Saturday, March 31, 2012

One to Go.

Louisville Cardinals vs. Kentucky Wildcats - NCAA Tournament Game - Recap - March 31, 2012 - ESPN

anyone who has paid close attention to Pitino ball was not surprised by tonight's game.  Only thankful that his trademark pull out the stops at the five minute mark was not enough.  While at UK we saw him come in the underdog and pull it out time after time.  The guy is a hall of fame coach.

Coach Cal is no slouch either.  He said his team is coming together.  Too bad they will blow into the pros in a few more days because if players still stayed four years we would be looking at a UCLA type dynasty.  But then that's how he gets them.  Promises to get them draft ready and it seems to work.  It is good to have a couple of upperclassmen like Miller and Jones to hold the team steady.   Hopefully we will keep a core to play that role next year.

Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Game plan

Game plan: Kentucky vs. Louisville - College Basketball Nation Blog - ESPN

Well, it is mid week and the big game is but 3 days away.  Of course, it is doubly important to win this game since having Louisville deprive Kentucky of its next banner would be a pill to bitter to swallow. Great assessment of the strengths and weaknesses of each team.

The End of Amateur Sports?

John Calipari, Anthony Davis, and what Kentucky's march to the Final Four means for college basketball - Grantland


 Chuck Klosterman  
has an interesting point to make about UK basketball and college sports.  It is nothing that we all have not spoken but now it is a chance for the Cats to hang another banner.  So, we will wait a while to bring the topic up again.  UK fans are unwavering if nothing else.  Whatever it takes to hang the banners.
 

Crony Capitalism |

Encore Broadcast: Crony Capitalism | Moyers & Company | BillMoyers.com



Encore Broadcast: On Crony Capitalism from BillMoyers.com on Vimeo.




I am sure that most do not watch this program but most maybe should.  Bill Moyers has always been a progressive with an intense focus on providing for the common people.  In this segment he does and interview with David Stockman, who was Director of the Office of Management and Budget under Ronald Reagan.  In this program you will see a lion of liberalism and a dedicated conservative slice through the misinformation and misdirection to the roots of our national malaise.

It asks us to think a little deeper than we are used to and it asks us not to be confused by party or partisan politics but to peer through the veil that is drawn over our national enterprise.  If we, as citizens, do not bond together to do this then we are indeed headed for the scrap heap.  Please take the time to watch this.

Monday, March 26, 2012

Playing games with plastic soldiers.

Support for Afghan War Falls in U.S., Poll Finds - NYTimes.com

No wonder the war is going badly.  Those at the top and the American people are divorced from the horror and brutality being done in their name.  Time to go.

Sunday, March 25, 2012

On to "Blue Orleans"

Kentucky skyrockets into Final Four - College Basketball Nation Blog - ESPN

Katz in this piece says this was Kentucky's best game but I think the Indiana game was.  I think Indiana is good enough to be the second best team in the country.  Next year could be the year for the Hoosiers.

Saturday, March 24, 2012

What a Game!!

Indiana Hoosiers vs. Kentucky Wildcats - NCAA Tournament Game - Recap - March 23, 2012 - ESPN

IU may be the second best team in the country.  There was no need for a shot clock last night as the teams pushed the ball up and down the floor in a frenzy.  Great basketball by two teams coached by great coaches.  IU is the best three shooting team I have seen this year.  Their guys get rid of the ball faster than you can get out on them.  There is no way to guard the three when the shooter simply steps back a step and releases.

UK showed a lot of character by not folding when Davis got in early foul trouble and never allowed the game to get out of hand.  MKG was spectacular as was Doron Lamb who is so smooth he just slid to the basket or nailed that three from the corner.  The best college game I have seen in a long time.

To Kristy

Why Getting Grimy As A Child Can Make For A Healthier Life : Shots - Health Blog : NPR

I have long argued that we are staying too clean for our own good.  Hand sanitizers may be OK in a hospital setting but not in the car.  Get dirty.

War on Coal

Panel Finds Failings by U.S. Agency in Deadly Mine Blast - WSJ.com

Friday, March 23, 2012

The Long View

Ron Paul slams rivals for Etch A Sketch 'games'


word is that Rep. Paul is angling for the #2 spot on the Romney ticket.  Is this where Paul succumbs to the lust for office?

Watch out for those peaceniks.

Documents show NYPD infiltrated liberal groups (3:03) - The Washington Post

anyone who was alive in the '60s will not be surprised by this.  Strange since it is the reactionary, uber-right wing groups that have created all the trouble for the past 50 years.

