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Friday, January 20, 2017
Inauguration of Donald J. Trump
Thursday, January 19, 2017
Democrats boycott the inauguration tomorrow
photo credit: mediatrackers
Adelle
Nazarian at Breitbart reports:
At last count, over
50 Democrats have announced they will be skipping President-elect Donald Trump’s inauguration on Friday, January 20.
The majority of them are from
the deep blue state of California.
The
full list is here. Ohio Representative Marcia Fudge is on that list. Cleveland.com article is here.
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Labels:
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Wednesday, January 18, 2017
Cleveland Tea Party’s Ralph King Goes to Washington
photo credit: washington.org
Thousands of Donald Trump
supporters from across the land will descend on the nation's capital this week
to witness history when the billionaire businessman is sworn in as the nation's
45th president.
We spoke to some of the Ohioans
who obtained tickets to the ceremony through their members of Congress.
Ralph King, Bedford:
As co-founder of the Cleveland
Tea Party, a delegate for the Trump campaign, and one of the representatives
who officially cast Ohio's 18 electoral votes for the president-elect, there
was no way that King would miss Trump's inauguration.
King says he backed Trump from
the beginning because he's not a typical politician. He felt the rest of the
candidates were "full of it," lying more than they told the truth.
"I couldn't give out
enough Trump signs to auto workers and union laborers," recalls King, who
works as a contract administrator. "They know they are getting screwed
over by the Democrats and the Republicans want to kill them. Where do you go?
To Donald Trump."
While he's in Washington for
the inauguration, King says he's hoping to network with other Tea Party
activists from across the nation, and attend a reception the Ohio Republican
Party is hosting on Thursday.
We’ll
want a full report with photographs! And we'll link to live-stream videos to the swearing in ceremonies on Friday.
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Monday, January 16, 2017
A Chance Encounter on MLK Day
art credit: CertainlyHer
Jeffrey Tucker’s report on Fee.org with a Lyft driver on MLK Day:
The
media narrative on American politics has become so tedious you don’t have to
listen anymore. Every story seems to follow a formula, and never more so on
than on the Martin Luther King holiday. Every headline proclaims how black
Americans are horrified at Trump’s insensitivity to the historical plight of
blacks in the civil rights movement. After all, he attacked Rep. John Lewis,
which apparently violates some canon of the civic religion.
I
had no interest in engaging this debate, but I did call a Lyft car this morning
and my driver, a black woman raised in poverty, was very interested in doing
so. The news was on and blaring how Trump was attacking the CIA, which made me
laugh, and I said, “I’m no Trump supporter but that’s funny.”
She
immediately shot back, “What do you not like about Trump?” I said a few things
about his trade policies, but she was having none of it.
“Here
it is Martin Luther King Jr. Day and I’m supposed to be all upset that Trump
attacked John Lewis, but Trump is right. Lewis said he is not a legitimate
president, so yeah Trump got upset. What exactly is Lewis doing to improve the
lives of the poor in this town? Nothing. At least Trump has some ideas. He
seems to care.”
Ok,
now I’m listening.
“I’m
glad Lewis marched in the protests so long ago,” she continued, “but you have
to do more than march. That’s all these people do is march. Meanwhile, there
are sections of Atlanta I’m afraid to drive in. And I say that as a black
woman! It’s not even about race. Many blacks in this town live better than
white people anywhere in the world. But there’s whole communities that have
been forgotten. They are paid off with welfare checks but they don’t have
skills or jobs, and they fear for their lives on their own streets.”
She
was just getting going, so I wondered how far I could push this. What about
Obamacare?
Explosion.
“Don’t
get me started. My premiums are through the roof. I can’t afford it. Because I
drive all day and night making money, I’m not poor enough to get any subsidies.
So this year I’m going to have to pay $750 on my tax return because I can’t
afford to buy insurance. But I can’t afford the health care either! And have
you seen those deductibles? If anything should happen to you, you go bankrupt.
I’ll tell you who benefited from Obamacare. Not the poor. It’s the insurance
companies and the government.”
I
pointed out that Hillary Clinton said she would try to improve it.
“You
kidding? The whole campaign, she defended all this #@#$!. She is just like the
rest of these people, all talk, no action, just like Trump said. She has been
pushing a pen for 30 years. She is not affected by high premiums. Her health
care is covered. She has no idea what the rest of us are going through.”
But,
I said, Trump is rich and well-covered too.
“Yeah
but he starts businesses and has to pay workers. He knows how to create jobs.
People say he went bankrupt sometimes. That’s what you do if you are
hardworking and trying to try new things. Bankruptcy is just part of business.
You win and lose but at least he knows how to learn and respond. The rest of
these people don’t do anything but give speeches and defend the way things are.”
Read
the rest here.
