Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Portent of Trouble for Governor Walker? Buckeyes to Reconsider Union Busting Law.



 Semi-truck delivering veto referendum petition signatures to Ohio Secretary of State today in Columbus, Ohio
(Columbus Dispatch Photograph)




Ohio does not have a recall procedure like Wisconsin's to remove state office-holders.  Its recall laws only permit local officials to be targeted for recall. What Ohio does have, however, may be a more powerful tool for the electorate to express its displeasure with state government.  Ohio has a "veto referendum," a procedure by which citizens can petition to repeal a law that they feel was improvidently passed by the state legislature and signed by the governor.  If enough petition signatures are collected (six percent of the electorate), enforcement of the law is suspended until a state-wide referendum is held on the future of the law.

Just as in Wisconsin, Ohio's Republican governor, John Kasich, pushed for a new law in the latest session of the Ohio legislature to substantially reduce the matters that can be negotiated during contract talks between management and public sector unions. The new Ohio law also prohibits public sector unions from striking. The law was promoted by Governor Kasich as a necessary tool to allow the state and local governments to get control of government personnel costs.  (Sound familiar?)  The new law triggered many weeks of protests in Columbus, and sparked organized labor to mount a repeal effort.  (How about this?)

The Columbus Dispatch reported today on the filing of the petitions to repeal Senate Bill 5, the Ohio union-busting law passed this past March:
The coalition leading the effort to repeal Senate Bill 5 delivered a record of nearly 1.3 million signatures to the secretary of state today to place Ohio's new collective bargaining law on the November ballot. A parade of more than 6,000, led by a banner proclaiming the "million signature march," rumbled through Downtown this morning.

We Are Ohio, the group leading the referendum effort, organized the march up Broad Street to Fourth Street, where a 48 ft. semi-truck carrying the 1,298,301 signatures in 1,502 boxes collected will be unloaded. The parade also included retired fire trucks, a drum line, bagpipes and loud motorcycles. It took about 15 minutes to pass.

We Are Ohio needs about 231,000 valid signatures to have Senate Bill 5 placed before voters. Husted has a staff of 60 ready to work this weekend to sort the signatures by county, count them, then distribute them to county boards of elections for validation.
In the 2010 Ohio gubernatorial election, just a shade under 4,000,000 citizens voted and Governor Kasich squeaked through by about 77,000 votes. So the number of signatures on the petitions to subject Senate Bill 5 to a veto referendum represent almost 33% of the 2010 electorate.

The recall effort as to Governor Walker will require about 540,200 signatures, or 25% of the number of voters for governor in the last general election (2,160,832).  I have previously posted about the myriad reasons why securing that many petition signatures in November could be difficult.  Given the success of the We Are Ohio movement, perhaps I was too skeptical about the chances for a successful recall effort as to the governor.

The veto referendum in Ohio will be conducted during the early November 2011 general election, just about the time that the recall petition drive as to Governor Walker will be getting started.  The results of the veto referendum in Ohio will likely impact the energy and success of the effort to gather recall signatures in Wisconsin.

Merriam Webster: Choke: To Block Normal Breathing By Obstructing the Trachea








The incident that occurred on Monday, June 13 between Justice David Prosser and Justice Anne Bradley is getting murkier by the day.  Much of the follow-up reporting seems to be affected by political ideology.   

Let's review the bidding.

1.  The original piece by Bill Lueders of the Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, was published this past Saturday morning in the Wisconsin State Journal on-line edition.  Lueders quoted three anonymous sources describing an event "inside" the office of Justice Bradley during which she was supposedly attacked by Justice Prosser after she insisted he leave her office.  According to Lueders, all three sources told him that upon Bradley demanding that Prosser leave her office, he placed both his hands around her neck.  What Lueders didn't say, however, is that his three anonymous sources actually witnessed the altercation, just that it occurred as described.  Lueders report also said that the incident was actually witnessed by "other justices."  So that report put at least four justices at the scene of the incident, the two participant justices and at least two and maybe more justices standing in the vicinity.  Based on the report, Justice Bradley was not one of the unnamed sources of Mr. Lueders, as he specifically reported that she had declined comment when contacted by Wisconsin Public Radio, which worked with Lueders in producing the initial report.

