were robbed.
  • A community newsletter reminded residents to report any crimes to the police and then call “George Zimmerman, our captain.”
  • On February 2, 2012, Zimmerman spotted a young black man looking into the windows of a neighbor’s empty house. He called the police and said “I don‘t know what he’s doing. I don’t want to approach him, personally.” The police sent a car, but by the time they arrived, the man was gone.
  • On February 6th, another house was burglarized. Witnesses said two of the robbers were black teenagers. One, who had prior burglary convictions, was soon caught with a laptop stolen from the house.
  • Two weeks later, Zimmerman spotted Travyon Martin and called the police. The last time he had done this, the suspect got away. This time, he disregarded police instructions and followed. A few minutes later, Martin was dead.

Is it possible that Zimmerman is an angry racist? It is. But as Business Insider wonders, “doesn’t it make you feel a bit differently about Zimmerman?”

via Reuters Investigation Reveals Some Stunning Details About George Zimmerman | TheBlaze.com.

April 23, 2012

Surveys: Republicans more enlightened, better informed than Democrats

Published:04/22/2012

By Neil Munro – The Daily Caller

Yet another new survey shows that Republican supporters know more about politics and political history than Democrats.

On eight of 13 questions about politics, Republicans outscored Democrats by an average of 18 percentage points, according to a new Pew survey titled “Partisan Differences in Knowledge.”

The Pew survey adds to a wave of surveys and studies showing that GOP-sympathizers are better informed, more intellectually consistent, more open-minded, more empathetic and more receptive to criticism than their fellow Americans who support the Democratic Party.

“Republicans fare substantially better than Democrats on several questions in the survey, as is typically the case in surveys about political knowledge,” said the study, which noted that Democrats outscored Republicans on five questions by an average of 4.6 percent.

The widest partisan gap in the survey came in at 30 points when only 46 percent of Democrats — but 76 percent of Republicans —- correctly described the GOP as “the party generally more supportive of reducing the size of federal government.”

The widest difference that favored Democrats was only 8 percent, when 59 percent of Republicans and 67 percent of Democrats recognized the liberal party as “more [supportive] of reducing the defense budget.”

The survey quizzed 1,000 people, including 239 Republicans and 334 Democrats.

via Republicans | Democrats | Open-mindedness | Tolerance | The Daily Caller.

April 17, 2012

GOP Mistakes, Social Justice Oxy-morons & Women’s decisions that effect ME.

A Few Names in the News.

by BurtPrelutsky

Burt Prelutsky
humor columnist

I REALIZE there are perfectly decent Republicans who still hold out hope that, through divine or not so divine intervention, Santorum, Gingrich or Paul, will wind up being the GOP nominee. I have no doubt that years ago, they were perfectly decent children who believed in Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny and the Tooth Fairy. So while I hate to destroy anyone’s delusions, I think it is high time that the RNC grew up and faced reality.

For openers, if this primary season has taught us anything, it’s that the GOP needs to address its laundry list of mistakes. One, they should do away with caucuses; if a state doesn’t wish to stage an actual primary for whatever reason, they should just sit it out. Are you listening, Iowa?

Two, let’s put an end to open primaries. Why would Republicans want Democrats helping to decide who our nominee is going to be? Do you really think they have our best interests at heart?

Three, let’s stop putting Iowa and New Hampshire at the head of the parade. In a general election, neither state is all that important, but because they come first, the nation has to focus on them for weeks, even months, at a time. And no more punishing states like Florida and Michigan for wanting to move up the dates of their primaries. Instead, have a start date; say January 15th, and then allow each state to determine when they want to hold their primary. If they all decide on January 16th, so be it. At least we wouldn’t have to drag these things on endlessly.

Finally, assuming all the primaries wouldn’t take place on the same date, candidates who don’t achieve a certain level of support would be excluded from future ballots. As I write this, there have been nearly 30 primaries or caucuses, and thus far Gingrich has won two and Paul, who is making his third run, has once again won none. There is no good reason that they should continue to be regarded as serious candidates, in just the same way that a bunch of wannabes looking to garner some publicity have no business clogging up the debates. I mean, seriously, did anyone, including his daughters, ever really believe that Jon Hunstman was going to be the nominee?

As long as I’m busy making rules, I would like to make a rule that nobody ever again be tried for a hate crime. A crime is a crime, and whether the victim is a black, a Hispanic or a homosexual, should not make the punishment any more severe than if the victim is a WASP. One can safely assume that every crime is hateful to the victim. People who favor concentrating on “hate” rather than “crime” are the same noodle-heads who are unaware that “social justice” is an oxymoron. Justice doesn’t call for adjectives. Once they’re added on, it ceases to be justice, which is why Lady Justice is always pictured blindfolded and why Martin Luther King pleaded for a colorblind society.

Not too long ago, I saw Rosie O’Donnell and Angelica Houston on TV sticking up for Sandra Fluke, and pretending on Obama’s behalf that mandating contraception and abortion for employees of Catholic entities is not actually an infringement on religious freedom, but is all about women’s health.

