Global Electoral College

Posted on September 30th, 2008 in United States Politics by rfburnhertz


Global Electoral College, what if the whole world could vote?
Well the McCain would lose and lose very badly.

If such a thing could happen Obama would currently lead in electoral votes 8,192 to 3.

A stupid idea like this just solidifies my resolve to vote for McCain.

When I go to the map and see that Saudi Arabia would give 100% of their theoretical electoral votes to Obama, Russia would give 78% of theirs to Obama, 80% from China…

That simply provides further evidence to me that Obama is the wrong person for this very important job.

I want nations like Russia and China to hate our President.
I want those nations to hate us as a people as such hatred just confirms that we are not like them and I find that more than a little comforting.

Dear Leader

Posted on September 30th, 2008 in United States Politics by rfburnhertz


I saw this video today on The Black Informant and have since seen it on many other blogs.

I’m not the first by any means to make the ‘Dear Leader’ connection (Dear Leader being a reference to Kim Jong Il of North Korea) he was/is fond of hearing the children of North Korea sing his praises.

That people would do this with/to little children is so very disgusting, this truly is one way in which extremists are created.



So far as I know neither Obama or his campaign had anything to do with this.
It would be very surprising if they did.

I Am A Moral Retard

Posted on September 30th, 2008 in Religion by rfburnhertz

I AM A MORAL RETARD!

Years ago I had another version of this blog by the same title and I had comes across an article by Timothy Shortell titled, ‘Religion & Morality: A Contradiction Explained’.

In this article Mr. Shortell wrote the following:

On a personal level, religiosity is merely annoying—like bad taste. This immaturity represents a significant social problem, however, because religious adherents fail to recognize their limitations. So, in the name of their faith, these moral retards are running around pointing fingers and doing real harm to others. One only has to read the newspaper to see the results of their handiwork. They discriminate, exclude and belittle. They make a virtue of closed-mindedness and virulent ignorance. They are an ugly, violent lot.

Considering the sheer ignorance of Mr. Shortell I took the title ‘moral retard’ as a badge of honor in that clearly what he considers to be moral is not what I know to be moral.

So I had at the time made the above icon for the sidebar of my WP powered blog and invited others to make use of it as well.

I just noticed tonight that there are still blogs using the icon.
I had actually forgotten all about it.

At the time I made this icon I hosted my own blog, right now I am using one of the free blog services and this particular services does not allow me to edit my sidebars and so I am unable to place this icon on my sidebar.

Just one more reason to host my own blog again.
Maybe soon.

The One Trick Pony

Posted on September 30th, 2008 in United States Politics by rfburnhertz

A great article from Duane of The Black Informant.
He notes how Congressman Keith Ellison who he call’s a One Trick Pony, has found a way to make the current economic situation a race issue.

I find it very disgusting that at this time when there is so much economic fear that a person in a position of responsibility would grab hold of that fear and attempt to wrap it tightly with more fear.

Do people really need someone like Ellison stacking one fear upon another?

I do not understand persons like Ellison and why they act in the manner they do. Are they unable to see that they will in the end do more harm than good?

Much to the shock and contempt of Keith Ellison, the culprit responsible for today’s financial crisis has been discovered by those on the right end of the political spectrum.

The villains?

“Poor blacks caused this,” said Ellison, Minnesota’s the 5th District congressman, scornfully. “That’s what we’re supposed to believe. Little ACORN caused this. The mighty captains of Wall Street got taken down by little ACORN and poor black people. That’s what you’re hearing on the right. The gall and audacity of this is beyond imagination.”

Duane also demonstrates how Ronald Reagan, Newt Gingrich, and both of the Bushes get smacked down on ACORN but Clinton gets a pass.
Read his entry here.

Pretty Sneaky Sis!

Posted on September 30th, 2008 in United States Politics by rfburnhertz

Was the Pelosi speech just before the vote on the bailout more than just an attack aimed at Bush?

Could the speech have been planned to do just what it looks like it did, namely kill the bailout?

I honestly do not know where I sit on this bailout. I don’t like the idea of it, it seems very socialist to me. But what else to do?

Okay. So here is my conspiracy theory.

Pelosi and other Democrats wanted the bill to fail today.

I envision Pelosi and company sabotaging today’s vote via her speech and previous collaboration so that Mr. Obama might come in sometime midweek, conduct a meeting with his fellow Dems thereby convincing them to pass this bill. Or he may well do it by way of a speech on the floor.

The bill passes, the Dems announce that the bill would never had passed were it not for Mr. Obama and he suddenly looks much more Presidential than he currently does.

I honestly think this could happen.

Don’t look at me that way, it’s not like I said I just saw Bigfoot walk through my yard.

One way or the other we know a new vote is to come in the days ahead and we will see how this plays out.

Quickly I want to highlight a portion of the Pelosi speech and then ad to that some quotes concerning the current state of the economy.

Pelosi’s opening statement

Madam Speaker, when was the last time someone asked you for $700 billion? It is a number that is staggering, but tells us only the costs of the Bush Administration’s failed economic policies — policies built on budgetary recklessness, on an anything goes mentality, with no regulation, no supervision, and no discipline in the system.

All the fault of GWB and his administration.

The American people did not decide to dangerously weaken our regulatory and oversight policies. They did not make unwise and risky financial deals. They did not jeopardize the economic security of the nation.

She is right. We the American people did not, rather Bill Clinton and the Democrats did.

And they [The American people] must not pay the cost of this emergency recovery and stabilization bill.

We’d rather not, but we are going to.
Some quick quotes from this IBD article.

It was October 1992, nearly 15 years before the housing meltdown and subprime crisis. Republican Rep. Jim Leach of Iowa was on the floor of the House, talking about something that no one at the time seemed to care about: the potential danger that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac posed to the economy.

Leach warned that Fannie and Freddie were changing “from being agencies of the public at large to money machines for the stockholding few.”

Led by top Democrats, including Rep. Barney Frank in the House and Sen. Chris Dodd in the Senate, Congress not only did nothing about the growing risks at Fannie and Freddie, it in essence doubled down on their risks.

The Democrat-led Congress of the early 1990s eased capital limits on the two mortgage lending giants, letting them use enormous leverage — 2.5% of assets at Fannie and Freddie, vs. 10% for banks — to expand lending to low-income, minority communities.

In 1994, the Democratic Congress again moved, passing the Community Reinvestment Act — an update of the original 1977 law.

For the first time, homeowners that previously didn’t qualify — either because they couldn’t put any money down or had bad credit — were made eligible for government-backed loans.

Still, even after the GOP won control of Congress in 1995, Democrats in both houses worked with President Clinton as Fannie and Freddie’s enablers.

Clinton, bypassing Republicans in Congress, had HUD rewrite the rules for Fannie and Freddie to let them get involved in the subprime market for the first time.

Robert Rubin’s Treasury got involved too, reworking its own rules to crack down on banks that didn’t make enough loans to distressed, minority neighborhoods.

Undersecretary Gary Gensler went to Congress in 2000 seeking an end to the companies’ special status — especially the “implicit” federal guarantee of their now-$5.4 trillion loan portfolio — and more power for regulators to boost the companies’ capital requirements.

Democrats raised a ruckus. So did Fannie and Freddie, which were both headed by politically well-connected CEOs who knew how to strategically reward — and punish — those who crossed them.

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