I Agree, Obama Blew It

Road to Recovery: Obama

Administration “Blew It,” Says

Peter Morici

Posted Sep 03, 2010 07:23am EDT by Stacy Curtin in Recession, Politics, China

It’s almost Labor Day, but before Wall Street and investors take off for a long three-day weekend, all eyes were on the August jobs report. The report showed unemployment for August rose to 9.6% from 9.5% in July. Nonfarm payrolls shed 54,000 jobs last month — less than expected — while both June and July were revised upwardly.

The private sector created 67,000 jobs, but Professor Peter Morici of the University of Maryland says that is far from enough jobs to put the U.S. back to work and continue down the road to recovery.

“It is far less than we should be expecting now in the fifth quarter of an economic recovery,” he says. “The private sector has to create over 300,000 jobs a month, every single month, if we are to get unemployment down to 6% by the end of 2013.”

As unemployment hovers just under 10%, Wall Street started September with some welcome economic news. Positive manufacturing reports out for the U.S. and China pushed the Nasdaq, S&P and Dow all up nearly 3% on Wednesday. More good news Thursday for housing, weekly unemployment and chain-store sales moved the markets even higher.

But we are far from a strong recovery, and Morici is not confident President Obama and his economic team can get the job done. He firmly believes that our country’s huge trade deficit with China is largely to blame for high unemployment. U.S. businesses need more customers, he argues, while massive imports from China are drastically decreasing demand for goods made here at home.

He tells Henry with blunt certitude in this clip that Obama has “blown it” for not fixing the economy faster. “He and his team used the recession as an excuse to make permanent increases in government spending under the guise of stimulus that don’t do a lot to stimulate the economy,” Morici says.

At least for now, the White House says it’s not considering a second stimulus to jumpstart the economy.

Thoughts For The Day

Well, the Climate Change and Global Warming Nuts are at it Again. The United States and some other parts of the World have had a hot summer season that is correct. Also, other Countries have had record flooding, correct again. The U.S. also had a record cold winter with much snow. Remember Washington, D.C. getting buried? Now there is a hurricane that is likely to hit our east coast. But, so far it has been a relatively mild hurricane season. I Don’t think its Global Warming or Whatever. I believe it’s called Weather, sometimes good, sometimes bad, sometimes hot, and sometimes cold.

I hear some Unions and Black Activist groups are going to have a Rally in Washington now to prove they can draw more people than Glenn Beck. I wonder if the Unions etc. are going to pay people and bus them in just to prove a point? I really don’t care; go for it, even if it’s a little childish, at least it will bring in extra income for businesses in Washington. They would probably like a Rally every week.

I also heard some Unions like the UAW, SEIU, and NEA Etc. are pledging $50 Million or whatever amount it takes to keep the Democratic Candidates in control of Congress this Mid Term Election. That makes perfect sense to me. It’s a great investment when the end game is for Congress to cough up Billions to help Unions keep their Cadillac plans and rescue their under funded pensions.

Our Justice department is going around to areas in our Country with large concentrations of Muslims to make sure no one is discriminating against them, or hate speeches etc. Yep, We have to take care of the Muslims, don’t want to offend them. Well, I still don’t care for Islam or the Koran and if you’re a True Believer in Islam and the Koran and I’m still a Christian – Infidel and You have to convert me to Islam or kill me. I just don’t see a cook out with hot dogs and pork chops or a close friendship in the future.

                                                                                                Good Night

 

 

 

Funny The Truth Hurts

I find it amusing whenever I post something about Obama not being a Natural Born Citizen. The Liberals come out of the woodwork. Where is the Real Birth Certificate? Not the standard proof of a live birth piece of paper. Why did Obama Lock Down All His Past Records and Data the day He took Office?

Obama is not a Muslim, Ok, Prove It. There is more Data out there that He is and even His actions speak louder than words..

Why do I call Islam, Not a Religion, and refer to it as a Killing Cult. Well Gee Whiz, If your not a Muslim, You need to be Killed you Nasty Ole Infidel. Do your research; check out the back ground about Mohammad.

Better yet, go back and check Obama’s Credentials and Experience to be President. Whatever Hasn’t been Locked Down or Altered? Obama was Elected with Change We can Believe In and Yes We Can. Well Gosh, Oh Gee, Isn’t that sweet.

