image credit: etsy.com
Sunday, December 24, 2017
Friday, December 22, 2017
Conrad Black on “Trump’s Whirlwind Year”
Image
credit: westernjournal.com
Conrad Black
has a great wrap-up of Trump’s presidential campaign, election and first year
as POTUS. He begins with Trump’s candidacy:
Trump was attacking the entire political
establishment, the whole Washington sleaze factory, all factions of both
parties, all the Bushes, Clintons, and Obama, the national media, the
lobbyists, Wall Street, Hollywood, and the limousine Left from the Hamptons to
Silicon Valley. Of course the Trump campaign was insane and impossible, and was
doomed to be a ludicrous fiasco, a gigantic, comical clown act that misfired
horribly.
On Election Night, Nobel prize–winning (for
economics) New York Times columnist Paul Krugman said the stock market would
“never recover” from the Trump victory. (It has set a new all-time high more
than 90 times since.) . . .
This year [Trump] has won over the congressional
Republican party, which had almost entirely opposed him, to toil in the
enactment of his program. Together they have achieved the greatest tax reform
and reduction in over 30 years, largely emasculated Obamacare, put a rod on the
backs of those states that elect incompetents like Jerry Brown and the Cuomos
and lay the resulting state income taxes off on the whole country, repatriated
trillions of dollars of corporate profit, exonerated over half the people from
personal income taxes, reduced the return of 80 percent of taxpayers to a
postcard, and produced conditions for 4 percent GDP growth next year. . .
.
Considering the sustained assault of 90 percent of
the media, in which the normal honeymoon for a new president has been replaced
by a daily media assassination squad, he has done well.
The article is at the National Review website here.
# # #
Labels:
Conrad Black. National Review,
Donald J. Trump,
Economy,
GOP,
media,
Paul Krugman,
POTUS,
tax cut
Thursday, December 21, 2017
The final tax bill
cartoon by Nate Beeler at the Columbus Dispatch
Help
for the middle class or Armageddon and lots of dead people? I found a concise summary of what's in the bill at Reuters; click here.
#
# #
Labels:
Armageddon,
Nancy Pelosi,
Reuter's Nate Beeler,
tax bill
Tuesday, December 19, 2017
Blogging for the Cleveland Tea Party
photo credit: pinterest
photo credit below: zazzle.com
Everyone is doing their Year-End round ups,
think pieces, retrospectives, and so on. Here is mine.
Back in 2009, I signed on to the Tea Party
because I agreed with its 3 core values: [1] Fiscal Responsibility (don’t spend more than
you have); [2] Constitutionally Limited Government (big government is not
the solution; keep the accountability as close to your backyard as possible);
and [3] Free Markets (as
little regulation as is possible)
But for me, there is another motivator. And I go back to President Trump’s historic address in Warsaw, in which he talked about America’s role in global society: one of things he said was “we write symphonies.” Some of the media had no idea what he was talking about, but his comment struck me right where I live.
The great divide in America is now a crisis: it's about the
magnificent culture of Western Civilization versus a nihilistic movement to
destroy that Western Civilization. We (today’s generations) can’t claim any
credit for its development, but Rome and Greece are not at the forefront today,
Europe is collapsing, and America is the de facto or default
flagship and guardian of Western Civilization. Or at least it was.
But how long can America lead the Free World
if our citizens do not acquire the skills of critical thinking and logic; learn
our language and history; and embrace the American culture? The collectivist
left has infiltrated, quite successfully, our major cultural institutions:
academia, Hollywood, and the media. And it is weakening our once robust can-do
culture. It may even be that in 50 years’ time, classical music will be
performed only in the Far East, not in Europe or the United States. I am
thinking here of Beethoven, Mozart, Tchaikovsky, Gershwin, etc. and dwindling support for the
orchestras.
I spent many years in the trenches employed
by various performing and cultural arts organizations, and most of my erstwhile
colleagues would be in the “left’ to “hard left” categories. I identify as a
fiscal conservative. Not as a Republican, but as a fiscal conservative. Until I
stood up and signed up for the Tea Party, I thought I was in some sort of
socio-political Siberia. That changed with the emergence of the Tea Party.