2.  The second report was by the Journal Sentinel on Saturday afternoon.  The Journal Sentinel report was that it had an unnamed source that reported that six of the seven justices were in Justice Bradley's chambers (office) on the late afternoon of June 13, a Monday, to informally discuss the court's release of the controversial decision overturning Judge Sumi's injunction against the law eviscerating public union collective bargaining rights. The Journal Sentinal also reported that there were two versions of the altercation.  In one, the event occurred as Lueders had initially reported it.  Justice Bradley insisted that Justice Prosser leave her chambers and he became angry and placed his two hands on her throat.  The Journal Sentinel reported that this version was supported by at least two sources, one of whom may have been Justice Bradley herself, as she issued a statement to the Journal Sentinel on Saturday afternoon:
"The facts are that I was demanding that he get out of my office and he put his hands around my neck in anger in a chokehold," Bradley told the Journal Sentinel.
The Journal Sentinel article then reported on an alternative version of the incident.  In this alternative version, Bradley rushed at Prosser with fists raised and in the course of defensively blocking her attack, his arm came into contact with her neck.  The article quoted "sources" backing up this version. Unfortunately, as in the Lueders article, the Journal Sentinal did not affirmatively assert that its "sources" for the competing versions actually witnessed the altercation.

3.  Yesterday's National Review On-line had an article by Christian Schneider that adds several interesting twists to the accounts of the incident. National Review has a conservative ideological bent. Here are the more interesting twists Schneider introduces into the narrative of the confrontation, and some brief commentary on them. 
In the past two days, multiple sources with first-hand knowledge of the incident have been able to provide more details as to what exactly happened behind closed chamber doors.
The week before the legislature was set to re-pass the collective-bargaining provision, three of the four conservative justices were ready to issue a ruling reinstating the union law as originally passed. Prosser, on the other hand, wanted to wait longer, to avoid the appearance that the court was rushing their decision through. Prosser thought he had an agreement with liberal Chief Justice Shirley Abrahamson to delay release of the opinion until Tuesday of the following week.
As Monday arrived, there was no word from Abrahamson on whether the decision would be issued the next day. At 5:30 p.m., Prosser and the other conservative justices marched around the chambers, looking for Abrahamson, who was found in Justice Bradley’s office. Prosser stood outside Bradley’s door, talking to the justices in Bradley’s office. The discussion got heated, with Prosser expressing his lack of faith in Abrahamson’s ability to lead the Court.
According to one witness, Bradley charged toward Prosser, shaking her clenched fist in his face. Another source says they were “literally nose to nose.” Prosser then put his hands up to push her away. As one source pointed out, if a man wants to push a woman who is facing him, he wouldn’t push her in the chest (unless he wants to face an entirely different criminal charge). Consequently, Prosser put his hands on Bradley’s shoulders to push her away, and in doing so, made contact with her neck.
At that moment, another justice approached Bradley from behind and pulled her away from Prosser, saying, “Stop it, Ann, this isn’t like you.” Bradley then shouted, “I was choked!” Another justice present replied, “You were not choked.” In a statement following the incident, Bradley maintained Prosser “put his hands around my neck in anger in a chokehold.”
On Monday night, Bradley called Capitol Police Chief Charles Tubbs to talk to him about the incident. On the morning of Wednesday, June 15, Tubbs joined the justices in a closed-door meeting, where he discussed “issues relating to workplace violence.”
During the meeting, Chief Justice Abrahamson actually reenacted the incident on Chief Tubbs — no doubt an amusing sight, as the diminutive Abrahamson mimicked choking the tall, portly police chief. During her demonstration, Abrahamson emphasized that Prosser had exerted “pressure” on Bradley’s throat.
Prosser. “That’s only because you broke us apart,” shot back Bradley. This exchange led several meeting attendees to believe Bradley was making up the charge, as they took her rejoinder as an admission that there was no pressure applied to her neck.
Let's assume that Mr. Schneider is rendering an honest report of his investigation.  The "multiple sources with first hand knowledge of the incident" are probably two or more supreme court justices.  No one below that pay grade would be likely to speak to a reporter about the incident.  If a law clerk or secretary working in Justice Bradley's chambers witnessed some or all of the event, I am guessing they would clam up about it. Justice Bradley and Chief Justice Abrahamson had versions of the incident consistent with Justice Prosser being the aggressor, so they were not among the sources.  If I am correct, then the multiple sources have to have been two or more of the justices that went looking for Justice Abrahamson on the 13th, which included Justices Prosser, Roggensack, Ziegler and Gabelman.  So whoever spoke to the NR Online reporter was motivated to get a different version of the events out in the press than had been published up to that time.  The NR Online story is written as if there were at least two sources for it, neither of whom was Prosser or Bradley.  One or more of the justices who talked to Schneider must have also concluded that the "closed door" meeting with Chief Tubbs on June 15 was fair game to describe to a reporter, including a belief that Bradley was inventing the charge that she was the victim of an attack.  Those kind of discussions with the NR Online reporter are not consistent with a desire by the justice or justices to try to restore some semblance of order and collegiality to this awful and dysfunctional mess.

