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Archive for July, 2007

FLOTUS To Fly Into Connecticut

July 23, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts No Comments →


First Lady Laura Bush will be coming to Connecticut tomorrow to read with children at the Driggs Elementary School in Waterbury. Mrs. Bush will later in the day stop on by The Mark Twain House in Hartford.

Mrs. Bush who was in Connecticut back in April, is a strong supporter of The Big Read which is “a nationwide initiative of the National Endowment for the Arts.” Four cities in Connecticut; Bridgeport, Waterbury, New Haven and Hartford are all partipants in The Big Read program.

Mrs. Bush’s visit to The Mark Twain House comes as ‘The Adventures of Tom Sawyer’ will be part of the fall reading in The Big Read program selection.

According to the National Endowment for the Arts, The Big Read “answers a big need. Reading at Risk: A Survey of Literary Reading in America, a 2004 report by the National Endowment for the Arts, found that not only is literary reading in America declining rapidly among all groups, but that the rate of decline has accelerated, especially among the young.”

“The Big Read aims to address this crisis squarely and effectively. It provides citizens with the opportunity to read and discuss a single book within their communities. The initiative includes innovative reading programs in selected cities and towns, comprehensive resources for discussing classic literature, an ambitious national publicity campaign, and an extensive Web site providing comprehensive information on authors and their works.”

For More Information on The Big Read and how you can get involved visit their website at: http://www.neabigread.org/

Swap or Bop?

July 23, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts 2 Comments →

The President is hitting his head up against a wall - of protectionism.

Today’s Wall Street Journal follows the fight between the White House and Congress over trade deals with Panama and Peru, which have yet to be passed.

After stamping their feet over a lack of labor and environmental “standards” imposed on developing countries, the Democrats allowed the President’s Free Trade Authority to expire on July 1st. The populists also have let trade deals with South Korea and Colombia rot. Although the White House inserted the Democrats’ “standards” into the trade deals with Panama and Peru, the protectionists now demand that the South American countries enact those standards into law before Congress approves the trade deal:

The reason, says House Ways and Means Chairman Charles Rangel (D., N.Y.) is that rank-and-file Democrats simply don’t trust the White House to enforce the labor commitments once Congress approves the deals. “That’s the bone of contention,” says Mr. Rangel, whose panel is the starting point for trade initiatives in the House. “You take me and the Democrats to the mat…how do you think you’re going to win?” he says in an interview. “The politics are on our side.”

The White House is rightly protesting:

Ms. Schwab [President Bush’s trade envoy] sent a scalding letter to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, a California Democrat. Ms. Schwab insisted the latest demand overreached, treading on the legal authority of another country. “Unilaterally requiring another sovereign country to change its domestic laws before the U.S. Congress approves a trade agreement would be a fundamental break with U.S. law, policy and practice,” she wrote.

The Democrats counter that the U.S. has pushed countries to change their laws before signing trade deals in the past, but the White House retorts that it exerted that pressure to rollback laws which violated a “standstill” agreement - laws that should never have been passed.

Beyond the legalistic wrangling, the Democrats are merely clinging to their protectionist seats to stop any extension of free trade.

The Heritage Foundation shares my frustration with our Democratic friends:

The Administration even relinquished the ability granted under the expired TPA to keep recently concluded FTAs with South Korea, Colombia, Peru and Panama from being rewritten with the new compromise rules. Unfortunately, the Administration’s concessions appear to have been in vain, remaining inadequate to persuade a hostile Congress to renew TPA.

But I can take solace in Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke’s remarks on the benefits of free trade from this past May:

According to one recent study that used four approaches to measuring the gains from trade, the increase in trade since World War II has boosted U.S. annual incomes on the order of $10,000 per household (Bradford, Grieco, and Hufbauer, 2006).2 The same study found that removing all remaining barriers to trade would raise U.S. incomes anywhere from $4,000 to $12,000 per household.

Perhaps our protectionist friends should take a look.

Back to the Jokes

July 22, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts No Comments →

While surfing the web, I noticed my name has come up at our friend, Connecticut Local Politics.