All this ties into my thoughts about the cultural collapse of America, the disintegration of behavioral self-restraint, and why I am grateful beyond words that our President is Donald J. Trump. He treasures a culture that writes symphonies, and he wants to ensure that future generations inherit that culture.
When
you have a media that calls FLOTUS Melania’s
Christmas decorations at the White House a “nightmare”
that would scare little children, despite the grade-schoolers
flocking to her for hugs, there is, I would say, something seriously wrong
with that media and those who agree with their “narrative.” I am one of many
observers who think we are witnessing some form of mass hysteria. When Morning
Joe warns his viewers that Trump is "mentally unstable," Joe
is exhibiting the phenomenon of projection: Accuse those with whom you disagree
with what you yourself are doing.
What has all this to do with my cultural
concerns? In the past several years, I’ve been involved in some projects that
aim to preserve our cultural assets -- much
as the early
Catholic monks did. They labored in many ways, and some of them sat
there in seclusion, attempting to preserve the artistic, intellectual, and
literary accomplishments of their cultural heritage (not to say literacy
itself), out of fear that the barbarians at the gate would destroy the
flowering civilization.
Archival projects today tear off a page from those monks. Maybe the Golden Age of Musical Theater (think Rodgers and Hammerstein) is not your thing, but The Musical Theater Project here in Cleveland is dedicated to such preservation. Maybe your thing is the visual arts. Cleveland has a world-class Museum of Art that offers free admission. Maybe your thing is classical music. The Cleveland Orchestra excels in performing and preserving that repertory. Maybe you’ve heard them for free at Public Square on the Fourth of July. My work over the last 20 years involved research on Shakespeare and his biography. I am so lucky that we live in close proximity to the Cleveland Public Library – it is another cultural treasure trove.
The point is: How long will these world-class institutions
survive, whether in Cleveland or anywhere else in the United States? Where are
their future audiences and readers? Many schools no longer require that
students read any Shakespeare or Charles Dickens. Mark Twain’s
masterpiece Huckleberry
Finn is banned in many schools. I weep.
I was in a conversation about some of this
recently with a friend and colleague who leans liberal, but we found ourselves
on common ground when it came to our cultural history and traditions. I
expressed some of my concerns, and he mentioned the monks. I took his point and
mentioned them above. It is frightening to even have to think that we need those monks now.
So-called "Safe Spaces" are
increasing, especially on campuses. The "Snowflake" population continues to insulate itself and reject critical thinking in favor
of emotional self-gratification. Identity Politics are everywhere, and as
groups like BLM and Antifa turn to violence, our cultural heritage is being destroyed. Attacked.
Erased. Our historical monuments -- representing our very history -- are being destroyed. Literally.
Look at what’s happening to the legacies
of George
Washington; Christopher
Columbus; and Robert
E. Lee. We expect that sort of historical erasure from ISIS
– destroying Palmyra’s sacred antiquities. But we do not expect it in the
United States. Except that it is happening NOW before our very eyes. Even
our language
is being corrupted.
So I continue with my little contribution to
the Cleveland Tea Party. Most of what I blog on is related to the three Tea
Party core values, often to post Action Alerts for legislative initiatives at
the local, state, and federal level that affect those three core values. But
for me, it also impacts the heritage that has been entrusted to us, and I speak
as a senior citizen who is so grateful to our forebears for our cultural
inheritance.
I stand for our National Anthem. I recite the Pledge of Allegiance to our flag. And I blog for the Cleveland Tea Party (deferring always to Ralph King, who is my mentor on whatever is going on in the political world). For me, being a Cleveland Tea Party blogger is also about a devout reverence for our Judeo-Christian traditions and values; a profound gratitude for our freedoms; and a sense of responsibility to preserve and pass on to future generations our cultural endowment, history, and yes, symphonies.
MERRY
CHRISTMAS!!!!
# # #
Sunday, December 17, 2017
Friday, December 15, 2017
Action Alert: Amnesty Again
image credit: americanmexorist.wordpress.com
RE: H-2B visas for 2018 and DACA amnesty
NumbersUSA sent this Alert out today:
NumbersUSA has learned that Congressional Leaders may include an
H-2B visa increase in the year-end spending bill. The H-2B visa is the
low-skilled guest worker program used to fill seasonal or temporary jobs in
landscaping, food service, hospitality, and more. This program adds extra job
competition for low-skilled American workers and adversely affects the wages
for these jobs.
