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Home Front: Culture Wars
'Hate group' sues to re-run ads on Metro buses
2013-10-09
Posting this because of the obvious bias of the reporter
By LEVI PULKKINEN Seattlepi.com

SEATTLE -- An anti-Muslim organization has sued the King County for refusing to allow the purported hate group to re-run controversial FBI advertisements on Metro buses.
For the record I don't think Pam Geller's group hate, or even dislike, all muslims - neither does the FBI. This is targeting TERRIROSTS - it is the mind of the reporter that links Terrorism with Muslims.
Metro previously allowed the FBI's "Faces of Global Terrorism" announcements to appear on the buses before the bureau pulled the ads. The FBI ads - which picture 16 terrorism suspects, most of whom are non-white, Muslim and living overseas - were dropped in June over concerns they perpetuated negative stereotypes of Muslims.
So, in this alleged reporter's mind only whites should have been pictured.
The New York-based American Freedom Defense Initiative and organization president Pamela Geller have sued King County claiming the county is violating the free speech rights of the organization's members by not allowing it to replicate the defunct FBI ads.

Geller's better known organization, Stop Islamization of America, has been named as a hate group by the Anti-Defamation League and the Southern Poverty Law Center.
I consider being named an hate group by the SPLC a badge of Honor.
Geller gained some national attention for opposing an Islamic cultural center in Lower Manhattan in 2010, which she and Robert Spencer - vice president of the American Freedom Defense Initiative and a plaintiff in the King County lawsuit - famously and falsely described as a "victory mosque" celebrating the Sept. 11 attacks.

Geller has more recently made outlandish claims about President Obama's parentage, denied the ethnic cleansing of Bosnian Muslims and established close ties to white supremacist organizations.

According to the Anti-Defamation League, she and Spencer were cited in the manifesto of Anders Behring Breivik, a Norwegian gunman who killed 77 people on a political retreat. Following the tragedy, Geller said the slain campers were playing "anti-Semitic war games," had a "pro-Islamic agenda," and were not "pure Norwegian."
I thought this article was about the bus advertisement. I guess its really a hit piece on Geller and Spencer.
The pair have also used advertisements on public property to spark controversy, most recently by buying ads in New York City describing Muslims as "savages."
Now that is a flat out LIE. Savages everywhere demand an apology.
Now, Spencer and Geller would like to replicate an FBI announcement previously posted on the sides of Metro buses as well as billboards around Seattle.

According to the lawsuit filed in U.S. District Court in Seattle, Metro rejected the American Freedom Defense Initiative advertisement on the grounds that it is misleading, demeaning and disruptive. Attorneys for the group contend Metro simply doesn't like the message and is limiting speech inappropriately.

Among the critics of the FBI ads was U.S. Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Seattle,
D- Al-Qaeda is more like it
who faulted the ads for "pointing a finger at a group of people, profiling them."
It profiles TERRORISTS! If, in your mind, terrorist == muslim then its your problem.
"I don't think that's fair and I don't think its good for our society," McDermott told The Associated Press in June. "It doesn't make us safer."
We also have a habit of profiling criminals, murderers, kidnappers, baby-rapers and sleezy politicians - and that is GOOD for society.
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Home Front: WoT
Dem Rep. demands FBI stop using "offensive" terrorism bus ads
2013-06-21
U.S. Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.) on Wednesday sent a letter to FBI Director Robert Muellerurging him to stop using “offensive” bus ads that show sixteen faces of wanted terrorists.

The ad campaign, created by the Puget Sound Joint Terrorism Task Force for the State Department’s Rewards for Justice Program, is “not only offensive to Muslims and ethnic minorities, but it encourages racial and religious profiling,” McDermott claims.

The congressman argues that the FBI’s Most Wanted Terrorists list also includes individuals of other races and “associations with other religions and causes.”

“But their faces are missing from this campaign,” he writes. “The…ad will likely only serve to exacerbate the disturbing trend against Middle Eastern, South Asian and Muslim Americans.”

It should be noted that, while the majority of the terrorists listed on the ad appear to be from Muslim regions, not all of them appear to be Muslim. More importantly, the FBI does not discriminate when determining who is a dangerous and wanted terrorist.


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Home Front: Politix
Ryan's wrong -- we need 'Medicare for all'
2011-05-19
[Iran Press TV] The Nation's
...Weekly journal of lefty opinion, featuring half-assed analysis on politics and culture. Founded in 1865. Hasn't had an original idea since...
Political Correspondent John Nichols spoke to Press TV's U.S. Desk on Wednesday about the debate in Washington over Medicare and Medicaid.

