The Asian Badger

Every Time You Think No One Can Be That Stupid, A Liberal Proves You Wrong

Archive for August, 2008

Lots of Class…All Tourist

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 30, 2008

Jim “Pol Pot” Doyle has a lot of class. Unfortunately, it’s all tourist.

From WisPolitics:

“It’s clear that after watching Senator Obama lay out very clearly the choice in this election, Senator McCain felt he needed a game-changer. Unfortunately, his panic pick of Governor Palin neither changes the game, nor represents the change America needs. Sarah Palin is perfectly in step with John McCain on pushing Big Oil’s agenda and continuing George Bush’s failed economic policies. More disturbingly, his political Hail Mary threatens to put a first term governor, who just two years ago was mayor of a town of 8,000, a heartbeat away from being Commander in Chief. This decision clearly had nothing to do with being prepared to govern and everything to do with the McCain campaign’s dim political outlook,” said Wisconsin Governor Jim Doyle.

Pol Pot…let me clue you in a few things since you’re too fucking stupid to understand something as basic as the sun rises in the East and that Wisconsin is a tax hell.

  1. George Bush isn’t running for anything.
  2. Sarah Palin is far more qualified to run the country than Barry who IS running for Commander-In-Chief. Here’s a little hint, Pol Pot. What has Barry ever run?
  3. Sarah Palin has a 90% approval rating as governor. What do YOU have Pol Pot, besides the approval of Madistan and vote fraud in Milwaukee?
  4. It’s obvious from your quote you hate women and must be a misogynist.
  5. You are living proof that Harvard Law School is over-rated and not difficult.
  6. But, the real reason you’re so bitter is……When McCain wins, no AG post for you. BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAH.
  7. Jimbo, let me clue you in on something. You’re still just a diptard and that will never change.

Posted in 2008 Race, Doyle Sucks, MSM Lies and Lies by Omissions, Sarah Palin | Tagged: | 3 Comments »

A Great Pick and a Real Boost for the GOP Ticket

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 29, 2008

Heard this this morning and I think it’s a great pick. Yeah, I know it’s all over the blogs but I’m really happy with the pick of Sarah “Barracuda” Palin.

As the Libtards start to go after her “lack of experience”, it’s important to remember a couple of things.

1) She has some executive experience at the local level and a governor. I admit, it’s not like she ran California for 8 years but her experience vastly outweighs Obama, who’s never run anything.
2) She is a true conservative.
3) Her background is just a great story.
4) She likes to shoot her own food.

All in all, a pick that was a real boost for the GOP and conservatives.

Oh yeah, as Rush pointed out on his show today….”Hillary Clinton has been replaced by the other woman…..again.”

UPDATE: I Might have been the first in the Cheddarsphere to blog about it. WOOT!

Posted in 2008 Race, Sarah Palin | Tagged: , | 2 Comments »

Road Trip!!!

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 28, 2008

Gotta check this place out in the very near future!!!

The Heart Attack Grill in Phoenix (actually Chandler) Arizona.

Check out the introductory page info for the franchise offering memorandum.

* The High End Burger Segment is Expanding Rapidly
* Industry Leading Sales per Employee Hour
* Industry Leading Sales per Square Foot
* Industry Leading Sales per Investment Ratios
* The Media Loves To Hate Us!

In the interest of fair disclosure, the owner, Dr. Jon, is a fellow TBird Alum.

By the way, every fried item is fried in lard, which has no transfats.

Check out the “news” page for his interview with Neil Cavuto.

Posted in Good Guys | 2 Comments »

Time Compression?

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 28, 2008

How are Clinton and Biden both going to give speeches tonight? There’s only 24 hours in a day, after all.

Posted in 2008 Race, Joe Biden is Crazy | 1 Comment »

The Ayers Video

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 27, 2008

Here’s the video the Obama camp is trying to block. (So much for free speech in America.) Since I doubt the local media will carry it, you should take a look.

Some nice analysis by The Confederate Yankee here as well as here.

Sister Toldjah adds some thoughts, too.