TrueBlueCT posted a comment a while back, claiming:

Genghis–

As a meta point, the CT GOP now has three official bloggers, Heath, Brian Bolduc, and Andrew Powaleny.

Certainly, I have no doubt that they are chiming in here at CTLP under pre-existing aliases.

My belief is that you should ask Chris Healy to have them be above board, and to have them stop spinning this site anonymously.

I assure my liberal friend that I have never posted to CTLP and that I always post under my full name, so that he can curse me in full.

Just clearing things up.

Blog Net News Ranks Us Number 2!

July 22, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts 1 Comment →

In a continuing sign that the Connecticut Republicans are winning in spreading their message on the internet, Blog Net News has just ranked us as the second most influential blog in Connecticut.

The Connecticut Republican Party has been on the forefront in speading their message via the internet. Not only do we have this blog but we also have a MySpace account, Facebook, YouTube and Twitter to help spread our positive message across the state.

We invite everyone to continue to please visit our blog page as well as our homepage at ctgop.org. There you can find out how to get involved in your local town committee as well as help make a contribution, we need the lights to stay on.

Thanks to everyone who visits our page and please check back here daily.

All Jokes Aside

July 22, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts 1 Comment →

Liberal bloggers once again have hit where it hurts.

Last week, Max Blumental’s “documentary” embarrassing College Republicans who support the mission in Iraq but won’t enlist in the military became the babble of the blogosphere.

Resisting pop shots against our liberal friends, I wish to address the argument that if you support the mission in Iraq, but don’t enlist in the military, you’re a hypocrite.

A hypocrite claims to follow the high standards by which he judges other people, but fails to live up to them. I don’t claim to be as good of a person as someone who enlists in the military. Nor do I claim that I’m “playing my part” by getting a job and helping the economy. The people who serve in the military are the greatest citizens of our country; and I will never compare to them. For me to say I, or anyone else who supports the mission in Iraq, but doesn’t enlist, was making as large a sacrifice as an American soldier, that would be hypocritical.

At the same time, I can support the mission in Iraq and not commit hypocrisy. As I believe people who serve in the military are greater than I, I also believe that their mission - to build a secure democracy in Iraq - is a noble goal. Certainly, the administration has stumbled in its execution of this war - deBaathification, failure to secure Iraq’s borders, underestimating the sectarian tensions, etc. But these are legitimate war strategies the country should be discussing, instead of screaming that either you’re a hypocrite if you support the war, or a coward if you don’t.

Liberals counter that pudgy, well-off politicians choose these people’s futures for them by forcing them to die in an unwinnable war.

But we have an all-volunteer army, and recruitment numbers from last month show that many soldiers are still willing to risk their lives for this cause:

* Active duty recruiting. Three of the four services met or exceeded recruiting goals for June. The Army recruited 7,031 soldiers, which is 84 percent of its goal of 8,400. The Navy finished with 3,999 recruits for 102 percent. Their goal was 3,924. The Marine Corps recruited 4,113 new Marines reaching 110 percent of its goal of 3,742, and the Air Force met its goal of 2,233 recruits.

* Active duty retention. Army, Navy, Marine Corps, and Air Force met or exceeded overall retention missions.

Liberals respond that these people joining the military are not truly volunteers, but plebeians desperate for the financial rewards the military offers its recruits. But demographic studies have shown that American soldiers come from financially stable, well-educated backgrounds:

That’s mainly because the military won’t accept the lowest academic achievers. The Army limits recruits without high school degrees to 3 1/2 % of the pool, for instance, while the Marines won’t accept recruits without high school degrees. Poverty correlates strongly with high school dropout rates, so these rules significantly limit the access of the very poor to military service.

At the same time, they ensure that enlisted members of the military are more likely than members of the general population to have high school degrees. The same pattern holds for commissioned officers. In 2004, for instance, only 4.2% of officers lacked college degrees, and a whopping 37% held an advanced degree of some sort, compared to only 10% of adults nationwide.

Most soldiers are financially secure, well-educated individuals making a clear choice to serve their country. While war supporters should not pat themselves on the back for merely associating with soldiers, war opponents should not relegate soldiers to kids being sent off to war by political fat-cats.