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Too Much Money

Election's Biggest Billionaire Donor - WSJ.com


 
some people just have too much money.  It's like waving a loaded gun around in a crowd.

Romney gets positive review from DeMint, hits back at Santorum - CNN.com

Romney gets positive review from DeMint, hits back at Santorum - CNN.com


Obama is leading Romney in the polls in Virginia.  Do you think this may make a difference to the old Tea Partier?  Wonder if he will be as obstructionist as he is with the current President?

Legalized alcohol sales for Somerset?




Opportunity

Once again the issue of alcohol sales is making an appearance in the discussion of the future of our local area. The current incarnation was led by a local option effort to be held for the precinct that includes Eagle’s Nest which wants to be able to serve alcoholic drinks at the clubhouse. It was not long before the well known opposition leaders took to the highways and airwaves to oppose the measure. Then in the midst of this a local businessman decided to spearhead an effort to legalize alcohol sales for the City of Somerset. Mr. Weddle proposes his effort as an economic issue while the opposition refers to it as an issue of morality.

Readers of this column are aware that I have espoused such sales as a means of presenting the Somerset-Pulaski County area in a progressive light. I must hasten to say that many of my friends and family disagree with me and I understand their reasons just as I understand the opposition leaders’ efforts against it. There can be no doubt that drug abuse and alcoholism are dreadful blots on a society and can bring suffering to those who are associated with such abuse. But, I will make the point that we don’t make cars illegal because they can be used to kill people nor have we been successful at gun regulation that would prevent many murderous crimes. It is in the same light that we must view the legal sales of alcoholic beverages. Now, I am very aware that this line of reasoning will not change many minds but it is mine, nevertheless. Those who have opposed the sale of alcoholic beverages on the basis of morality will continue to do so regardless of any persuasive argument. Prohibition was done a century ago and was not particularly effective or popular but it did give rise to the criminal elements that prospered from the illegal provision that people desired. At the onset it enjoyed widespread popularity but proved impossible to enforce and its end was joyously celebrated.

At this point I feel I should point out that I don’t drink such beverages although I have certainly done so in the past. I found that my aspirations, a wife and alcohol did not mix. I have known some who fell victim to addiction to this substance but my experience is that the large majority have enough sense to handle social drinking responsibly. I think this is true generally. I am loathe to try to legislate morality when there is such profound disagreement and prefer to leave the matter to individual conscience.

I do however agree that the legalized sale of alcoholic beverages is necessary for Somerset and Pulaski County to reach the potential that is present for our location, size and the availability of Lake Cumberland.

Burnside led the way a few years ago with sales in restaurants but did not include package sales. The Proposal for Somerset does include package sales which, according to Mr. Weddle, amount to some 80% of Danville’s revenue from sales. While a few restaurants have sprang up on the U.S. 27 corridor, Burnside has not been aggressive in recruitment of other opportunities. Somerset is better positioned to do so.

We, and I mean that inclusively, are aware that our citizens have for many hears driven to Richmond, Nicholasville or Tennessee to purchase beer, wine or liquor. Now they drive to Lancaster or Danville to spend the money that could be retained in our local area. I am persuaded that if people want to drink they are going to do so regardless of the challenges to procurement. I am also very doubtful that legalized sales will result in a large increase in intoxicated driving since those people are now induced to travel 65 miles or more to purchase beer and liquor. Very few will make the drive home without lifting a few on the road.

I agree with the argument that the economic impact would be significant. The major impact would not be in the sale of the alcoholic beverages but, rather, in the associated entertainment opportunities that would necessarily follow it. In addition, it is just a fact of human nature that many businesses choose not to locate here due to the lack of entertainment and other activities that would be encouraged by the sale of adult beverages. Those businesses are not limited to nightclubs and restaurants but also include traditional businesses that would transfer management personnel here to live.

Mr. Weddle has pointed out the the city would be limited by population to about four package outlets which would certainly deny the argument that there would be alcohol on every corner and drunks in the gutters and on the sidewalks. There will be some. There already are.

Somerset has allowed some opportunities to escape in recent years due to a lack of vision among the councilors and city leaders. The Judge-Executive of Pulaski County is on record as opposing the legalized sale of alcohol so the burden is on the city to act. It is an opportunity for Somerset to move into the ranks of forward looking cities or to remain a parochial backwater.

My take on this issue is that Somerset must move to approve legal sales in order to compete with surrounding cities that threaten to outperform our economy.
