In past year's spending bills, Congress has exempted returning
workers from the H-2B program, having the potential impact of quadrupling the
number of these guest worker visas issued each year. For FY2017, Congress
didn't exempt returning workers, but gave the Department of Homeland Security
authority to issue visas beyond the annual cap. DHS ultimately increased the
number of visas available by 15,000.
This new threat adds to the continuing threat of a DACA amnesty
being part of the spending bill. Despite rhetoric from leaders of both Parties,
Congress could still include this amnesty in the must-pass bill.
The ALERT:
Please
call your U.S. Representative and two U.S. Senators and tell them to oppose a
DACA amnesty and an H-2B visa increase in the must-pass, year-end spending
bill.
Sen. Sherrod Brown ~ (202) 224-2315
Sen. Rob Portman ~ (202) 224-3353
Rep. Marcia Fudge ~ (202) 225-7032
If Marcia Fudge is not your Representative, call the Capitol
switchboard at (202) 255-3121 to reach your Rep.
#
# #
Labels:
Amnesty,
Congress,
DACA,
guest worker visa,
H-2B,
Immigration,
NumbersUSA
Thursday, December 14, 2017
2017 official White House Christmas Portrait
Via Conservative Treehouse:
The White House released the official Christmas Portrait – President Donald J. Trump and First Lady Melania Trump are seen . . . in their official 2017 Christmas portrait, in the Cross Hall of the White House in Washington, D.C.
# # #
Wednesday, December 13, 2017
Judge Roy Moore vs RINO Mitch McConnell and the Uniparty
image credit: sol1776.blogspot.com
Mark Steyn is a favorite of mine, and here are a few of his
post-election thoughts:
[Judge Roy] Moore lost narrowly enough
to suggest that it wasn't the accusations that did him in. He could have
survived those, just about. What killed him was that he was running against
both the Democrats and the Republicans - including Alabama's own senior senator,
Richard Shelby. (Trump post-Billy Bush was in a similar position, as the likes
of Paul Ryan, Kelly Ayotte, etc, stampeded to distance themselves.) But Roy
Moore was the nominee only because the smart guys over-invested in Luther
Strange (just as in 2015 they over-invested in Jeb Bush). In the first round of
primary voting, Mitch McConnell's priority was to prop up Strange by taking out
what he regarded as his principal threat, Mo Brooks. Congressman Brooks would
have made an excellent senator, and would have been elected in a walk, and he
can also claim more plausibly than Moore to be a populist conservative aligned
with the Trump agenda. But McConnell didn't want him in the Senate and, as he
saw it, once Brooks was gone, Luther Strange would have no trouble walloping
Moore in the run-off.
Unfortunately, Strange owed his eminence in Alabama to the
patronage of a corrupt and discredited governor. As I wrote three months ago,
given the disposition of GOP primary electorates in the Age of Trump, they were
unlikely to turn to "a creature from the Alabama swamp ...to drain the
Washington swamp". So, thanks to McConnell and the ten million
bucks he blew through, Moore won the run-off and became the candidate. And
thus, of all preposterous outcomes, Alabama is now a blue state.
. . .
A final thought on Moore:
Yes, he's a kook, and an insufficiently nimble one to dodge the incoming
schoolgirls. But as I wrote three months ago:
Whatever one feels about
Roy Moore, he's principled enough to be willing to lose his job over the Ten
Commandments and same-sex marriage. That's unusual in American politics.
Read Steyn’s full column here. I think he is correct to place blame on Mitch McConnell
and the GOPe Uniparty.
#
# #
Tuesday, December 12, 2017
Catching up on last week’s news: Mike Gibbons running for U.S. Senate
map image credit: cleveland.com
Last week, Jeremy Pelzer at cleveland.com reported (h/t Ralph King):
COLUMBUS,
Ohio--U.S. Senate candidate Mike Gibbons was endorsed by the Franklin County
Republican Party on Wednesday by an overwhelming margin, giving the
Cleveland-area businessman a high-profile win in his underdog bid to snatch the
GOP nomination from Treasurer Josh Mandel.