As we all know, the left is all for free speech until it involves inconvenient facts on one of their own.

Posted in 2008 Race, MSM Lies and Lies by Omissions, Obamarama is an Illusion | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »

Great Moments in Big Pilot Airways

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 27, 2008

Earlier today, I spent some time at the HQ of Big Pilot Airways. As my 12.5 regular readers may recall, The Big Pilot (BP) scammed a jet which I wrote about here.

Now, BP, who makes most of us in the Cheddarsphere look like diptard liberals, runs his little charter service at egregious prices to support his medflight stuff…not that BP needs the money but his thinking is that anyone who’s stupid enough to pay his prices deserves to get where they want to go….with some exceptions….as we shall see.

I was hoping he’d get a few to repay me the time I spent getting re-qualified on this aircraft. The following are (almost) verbatim from some calls he’s received to book a charter. Note…BP=Big Pilot….SC=Silly Customers.

I happened to be in the office for this one.
BP….Hello, Big Pilot Charters, Big Pilot speaking.
SC….I’d like a quote on a price from xxxx to Denver on Sunday, August 24th and a return flight to xxxx on Saturday, August 30th. (Notice the diptard thought BP Airways would be available..not even a “are you available for the following dates?….Typical.)
BP….Are you going to the Democratic Convention?
SC….Yes.
BP….My carbon footprint is huge…why don’t you walk? {CLICK}

I told BP that he should be a little less aggressive and make some money. So..here’s the next one. (From the tape.)

BP….Hello, Big Pilot Charters, Big Pilot speaking.
SC….I’d like to know if you can fly me and three others from xxxx to Denver on 8/24?
BP….You’re lucky, I have just had a cancellation and can take you. Do you need a return flight?
SC….Well, yes we do, on Sunday, August, 31.
BP….OK…now, you understand that I have to charge a “relocation fee” since I have to fly to your city to pick you up. Is that OK with you?
SC….Ummmm…..OK, I can see that. I’m going to the Democratic Convention, can you give us a discount?
BP….Fuck You. {CLICK}

And, as Dave says at the excellent blog FL390, “Life on the line continues”.

I was so proud of BP that I bought him a lunch.

We did have a few “regular” charters and some normal medevac (not freebies for kids, just normal stuff under insurance contracts) to keep us busy.

In all honesty, the best part is that we have not had to fly any sick children for a pretty long time.

Posted in Fun Stuff, Stupid Tourists | 3 Comments »

Maybe She Was Eating Cheesesteaks

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 25, 2008

Bice has an interesting piece over at the MJS about the petulant Charlene Hardin. Seems as though Ms. Hardin likes to use taxpayer dollars to go to conventions without actually going to conventions.

Even with the district’s financial troubles, Milwaukee School Board member Charlene Hardin could probably justify taking a taxpayer-funded jaunt to a school safety conference in Philadelphia last month.

Violence in Milwaukee Public Schools has been on the rise, and she might learn something at the conference.

But for that to have happened, she would have had to actually attend the event while in the City of Brotherly Love.

She didn’t.

Officials with the National Association of School Safety & Law Enforcement Officers say Hardin, a three-term board member, and Lolita Pearson, a data processing secretary at the Milwaukee High School of the Arts, were MIA during the three-day gathering on July 14-16.

“I didn’t see her (Hardin) at all,” said Peter Pochowski, the executive director of the national school safety group who used to work for MPS and knows Hardin. ““It would have been hard for me to miss her. I was the guy who ran the conference.”

Joe Ricci, a Philadelphia school administrator who helped plan the event, was at the registration table when Hardin and Pearson arrived on the final day of the conference.

At first, Hardin complained loudly that the staff had run out of conference bags, which contained zoo passes, city information and discounts for various items, Ricci said.

“Then she proceeded to go into the vendors’ area, get some plastic bags from them, help herself to a ton of food and cookies and candy and all that stuff from the snack tray, and proceeded to walk out the door again, making another big stink about the thing, and left,” Ricci said, estimating that the pair were there for all of five minutes.