"The debate in the United States has been very focused on our Medicare and Medicaid programs and these programs provide basic healthcare for the elderly as well as for people with disabilities and low income folk," Nichols said.

He continued, that the Republicans in the U.S. have been proposing deep cuts in Medicare and Medicaid and the cuts would make those programs dysfunctional.

Nichols concluded that there may be a real debate in the U.S. and that the battle lines will be drawn in fascinating ways raising the possibilities that in 2012, "we might have a genuine election fight in this country between the Republicans who propose cutting back dramatically on our existing health care programs and the progressives who suggest that it is time actually to expand those programs."

The following is Nichols article about the same issue published by Common Dreams:

House Budget Committee Chair Paul Ryan
...U.S. Representative for Wisconsin's 1st congressional district, serving since 1999. He is a member of the Republican Party. He proposed an alternative to President B.O.'s 2011 budget and made himself the target of both Democrat and Republican verbal pies...
proposes to undermine the integrity of the Medicare and Medicaid programs, with an eye toward enriching the insurance companies that so generously fund his campaigns.

The American people are not amused. They have sent clear signals that they want to maintain Medicare and Medicaid.

Ryan's town hall meetings in April featured noisy opposition in communities such as Milton and Kenosha, and tough questioning even in the most conservative communities of Walworth County. Likewise, Republican House members from Pennsylvania, Florida and other states got earfuls at their town meetings.

The protests at the meetings were just the tip of the iceberg of objection to the plan championed by Ryan, R-Janesville.

Polls show that roughly 80 percent of voters think it is a bad idea to try to balance the budget by gutting Medicare and Medicaid as Ryan proposes -- with a scheme to force seniors to buy coverage from private, for-profit insurance companies that happen to be major contributors to his campaign fund. Overwhelming majorities say that they would prefer that Congress end tax cuts for wealthy Americans and reduce Pentagon spending before making any changes to Medicare and Medicaid.

And rightly so. Despite the battering they have taken from misguided and malicious policymakers, the Medicare and Medicaid programs still provide the rough outlines for a single-payer health care program that keep costs down while expanding access to prevention and treatment for millions of Americans.

So, instead of gutting Medicare, as Ryan proposes, why not expand on what works?

That's what Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders
...The only openly Socialist member of the U.S. Senate. Sanders was Representative-for-Life from Vermont until moving to the Senate for the rest of his life in 2006, assuming the seat vacated by Jim Jeffords...
is proposing.

"The United States is the only major nation in the industrialized world that does not guarantee health care as a right to its people. Meanwhile,
...back at the secret hideout, Scarface Al sneeringly put his proposition to little Nell...
we spend about twice as much per capita on health care with worse results than others that spend far less," Sanders explained recently as he announced plans to introduce the American Health Security Act of 2011, which would provide federal guidelines and strong minimum standards for states to administer single-payer health care programs. "It is time that we bring about a fundamental transformation of the American health care system. It is time for us to end private, for-profit participation in delivering basic coverage. It is time for the United States to provide a Medicare-for-all single-payer health coverage program."

Sanders' plan is the right response to the health care crisis in America -- and any country where tens of millions of citizens lack health care coverage, where tends of millions more lack adequate coverage, and where costs are skyrocketing because of insurance company profiteering.

Don't get the independent senator wrong. He voted for the health care reform legislation that passed Congress last year and was signed by President B.O.. He even improved that legislation by fighting to include funding for public health programs and community clinics.

But Sanders also recognizes flaws in the 2010 reform -- which, reformers note, keeps the for-profit private health insurance industry at the center of the U.S. health system. And the senator argues that the ultimate cure for what ails American health care is a "Medicare for all" approach that ends the profiteering and focuses on prevention and treatment of disease.

And he is not alone.

Congressman Jim McDermott
...Representative-for-Life from Washington state. McDermott is noted for his 2002 trip to Baghdad in support of Saddam Hussein and for tapping Newt Gingrich's cell phone in 1997. He is consistly returned to office with Stalinesque majorities from his district, which seems to be populated by hippies and community organizers...
, the Washington Democrat who has for two decades been one of the House's steadiest backers of real health care reform, will introduce a parallel bill in that chamber. Says McDermott: "The (2010) health care law made big progress toward covering many more people and finding ways to lower cost. However,
The contradictory However...
I think the best way to reduce costs and guarantee coverage for all is through a single-payer system like Medicare. This bill does just that -- it builds on the new health care law by giving states the flexibility they need to go to a single-payer system of their own. It will also reduce costs, and Americans will be healthier."