Just not for us. Guess we've gotten too fancy.

Datsun: Nissan to bring back Datsun car brand in selected markets - latimes.com

I had a couple of the Datsun pickups from the mid-seventies and I loved those trucks.  They would carry whatever you put on them and would go like a four wheel drive in the snow.  Extremely durable and withstood maltreatment from me on multiple occasions.

Monday, March 19, 2012

Self Defense? NOT!!!

Florida's self-defense law complicates shooting of teenager - KansasCity.com


this points out the idiocy of the lax gun laws some states have.  the rule must be that if you choose to carry and use a weapon you must bear the responsibility of your actions.  This guy should go to jail.

totally sucks!!

Curse of the $500 million sunken treasure - Sep. 11, 2007

Just because we haven't paid any attention to it for 200 years doesn't mean we don't love it.

Honeybee or not to Honeybee

Are Pesticides Killing Bees? Yes, But Not Exclusively - Davis, CA Patch


culprits in the pollination wars.  What is responsible for the killing of the most important pollinator of our food crops?

Word

Gas prices rising: Why GOP won't address real cause - CSMonitor.com

the truth about rising gas prices but you don't see the campaigners clamoring for more regulation of the oil industry or for a tax on windfall profits.

Sunday, March 18, 2012

Just don't leave town.

Chevron executives barred from leaving Brazil over spill | Reuters


Brazil breaks bad on Chevron over a spill less than .1% the size of the BP spill.

Piling On.

Romney: Obama Mismanaging Karzai Relationship - WSJ.com


the blathering of those who seek personal gain and the warmongers over Afghan policy sounds so much like piling on just to have something to complain about.  McCain insists that the strategy is working and would have us stay forever in a country that attacks our soldiers and who does not want us on its soil.  Romney would have us dictate terms to the country's President acting more like conquerors than liberators.  I have no confidence in the military capability of either of these men.  If one wishes to return to the Bush policy of interminable war, here is your man.

Saturday, March 17, 2012

More oil in the water.

Chevron Sees New Oil Sheen at Brazil Frade Field - WSJ.com

these things happen all the time all over the place.  Not just occasionally in American waters.  Pollution doesn't stay where it is produced.

*& ##%&**

ESPN's Bob Knight won't refer to Kentucky by name


there is a vulgar name for someone like this.  Maybe more than one.  It is hard for me to imagine why ESPN even wants Bob Knight on the show.  What an ------------------!

By hook or crook.

Under fire, Goldman finds friend in New York's mayor | Reuters


is it ever ok to make money by duping people?

Senate Bill 12



Senate Bill 12



I have often stated in this column that the only proper role of government is the protection of its citizens. This can be interpreted broadly to include disparate topics such as police protection and laws against fraud but it can also be interpreted to include laws and rules that preserve the ability of citizens to seek a fair and equitable access to basic services. Basic services can be things like medical care or protection from unfair hiring practices. In this case I want to speak to you of Senate Bill 12 which will relieve telecommunications companies from being required to act a provider of last resort to areas that are not as profitable as others. Specifically, it would relieve companies like AT&T and Windstream from providing basic services to rural areas for which it is less profitable due to terrain, sparseness of subscribers or for locations that would require significant construction to provide service. What we are talking about are land lines to subscribers who desire basic telephone service without the frills. This would include 911 service which has proven to be a lifeline for untold numbers of people. Cell phone service is spotty at best in the mountains of Easter Kentucky and would not be a workable replacement for landline service. Most people receive internet service either by television cable or by phone lines. They would be totally left without broadband or even dial-up service.

The telecommunications giants claim this would free them from unprofitable activities in order to invest in more technologically superior infrastructure. It is unclear just what that infrastructure would be or how much it would cost. What is clear is that it would effectively deny basic life saving service to many of Kentucky’s poor and we have a number of poor people in hard to reach areas. Also, at a time when we are trying to increase broadband coverage to rural Kentucky in order to increase economic opportunity Senate Bill 12 would decrease the primary method of delivering those services which is by telephone lines.

Now, the telecommunications giants say they won't remove anyone from basic service that is already being served but future applicants may not be served or may be required to purchase a telephone package that includes lots of other features that add cost to the monthly bill. For instance, my daughter has a basic service package that costs about $50 per month but I have a package that includes unlimited long distance, all the bells and whistles and broadband service that costs about $100 per month. Kentucky is not a wealthy state and the burden this legislation would place on those least able to pay would be onerous.