 

 

 

 

Interesting Article WSJ Online A Great Resource

The Folly of Subsidizing

Unemployment

My calculations suggest the jobless rate could

be as low as 6.8%, instead of 9.5%, if jobless

benefits hadn’t been extended to 99 weeks.

By ROBERT BARRO

Congressman John Boehner recently suggested that President Obama replace his top economic advisers. I think he may have a point. The economic “recovery” has been disappointing, to put it mildly, and it has become increasingly clear that the blame lies with the policies of the Obama administration, not with those of its predecessor.  

In general, the current administration has been too focused on expanding government, redistributing more from rich to poor, and stimulating aggregate demand. I have previously criticized the stimulus package as cost-ineffective. In particular, whatever tax reductions were in the package did not involve the cuts in marginal income tax rates that encourage investment, work effort and productivity growth.

 

Now the administration wants to kill the 2003 income-tax cuts, at least the parts that reduced marginal income tax rates for high-income earners and for all recipients of dividend income. This proposal is particularly disturbing because the 2003 law was George W. Bush’s main economic achievement; unlike most of Mr. Bush’s policies, this one was well-conceived and effective.

I want to focus here on another dimension of the Obama administration’s policies: the expansion of unemployment-insurance eligibility to as much as 99 weeks from the standard 26 weeks. 

 

The unemployment-insurance program involves a balance between compassion—providing for persons temporarily without work—and efficiency. The loss in efficiency results partly because the program subsidizes unemployment, causing insufficient job-search, job-acceptance and levels of employment. A further inefficiency concerns the distortions from the increases in taxes required to pay for the program.

 

In a recession, it is more likely that individual unemployment reflects weak economic conditions, rather than individual decisions to choose leisure over work. Therefore, it is reasonable during a recession to adopt a more generous unemployment-insurance program. In the past, this change entailed extensions to perhaps 39 weeks of eligibility from 26 weeks, though sometimes a bit more and typically conditioned on the employment situation in a person’s state of residence. However, we have never experienced anything close to the blanket extension of eligibility to nearly two years. We have shifted toward a welfare program that resembles those in many Western European countries.

 

The administration has argued that the more generous unemployment-insurance program could not have had much impact on the unemployment rate because the recession is so severe that jobs are unavailable for many people. This perspective is odd on its face because, even at the worst of the downturn, the U.S. labor market featured a tremendous amount of turnover in the form of large numbers of persons hired and separated every month.

 

For example, the Bureau of Labor Statistics reports that, near the worst of the recession in March 2009, 3.9 million people were hired and 4.7 million were separated from jobs. This net loss of 800,000 jobs in one month indicates a very weak economy—but nevertheless one in which 3.9 million people were hired. A program that reduced incentives for people to search for and accept jobs could surely matter a lot here.

 

Moreover, although the peak unemployment rate (thus far) of 10.1% in October 2009 is very disturbing, the rate was even higher in the 1982 recession (10.8% in November-December 1982). Thus, there is no reason to think that the United States is in a new world in which incentives provided by more generous unemployment-insurance programs do not matter much for unemployment.

 

Another reason to be skeptical about the administration’s stance is that generous unemployment-insurance programs have been found to raise unemployment in many Western European countries in which unemployment rates have been far higher than the current U.S. rate. In Europe, the influence has worked particularly through increases in long-term unemployment. So the key question is what happened to long-term unemployment in the United States during the current recession?

 

To begin with a historical perspective, in the 1982 recession the peak unemployment rate of 10.8% in November-December 1982 corresponded to a mean duration of unemployment of 17.6 weeks and a share of long-term unemployment (those unemployed more than 26 weeks) of 20.4%. Long-term unemployment peaked later, in July 1983, when the unemployment rate had fallen to 9.4%. At that point, the mean duration of unemployment reached 21.2 weeks and the share of long-term unemployment was 24.5%. These numbers are the highest observed in the post-World War II period until recently. Thus, we can think of previous recessions (including those in 2001, 1990-91 and before 1982) as featuring a mean duration of unemployment of less than 21 weeks and a share of long-term unemployment of less than 25%.

 

These numbers provide a stark contrast with joblessness today. The peak unemployment rate of 10.1% in October 2009 corresponded to a mean duration of unemployment of 27.2 weeks and a share of long-term unemployment of 36%. The duration of unemployment peaked (thus far) at 35.2 weeks in June 2010, when the share of long-term unemployment in the total reached a remarkable 46.2%. These numbers are way above the ceilings of 21 weeks and 25% share applicable to previous post-World War II recessions. The dramatic expansion of unemployment-insurance eligibility to 99 weeks is almost surely the culprit.