The Sanders-McDermott initiative in Washington comes as the Vermont legislature has taken steps to make the senator's home state the first in the nation to develop what advocates describe as a state-based variation on the single-payer approach. Sanders applauds the move, and thinks it could serve as a national model. Others agree, while noting that Medicare provides another model.

Sanders and McDermott were joined at the announcement of their new "Medicare for all" push by Arlene Holt Baker, executive vice president of the AFL-CIO; Jean Ross, co-president of National Nurses United;
Looks like an astroturf nurses organization: "NNU was founded in 2009 unifying three of the most active, progressive organizations in the U.S.--and the major voices of unionized nurses--in the California Nurses Association/National Nurses Organizing Committee, United American Nurses, and Massachusetts Nurses Association." They've got pictures of cops and firefighters and guys with hard hats on their website and pics of a protest that has Sean Penn in attendance.
and Greg Junemann, president of the International Federation of Professional and Technical Engineers. All three groups are encouraging this fight for real reform.

"Providing a single standard of high-quality care for all is a priority for registered nurses, who have seen their abilities to act as patient advocates made more difficult as for-profit interests control more patient care decisions," says Ross, whose union has been in the forefront of the fight for single-payer. "We commend Senator Sanders and Representative McDermott for their vision and passion to help registered nurses create a more just health care system through the American Health Security Act and applaud our brothers and sisters in labor for their support."

Physicians for a National Health Program,
Physicians for a National Health Program is a single issue organization advocating a universal, comprehensive single-payer national health program. PNHP has more than 18,000 members and chapters across the United States. Since 1987, we've advocated for reform in the U.S. health care system. We educate physicians and other health professionals about the benefits of a single-payer system--including fewer administrative costs and affording health insurance for the 50.7 million Americans who have none.
the movement of doctors and medical students for real reform, welcomed the national legislation.

"At a time when the airwaves are filled with talk about cutting or even ending Medicare," said Dr. Garrett Adams, PNHP president, "Senator Sanders has boldly stepped forward with the seemingly paradoxical proposition that the best way to financially strengthen the Medicare program is to upgrade it and expand it to cover everyone."
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Home Front: Politix
Liberals Try to Prevent Pelosi From Bringing Tax Bill to the Floor
2010-12-08
Fox has learned that Reps. Peter DeFazio (D-OR), Jim McDermott (D-WA) and Jay Inslee (D-WA) are crafting a letter to share with the House Democratic Caucus that would try to prevent the Speaker from bringing the tax bill to the floor.

They hope to get 60 signatures on their letter (which is still being drafted) and then force a vote in the caucus. DeFazio says he thinks that if a majority of House Democrats are against this compromise, they shouldn't bring it to the floor.

In other words, they are seeking a majority of the majority to move this and a senior House democratic source indicates they don't know if they have a majority of democrats, saying they haven't whipped this yet.

In an interview with Fox, DeFazio criticizes the president and says a majority of the House Democratic Caucus does not support the tax rate compromise. "There does not seem to be a majority of the Democrats who support the deal negotiated by Vice President Biden," DeFazio said. "So we want to have a record vote in the caucus on a resolution that says this resolution should not go to the floor without a majority of Democratic votes."
I smell desperation. Also, if the dhimocrats got hammered on this just a month ago, doubling down on FAIL really doesn't seem all that bright.
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Economy
Public Option Not Dead Yet, 128 House Dems Try To Resuscitate It
2010-07-23
Four months after President Obama signed the historic health-reform bill into law, House Democrats are officially plotting to bring back the government-run health plan that was stripped out under political pressure.

House members introduced the Public Option Act Wednesday evening to create a Medicare-like public plan that would compete with private insurance plans. Rep. Lynn Woolsey, D-Calif., is the bill's main sponsor. Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Seattle, is among the 128 co-sponsors.

The public option under this legislation is more "robust" than even what the House itself passed last November. Instead of the government negotiating reimbursement rates with doctors and hospitals, the proposal this time calls for paying providers a flat Medicare rate plus 5 percent. Democrats in the Senate couldn't muster the votes for a public option last year, and it was left out of the final reform bill.