The county
party's central committee vote was 85-16, according to Gibbons. It's the first
time Gibbons has been endorsed by a county party; the Cuyahoga County GOP
previously endorsed Mandel.
Read the rest here. Mr. Gibbons's website is here.
# # #
Labels:
cleveland.com,
Franklin County,
Mike Gibbons,
U.S. Senate
Sunday, December 10, 2017
Army-Navy Game Puts National Football League to Shame
photo credit: cbssports.com
Tom Joyce reports at Lifezette on yesterday’s Army-Navy game:
The Army, which honored the 10th Mountain Division with their
uniforms on Saturday, ran for 221 yards on 49 carries while the Navy, which
honored the Blue Angels, ran for 294 yards on 46 carries. . . .
Thanks to the team's win
and its victory over the Air Force Falcons earlier in the season, the Army
received the Commander-in-Chief's Trophy, which is given to the top military
football school annually. . . .
President Donald Trump
himself tweeted earlier in the day that he would be watching the game.
Following the results, he offered congratulations to the Army's Black Knights. . .
No matter what the teams' records are coming into the game or
which one comes out on top, the American people are still happy to support
these two sides. Without them and the rest of the military academies and the
military overall, there would be no United States, in which citizens are free
to enjoy things like football.
Joyce’s full column, with the President's Congratulatory tweet, is here.
UPDATE: Here's a video of the National Anthem before the game.
# # #
Labels:
Army vs Navy,
kneel,
Lifezette,
President Trump,
Tom Joyce
Friday, December 8, 2017
Trump storms
Image
credit: cowgernation.com
Need a little
pick-me-up? David Prentice at American Thinker has some thoughts on President Trump's accomplishments in his first year in office, despite a corrupt and hostile media that
lies about him every day, despite the GOP elites that obstruct his agenda every inch of the way, despite the
howling from environmentalists, the academic community, etc., etc. Prentice’s
question: “how in the hell is
Trump doing this?” Below is a short extract from his article proposing some answers:
The art of building is an underestimated skill. It
requires a combination of deep intelligence, blue collar toughness, a mind
capable of great focus and flexibility. Walking onto a construction
site is like walking into a washing machine. Everything is moving;
machines, people, tools, and lots of noise. Lots of noise. All
being driven to a finish line of time, money, and hopefully the integrity of a
job that will endure. It’s the Wild West of being in business, and you’d
better be prepared to live your life in a storm that doesn’t stop until each
project is complete. After which you are fired. Well, not really,
but you are terminated with your final payment, and if you’re good, you get to
start another job all over again because you won a bid against other companies
that want the same job. The storm never ends.
. . .
It’s a storm that invigorates you to succeed, or drives you to
fail. You push, you press to figure out the process and master
it. Or go home. Donald Trump loved this process early
on. It was his early training, it was what molded his outlook, it was what
tested him. His life was a storm. He used the storm of New York
building to vault his company to the top of the heap. He used the storm
while building nationwide, and worldwide to propel it even further.
This is a man whose whole life has been lived within storms.
He thrives on them, welcomes them, and uses them to achieve his goals.
It’s clear Trump’s political career is following the same
course. Whoever tries to engulf him within a storm loses. The left
has been calling on storm after storm, and they are still losing. They
don’t get it yet. Return to that list of accomplishments cited
earlier. He is implementing his promises one at a time, the whole time
the left conjures multiple deluges, dark ones, like the witches in
Shakespeare’s Macbeth.
It’s amazing to watch.
Read the rest here.
And yes, it is amazing to watch.
# # #
UPDATE on Amnesty (A "No Action Needed" Alert)
NumbersUSA sent out this newsletter earlier today:
Thirty-three Republican U.S. Representatives want to put young
illegal aliens who received the unconstitutional DACA amnesty ahead of the
interests of American workers, according to a letter they all signed addressed
to House Speaker Paul Ryan earlier this week.
The letter signers urged Speaker Ryan to immediately pass
legislation that would grant a permanent
amnesty to approximately 700,000 illegal aliens before the end of the year.