What is interesting in the Schneider report is that Justice Prosser had thought he had secured an agreement from the dissenting justices (or perhaps just the Chief Justice) to issue the Ozanne - Open Meetings lawsuit opinion on Tuesday, June 14.  Having someone go back on what you feel is an agreement can be very frustrating. That might help explain any flash of anger that Justice Prosser may have shown in the encounter.

But how more frustrating may it have been to Justice Prosser or other justices? ("At 5:30 p.m., Prosser and the other conservative justices marched around the chambers, looking for Abrahamson.")  Recall the public statements by Jeff Fitzgerald, Assembly Speaker, the day before the incident in Justice Bradley's chambers.

Here is the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel's coverage at the time:
The Legislature will put Gov. Scott Walker’s limits on collective bargaining into the state budget Tuesday if the state Supreme Court hasn’t ruled on the matter by then, Assembly Speaker Jeff Fitzgerald (R-Horicon) said Monday.
“If need be, we are going to have to pass collective bargaining again,” Fitzgerald said at a Capitol news conference. “My caucus is more solid on that collective bargaining vote than they ever have been.”
But he said he does not believe lawmakers will have to take that vote because he thinks the court will act soon. “I’m an optimist,” he said. “I still think they might rule yet.”
 The Oshkosh Northwestern had an even more interesting quote:
Fitzgerald said Monday that the changes Walker is seeking will be added to the state budget as an amendment either Tuesday or Wednesday.
Republican leaders have said for weeks that would be the plan if the law remained held up by the courts. Fitzgerald says he remains hopeful the Supreme Court will decide by midday on Tuesday, but the court has given no indication as to when it will rule on the case.
Why in the world would Jeff Fitzgerald have made such a statement?  How would he have pinpointed the likely issuance of the decision to a time certain on a date certain?  Could he have known that such a public statement would not prove infuriating to a majority of the court because the decision was a fait accompli, merely awaiting issuance?

Court decisions are supposed to be top secret until they are issued. You don't want one side to a lawsuit trading on insider information to settle a case it is about to lose.  You don't want third parties to buy or sell stock based on insider information about a court decision that could drive the stock price of a company up or down.  You don't want some lawyer working on insider information to quickly settle some unrelated lawsuit that would be controlled by a Supreme Court decision about to be issued in a different case.

I have no way to know if Justice Prosser or any of the other justices were angry on the 13th because word of the planned issuance of the decision on the following day had been conveyed to Republican legislators. I must assume that all the justices are honorable and would honor the "secrecy" aspect of issuing decisions. Jeff Fitzgerald may have just been talking like a sausage when he seemed to know when the decision would be issued. But exploring the possibility that the plan to issue the decision on June 14 was leaked to one or more persons outside the court is an aspect of this entire mess that should be part of the Dane County Sheriff Department's and Judicial Commission's investigations.

Classiest Politicians in America - Installment No. 8 - I went to the legislature to serve the interests of . . . . ?


 Michelle Litjens, R - Town of Vinland






The Oshkosh Northwestern had an editorial today on a new piece of proposed legislation in the Wisconsin legislature.

Money Quotes:
Wisconsin assemblywoman Michelle Litjens, R-Town of Vinland, is sponsoring Assembly Bill 182, which would prohibit municipal utilities from placing tenants' unpaid utility bills on a landlord's property tax bill at the end of each year.
The bill has the potential to impact all customers. City Manager Mark Rohloff told The Northwestern the bill is "patently unfair to rate-payers who pay their bills every month" since they would face higher rates to cover unpaid delinquencies and the utilities' cost to try and collect unpaid bills.
Making the bill less palatable: Litjens and her husband, Tony, own and manage 24 apartment buildings in Oshkosh, according to city and Wisconsin Department of Financial Institutions records. The properties total 133 units under Tony and Michelle Litjens and companies they control. Some of her buildings offer water costs included in the rent, while others have utilities charged to tenants. A search of the Litjens' properties found they owe, as of last week, $2,326 on the 15 properties where they receive a bill addressed to them. Tenants at their properties owe hundreds of additional dollars, city utility bill records show.  . . .
While technically not against the Government Accountability Board's Standards of Conduct for state officials – because Litjens won't gain any more than a similar group of people – her sponsorship of the bill reeks of self-interest.
Apparently Ms. Litjens believes the taxpayers of the community owning the water utility should pay the freight when she mistakenly rents to dead-beats.