McDermott, one of Congress's uber liberals, was forced to skip the news conference because he was managing the House floor debate on extending unemployment insurance ("This was a very good day," McDermott relished).

McDemott said House Democrats wanted to launch the debate on the public option now in hopes of garnering enough support for passage next year. Even foes of reform, McDermott said, would have to agree that curbing health-care costs remains the biggest unsolved challenge.

"We still think that public option is the way to go," McDermott said. "I want to get the discussion going. Put the proposal out there and let people see it."
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Home Front: Politix
Congressional Black Caucus Bitches About Rangel's Removal
2010-03-03
House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) is facing a new conundrum as the swell of voices calling for the removal of House Ways & Means Chairman Charlie Rangel (D-N.Y.) begins to build.

Sources on the Hill tell HUMAN EVENTS that the latest problem involves the Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) and their objection to Rangel's ouster as the first member of their caucus to hold the chairmanship of the very powerful tax writing committee.

To complicate matters, one source says the CBC is pressuring Pelosi to give the slot to another CBC member, Rep. John Lewis (D-Ga.). The main problem with that scenario is she'd have to "reach down five people," passing over three other committee members in line to do so: Rep. Pete Stark (D-Calif.), Rep. Sander Levin (D-Mich.) and Rep. Jim McDermott (D-Wash.).

Stark is a 78-year-old bombastic Californian notorious for his lack of decorum. One source told me, "Pelosi really doesn't want to see Stark in the chairmanship."

At a town hall meeting over the summer a constituent told Stark, "Don't pee on my leg and then tell me it's raining." Stark replied to the senior citizen, "I wouldn't dignify you by peeing on your leg. I wouldn't waste the urine."

According to a report in the Los Angeles Times, "Stark once called the American Medical Association a bunch of 'greedy troglodytes.'
He's got a point there ...
He assailed one Republican colleague as 'a whore for the insurance industry,' called another a 'fascist' and a third a 'fruitcake.' Recently, when a pesky journalist asked the same question too many times, Stark threatened to throw him out the window."

Another Hill staffer close to the arena told me on condition of anonymity, "Pelosi's choice is between unethical and crazy. It's tough to decide which is better."

Pelosi could likely justify stepping over Stark and his behavior, yet the next two in line, Levin and McDermott, don't have the issues their colleague has. It will be interesting to note which Democrat members of the committee support an affirmative action policy when it's the committee chairmanship at stake.

One thing is certain: Rangel's corruption issues are causing severe damage to the Democrat Party in the election year. This initial ethics finding was only the first shoe to drop. Rangel remains under investigation for more serious charges including income tax violations.
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Economy
Class Warfare's Next Target: 401(k) Savings
2010-02-19
You did the responsible thing. You saved in your IRA or 401(k) to support your retirement, when you could have spent that money on another vacation, or an upscale car, or fancier clothes and jewelry. But now Washington is developing plans for your retirement savings.

BusinessWeek reports that the Treasury and Labor departments are asking for public comment on "the conversion of 401(k) savings and Individual Retirement Accounts into annuities or other steady payment streams."

In plain English, the idea is for the government to take your retirement savings in return for a promise to pay you some monthly benefit in your retirement years.
That would be the point at which we'd see barricades in the streets ...
They will tell you that you are "investing" your money in U.S. Treasury bonds. But they will use your money immediately to pay for their unprecedented trillion-dollar budget deficits, leaving nothing to back up their political promises, just as they have raided the Social Security trust funds.

This "conversion" may start out as an optional choice, though you are already free to buy Treasury bonds whenever you want. But as Karl Denninger of the Market Ticker Web site reports: "'Choices' have a funny way of turning into mandates, and this looks to me like a raw admission that Treasury knows it will not be able to sell its debt in the open market -- so they will effectively tax you by forcing your 'retirement' money to buy them."
Argentina did this a year back. A lot of good it did, too, though the Kirchners enjoyed spending the boodle ...
Moreover, benefits based on Treasury bond interest rates may be woefully inadequate compensation for your years of savings. As Denninger adds, "What's even worse is that the government has intentionally suppressed Treasury yields during this crisis (and will keep doing so by various means, including manipulating the CPI inflation index) so as to guarantee that you lose over time compared to actual purchasing power."

