The Daily Gouge, Thursday, October 17th, 2013

On October 16, 2013, in Uncategorized, by magoo1310

It’s Thursday, October 17th, 2013…and here’s The Gouge!

First up, as you’ve undoubtedly heard:

Senate approves budget deal, bill heads to House

 

ha-ha-america-obama-pelosi-congress-obamacare-socialism-political-poster-1269314933

House Speaker John Boehner said earlier that the House “absolutely” will take up the Senate bill, even if he has to rely on mostly Democrats to pass it, and that he expects the partial government shutdown to end by Thursday. “We fought the good fight. We just didn’t win,”… (No, John.  The Spartans fought a good fight at Thermopylae; you fought about as well as the French in WWII.)

Now, as the late, great Paul Harvey loved to say, the rest of the story:

McConnell-Reid Deal Includes $2 Billion Earmark for Kentucky Project

 

mcconnell618

A proposal to end the government shutdown and avoid default orchestrated by Republican Leader Mitch McConnell and Democratic Leader Harry Reid includes a $2 billion earmark for a Kentucky project. Language in a draft of the McConnell-Reid deal (see page 13, section 123) provided to WFPL News shows a provision that increases funding for the massive Olmsted Dam Lock in Louisville from $775 million to nearly $2. 9 billion.

cimg0453

The dam is considered an important project for the state and region in regards to water traffic along the Ohio River. As The Courier-Journal‘s James Bruggers reported in 2011, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers said they needed about $2.1 billion for the locks due to “stop and go funding.”

Asked about the additional funding in the proposal, McConnell spokesman Robert Steurer directed all questions to lawmakers who worked on the bill directly.

Nothing to see here, folks; move along.  And to add insult to injury, as the WSJ notes, the man who helped launched this latest GOP fiasco has suddenly grasped reality:

“…Does Ted Cruz support ObamaCare? You might laugh at that question, but on Wednesday the freshman Texas Republican refused to delay the Senate deal to reopen the government and raise the debt limit even though it contained barely a token concession on the Affordable Care Act.

“Delaying this vote would not accomplish anything,” Mr. Cruz explained. “The focus is and should be on the substance of providing real relief for the American people. This deal doesn’t do that and that’s why I intend to vote no, but there is nothing to be benefited by delaying this vote a couple of days, versus having it today.””

Really, Ted?!?  Or perhaps, having tucked millions of additional campaign dollars safely away in his war chest, Cruz no longer sees a need to further damage the Republican brand through further futile filibusters.

The way we see it, the GOP picked the wrong fight at the wrong time; but as the AEI‘s Edward Conard details, the battle they’re ignoring is inevitable:

The case for hostage-taking

 

091101-ship-of-state

As the budget and debt ceiling-standoff continues in Washington, many are asking the wrong question: Which party will pay a political price for the government shutdown? Democrats are comparing Republicans to “hostage-takers”; Republicans complain that Democrats refuse to negotiate.

Here’s the right question: Can we afford not to have this fight? With federal expenditures running 30 percent higher than revenues, debt at nearly twice the historical average, and no significant improvement in sight, is it any wonder that a contingent of conservative legislators is willing to ignore political expediency and stand on principle instead?

http://www.aei.org/article/politics-and-public-opinion/the-case-for-hostage-taking/?utm_source=today&utm_medium=paramount&utm_campaign=101613

It’s either them or us…and if we go, the country goes with us.

Next up, Conn Carroll relates…

Something very strange going on behind Healthcare.gov

 

obamacare_dmv_irs

Healthcare.gov, the web site for Obamacare, is the crown jewel of the American welfare state and President Obama’s signature domestic policy achievement. Hundreds of millions of Americans will use Healthcare.gov every day for decades to come if the site ever functions properly and Obamacare becomes as permanent a feature of American life as Social Security.

So, if you were picking the IT firm to design Healthcare.gov, you would spare no effort to make sure every potential bidder knew about the opportunity, that the integrity of the bid selection process was beyond question, and that the company most likely to create the best possible site got the award, right?

But that’s not what happened with Healthcare.gov. Officials with both the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services and CGI Federal, the U.S. subsidiary of the Canadian IT firm that won the $93 million contract, are instead acting like they’ve got something to hide.

Several weeks ago, Washington Examiner senior investigative reporter Richard Pollock found that two federal contract databases listed CGI as the lone bidder for the Healthcare.gov. So, Pollock started asking questions at CGI and HHS. Nobody would talk on the record, but insisted “on background” that as many as four bidders sought the contract before it was awarded to the Canadian firm’s U.S. subsidiary.

obamacare-cartoon-july-15-4

When Pollock pressed for documentation of the multiple bidders, including names of the companies involved, neither CGI nor HHS produced it. Tasha Bradley, an HHS spokesman, even claimed that “off the record, Richard, you will need to FOIA us for that information.”