David Frum Reverses His Position on Same-Sex Marriage

Frum, a noted conservative, and former special assistant to George W. Bush, has changed his stance on same-sex marriage in the wake of the enactment of the New York law.

Sarah loses to Barack in New Alaska Polling

Alaskan voters haven't favored a Democratic presidential candidate since Lyndon Johnson campaigned against Barry Goldwater in 1964 with the infamous "Daisy Ad."



Yikes, I would have voted for LBJ too!

A new poll done by Hays Research, an Alaskan polling firm, was commissioned by a conservative talk host in Anchorage, Mike Porcaro.  The results of 500 likely voters had Obama out-polling Palin in her home state by a margin of 42% to 36%.








 











Who knows her best?

Monday, June 27, 2011

Michele's in the race infused with Pogo's Spirit!






Serial Killer John Wayne Gacy as Pogo the Clown




Michele Bachmann announced her candidacy for President today in Waterloo, Iowa.  Shortly afterwards she was interviewed on local TV and said:  "What I want them to know is that just like John Wayne is from Waterloo, Iowa, that's the kind of spirit I have too."



The only problem is that the Duke was born in Winterset, Iowa, some 300 miles distant from Waterloo and never lived in Waterloo.  The "John Wayne" who hailed from Waterloo, Iowa was the infamous "clown serial killer," John Wayne Gacy.

If you go to Rep. Bachmann's new campaign site, you will see that she supports the repeal of "ObamaCare."  Here is just one paragraph from her platform on ObamaCare:
Studies have found that 30 to 50 percent of employers may drop health plans covering tens of millions of workers – adding $1 trillion or more to Obamacare’s cost. Not to mention the looming shortage of physicians, hundreds of billions of dollars in cuts to Medicare, and the panels of unelected bureaucrats who will determine your level of care. The CBO studies that show Obamacare will reduce (sic.) in the death of 800,000 jobs. And of course, the unconstitutional infringement on your freedoms from the individual mandate and centralized government care.
So in a single short paragraph, her campaign managed to insert two sentence fragments. Education is not included among the issues she wants to address.  Just saying.

Wednesday, June 22, 2011

Zany Republican Candidates - Part 2 - Texas Governor Rick Perry Vetos Texas Law Outlawing Texting While Driving


The political talking heads have Governor Rick Perry of Texas on the verge of throwing his hat into the GOP race for the 2012 Presidential nomination. Last Friday he vetoed Texas House Bill 242, which imposed a $200.00 fine for texting while driving.   Here is his veto message:

Texting while driving is reckless and irresponsible. I support measures that make our roads safer for everyone, but House Bill 242 is a government effort to micromanage the behavior of adults. Current law already prohibits drivers under the age of 18 from texting or using a cell phone while driving. I believe there is a distinction between the overreach of House Bill 242 and the government's legitimate role in establishing laws for teenage drivers who are more easily distracted and laws providing further protection to children in school zones.

The keys to dissuading drivers of all ages from texting while driving are information and education. I recommend additional education on this issue in driving safety and driver's education courses, public service ads, and announcements, and I encourage individuals and organizations that testified in favor of the anti-texting language included in this bill to work with state and local leaders to educate the public of these dangers.

His veto message is succinctly thus:  Texting while driving is reckless and irresponsible, but Texas should not use motor vehicle laws to reduce the number of people who might drive in a reckless and irresponsible manner. 

This is either mindless stupidity on Governor Perry's part, or a calculated effort to increase his props with the right wing fringe as a defender of citizens' rights against Big Brother style government.  Does he assume that teenagers won't be "informed and educated" by watching adults (perhaps parents) text while driving?  Does he think motor vehicle laws increasing fines in work zones should be restricted to teenage drivers, so as not to micro-manage the behavior of adults?  Does he favor government protecting life by outlawing abortion and forcing a woman to carry a baby to term, but disfavor government protecting life by asking adults to pull off the road to stay connected with their offices?  Does he favor trying to cure this by methods that will cost the taxpayers money rather than by a method that will lead to state and local revenues? 