This proposal follows hearings held last fall by House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller, D-Calif., and Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Soviet Wash., of the Ways and Means Committee focusing on "redirecting (IRA and 401k) tax breaks to a new system of guaranteed retirement accounts to which all workers would be obliged to contribute," as reported by InvestmentNews.com.
Obliged as in mandated, as in the pols take your 401k ...
The hearings examined a proposal from professor Teresa Ghilarducci of the New School for Social Research in New York to give all workers "a $600 annual inflation-adjusted subsidy from the U.S. government" in return for requiring workers "to invest 5% of their pay into a guaranteed retirement account administered by the Social Security Administration."
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Home Front: Politix
U.S. lawmakers to Obama: Press Israel to ease Gaza siege
2010-01-26
Fifty-four members of the U.S. Congress have signed a letter asking President Barack Obama to put pressure on Israel to ease the siege of the Gaza Strip.
Good grief. Name that party...
The letter was the initiative of Representatives Baghdad Jim McDermott from Washington and Keith Ellison from Minnesota, both of whom are Democrats. Ellison is the first American Muslim to ever win election to Congress.
Fancy those two paring up.
McDermott and Ellison wrote that they understand the threats facing Israel and the ongoing Hamas terror activities against Israeli citizens but that "this concern must be addressed without resulting in the de facto collective punishment of the Palestinian residents of the Gaza Strip."

"We ask you to press for immediate relief for the citizens of Gaza as an urgent component of your broader Middle East peace efforts," they wrote, adding that the siege has hampered the ability of fifth columns aid agencies to do their work in Gaza.
Since everything else Obama has been doing has turned out so rosy.
The congressmen urged Obama to pressure Israel to ease the movement of people into and out of Gaza, especially students, the sick, aid workers, journalists and those with family concerns, and also to allow the import of building materials to rebuild houses. Israel has warned that such materials would be used to rebuild Hamas infrastructure and not civilian homes.

Ellison has harshly criticized the House of Representatives decision to reject the Goldstone report, arguing that the report "only presents facts and raises recommendations for the future." He cast doubt that members of Congress who voted to reject the report even took the time to read it and that the rejection hurt the Obama government's role as an honest broker in the Middle East conflict.

In addition to members of Congress, several leftist organizations also signed the letter, including Americans for Peace Now and J Street.
Look! J Street showing up on the anti-Israel line again!
The Israeli Embassy in Washington responded to the letter: "The Israeli position is that the Hamas government in Gaza does not meet the conditions set forth by the international community and the Quartet. And as long as Hamas continues to attack Israel with missiles and other means, Israel will not open the border crossings. With this, Israel is doing everything possible to ensure that humanitarian aid enters Gaza in a controlled manner so that it is ensured that the population receives what it needs, including medical care in Israel. But Israel will not allow a neighbor that calls for its destruction to enjoy the benefits of an open border."
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-Signs, Portents, and the Weather-
Don't Count out 'Mandatory' Service Yet
2009-03-29
HB 1388 "quietly" passed the Senate last week. Now, this bill is working itself through the process.
A proposal in Congress to study whether "mandatory" service should be required of all young people in the United States has suddenly disappeared from a bill that would reauthorize other national service programs such as AmeriCorps. But the plan has appeared in another bill at just about the same time.

WND reported more than a week ago on a plan in the U.S. House of Representatives to determine whether "a workable, fair, and reasonable mandatory service requirement for all able young people" should be developed across the United States. But the language that was included in H.R. 1388 suddenly disappeared.

At about the same time, H.R. 1444 by U.S. Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Wash., appeared and was assigned to the House Committee on Labor and Education.

The bill, under Section 4 (b)6, states:

Whether a workable, fair, and reasonable mandatory service requirement for all able young people could be developed, and how such a requirement could be implemented in a manner that would strengthen the social fabric of the Nation and overcome civic challenges by bringing together people from diverse economic, ethnic, and educational backgrounds.

The original plan not only reauthorized existing programs but added "new programs and studies" with a forecast funding level of $6 billion over the next five years, according to the Congressional Budget Office.

It raised immediate concerns that the effort, which is intended to include 250,000 "volunteers," is the beginning of what President Obama called his "National Civilian Security Force" in a speech last year in which he urged creating an organization as big and well-funded as the U.S. military. He has declined since then to elaborate.

The newest plan says the aim is "to establish the Congressional Commission on Civic Service to study methods of improving and promoting volunteerism and national service, and for other purposes."