 

To get a rough quantitative estimate of the implications for the unemployment rate, suppose that the expansion of unemployment-insurance coverage to 99 weeks had not occurred and—I assume—the share of long-term unemployment had equaled the peak value of 24.5% observed in July 1983. Then, if the number of unemployed 26 weeks or less in June 2010 had still equaled the observed value of 7.9 million, the total number of unemployed would have been 10.4 million rather than 14.6 million. If the labor force still equaled the observed value (153.7 million), the unemployment rate would have been 6.8% rather than 9.5%.

 

Consider how the prospects for Democrats in the November elections would look if the unemployment rate were now only 6.8%. Obviously, this change would make all the difference, and President Obama can reasonably blame his economic advisers. They should have protected their boss by standing firm and arguing that a reckless expansion of unemployment-insurance coverage to 99 weeks was unwise economically and politically. Congressman Boehner’s advice to Mr. Obama seems correct, though possibly too late to matter.

Mr. Barro is an economics professor at Harvard University and a senior fellow at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution.

Join the Proud Party of No, Well Written, Worth a Read

Saying “NO” repeatedly as a good parent helps shape a narcissistic, me-oriented baby into a responsible, ethical, and caring adult. No child will thank you the next day for discipline or for denying requests. But, later in life, children come to appreciate the limits and grounding that helped shaped the responsible habits and character that they now treasure.

“NO” is an essential message our courts provide to reinforce the Constitutional limits on eager politicians who want to please their own constituents by passing laws and programs that impinge on the rights of one group to better another. Our Founding Fathers were wise enough to reinforce equal rights for all. One citizen’s desire for change was not to negate the equal Constitutional rights of another no matter how many citizens wanted it to be so.

The late management expert Peter Drucker loved to say, “The essence of strategy is denial.” It’s what you say “NO” to that allows you to have the time, money and resources to focus on what truly is essential and strategic. Budgets force you to prioritize and make the tough choices involved in continuing to invent a profitable future. There is a sign on the wall of the CA State Finance Department that reads, “Nothing inspires genius like a tight budget.” They should have been putting that into practice twenty years ago!

The Democrats love to say that Republicans are the “Party of No” and would return America to the failed policies of the past. It’s about time Republicans actually live up to that label and embrace it! America desperately needs more politicians capable of saying “NO!” They should be proudly repeating it in the Houses of Congress and in every campaign speech. We wouldn’t be returning to failed policies; we’d be returning to the founding principles and free-enterprise system that made America the shining city on the hill.

Have you been reading the polls? Americans are fed up with big government, big spending and the big taxes that are required to feed the monster our elected politicians have created and the current administration is expanding. The Tea Party faithful are taking that message to the streets and to the voting booth.

Intel CEO Paul Otellini’s remarks at this month’s Technology Policy Institute’s Aspen Forum warned that unless government policies are altered, “the next big thing will not be invented here. Jobs will not be created here.” The U.S. legal and political environment has become hostile to business. Washington is piling on more taxes, more regulation, more litigation and benefit costs, and greater uncertainty about the climate going forward. They do all this while saying that they are “pro-jobs.” Otellini singled out the policies of Democrat-controlled Washington, saying: “I think this group does not understand what it takes to create jobs. And I think they’re flummoxed by their experiment in Keynesian economics not working…. They’re in a ‘Do’ loop right now trying to figure out what the answer is.”

The basic assumption of the left is that government must “DO” something, provide something, control something, tax something, regulate something, or spend something, or it isn’t doing its job. Some Republicans have been intimidated into believing that they too must spend and provide more to get elected. The conservative policy of spending less, regulating less, hiring fewer government workers, and taxing less is not even an option these politicians consider. To a liberal, America has problems that only government can fix.

Democrats seem to think that they know better than you how to spend your money. The money you could be spending on products and services could help revitalize and fuel the private sector growth that would mean more jobs and prosperity. Instead, that money is being taken from you to create a bigger more intrusive government. As Dennis Prager is so right in saying, “The bigger the government, the smaller the individual.” We the people aren’t protecting our freedom; we’re inviting tyranny if we don’t start saying NO, ENOUGH, STOP!