I am guessing it was calculated to score political points at the expense of significantly greater highway injuries, deaths and increased insurance rates.  Perhaps the insurance industry will rate Texas drivers differently because of the veto.  I would certainly hope so.

Friday, June 17, 2011

Zany Republican Candidates - Part 1 - Bachmann and TPaw's Tax Ideas



 Tim Pawlenty, Former Governor of Minnesota and Presidential Candidate




The Tax Policy Center, a joint venture of the Urban Institute and the Brookings Institute, has analysed the announced federal tax proposals of Presidential candidates Michele Bachmann and Tim ("If you can Google it, cut it.") Pawlenty and found some interesting impacts:

Pawlenty's proposal would lead to almost $12 trillion dollars in reduced federal tax revenues over the next ten years, or an average of $1 trillion dollars per year.  That would require cutting an awful lot of federal programs for a government whose annual budget is $3.82 trillion dollars.  The Tax Policy Center analyses who the big winners are among taxpayer groups in the proposed tax cuts offered by the former Minnesota governor:

1.  A taxpayer making more than $1,000,000 per year would see her tax rate cut almost in half, and save on average (for all taxpayers making more than $1,000,000 in income per year) $490,000 in annual federal tax liability.

2.  A taxpayer making between $30,000 and $40,000 per year would see his tax rate cut by about ten percent and save, on average, some $400 in tax liability.

3.  A taxpayer making between $50,000 and $75,000 per year would see a tax rate cut of about fifteen percent, and save on average about $1,600 in tax liability.

TPaw's proposal would be very close to a flat tax for taxpayers earning above $75,000.  Those in the $75,000 to $100,000 earning range would pay 16% of income, while those earning more than $500,000 and up would pay on average about 16.5% of income.

TPC's Howard Gleckman summarized Michele Bachmann's tax proposal to eliminate capital gains taxes in a blog post entitled:  "How Michele Bachmann would knock 20,000 millionaires off the taxrolls."  Gleckman:
This got me wondering: What would happen to the number of non-payers if the GOP presidential hopeful got her wish and Congress did abolish taxes on [capital] gains. My Tax Policy Center colleague Dan Baneman ran the numbers: Such a step would remove 23,000 millionaires from the income tax rolls, and cut their annual tax liability by an average of a half-a-million dollars. If all investment income (including interest, dividends, and gains) were made tax free—an idea backed by Tim Pawlenty, another GOP presidential aspirant– 57,000 households making $1 million or more would avoid paying any income tax, about 50,000 more than today. 
But for now, just look at this through Bachmann’s prism: When it comes to the income tax, she told Moore, “I think everybody should have to pay something.”
Fair enough. But how does that square with a plan that would eliminate tax liability for tens of thousands of those with the highest incomes?
In a regressive sort of way, Bachmann’s plan does succeed.  While making gains tax-free would eliminate all income tax liability for 23,000 filers making a million or more, it would add about 250,000 others to the rolls. Nearly all, however, would be low- and moderate-income. It is likely that many would become payers because they’d lose the ability to write off losses on the sale of assets.
In a far more bodacious way, these tax proposals represent the same kind of thinking underlying the new Wisconsin biennial budget:  reward "job-creators" (i.e., the richest citizens of Wisconsin) with tax cuts, and you will quickly have a "trickle down" effect that will significantly boost jobs, boost average wage-earner income, and ultimately increase government revenue.  

The guy who helped Ronald Reagan introduce "supply-side" or "trickle-down" economic policy to the nation was his director of the Office of Management and Budget (OMB), David Stockman.  In an August 2010 op-ed piece in the New York Times, Stockman described the 1980's as having "hooked Republicans for good on the delusion that the economy will outgrow the deficit if plied with enough tax cuts."

The American economist John Kenneth Galbraith wrote of "trickle-down economics" in 1982:
"Mr. David Stockman has said that supply-side economics was merely a cover for the trickle-down approach to economic policy—what an older and less elegant generation called the horse-and-sparrow theory: 'If you feed the horse enough oats, some will pass through to the road for the sparrows.'"
So now Wisconsin is embarked on a great experiment, at the cost of public education, to see if the sparrows can thrive as well as the horses do.

Thursday, June 16, 2011

Michelle Bachmann Eclipsing Sarah Palin?







Michelle Bachmann (R. Minn.) was clearly seen as one of the winners of the New Hampshire GOP presidential debate on Monday night.  Some background on Bachmann from The Beast's Michelle Goldberg. 