“She never checked in . . . or showed up at any conference functions at all, her or her assistant.”

In the real world, actions like this are most likely a firing offense. In the world of MPS, actions like this are punishable by a “bad girl, don’t do it again”.

Now, since Hardin is a member of the School Board, she can’t be fired. But at the very least, she should reimburse MPS for the costs involved. Here’s another thing…why is a data processing assistant going to a convention on school safety?

Posted in General Stupidity, Milwaukee Stuff, Stupid Tourists | Tagged: , | 7 Comments »

LMAO

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 23, 2008

The clean, literate, presumptive nominee aka Barack “Little Barry” Obama named everyone’s favorite crazy uncle, Joe Biden as his Veep candidate.

Talk about manna.

Here’s a sample.

Posted in 2008 Race, Interesting Stuff, Joe Biden is Crazy, Obamarama is an Illusion | Tagged: | 2 Comments »

The John Wiley Article

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 22, 2008

John Wiley, an average chancellor at UW-Madison is stepping down (finally). He claims he discovered an article he’s written in 2003.

You can read the MJS reporting on the issue here, as well as a summary here.

The entire article, which appeared in “Madison Magazine” is viewable here.

You can read the WMC response to Wiley’s article here. (PDF required.)

Wiley, to his credit did have some very useful suggestions for the state. Here’s one I particularly liked; too bad nothing will ever come of it. (Any emphasis mine.)

According to the National Conference of State Legislatures, only ten states have full-time legislatures, and Wisconsin is by far the smallest of these. Why do we need a full-time legislature if Minnesota, Indiana and other similar-sized states don’t? How much money would we save, and how much less partisan would our legislature be, if we had part-time citizen legislators who met periodically to work together and solve problems?

Wisconsin is carved up into a truly astounding number of independent counties, cities, towns, villages, school districts and other jurisdictions. UW–Madison alone has to deal with fifty-six different jurisdictions on a daily basis. Imagine how much worse it is for the Department of Administration, which has to deal with thousands. It’s an expensive administrative nightmare. This is rich territory for some consolidation in the name of efficiency and economy.

My first two suggestions may be politically difficult to implement. But surely our elected officials can reform the process by which the state builds and maintains or repairs buildings. Madison Magazine limited me to three thousand words. If I wanted to convey the flaws in our current system of construction, a few thousand words wouldn’t get me past the introduction. Let me just say that the state spends twice as much and takes twice as long as anyone in the private sector would tolerate. It is a fiction that the state builds “hundred-year buildings,” or that the higher initial construction cost saves us in life-cycle costs through lower maintenance. UW–Madison has already spent far more trying to make the Humanities Building functional than the original cost to construct it in 1968, and the repairs began in the same year it was turned over to us. The only word I can think of to describe the state’s building system is scandalous.

Fifty six differerent jurisdictions? That’s unreal. Even if the number is inflated, the fact that they have to deal with more than THREE (State, Dane County, Madistan) is just ridiculous.

Wiley also blames the legislature for many of the UW problems. Of course, Wiley, when confronted about things, pulls his “I’m smarter than you” persona. From the “main article”.

n his 2008 essay, he wrote that in meetings with lawmakers, he encountered a partisan monologue accusing the other party of hijacking the state. Too often, he said, he was threatened with “dire consequences” if he spoke out against policies he thought would hurt the university.

Wiley’s article didn’t name names, but he has consistently tangled with Rep. Steve Nass (R-Whitewater), chairman of the Colleges and Universities Committee. Nass was unavailable Thursday, but aide Mike Mikalsen said Wiley was off base.

“John Wiley doesn’t want anybody telling the university what to do,” he said. “They believe they know best. . . . If anybody dare ask for accountability — how did you spend that money, why did you spend that money? — they get defensive and they begin to attack the integrity and the intellect of the individuals of the people who raised those questions.”

No surprise there. The UW-Madison approach has always been “give us money and we’ll use it wisely. Don’t ask us how.”