Meanwhile, over at PJ Media, Walter Hudson shared some thoughts about why we celebrate the life of Martin Luther King, Jr:
Meanwhile, over at PJ Media, Walter Hudson shared some thoughts about why we celebrate the life of Martin Luther King, Jr:
Whoever King really was, whatever he sincerely believed, the image of King worth celebrating was presented in that 1963 speech. We aspire toward a world where children "will not be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character." That vision of racial reconciliation, of judgment according to merit, speaks to each and every human being. It's something we can and should get behind. It evokes the American spirit, a point emphasized when King cited the Declaration of Independence. Ninety-four percent of Americans came to favor King because they associate him with that dream, not because they support whatever radicalism he later embraced.More here.
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Saturday, January 14, 2017
Gov. Kasich’s Medicaid Expansion again
art credit: KUT
Legal Insurrection reports [original links retained]
Full repeal or “roll
back parts of ObamaCare”?
The ObamaCare Medicaid expansion is a horrible deal for low income Americans; it’s also
where a large number of “newly covered” Americans get their new coverage.
Not only does the expansion include
“automatic” enrollment in Medicaid through ObamaCare even if it’s not wanted, but expanding
Medicaid to slightly higher income levels includes many who have managed to
acquire a home or other assets. Their home and assets, however, go to pay for
their Medicaid bills after they die. In essence, then, Medicaid functions as a loan from the federal government just as it
always has, but because the income level has been raised, more Medicaid
recipients than ever will have their assets seized to cover the cost of their
Medicaid expenses.
Despite this, some GOP governors are fighting
their own party to keep the Medicaid expansion in their states.
Republican governors who reaped the benefits
of Obamacare now find themselves in an untenable position — fighting GOP
lawmakers in Washington to protect their states’ health coverage.
. . . . President-elect Donald Trump
heaped more pressure on lawmakers to find a resolution of the issue this week
when he vowed to “repeal and replace Obamacare essentially simultaneously”
after the Senate confirms Rep. Tom Price, his pick for Health and Human
Services secretary.
But Trump’s push comes as at least five of
the 16 Republican governors of states that took federal money to expand
Medicaid are advocating to keep it or warning GOP leaders of disastrous
consequences if the law is repealed without a replacement that keeps millions
of people covered. They include Govs. Charlie Baker of Massachusetts, Rick
Snyder of Michigan, John Kasich of Ohio,
Asa Hutchinson of Arkansas and Brian Sandoval of Nevada.
The governors explain why they want to keep
the Medicaid expansion in their states.
Politico continues:
“We are now able to provide health insurance
to 700,000 people,” said Kasich, who circumvented his state Legislature to
enact expansion in 2013 and who was the sole GOP presidential candidate in 2016
to defend that portion of Obamacare.
“Let’s just say they just got rid of it,
didn’t replace it with anything,” he said. “What happens to the 700,000 people?
What happens to drug treatment? What happens to mental health counseling? What
happens to these people who have very high cholesterol and are victims from a heart
attack? What happens to them?”
. . .
Part of Kasich’s argument is that the federal
taxpayer dollars his state gets for Medicaid expansion is “our money,” that of
Ohioans.
Hot Air explains this is not exactly the case:
Expanding Medicaid, Kasich has said, allowed
him to “bring Ohio money back home,” preventing other states from getting $13
billion of “Ohioans’ federal tax dollars” in the first seven years. He
circumvented a legislative ban on Obamacare expansion, waving off concerns
about the cost with appeals to his experience in Congress in the
’90s.
In just three years, Kasich’s Obamacare
expansion cost $11.3 billion, and not a penny of that new federal spending was
“Ohio money” that would have otherwise gone to another state.
It’s not clear what President-elect Trump or
the GOP Congress plan to do with or about the ObamaCare Medicaid expansion
should they indeed succeed in repealing the entire law rather than picking and choosing what parts to to keep and what
to “roll back.”
State Issue 3, a public vote on
passage of the Healthcare Freedom Amendment in Ohio, passed overwhelmingly in
all 88 Ohio counties. In Cuyahoga County, the Amendment passed 202,010
votes (58.24%) to 144,908 votes (41.76%). [Source: Ohio GOP]
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Wednesday, January 11, 2017
Tomi Lahren 's snowflakes
art
credit: Pinterest
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Friday, January 6, 2017
Congress certifies Trump’s Electoral College win
art credit: enVolve
It is over.
From The Hill (at 1:30pm Jan-06):
Several House Democrats tried
to raise objections as a joint session of Congress met to formally count the
Electoral College results certifying Donald Trump's presidential
election.
Rep. Jim McGovern (D-Mass.)
cited Russia's interference in the election as he raised the first Democratic
objection to Trump's Electoral College victory.
Vice President Biden, who was
presiding over the proceedings, ruled McGovern's objection out of order because
it wasn't backed by a senator.
. . .
Despite
more attempts to stop the certification,
the process went swiftly and
was over in under an hour, the final step in making Trump's White House win
official.
So
hopefully that will be the end of these reports and hearings about Russia“hacking” the election. See also here.
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