While they did mention their desire to improve border security
and to fix the "broken immigration system", they offered no
specifics. And they did not suggest that those fixes or any other
immigration-related provisions be paired with DACA legislation.
We write in
support of passing of a permanent legislative solution for Deferred Action for
Childhood Arrivals (DACA) recipients before the end of the year. ...
We are compelled
to act immediately because many DACA recipients are about to lose or have
already lost their permits in the wake of the program's rescission. ...
We must pass
legislation that protects DACA recipients from deportation and gives them the
opportunity to apply for a more secured status in our country as soon as
possible. Reaching across the aisle to protect DACA recipients before the
holidays is the right thing to do.
You can read the full letter here: https://www.numbersusa.com/news/34-house-republicans-call-daca-amnesty
The letter's signees -- led by Reps.
Scott Taylor of Virginia and Dan Newhouse of Washington
-- fail to address any of the unintended consequences that would result from
passing amnesty-only legislation. They ignore interior enforcement, including a
requirement for all employers to use E-Verify for all new hires, that would cut
off the jobs magnet and significantly reduce future illegal immigration. An
amnesty without E-Verify would only guarantee demands for future amnesties for
the new illegal aliens who would be enticed to come.
The letter fails to address Chain Migration, which if not ended,
would multiply the size the amnesty, adding millions more foreign workers to
the labor market to compete with unemployed and underemployed American workers.
Pres. Trump, himself, has said that an end to Chain Migration must be part of
any DACA deal, but the letter signers instead refer to an outdated quote from
White House Press Secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders that leaves out Chain
Migration.
The full list of the letter signers is at the link above to the
full letter, or click here. I am pleased to say that none of the signatories are from Ohio, so
there’s no Action Alert today to get on the phone to them.
# # # .
Labels:
Amnesty,
chain migration,
DACA,
Dan Newhouse,
Dreamers,
GOP,
NumbersUSA,
Scott Taylor
Thursday, December 7, 2017
Remembering Pearl Harbor on December 7 * Gallery #2
Today marks the 76th
anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. Below are
photographs taken a few years ago by Cleveland Tea Party’s Pat Dooley
Photography at Pearl Harbor.
Gallery #2
# # #
Remembering Pearl Harbor on December 7 * Gallery #1
Today marks the 76th anniversary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941. Below are photographs taken a few years ago by Cleveland Tea Party’s Pat Dooley Photography at Pearl Harbor:
Gallery #1
# # #
Wednesday, December 6, 2017
Confused about the two tax cut bills?
art credit: economiapersonal.com.ar
Joseph Smith at the American Thinker blog helps to sort it out, and he includes links to Forbes:
. . . With
the House bill weighing
in at 429 pages and filled with many arcane tax reform provisions, perhaps the
best summary comparison of the House and Senate bills is found at
forbes.com, page
1 and page
2.
Among
the major issues to be reconciled between the two versions are:
·
The
repeal of the Obamacare mandate is in the Senate bill only and should be
included in the reconciled bill.
·
The
new tax provisions for individuals are permanent in the House bill but expire
after 2025 in the Senate bill to meet budget reconciliation rules.
·
The
mortgage interest deduction is different in the two versions, with the
home-building industry expected to push for the higher deduction in the senate
bill
·
The
tax treatment of pass-through business income, a major issue for Senator Ron
Johnson of Wisconsin and others, differs in the two bills.
·
The
corporate tax rate is cut from the current 35 percent to 20 percent beginning
in 2018 in the House bill but is delayed until 2019 in the Senate bill.
Why would the Republicans have their biggest economy-booster kick in after the
2018 elections?
·
While
both versions contain a property tax deduction up to $10,000, the state and
local income tax deduction has been eliminated from both bills. Expect
blue state House members to seek further
compromise on that issue in the conference committee.
The
two tax bills, which no Democrats have supported, must now be reconciled in a
House-Senate conference committee,
with the compromise bill to be voted on again in each body before being sent to
the president for signing into law.
With
deregulation and a resurgent economy paving the way for tax cuts, the Trump
economic train is leaving the station without the Democrats.
Read the rest here.