It would be directed to identify how issues that deter volunteerism "and national service" can be overcome, determine what role should government have "in overcoming" those issues, evaluate the "existing databases" for linking "would-be volunteers and service providers," and referred to the "workable, fair, and reasonable mandatory service requirement."

The proposal also speculates on a "public service academy, a four-year institution that offers a federally funded undergraduate education with a focus on training future public sector leaders."

Like the provisions in the earlier bill, it also includes children down to primary school, requiring a review of "the means to develop awareness of national service and volunteer opportunities at a young age by creating, expanding and promoting service options for primary and secondary school students and by raising awareness of existing incentives."
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India-Pakistan
ISI’s activities of mutual concern: U.S. lawmaker
2008-12-28
This sure as hell made the surprise meter twitch ...
NEW DELHI: A leading American lawmaker, Jim McDermott of the Democratic Party, feels that the activities of Pakistan’s Inter-Services Intelligence “are of mutual concern” to both India and the United States and that Washington would remain engaged in its effort to resolve problems in Afghanistan, tribal areas and Pakistan.

Mr. McDermott, elected to represent the 7th district of Washington State for the 12th term, has suggested to President-elect Barack Obama that he make India his first international stop. The Congressman visualised that geopolitical events will make relationship between the two democracies “more intense” and make it imperative for Washington to have an excellent working relationship with New Delhi.

Having made the recommendation to Mr. Obama’s transition team before the Mumbai terror attacks, Mr. McDermott told The Hindu that while events in Mumbai have drawn the issues of Afghanistan and Kashmir “closer and closer to each other so that it is impossible to solve one without convening all the players at the table, I do not know at this time if a special envoy makes sense. The activities of the ISI are of mutual concern to our countries.”

As the co-Chair of the bipartisan Congressional Caucus on India and Indian Americans, Mr. McDermott is of the view that now with a stronger Democratic Congress and a Democrat in the White House, the new President and the U.S. Congress will re-establish America’s leadership role in global affairs, emphasising diplomatic engagement while respecting the sovereignty of nations. “This will rebuild trust in us as a partner and can lead to finding common ground and commitment to work together on difficult issues,” he said, in response to a question as to what both the Congress and White House would do to strengthening Pakistan’s civilian government to rein in its army, the ISI and “non-State elements.”

Asked whether the next Congress would have greater oversight over Pakistan in tackling terror on its soil and prevent its spread, Mr. McDermott said it was necessary to take a comprehensive view on what was going on instead of a fragmented, disconnected response. Earlier this month, Mr. McDermott piloted a resolution on December 11 (HR 1532) in the House of Representatives condemning the Mumbai terror attacks.
And then back to reality ...
Having voted against the U.S.-India Nuclear Cooperation Approval and Nuclear Non-Proliferation Enhancement Act this September, Mr. McDermott said while his friendship for India “has not and will never change,” the Act is not in India’s best interest. “As presented to the House, the legislation undermines the Nuclear Non-Proliferation Treaty, and that can only serve to destabilise the region in the coming years. In my judgment there were insufficient safeguards in the bill and that worries me greatly. With nuclear-armed India and Pakistan separated by a border where violence is all too frequent, I cannot see how India giving additional nuclear capacity will not be countered in Pakistan. Despite the goal of providing additional energy, we are in reality fuelling a nuclear arms race.”
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Home Front Economy
Democrats contemplate abolishing 401(k) tax breaks - Mandatory worker contributions considered
2008-10-26
Relax - give the Feds an additional 5% to spend, and your retirement is in good hands.
Why McCain hasn't turned this into a campaign ad yet I don't know ...
Powerful House Democrats are eyeing proposals to overhaul the nation's $3 trillion 401(k) system, including the elimination of most of the $80 billion in annual tax breaks that 401(k) investors receive.
It's not a break, it's a deferral. When you retire and cash your 401k you pay the taxes on the disbursement.
House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller, D-California, and Rep. Jim McDermott, D-HAMAS (Washington), chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee's Subcommittee on Income Security and Family Support, are looking at redirecting those tax breaks to a new system of guaranteed retirement accounts to which all workers would be obliged to contribute.
We have one of those already.
A plot plan by Teresa Ghilarducci, professor of economic-policy analysis at the New School for Social Research in New York, contains elements that are being considered. She testified last week before Miller's Education and Labor Committee on her proposal.
That she's from the 'New School' is all you need to know.
At that hearing, the director of the Congressional Budget Office, Peter Orszag, testified that some $2 trillion in retirement savings has been lost over the past 15 months.
Bad as that is, what Ghilarducci proposes is far worse.
Under Ghilarducci's plan, all workers would receive a $600 annual inflation-adjusted subsidy from the U.S. government ...
Guess where that 'subsidy' comes from ...
... but would be required to invest 5 percent of their pay into a guaranteed retirement account administered by the Social Security Administration. The money in turn would be invested in special government bonds that would pay 3 percent a year, adjusted for inflation.
The bonds, of course, fund all the new spending for Congress.
The current system of providing tax breaks on 401(k) contributions and earnings would be eliminated.