Now, you might say that the telecommunications giants have a right to be able to make as much money as they can from their product but there are a few other things to consider. For instance, these corporations are granted franchises (monopolies) to operate in a given area much the same as the electrical providers in order to give them a financial incentive to include the less profitable lines and to make long term investments. In addition, they use public rights of way to string lines and public airwaves to facilitate wireless services. In return the telecommunications giants are granted privileges that are anti-competitive and now, even after all these grants, they want to unload those customers for which the profit margin may be a bit smaller. Further, there have been efforts by other groups and municipalities to offer competing services that have been vehemently beaten back by the telecommunications giants who claim infringement on their franchises and now they want to withdraw service from those areas they no longer want at the price. Maybe they would be interested if the pot were sweeter.


Senate Bill 12 has been reported out of committee favorably. News reports state that when the bill's sponsor, Senator Paul Hornback (R-Shelbyville), testified before the committee he had an AT&T executive on each side of him. In addition, AT&T employs 31 lobbyists in Frankfort and has contributed generously to political campaign funds and has spent an additional $80,000 in lobbying expenses. Even at this these expenses would prove to be miniscule in comparison to the windfall the telecommunications giants would receive in return.

So, here are giant corporations who are attempting to make Kentucky their cash cow while refusing to provide services that would benefit the state as a whole. Through the entire history of this state, Kentucky has had the land raped and the revenue moved out of state. This seems a perfect place for intervention by the state to protect the public interest. Imagine your loved ones, existing on a Social Security check and isolated in the hills and hollows of Kentucky who these telecommunications giants would deny 911 services to thereby risking their lives. Is it too much to expect corporations to be just a little bit socially conscious? Without the telecommunications giants delivering these services it would fall to state government to fill the gap. The downside there is higher taxation to support these services.

My take? This bill should meet a swift death in order to protect the public and to facilitate the efforts to make opportunity equitable. Either that or forgo the franchises and allow entrepreneurial effort to compete for the business with minimum service requirements.



Thursday, March 15, 2012

Predator on Wall Street

Goldman resignation tip of iceberg - CSMonitor.com 

it is this kind of predatory behavior that the impending financial regulaion hopes to prevent in the future.  Goldman is the bank that kicked the can over the edge starting the maelstrom that engulfed the entire world.  Someone ought to be in jail.

Thanks for your service.

World News - NYT: Soldier in Afghanistan massacre 'just snapped,' US official says

 

there can be no doubt this is a horrific crime but exactly what does one expect from a man who was on his fiurth combat tour in 8 years with his marriage falling apart?  The real blame is rightfully placed on those who require this kind of indoctrination for war.  In previous wars a person might experience combat only a few days or weeks a year but now we require them to take repetitive tours where they are in harm's way day after day.

A trite thank you won't be enough for these men and women.

What's Behind These High Gas Prices? : NPR

What's Behind These High Gas Prices? : NPR

Mississippi Builds Insurance Exchange, Even As It Fights Health Law : Shots - Health Blog : NPR

Mississippi Builds Insurance Exchange, Even As It Fights Health Law : Shots - Health Blog : NPR

Wednesday, March 14, 2012

Southern Comfort

Santorum Wins Alabama, Mississippi Primaries - WSJ.com

The story here is that 70% of the vote went against Romney.  Question is would the South vote for Romney in November?

Monday, March 12, 2012

Motivator

�Kentucky's loss in SEC final all motivation it needs - Andy Staples - SI.com

The Vandy game points out the value of having an experienced team.  On Sunday the freshmen showed up. Kentucky had the guns to pull the game out but just came apart a bit in the last 3 minutes.  Not to take anything away from Vandy, they played a whale of a game and were intense the entire game.  Kentucky faces some problems in its South Regional but not insurmountable ones.  One can never discount Duke (made for TV?) and I think the Shockers are a team to be watched.  UConn has experience with its run to the title last year.

If Kentucky can play with poise they should go the distance, however, Vandy exposed a tactic that could be used to negate Davis in the post and place more of an emphasis on perimeter shooting.  Packing that zone inside the arc was a stroke of genius on Kevin Stallings' part.

Inexperience is the only negative for this team.  We will need the steadiness of Miller, Lamb and Jones in this run.

It all starts NOW.

Friday, March 9, 2012

What About AIG?

AIG’s bailout is a quiet success - The Washington Post

this editorial deserves a read since it enlightens as to the results of the AIG bailout. It leaves unresolved the philosophical issues but lays bare for the world to see how the financial end of the deal worked.