In their discussion, they parroted the old line about men having no business being involved in women’s reproductive freedom. Even if we ignore the fact that men are fathers, brothers and boyfriends, whose own lives will be greatly affected because of the decisions made by women, by what stretch of the imagination do these two women — one a 50 year old lesbian, the other a 60 year old who has all the reproductive freedom she could possibly want, thanks to Mother Nature — have commenting on things that don’t involve them?

I recently got word that over 50,000 people have been killed in Mexico over the past five years. At about the same time, I learned that Malia Obama had been vacationing in Mexico with some of her school chums.

I must confess it surprised me that her mother, who seems overly concerned that your kids are eating an occasional cupcake, would send her child to a place that makes Kandahar seem as safe as Lincoln’s bedroom.

Then I heard that the kids were accompanied by 15 Secret Service agents! That’s 15 –count them–- 15!

The first thing that occurred to me was that I helped pay for that kid’s vacation.

The second thing that occurred to me was, like mother, like daughter.

via BurtPrelutsky.com.

April 10, 2012

Obama in his own words: I will negotiate w/ Russia (after my last election) to achieve deep cuts in our (America’s) nuclear arsenal.

This a combination of two Obama quotes in his own words.

1) I will negotiate with Russia to achieve deep cuts in our (America’s) nuclear arsenal.

2) This is my last election. After my election I have more flexibility.

by Jeffers M. Dodge

Jeffers M. Dodge President PopModal.com & Editor of AirModal.com

President Obama believes in the redistribution of wealth, not just domestically but internationally as well. He stops oil production in America which increase the wealth of his kindred Muslim and Socialist nations. He also believes that America’s military dominance in the world needs to be reduced so that we are on more of an equal basis with Russia, a joint effort to counter balance the military build up of his idol Mao’s China. Remember, his family, mentor’s and most of his cabinet are Marxist and supported the Soviet Union’s Communist Regime.

This video is just one more piece of evidence that may be used in a future trial of Barack Obama for his treasonous efforts to collapse the economy of the United States.

April 4, 2012

The Obama Election Campaign Strategy on Energy Prices as expressed by Joe Biden.


Jeffers M. Dodge President PopModal.com & Editor of AirModal.com

by Jeffers M. Dodge April 4, 2012

In an interview with WAVY News in Norfolk VA, Vice President Joe Biden discusses Obama’s Election Energy Plan by taking credit for things Obama was not responsible for and by blaming high oil prices on Muslim Brotherhood instability that he is responsible for.

Biden claims that we are importing less foreign oil than ever before. This is because nobody is driving. There are two reasons for this: The Obama economy is so bad nobody can afford the cost of a gallon of Obama Oil that has doubled since he has come into office.

Biden claims we are producing more oil than ever before. There are two reasons for this; the first of which is because of George Bush. There was net increase in oil drilling permits approved under his administration designed to maintain a stable economy with minimal government interference and, secondly, because of new extraction technology that is getting a lot more oil and gas out of private lands Obama cannot control. Obama has had a net decrease in the approval of permits and is responsible for the closure of 1 in 5 coal fired energy plants in America. This is a fulfillment of his campaign promise to increase the price of energy with the objective to increase poverty that will create more dependent voters for his big government administration.

Biden claims we have doubled the mileage of the automobile by making them smaller, lighter and weaker resulting in more deaths from accidents in small cars in history. This is the unintended consequence of an out of control, economically destructive EPA that has become an election tool of the Democrat Party.

Biden claims we have instability in the Arab world. This is due exclusively to Obama’s weak, appeasing foreign policy as it pertains to the rise of his kindred Muslim Brotherhood, his hatred for Israel and Iran’s nuclear ambitions. All designed to drive up the futures markets for oil. Normal Americans would conclude that the best way to off set this would be to encourage domestic oil production including lifting the Obama Moratorium on drilling in the Gulf, Alaska and the Keystone Pipeline.

There is another major reason for the high price of a gallon of Obama Gas. Oil prices are pegged to the value of the dollar, which has been getting considerably weaker due to the incredible amount of inflation as a result of Obama’s printing, taxing and borrowing fiscal policies.

Biden suggest that instead of giving tax incentives to American oil exploration companies that risk their own capital to produce more oil to keep this economy stable and independent from Muslim Brotherhood owned oil, we should allow Obama to learn how to become a venture capitalist and investment banker just like his very successful opponent Mitt Romney. So far, Obama has risked and lost billions of tax payer’s money on alternative energy firms owned by his campaign donors. He has never succeeded on his investments with taxpayer’s money. Question for the Constitutional Scholars; since when did the U.S. Constitution give the President that kind of power? Shouldn’t Obama, who is a Constitutional Scholar, know this?

April 4, 2012

Texas vs. California – Chuck DeVore

Chuck DeVore

Chuck DeVore Senior Visiting Scholar for Fiscal Policy at the Texas Public Policy Foundation.

One in five Americans calls California or Texas home. The two most populous states have a lot in common: a long coast, a sunny climate, a diverse population, plenty of oil in the ground, and Mexico to the south. Where they diverge is in their governance.