Never has President Ronald Reagan’s statement in his first inaugural address been more true: “Government isn’t the solution to our problems, government is the problem.” Washington and our struggling state governments need a strong dose of “No.” Every time more money is spent, they are reaching deeper into your and future generation’s pockets to feed the problem not the solution.

America has always been about business, innovative and successful small businesses that have fueled our next wave of prosperity. America needs a strong, vibrant private sector made up of small and big businesses that have weathered downturns and earned success, not hand-picked “too big to fail” fat cats who have been propped up with your tax money.

The answer for our ills is not bigger government, it is empowered individuals, caring communities, and competitive businesses working together to invent an even better America. It’s worked in the past, and, God willing, we will send a message this November to ensure that it will work for generations to come. Had enough? Join the Party of No!

Terry Paulson

Terry Paulson

Terry Paulson, PhD is a psychologist, award-winning professional speaker, author of The Optimism Advantage: 50 Simple Truths to Transform Your Attitudes and Actions into Results, and long-time columnist for the Ventura County Star.

No NRA Endorsement for Harry Reid

No NRA Endorsement for Harry Reid

Tags: Harry Reid, Sharron Angle

The NRA will not be endorsing Harry Reid. NRA Political Victory Fund Director Chris Cox just issued this statement:

In the coming days and weeks, the NRA Political Victory Fund (NRA-PVF) will be announcing endorsements and candidate ratings in hundreds of federal races, as well as thousands of state legislative races. Unless these announcements are required by the timing of primary or special elections, the NRA-PVF generally does not issue endorsements while important legislative business is pending. The NRA-PVF also operates under a long-standing policy that gives preference to incumbent candidates who have voted with the NRA on key issues, which is explained in more detail here.

The U.S. Senate recently considered a number of issues important to NRA members, including the confirmation of Elena Kagan to the Supreme Court. Out of respect for the confirmation process, the NRA did not announce its position on Ms. Kagan’s confirmation until the conclusion of her testimony before the Senate Judiciary committee. Her evasive testimony exacerbated grave concerns we had about her long-standing hostility towards the Second Amendment. As a result, the NRA strongly opposed her confirmation and made it clear at the time that we would be scoring this important vote.

The vote on Elena Kagan’s confirmation to the Court, along with the previous year’s confirmation vote on Sonia Sotomayor, are critical for the future of the Second Amendment. After careful consideration, the NRA-PVF announced today that it will not be endorsing Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid for re-election in the 2010 U.S. Senate race in Nevada.

This is something of a surprise, and an advantage for Sharron Angle.

WOW,This Guy just put it out there, the Truth is the Truth, listen to his voice.

WATCH THIS COMPLETE VIDEO NOW!!!!

If this doesn’t stir you up nothing will.

We Americans are SO creative aren’t we??

THIS IS A GREAT IDEA ! YOU CAN HEAR THE SCREAMING NOW!!!

Let’s erect a Hooters-style rib place next door to the mosque? A step better, a rib joint with strippers!

Oh, yeah, a liquor license is a must! Booze, pork, and naked women!

Happy hour would be whatever time they call to prayer!

Just trying to promote a little diversity using the same sensitivity as the Muslim terrorists wanting to build the mosque.

Just Another Day In Obama Land

It’s kind of Ironic that 30 Yr Home Mortgage Rates are at an all time Low and Home sales are falling like a rock. I don’t understand what the big deal is with New Home sales being down. Why are we building New Homes any way when we have almost 5 million previously owned homes empty? Let’s get some of the existing Homes sold first.

Oh Wait, Now you have to put a small down payment down and actually prove you have a job or the means to afford the payment. OOPS, No Home Loan for you, The Barney Frank and Chris Dodd sub prime give away is over. Most people now aren’t looking for a home any way. They are looking for a Job. Yeah, you know all those Jobs Obama promised from the Great Stimulus plan.. I really like the Green Job thing, now there is the best Con of all time.

I really get a kick out Muslims and the Koran. The Religion of Peace, Nope Don’t think so. First It’s Not a Religion; It’s a Controlling, Demeaning, and Killing Cult whose goal is World Domination. Obama fits in so well with Islam. Let’s see, can You Prove beyond a reasonable doubt that Obama is a Natural Born Citizen? Didn’t think so. Maybe You can prove he is Not a Muslim, humm, No, You can’t prove that either can you.