"I want to stop the federal subsidy of 401(k)s," Ghilarducci said in an interview. "401(k)s can continue to exist, but they won't have the benefit of the subsidy of the tax break."
Hers is one voice in 300 million. Do the rest of us get a say?
Under the current 401(k) system, investors are charged relatively high retail fees, Ghilarducci said.
NOT TRUE. You can invest your 401k at Vanguard (for example) or Fidelity in an indexed fund and pay fees that are very, very low.
"I want to spend our nation's dollar for retirement security better. Everybody would now be covered" if the plan were adopted, Ghilarducci said.
How in the world would that be true? You get your money compounded at 3% instead of 7%, the historical market return, and it gets invested into government bonds that the Congress uses to burn more money. How is that better for anyone other than Congress?
She has been in contact with Miller and McDermott about her plan, and they are interested in pursuing it, she said.
Well sure they are, they love spending other people's money.
"This [plan] certainly is intriguing," said Mike DeCesare, press secretary for McDermott. "That is part of the discussion," he said.

While Miller stopped short of calling for Ghilarducci's plan at the hearing last week, he was clearly against continuing tax breaks as they currently exist. The savings rate isn't going up for the investment of $80 billion," he said. "We have to start to think about ... whether or not we want to continue to invest that $80 billion for a policy that's not generating what we now say it should."
That's an idiot statement. The savings rate isn't the issue here. People lock up money for long periods of time into equities, and that helps our economy far more than having the money used to facilitate more government spending.
"From where I sit that's just crazy," said John Belluardo, president of Stewardship Financial Services Inc. in Tarrytown, New York. "A lot of people contribute to their 401(k)s because of the match of the employer," he said. Belluardo's firm does not manage assets directly.

Higher-income employers provide matching funds to employee plans so that they can qualify for tax benefits for their own defined-contribution plans, he said. "If the tax deferral goes away, the employers have no reason to do the matches, which primarily help people in the lower income brackets," Belluardo said.

"This is a battle between liberalism and conservatism," said Christopher Van Slyke, a partner in the La Jolla, California, advisory firm Trovena, which manages $400 million. "People are afraid because their accounts are seeing some volatility, so Democrats will seize on the opportunity to attack a program where investors control their own destiny," he said.
The Dhimmicrats have to be seen as 'doing something', even if it is ultimately destructive.
The Profit Sharing/401(k) Council of America in Chicago, which represents employers that sponsor defined-contribution plans, is "staunchly committed to keeping the employee benefit system in America voluntary," said Ed Ferrigno, vice president in the Washington office. "Some of the tenor [of the hearing last week] that the entire system should be based on the activities of the markets in the last 90 days is not the way to judge the system," he said.

No legislative proposals have been introduced and Congress is out of session until next year. However, most political observers believe that Democrats are poised to gain seats in both the House and the Senate, so comments made by the mostly Democratic members who attended the hearing could be a harbinger of things to come.
Yup, that's just what it is. Miller and McDermott will be back in January.
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Home Front Economy
Democrats' Assault to Redistribue Your Wealth Begins
2008-10-23
House Democrats Contemplate Abolishing 401(k) Tax Breaks
Powerful House Democrats are eyeing proposals to overhaul the nation's $3 trillion 401(k) system, including the elimination of most of the $80 billion in annual tax breaks that 401(k) investors receive.

House Education and Labor Committee Chairman George Miller, D-California, and Rep. Jim McDermott, D-Washington, chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee's Subcommittee on Income Security and Family Support, are looking at redirecting those tax breaks to a new system of guaranteed retirement accounts to which all workers would be obliged to contribute.
Don't we already have one of those?
A plan by Teresa Ghilarducci, professor of economic-policy analysis at the New School for Social Research in New York, contains elements that are being considered. She testified last week before Miller's Education and Labor Committee on her proposal.