For six years ending in 2010, I represented almost 500,000 people in California’s legislature. I was vice chairman of the Assembly Committee on Revenue and Taxation and served on the Budget Committee. I was even a lieutenant colonel in the state’s National Guard. Before serving in Sacramento, I worked as an executive in California’s aerospace industry.

I moved to Texas late last year, joining the 2 million Californians who have packed up for greener pastures in the past ten years, with Texas the most common destination.

In his State-of-the-State address this January, California governor Jerry Brown said, “Contrary to those declinists who sing of Texas and bemoan our woes, California is still the land of dreams. . . . It’s the place where Apple . . . and countless other creative companies all began.”

Fast forward to March: Apple announced it was building a $304 million campus in Austin with plans to hire 3,600 people to staff it, more than doubling its Texas workforce.

California may be dreaming, but Texas is working.

California’s elected officials are particularly adept at dreaming up ways to spend other people’s money. While the state struggles with interminable deficits caused by years of reckless spending, the argument in Sacramento isn’t over how to reduce government; rather, it’s over how much to raise taxes and on whom. Governor Brown is pushing for a tax increase of $6.9 billion per year, to appear on this November’s ballot. California’s powerful government-employee unions and Molly Munger, a wealthy civil-rights attorney (wealthy by dint of being the daughter of Warren Buffett’s business partner) are offering two competing tax-hike plans. The silver lining may be that having three tax hikes on the ballot will turn voters off all of them.

Meanwhile, lawmakers in Texas are grappling with a fiscal question of an entirely different sort: whether or not to spend some of the $6 billion set aside in the state’s rainy-day fund.

California’s government-employee unions routinely spend tens of millions of dollars at election time to maintain their hold on power. In Texas, the government unions are weak and don’t have collective bargaining, leaving trial attorneys as the main source of funding for Lone Star Democrats.

California’s habit of raising taxes to fund a burgeoning regulatory state isn’t without impact on its economy. Californians fork over about 10.6 percent of their income to state and local governments, above the U.S. average of 9.8 percent. Texans pay 7.9 percent. This affects the bottom line of both consumers and businesses.

With that money, Californians pay for more government. The number of non-education bureaucrats in California is close to the national average, at 252 per 10,000 people. Texas gets by with a bureaucracy 22 percent smaller: 196 per 10,000.

Of course, having more government employees means making more government rules. According to a 2009 study commissioned by the California legislature, state regulations cost almost $500 billion per year, or five times the state’s general-fund budget. These regulations ding the average small business for some $134,122 a year in compliance and opportunity costs.

While California has more bureaucrats, Texas has 17 percent more teachers, with 295 education employees per 10,000 people, compared to California’s 252.

The two states’ educational outcomes reflect this disparity. If we compare national test scores in math, science, and reading for the fourth and eighth grades among four basic ethnic and racial categories — all students, whites, Hispanics, and African-Americans — Texas beats California in every category, and by a substantial margin. In fact, Texas schools perform consistently above the national average across categories of age, race, and subject matter, while California schools perform well below the national average.

Apologists for the Golden State frequently point to Texas’s flourishing oil and gas industry as the reason for its success. Texas does lead the nation in proven oil reserves, but California ranks third. The real difference isn’t in geology but in public policy: Californians have decided to make it difficult to extract the oil under their feet.

Further, contrary to popular opinion, California’s refineries routinely produce a greater value of product than do refineries in Texas, mainly because the special gasoline blends that California requires are more costly.

Another advantage that Texas enjoys over California is in its civil-justice system. In 2002, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce ranked Texas’s legal system 46th in the nation, just behind California’s, which was 45th. Texas went to work improving its lawsuit environment, enacting major medical-malpractice reforms in 2003. Texas’s ranking consequently jumped ten places in eight years, while California’s dropped to 46th. In the last legislative session, Texas lawmakers passed a landmark loser-pays provision, which promises to further curtail frivolous lawsuits.

While California seeks more ways to tax success, it excels at subsidizing poverty. The percentage of households receiving public assistance in California was 3.7 percent in 2009, double Texas’s rate of 1.8 percent. Almost one-third of all Americans on welfare reside in California.

With this in mind, it makes perfect sense that only 18 percent of the Democrats who control both houses of California’s full-time legislature worked in business or medicine before being elected. The remainder drew paychecks from government, worked as community organizers, or were attorneys.

In Texas, with its part-time legislature, 75 percent of the Republicans who control both houses earn a living in business, farming, or medicine, with 19 percent being attorneys in private practice. Texas Democrats are more than twice as likely as their California counterparts to claim private-sector experience outside the field of law.

That Texas’s legislature is run by makers and California’s by takers is glaringly obvious from the two states’ respective balance sheets.

— Chuck DeVore served in the California State Assembly from 2004 to 2010 and was a Republican candidate for the United States Senate in 2010. He is currently a visiting senior fellow in fiscal policy at the Texas Public Policy Foundation.

via Texas vs. California – Chuck DeVore – National Review Online.

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