# # #
Monday, December 4, 2017
More on DACA & Dreamers Amnesty
image credit: wwwwakeupamericans-spree.blogspot.com
Last week,
Cleveland Tea Party blogged on the DACA / Dreamers’ Amnesty bill, urging Ohio
AG Mike DeWine (now running for Governor) to stay away from the coalition of state
Attorneys General suing the Trump administration and instead support the existing rule of law. That blog included phone numbers
for an Action Alert.
Hans von Spakovsky at The Daily Signal outlines the pitfalls and downsides of DACA (useful analysis if you are making any calls now or later this
week and needing information to counter the usual liberal talking points).
DACA had no requirement of English fluency either. In fact, the
original application requested applicants to answer whether the form had been
“read” to the alien by a translator “in a language in which [the applicant is]
fluent.”
The Center for Immigration Studies estimates that “perhaps 24 percent
of the DACA-eligible population fall into the functionally illiterate category
and another 46 percent have only ‘basic’ English ability.”
This is a far cry from the image of DACA beneficiaries as all
children who don’t speak the language of—and know nothing about the culture
of—their native countries.
In fact, it seems rather that a significant percentage of DACA
beneficiaries may have serious limitations in their education, experience, and
English fluency that negatively affected their ability to function in American
society.
Providing amnesty to low-skilled, low-educated aliens with
marginal English language ability would impose large fiscal costs on American
taxpayers resulting from increased government payouts and benefits, and would
be unfair to legal immigrants who obeyed the law to come here.
. . .
Providing amnesty would simply attract even more illegal
immigration and would not solve the myriad of enforcement problems we have
along our borders and in the interior of the country. Congress should
concentrate on giving the federal government (with the assistance and help of
state and local governments) the resources to enforce existing immigration laws
to reduce the illegal alien population in the U.S. and stem entry into the
country.
Until those goals are accomplished, it is premature to even
consider any DACA-type bill.
Read more here.
# # #
Labels:
Amnesty,
chain migration,
DACA,
Dreamers,
Hans von Spakovsky,
Mike DeWine,
The Daily Signal
Saturday, December 2, 2017
Supermoon Sunday
plain old full moon over the Terminal Tower by Pat Dooley Photography
Should be clear skies!
cleveland.com reports:
The year's last
supermoon will rise into the night sky Sunday, and Northeast Ohioans may
actually be able to see this one, with favorable weather conditions.
The full moon officially peaks at
10:47 a.m. Sunday, Dec. 3, but it won't reach perigee, or the point in its
orbit when it's closest to the Earth, until 3:45 a.m. the next day. Unless
you're willing to stay awake all night, the best viewing for you will be Sunday
night. In Northeast Ohio, that happens to coincide when cloud cover is expected
to be at a minimum ...
More details here.
# # #
Friday, December 1, 2017
Stop Mike DeWine from Suing President Trump over DACA
image credit: discussionist.com
Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) was an American immigration policy that allowed some individuals who entered the country
as minors, and had either entered or remained in the country
illegally, to receive a renewable two-year period of deferred
action from
deportation and to be eligible for a work permit. As of 2017, approximately 800,000 individuals—referred to
as Dreamers after the DREAM Act
bill—were enrolled in
the program created by DACA. The policy was established by the Obama administration in June 2012 and rescinded by the Trump administration in September 2017.
(from
Ralph King, Cleveland Tea Party):
Call
Mike DeWine and tell him to put Ohio citizens first - NO MORE Kate Steinle's!
Mike DeWine: 800-282-0515
To
date Ohio Attorney General and candidate for Governor Mike DeWine has REFUSED
to come out and support President Trump's ending Obama's DACA program. We must
STOP the soft-on-illegal immigration AG DeWine from joining AG's in 15 other states from suing President Trump!
Seeing that Mike
DeWine has used Obama's original DACA ruling in allowing illegal immigrants to
obtain an Ohio Driver License -- suing President Trump over DACA is not far
off! Tell Mike DeWine to put Ohio citizens first and don't be like his buddy
John Kasich!
Call
Mike DeWine (800-282-0515) and tell him to put Ohio citizens first and respect
the rule of law!
# # #
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