Just What Do You Know About Obama and His Merry Little Band of Friends? Oh, Sorry, I meant Administration or Czars or whatever Obama has going in Washington. It’s For Sure, He is Not Concerned about America and It’s Citizens. We do know, Obama and His Groupies are Elitists and You and I are his Serfs. We are here to serve the Master and do as We are told because We are too Dumb to know what is best for us.

But, we have the Constitution and the Bill of Rights, No; Obama has pretty much used that for toilet paper. Just a small clue folks, if you think we are living in a Republic and Free Society, you had better check again.

 

 

Great Article, Nicely Written, Great Insight

Larry Kudlow                                                  townhall.com     
 
Barney Frank Comes Home to Facts

Can you teach an old dog new tricks? In politics, the answer is usually no. Most elected officials cling to their ideological biases, despite the real-world facts that disprove their theories time and again. Most have no common sense, and most never acknowledge that they were wrong.

But one huge exception to this rule is Democrat Barney Frank, chairman of the House Financial Services Committee.

For years, Frank was a staunch supporter of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the giant government housing agencies that played such an enormous role in the financial meltdown that thrust the economy into the Great Recession. But in a recent CNBC interview, Frank told me that he was ready to say goodbye to Fannie and Freddie.

“I hope by next year we’ll have abolished Fannie and Freddie,” he said. Remarkable. And he went on to say that “it was a great mistake to push lower-income people into housing they couldn’t afford and couldn’t really handle once they had it.” He then added, “I had been too sanguine about Fannie and Freddie.”

When I asked Frank about a long-term phase-out plan that would shrink Fannie and Freddie portfolios and mortgage-purchase limits, and merge the agencies into the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) for a separate low-income program that would get government out of middle-income housing subsidies, he replied: “Larry, that, I think, is exactly what we should be doing.”

Frank also said that any federal housing guarantees should be transparently priced and put on budget. But he added that the private sector must be encouraged to re-enter housing finance just as the government gradually withdraws from it.

Some would say Frank’s mea culpa is politically motivated in advance of an election where bailout nation and big government are public enemies number one and two. Of course, poll after poll shows that the $150 billion Fan-Fred bailout, which the Congressional Budget Office estimates could rise to $400 billion, is detested by voters and taxpayers everywhere.

In fact, these failed government agencies are in such bad shape that they can’t even pay Uncle Sam the dividends owed under the conservatorship deal reached two years ago. That’s right. In order to pay a $1.8 billion dividend on Treasury department stock, Fan and Fred had to borrow $1.5 billion from — you guessed it — the Treasury.

Then there’s this head-scratching detail: In an absolutely outrageous move last Christmas Eve, President Obama signed off on $42 million in bonuses for the top twelve Fannie and Freddie executives, including $6 million apiece for the two CEOs. (Hat tip to attorney Stephen B. Meister.)

Voters are on to all this. So politics may indeed be motivating Barney Frank’s turnaround. But I’m going to credit him with more than that.

I think Chairman Frank watched these government behemoths descend into hell and then witnessed the financial catastrophe that ensued. And I think he has come to realize that the whole system of federal affordable-housing mandates that was central to the real-estate collapse — including the mandates on Fannie and Freddie and the myriad bad decisions made by private banks and other lenders in response to the government’s overreach — simply needs to be abolished.

Noteworthy is the fact that Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner has come to a similar conclusion. Geithner told a recent Washington conference on the future of housing finance that the system needs fundamental change. He said, “We will not support a return to the system where private gains are subsidized by taxpayer losses.”

Of course, the withdrawal of housing markets from government programs, and the onset of a reinvigorated private sector for providing mortgages, must be done gradually over a period of years. But it is possible that the federal mortgage madness is coming to an end.

We will have to see if Congress really does say good-bye to Fan and Fred, as Republicans like Jeb Hensarling are advocating. Equally important, we will have to see if the federal affordable-housing mandates created by Congress and implemented by HUD and banking regulators are similarly repealed.

And then we will have to see if reformed federally guaranteed housing insurance includes larger down-payments, stricter underwriting standards, and greater reliance on private capital markets, lenders, and insurers. In other words, we need to see if housing will be restored to a market-based system and removed from the government-backed system that has proved so disastrous.

The broader lesson here is that government planning doesn’t work. And if left to their own devices, market processes will work. I don’t know if President Obama gets this. But my hat goes off to a man who does, Chairman Barney Frank.