Then things really got strange yesterday when Bradley said this:

“Off the record, we have gotten a number of questions about your report. We are currently giving those reporters the same information that I provided to you and saying, on the record, that your reporting was incorrect.”

Did you catch that? HHS refuses to document “on background” its claim there were four bidders, but goes “on the record” with other news organizations to trash the Examiner for reporting that the only available official documents found to date say there was only one bidder.

Just another day in “the most transparent administration in history,” right?

Yeah…

yeahright

Fortunately, America gets yet another chance…

toles05082013

…for a second opinion.  After all, when even Wolf Blitzer senses a problem…

…things have to be a wee bit out of kilter.

In a related item, if you think you’ve seen Der Obafuhrer’s act before, in an absolute must-read commentary at American Thinker, Ed Lasky suggests the likely locale:

Obama in Wonderland

 

Obama in Wonderland

Many people criticize President Obama for spending too much time campaigning, traveling or on the golf course.  They are wrong.  He spends too much time in a far more removed and unique place: Wonderland Indeed, he seemingly lives in Wonderland. The problem is that the rest of us live in the real world.

Over the last five years it has become increasingly clear that Barack Obama and his crew of handpicked officials see America and the rest of the world in ways at variance with reality…

http://www.americanthinker.com/2013/10/obama_in_wonderland.html

WONDERLAND

On the Lighter Side…

mrz101013dAPR20131009074616ramirez021810_FULL-thumb-410x280gmc1127972013101005150081_13863020131010032548131009titanicareRGB20131010122552sbr101013dAPR20131010024520hF2F8C81DhFD930D73h9F8DBD45

Then there’s this from Bob Chagares…

bobchagares

…as well as Sandy Martindale’s helpful hint how to tell if you’re dog’s involved in a sex scandal:

sandymartindale

Must be a Demodog!

And in the “Don’t Mess With Texas” segment, yet another reason to love the Lone Star State:

Texas refuses to give back lethal drugs, proceeds with execution

 

texas lethal inject

A Texas man convicted of killing his parents was executed as planned Wednesday night despite a growing controversy over the drug used to carry out the punishment. Last week, state prison officials refused a request from the compounding pharmacy that created and sold Texas the pentobarbital — a single-dose drug used in executions — to return the drug.

Jasper Lovoi, owner of The Woodlands Compounding Pharmacy, claims Texas authorities put him “in the middle of a firestorm” of protesters, hate calls and press requests after letting it leak that he sold eight 2.5-gram doses of pentobarbital to the state for upcoming executions. Lovoi says he had been promised anonymity by the state.

But Jason Clark, a spokesman for the Texas Department of Criminal Justice, said the department bought the drug vials legally and won’t return them. Clark said the state has enough vials to carry out scheduled executions for the remainder of the year.

E4277r

Death penalty states like Texas, which has executed 505 people since 1981, have been turning to compounding pharmacies to purchase lethal doses of barbiturates used in executions. The switch comes after the drugs’ primary makers shut off supplies to states following pressure from anti-death penalty advocates. Compounding pharmacies allow certified specialists to mix ingredients for medicine themselves and sell them. For example, if there is only an adult-dose of a particular drug available, compounding pharmacists can manipulate the active ingredients and change the dosage or strength.

However, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration does not vouch for the validity, safety or effectiveness of drugs made in compounding pharmacies. Earlier this year, these new go-to drug dens came under scrutiny following a deadly meningitis outbreak that was linked to contaminated injections made at a Massachusetts compounding pharmacy.

And we wouldn’t want convicted killers to die of meningitis, would we?!?

Finally, we’ll call it a day with another sordid story ripped from the pages of the Crime Blotter:

Ex-Detroit mayor sentenced to 28 years in prison for corruption

 

bilde

Jailbirds of a feather flocking together; Kwame just got caught!

Former Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick was sentenced Thursday to 28 years in prison for corruption, after a series of scandals destroyed his political career and helped steer a crisis-laden city even deeper into trouble. Kilpatrick, who served as mayor from 2002 until fall 2008, fattened his bank account by tens of thousands of dollars, traveled the country in private planes and even strong-armed his campaign fundraiser for stacks of cash hidden in her bra, according to evidence at trial.

“I’m ready to go so the city can move on,” Kilpatrick told the judge. “The people here are suffering, they’re hurting. A great deal of that hurt I accept responsibility for.”

As we said…

myworkhereisdone

…birds of a feather!

Magoo



Archives