22 February 2010

Rexhame Beach, Marshfield, MA, On a February Morning

Took Gizmo (my 4 year old, 110 pound golden retriever) for a walk this morning on Rexhame (that's "REX-um") to you out-of-towners.  Nearly empty.  Lovely.  About 40 degrees with a steady, light breeze.  Notice faint pink in the "cloud mountain" on the horizon in the top pic and the moon in the bottom one! Giz had a blast.  Met some other pups to play with.  Frolicked in the tide pools.  Doggy came home wet and happy and tired.  Be sure to click each one for a MUCH larger view.  You'll feel like you were right there with me!



"Pounding Their Spoons on Their Highchairs"

Jonah's got it exactly right on Obama's infantile attitude here!

JONAH GOLDBERG
FEBRUARY 19, 2010 12:00 A.M.
Pick an Excuse, Any Excuse
Dems think none of their problems are their fault.
Remember that great scene from the Oscar-robbed classic The Blues Brothers? Jake and Elwood (John Belushi and Dan Akroyd) are finally cornered by Jake’s former fiancĂ©e (Carrie Fisher). Jake left her at the altar with 300 guests and the best Romanian caterers in the state waiting.
“You betrayed me!” she exclaims.


“No I didn’t. Honest,” Jake explains. “I ran out of gas. I, I had a flat tire. I didn’t have enough money for cab fare. My tux didn’t come back from the cleaners. An old friend came in from out of town. Someone stole my car. There was an earthquake! A terrible flood! Locusts! IT WASN’T MY FAULT, I SWEAR TO GOD!”


This is pretty much how Democrats sound these days. None of their problems are their fault.


For the first time, more than half of voters think President Obama doesn’t deserve to be reelected. Almost three out of four Americans believe that the stimulus was wasted.


Evan Bayh’s retirement has triggered a bowel-stewing panic among Democrats. Bayh is from Indiana, one of the two crown jewels of Obama’s “red-blue” victory (the other being Virginia). Even a month ago, the notion that Republicans could get within striking distance of taking back the Senate was considered absurd. Now, it’s a live possibility.


Obama’s defenders claim that he is personally popular, which is at best debatable. But even if that is true, Obama’s personal political capital is as non-transferable as an out-of-state check drawn in crayon. It’s certainly useless in getting Obamacare or cap-and-trade passed. And, so far, it hasn’t helped Democrats in Virginia, New Jersey, or Massachusetts.


Harry Reid, the Senate majority leader and Obama’s lead legislative Sherpa, is almost surely toast in his reelection bid. Richard Blumenthal, the popular Democratic candidate running for retiring Sen. Chris Dodd’s seat in Connecticut says it’s an “open question” whether he will even invite Obama to campaign for him. That’s a vote of confidence.


Why is this happening? If you listen to the White House and its defenders in the press, the answer is simple: It’s everyone else’s fault.




Well, that’s not entirely right. The Obama administration admits one mistake — and one mistake only. It didn’t explain itself better. In both his State of the Union address and interviews, Obama insisted he got all the policies right. It’s just that the reportedly greatest orator in the history of the republic couldn’t quite make himself clear enough.


The good news is that he recognizes his mistakes and is going to try again. White House communications director Dan Pfeiffer told the Washington Post this week that “in 2010, the president will constantly be doing high-profile things to be the person driving the narrative.”


The multiple trips to Copenhagen, the five-Sunday-shows-in-one-day marathon, the three joint-session addresses to Congress in one year, the prime-time news conferences, the state dinner, the speech in Cairo: These don’t add up to “constantly” doing “high-profile things”? I can’t wait to hear what “high-profile” means. Explain health-care reform while parting the waters of the Potomac?


But even this explanation amounts to dodging blame. It’s still code for “you stupid Americans, why can’t you understand I’m right and you’re wrong?”


That’s certainly how Joe Klein, Obama’s de facto press flack at Time magazine, sees things. In a piece titled “Too Dumb to Thrive,” Klein argues that Americans are too stupid to understand how totally awesome the stimulus was. (Time’s Peter Beinart makes a similar argument in a debate with me for Bloggingheads.tv.) What’s funny about this is that if nearly two-thirds of Americans are idiots, that means roughly half of Obama’s voters were idiots, too. His election was once the epitome of American wisdom. Now it seems he was elected despite the stupidity of his supporters.


Of course, the Obamaphiles switched to this argument only after months of pounding their spoons on their high chairs about the unfairness of Republican “obstructionism” in the Senate. The filibuster was once a bulwark against tyranny, according to Democrats trying to block George W. Bush’s agenda. Now, it’s proof that the American political system “sucks,” according to Obama confidante and liberal super-wonk John Podesta, and evidence that America’s system is arguably “worse” than totalitarian China’s, according to New York Times columnist Tom Friedman.


And they switched to that argument only after insisting that Bush was responsible for every evil under the sun. (Now, the White House brags about using Bush’s anti-terror policies and insists it deserves the credit for success in Iraq.)


Coming soon: A terrible flood! Locusts! Anything and everything to avoid admitting their problems are their own fault.

— 
Jonah Goldberg is editor-at-large of National Review Online and the author of Liberal Fascism: The Secret History of the American Left, From Mussolini to the Politics of Meaning. © 2010 Tribune Media Services, Inc.

Obama, Insurance Company Executive

President Obama is poised to impose government restrictions on private insurance companies regarding rate hikes.  If he can tell one sector of private industry how to make money, what's next?

This is not the solution.  If he is so concerned about rate hikes on the insured, and simultaneously, seeing to it that the insured get care, why not FUND the UNFUNDED mandate, a noble one to be sure, that everyone who shows up in an emergency room for care gets it?  Why not let the hospital SEPARATE those charges from the insured and SEND THE BILL TO OBAMA?

It's ain't great, but at least this way, hospitals which are absorbing the cost, thus increasing the price of care, thus passing the cost of that care on to the insured, will be relieved of the MAJORITY of the reason insurance companies enact rate hikes to begin with!

Hey, we are a direct pay family.  We pay an obscene amount of money to keep our family insured.  I'm no fan of insurance companies.  But I'm less of a fan of socializing Blue Cross.  This will crush them.