I am reminded of Jefferson's purchase of the Louisiana Purchase.  It went against everything he stood for from a philosophical standpoint but was just too good a deal to pass up.  I think we'll give him a mulligan for that one.

Thursday, March 8, 2012

Will Donor Money Destroy Occupy Wall Street? | Adbusters Culturejammer Headquarters

Will Donor Money Destroy Occupy Wall Street? | Adbusters Culturejammer Headquarters

Op-Ed: The Myth of the Out-of-Control Federal Government - 24/7 Wall St.

Op-Ed: The Myth of the Out-of-Control Federal Government - 24/7 Wall St.

Corruption Remains Intractable in Afghanistan Under Karzai Government - NYTimes.com

Corruption Remains Intractable in Afghanistan Under Karzai Government - NYTimes.com

As before, there is just no good foreseeable end game in this forsaken wilderness.  It has been bombed to rubble and occupied for forty years.  Government has been reduced to tribalism and the resent our presence.  Sure, there are a few that desire us to stay and help establish a working country but they are not enough to justify the expense and lives we would expend there.

We just can't take every misbegotten population in the world under our umbrella indefinitely no matter how much we have to offer them.  They still must make the effort on their own as our experience in Iraq so able exemplifies.

Yes, I am certain that the Taliban will return and they may give refuge to terroristic elements but we will have to deal with them another way.  Fact of the matter is that it is our relationship to Israel and Israel's treatment of the Palestinians that creates enmity toward the United States.  Focus on that problem and the danger relents.

Wednesday, March 7, 2012

U.S. officials warn against Syrian intervention - The Washington Post

U.S. officials warn against Syrian intervention - The Washington Post

some are sounding the drumbeat for war even as we try to extract ourselves from military misadventure and a broken treasury.  The fact is that in Syria the mission is not defined nor is the opposition.  Syria, like Iran, has a very well developed and supported military and would not be a pushover as easy as even Iraq and look what a mess that was.

There is no consensus on intervention and the United States would be insane to put something like this on the burner now.  Our plate is full.

The Charlatan Wins

With Super Tuesday in the can it appears that the GOP is still not ready to take the bit in its mouth and get behind Mitt Romney. They REALLY don't want to do it but the primary season has revealed a bit more of the craziness than they had anticipated. The establishment GOPers who exist just out of sight kept prodding Jeb Bush and Mitch Daniels to ride in and save the day but wisdom prevailed and neither one of those potential #1s wanted to take a chance on the knife throwing in this dustup. I can't say that I blame them. Last go-round the GOP went with John McCain who was formerly known as a moderate Republican with a bit of a maverick streak meaning that occasionally he would shake hands with a Democrat. He only won the nomination after abandoning that maverick thing and proving it by taking on Sarah Palin as his partner and she stole his “maverick” mojo. This time a formerly perfectly reasonable man, Mitt Romney, once again sought the approval of his party but soon determined that perfectly reasonable was not going to cut the cake so he abandoned that tack to become “severely”conservative. The problem is that his record did not reflect that and he has had to perform the unenviable task of running against himself. It is very hard to win a nomination doing that and he should be awarded extra points just for accomplishing that feat of derring-do.

I really don't know who decided that the GOP primary process would open itself up by instituting a series of sponsored debates but my hat is off to them. That took a remarkable sense of confidence that President Obama could be beat with a ham sandwich and a seeming lack of realization of the reactionary nature of the right wing of the Republican Party. One could make the case that people who are that out of touch with their party may not need to occupy the Presidency.

Debates are the perfect format for exposing weaknesses and highlighting strengths and only one of those options was foreseen. Who knew that people who seriously sought to run the most powerful office in the world would resort to such guttersnipe tactics to achieve their personal aspirations. It would have been just as easy to engage in civil, logical debate on issues that our country desperately needs discussed with the good of the people at heart. Well, so much for integrity and the common weal when it comes down to living at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue. These candidates have resorted to some of the nastiest and least relevant stuff I can recall and I remember Richard Nixon. Even Barry Goldwater seems like a shining light of philosophical discourse in comparison. Each candidate has been bankrolled by one or more knights in shining armor made of gold and trimmed in greenbacks. The funding has overcome the sanity and reason of the candidates and allowed them to continue to hamstring their opponents without being forced to fold because of being out of call money. Everyone has had enough money to keep raising and the others keep calling their bluff.