Money quotes:

Lots of politicians talk about a sinister homosexual agenda. Bachmann, who has made opposition to gay rights a cornerstone of her career, seems genuinely to believe in one.
On Monday, Bachmann didn't talk a lot about her religion. She didn't have to—she knows how to signal it in ways that go right over secular heads. In criticizing Obama's Libya policy, for example, she said, "We are the head and not the tail." The phrase comes from Deuteronomy 28:13: "The Lord will make you the head and not the tail." As Rachel Tabachnick has reported, it's often used in theocratic circles to explain why Christians have an obligation to rule.
Indeed, no other candidate in the race is so completely a product of the evangelical right as Bachmann; she could easily become the Christian conservative alternative to the comparatively moderate Mormon Mitt Romney. "Michele Bachmann's a complete package," says Ralph Reed, the former Christian Coalition wunderkind who now runs the Faith and Freedom Coalition. 

Governor Walker is Still on Pace to Hit 250,000 new Private Sector Jobs by December 31, 2014, but Pace of Job Creation Slowed in April and May.

The Wisconsin DWD released the May job numbers and only 900 new private sector jobs were created during May.  While the Governor is still on pace (barely) to create 250,000 new private sector jobs by the end of his first term, the rate of growth has slowed over the last two months.  There were 21,900 new private sector jobs created in the first three months of the Governor's term, an average of 7,300 per month, but only 4,500 in the last two months, an average of 2,250 per month. The state's unemployment rate in May rose to 7.4% from 7.3% in April, but that was the result of some 4,100 more people recorded as having entered the labor force over the same month, so that the number of unemployed workers rose by some 3,600.  The one-tenth of one percent rise in Wisconsin's unemployment rate paralleled a rise in the national unemployment rate from 9.0% in April, to 9.1% in May.  Again, the small rise in the national rate was attributable to more workers (272,000) re-entering the national labor force.  Thus, even though the number of employed workers nationally rose by 100,000 in May, the influx of new workers seeking jobs exceeded new job creation by 172,000.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

U.S. Annual Defense Budget Larger than the Next Highest 17 Countries Combined

The Economist discusses the size of the U.S. defense budget relative to that of other nations:
"China's defense spending has risen by nearly 200% since 2001 to reach an estimated $119 billion in 2010—though it has remained fairly constant in terms of its share of GDP. America's own budget crisis is prompting tough discussions about its defense spending, which, at nearly $700 billion, is bigger than that of the next 17 countries combined."
What good will it do the United States to maintain military spending at its current high levels if the result of that approach exacerbates our national debt and decreases our ability to grow the economy in a fashion that will allow maintaining a secure lead in defense spending? 

Put another way: At what point should three wars being currently waged by the U.S. be seen as peripheral to our national security compared to the need to produce sustainable economic growth?


Source:  Stockholm International Peace Research Institute

Monday, June 6, 2011

Tina Fey I could support. Palin, not so much

Fox News reports on the GOP presidential candidates over this weekend, and uses a picture of Tina Fey in its report on Sarah Palin. Maybe Fox is trying to distance itself from the former Alaskan governor:



Here is a closeup of the screen:

Friday, June 3, 2011

Sarah Palin's History Lesson

This is what the Republican Cult has to offer America:



Just making it up on the fly! Put me in mind of this clip of Miss South Carolina that went viral:



Miss South Carolina was young and nervous. Palin doesn't have either excuse. She doesn't worry about speaking nonsense. That's a Lame Stream Media hang-up.

Thursday, June 2, 2011

Sarah Sucked Too Many Fumes Riding on the Back of a Harley during Rolling Thunder

Sarah Palin's interviewed by Dairyland's very own Greta Van Susteren while on her Magical Mystery Tour bus:




After saying "Step back and look at the facts," Palin says that during President Obama's two years, the country built up more national debt than during the presidencies of all other presidents combined.  Think Progress addresses her "facts:"
This is flatly false. When Obama took office the debt stood at $10.6 trillion. After inheriting two wars and the worst economy since the Great Depression, the debt has grown by $3.7 trillion since Obama has been in office. Palin is off by about $7 trillion.
So not only has the debt not increased more under Obama than all other Presidents combined, it has increased less under Obama than our last president, George W. Bush. Under President Bush, who inherited a $236 billion budget surplus from President Clinton, the deficit increased by $4.9 trillion.
How's that truthy-ness thing working out for you, Sarah?  Can't wait to have you convince Trump to sign on as your VP candidate in the election next year. If you missed it, here is the clip from The Daily Show on her recent schmoozing with the Donald :