This question that “if you support the war, then why don’t you enlist?” also was mysteriously absent when the U.S. invaded Afghanistan to oust the Taliban. Of course, the country was nearly unanimous in its support of the mission, so there was no need for such a question. This discrepancy shows that liberals charge conservatives with hypocrisy for political expediency. They ask this question to shut off debate, rather than wage it. You can’t support a military mission if you don’t enlist in the military; so that leaves only pacifists to decide which military policies (if any) the country can pursue.

And on a purely statistical note, soldiers tend to be Republicans, as opposed to civilians who tend to be Democrats:

Compared to civilians, members of the military are significantly more religious, and they’re also far more likely to be Republicans. A 2005 Military Times poll found that 56% of military personnel described themselves as Republicans, and only 13% described themselves as Democrats. Nationwide, most polls suggest that people who define themselves as Democrats outnumber those defining themselves as Republicans.

Should I then argue that only Republicans should discuss the mission in Iraq, since they more likely represent soldiers’ views? Such an argument, like the “why don’t you enlist?” argument, uses soldiers as pawns in the debate. Republicans and Democrats merely compete to see how many soldiers they can get on their side - or use to their advantage. This contest is wrong.

Liberals make a fair point that people would be more cautious if their relatives were in the military, and some conservatives who haven’t served can be overly zealous, but this charge of hypocrisy doesn’t stand.

Challenge me on the right strategy for success in Iraq or whether continued military action offers any chance of success at all; but don’t try to shut me up with charges of hypocrisy.

And on this Sunday, let’s remember the men and women of our military; and pray for their safety, and eventual return home.

The Bully Weighs In On Simmons

July 21, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts No Comments →

Ray Hackett of the Norwich Bulletin wrote a nice piece about Former 2nd District Congressman Rob Simmons who recently spoke in Norwich.

Simmons was appointed by Gov. Rell earlier this year to fill the position as State Business Advocate, a position in which Simmons is the first to hold.

Simmons himself is looking forward to offering legislation to the Governor and General Assembly that will aide our small businesses here in Connecticut.

According to Hacket “Simmons told the gathering many problems facing businesses in Connecticut stem from the regulatory process, some of which will require legislative action to change. And that may take time.

“Regulatory agencies tend to take a parental approach to business,” said Attorney Ted Philips, “telling business what they can’t do, instead of telling business here’s how to do it.”

Simmons said one priority for him is to develop an interactive Web page that allows users to ask questions and receive answers to problems.

“But we have to work our way through that,” he said. “If we don’t change some of these stigmatic issues now, in three or five years we’re going to be in trouble.”

One highlight in the piece is from Bob Reed who had this to say about Simmons: “”I think Rob was the best congressman the 2nd District ever had,” Bob Reed said, “and we were lucky to have him. But I got to tell you, I went into a depression when he lost. But that depression lifted when I heard he was going to be the state’s business advocate. I said, ‘Yes, we’re going to be OK.’”

More Debates!

July 20, 2007 By: Heath Category: Blogspot Posts No Comments →

Thankfully, the Debate Gods have heard the call for yet more Presidential debates, and this time, they have divined CNN and YouTube to carry out Their Will to the Democratic candidates on Monday July 23rd.

This debate will be a unique one - questions will be posed to candidates via YouTube video and then the Democrats will answer them. Visit www.youtube.com to get more information on that. The GOP candidates will have their go with this format on Sept 17.

Certainly its an innovative format, allowing average people (and the Republican National Committee apparently) the opportunity to communicate directly with POTUS candidates. The format seems promising for perhaps offerring a different perspective on the candidates. The risk of such a debate, though, is the chance for becoming bogged down with the very personal questions, which a potential President will have to first address the personal, the broaden their answers to make more broad policy statements. With the necessarily constraining time limits, we may get the personal touch without the substance and philosophy that we really hire a President to have.

It will be an interesting experiment - perhaps the YouTube debates will mark a turn for the better in the great scope of Presidential debates. Or, it may be a miserable sequence of heart-strings stories with lots of "I feel your pain" and a dearth of "this is my philosophy". Tune in Monday on CNN.