If the nominee of the Grand Old Party actually wants to be President everyone knows that he is going to have to tack back to the middle to actually get the people to vote for him. This inundation of PAC money has artificially allowed the losers to not lose so soon and has kept the apparent nominee from mitigating his positions a bit. Now, the extreme right of the party sees mitigation as a cardinal sin subject to excommunication (the use of theological terminology just seemed appropriate) and just refuses to be driven back into the bushes (no pun intended). The old heads of the Grand Old Party seem to have finally accepted that Romney is their best chance for this go round and have sent the Grand Old Dame of that party, none other than Barbara Bush, out to speak the word out loud. COMPROMISE.

Even after these Super Tuesday results the deed is not yet done and Mitt will still have some heavy slogging to do to get to Tampa but likely he will do so. Then the heavy slogging will be to get back to the middle enough to defeat that charlatan in the White House.

If you have read this column before you know that I love the debate format. It does exactly what it is supposed to do which is examine the candidates evenly and allow each one to make his or her case. The only problem with the debate format this time around has been the flood of lucre that has allowed the least electable candidates to stay in the race while forcing the others to cater to the whims of those who make the most noise. With less reliance on millions of dollars to stay on the stage one could assume that reason would triumph, at least that was Jefferson's surmise. Regardless of what George Will says “welfare for politicians” is what we have now. Get the money out, fund elections publicly.

Just think, we still have eight months to go until this is over. Eight months of millions of dollars of ridiculous advertising designed to make the other guy look bad.

My take? It stinks. Oh yeah, the “charlatan” wins again.


Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Astonishing

Election Map 2012: Live Voting Results - CO - POLITICO.com

So far, the most astonishing and revealing thing to me are the results in Virginia. Romney wins with 59% of the vote but polling had him at 69%. In a show of evidence of Virginians lack of enthusiasm for Romney Ron Paul garnered 40% of the vote after polling at about 29%. No one else was on the ballot due to campaign staffs that did not understand the requirements to get on the ballot. This continues to show the weakness of Romney with the reactionary wing of the conservative party.

As of this time, 11 PM, Ohio is still a dead heat.  I had Romney winning by perhaps 3 points.  Those reds just don't like Romney.

Monday, March 5, 2012

Democracy? Maybe not.

An Existential Threat Within Israel Endangers Its Democracy : The New Yorker


This effete, liberal rag examines Israeli government as it struggles with what it perceives as an existential threat.  Apart from the apocalypse Israel cannot long exist as it does now especially if the United States withdraws its protective cover. We must ask if Israel deserves to exist if it imprisons and treats the people living withing its borders as enemies.  Most assuredly, many of them are enemies and the only hope that Israel has, short of apocalypse, is to reach a peaceful agreement with its neighbors and establishment of a road to coexistence.

This article deserves a read to increase awareness of the internal debate in Israel.

In what universe?

Senator McCain calls for war in Syria - CSMonitor.com


this guy has gone over the edge. There are any number of reasons for us to not become involved in another war right now regardless of where. Not even the military is for this. Someone ought to check this guy for Alzheimer's.

Peter Gabriel Pulls Music

Peter Gabriel Pulls Music From 'Rush Limbaugh Show' | Music News | Rolling Stone

Is this censorship or free enterprise? If a company chooses to not be associated with some sort of speech it certainly is censorship of a sort but only if it is intended to deny a platform for that speech. Otherwise it must be free enterprise.

The High Wire

Obama Tells Aipac He Won’t Tolerate a Nuclear Iran - NYTimes.com

Walking the high wire. It is an election year and the pro-Israel vote is important to the Democratic nominee. As I have said before, what little difference does it make if Iran has nuclear weapons. They will never be able to use them. Bibi needs to focus his efforts on peace in the region rather than bellicose rhetoric.

Saturday, March 3, 2012

Does Oil Trump Property Rights?

Farmer's Restraining Order Against Keystone XL Pipeline Reinstated | StateImpact Texas


Eminent Domain. A doctrine that enrages personal liberties people who believe that property rights are sacred. Problem is that those people for whom seizure of private property is an overreach by government are also those people who are in the "drill, baby, drill" crowd and who are enraged at President Obama's rejection of the current plan for the Keystone Pipeline.

So, what is the takeaway here? Is it OK to seize private property to benefit a private enterprise if that enterprise is something to do with oil? Or is is OK if the seizure is in the public interest?.

Here is a farmer in Texas who does not want the pipeline on her property. Does she have the right to refuse? What is the opinion of the oil first crowd? This is the same thing that is happening in Nebraska and the President is getting blamed for it with everyone saying it is those tree hugging environmentalists who are at fault.