At that hearing, the director of the Congressional Budget Office, Peter Orszag, testified that some $2 trillion in retirement savings has been lost over the past 15 months.
Thanks, Barney and Chris ...
Under Ghilarducci's plan, all workers would receive a $600 annual inflation-adjusted subsidy from the U.S. government but would be required to invest 5 percent of their pay into a guaranteed retirement account administered by the Social Security Administration. The money in turn would be invested in special government bonds that would pay 3 percent a year, adjusted for inflation.
Just like the current SS system, all the money goes into the bonds the government has to issue to cover deficit spending. Which means the government would have more money available to spend. Sounds like the Democrats alright ...
The current system of providing tax breaks on 401(k) contributions and earnings would be eliminated. "I want to stop the federal subsidy of 401(k)s," Ghilarducci said in an interview. "401(k)s can continue to exist, but they won't have the benefit of the subsidy of the tax break."
And I want Ghilarducci run out of town on a rail ...
Under the current 401(k) system, investors are charged relatively high retail fees, Ghilarducci said. "I want to spend our nation's dollar for retirement security better. Everybody would now be covered" if the plan were adopted, Ghilarducci said.
Who the hell cares what she wants? She's one citizen. I like the 401K plans precisely because government can't get its hands on them.
She has been in contact with Miller and McDermott about her plan, and they are interested in pursuing it, she said. "This [plan] certainly is intriguing," said Mike DeCesare, press secretary for McDermott. "That is part of the discussion," he said.

While Miller stopped short of calling for Ghilarducci's plan at the hearing last week, he was clearly against continuing tax breaks as they currently exist. "The savings rate isn't going up for the investment of $80 billion," he said. "We have to start to think about ... whether or not we want to continue to invest that $80 billion for a policy that's not generating what we now say it should."
Of course it's generating what it should. It's making people less dependent on government for their retirement. Once you understand that, you understand why the Democrats want to get rid of it.
"From where I sit that's just crazy," said John Belluardo, president of Stewardship Financial Services Inc. in Tarrytown, New York. "A lot of people contribute to their 401(k)s because of the match of the employer," he said. Belluardo's firm does not manage assets directly.

Higher-income employers provide matching funds to employee plans so that they can qualify for tax benefits for their own defined-contribution plans, he said. "If the tax deferral goes away, the employers have no reason to do the matches, which primarily help people in the lower income brackets," Belluardo said.

"This is a battle between liberalism and conservatism," said Christopher Van Slyke, a partner in the La Jolla, California, advisory firm Trovena, which manages $400 million. "People are afraid because their accounts are seeing some volatility, so Democrats will seize on the opportunity to attack a program where investors control their own destiny," he said.

The Profit Sharing/401(k) Council of America in Chicago, which represents employers that sponsor defined-contribution plans, is "staunchly committed to keeping the employee benefit system in America voluntary," said Ed Ferrigno, vice president in the Washington office. "Some of the tenor [of the hearing last week] that the entire system should be based on the activities of the markets in the last 90 days is not the way to judge the system," he said.

No legislative proposals have been introduced and Congress is out of session until next year. However, most political observers believe that Democrats are poised to gain seats in both the House and the Senate, so comments made by the mostly Democratic members who attended the hearing could be a harbinger of things to come.
"I see the train a-coming, it's comin' down the track ..."
In addition to tax breaks for 401(k)s, the issue of allowing investment advisors to provide advice for 401(k) plans was also addressed at the hearing. Rep. Robert Andrews, D-New Jersey, was critical of Department of Labor proposals made in August that would allow advisors to give individual advice if the advice was generated using a computer model. Andrews characterized the proposals as "loopholes" and said that investment advice should not be given by advisors who have a direct interest in the sale of financial products.

The Pension Protection Act of 2006 contains provisions making it easier for investment advisors to give individualized counseling to 401(k) holders. "In retrospect that doesn't seem like such a good idea to me," Andrews said. "This is an issue I think we have to revisit. I frankly think that the compromise we struck in 2006 is not terribly workable or wise," he said.

On Thursday, October 9, the Department of Labor hastily scheduled a public hearing on the issue in Washington for Tuesday, October 21. The agency does not frequently hold public hearings on its proposals.
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