Wiley saves his final salvo for WMC, Wisconsin Manufacturers & Commerce, a group which represents Wisconsin businesses.

Wiley said that the candidates WMC has supported for public office have chosen to dwell on “ideological diversions” such as opposing stem cell research, domestic partner benefits, the taxpayer bill of rights and the personal views of “otherwise obscure” instructors. The latter appeared to be a reference to part-time UW lecturer Kevin Barrett, who taught a controversial theory on the Sept. 11 attacks.

And instead of pushing for more high-income jobs, Wiley wrote, WMC’s definition of being competitive is “being among those states with the lowest taxes, lowest wages, and least regulation in the nation.”

WMC has described Wisconsin as a “tax hell.”

But Wiley points out that of the 10 states with higher per-capita taxes — including Minnesota — nine have higher per-capita income, too. Higher taxation, by itself, hasn’t hampered the economies of the states that outperform Wisconsin, he said.

WMC has been under attack in recent months from its critics, but spokesman Jim Pugh said he did not expect the group to change.

“We’re going to continue to advance the business agenda that promotes limited government, modest taxation (and) fair and reasonable regulation,” he said. “(Critics) sometimes lose the argument on the merits, so they attempt to attack the messenger.”

Looking to the future, Wiley recommended Wisconsin overhaul its tax system, make the Legislature part time, consolidate some of the state’s various jurisdictions and reform the state building process.

Wiley ends with a call to WMC member businesses:

“Please get control of (WMC) staff or replace them.”

Now, here is where Wiley is out of touch. The state is a tax hell. Secondly, WMC represents the interests of its members. As they say in their response.

WMC’s ideology is the ideology of the WMC board of directors and the WMC
members. The staff represents the members. Period. The policy agenda was approved
unanimously by the WMC board, and the WMC board unanimously has recommended
that WMC continue to engage in the political debate in our state.

You see John, the men and women “in the trenches” know what the problems are and band together to get their message across.

If Wiley was as adamant about the problems relating to the wastefullness he cites above, he should have joined in and made it a priority for WMC.

Christian Schneider offers a very thoughtful analysis of Wiley’s article here.

Posted in News, Wisconsin | 3 Comments »

A Useful Translation Service

Posted by The Asian Badger on August 20, 2008

The Wall Street Journal is providing a useful translation service for the grand theft scheme, aka “The Obama Tax Plan.”

Here are two recent articles to clarify exactly what Barry really means when he says he wants to make taxes “fair”.

Here’s the first article, along with a few excerpts. Here’s the entire column for your reading dis? pleasure.

On Saturday night at the Saddleback Church in Southern California, Rick Warren showed Jim, Gwen, Tom, Bob and Co. what a presidential moderator can accomplish when he makes the debate about the candidates and not himself.

Over the course of a two-hour, televised forum, the best-selling evangelical author and pastor took a novel approach to our presidential debates. He asked Barack Obama and John McCain the same simple questions — and then gave them time to answer.

For example, here is how Mr. Warren asked the candidates to talk about their flip-flops: “Give me a good example of something, 10 years ago, you said that’s the way I feel about [it] and now, 10 years later, I changed my position.”

Likewise on abortion: “I know this is a very complex issue. Forty million abortions, at what point does a baby get human rights, in your view?” And again on the Supreme Court: “Which existing Supreme Court Justice would you not have nominated?”

These are not your standard-issue Beltway questions, and their directness made them hard to evade. Nowhere was this more evident than in Mr. Warren’s attempt to get the candidates — both of whom are trying to persuade the American people they are tax cutters — to draw some fundamental distinctions between their approaches. In simple but arresting language, he cut to the chase.

Here’s how he put it: “OK. Taxes. Define rich. I mean give me a number. Is it $50,000, $100,000, $200,000? Everybody keeps talking about who we’re going to tax. How can you define that?”

Plainly this is a man who understands that it is easier to get a camel through the eye of a needle than to get a direct answer from a politician running for election. And indeed, while Mr. McCain was at first shy about giving a specific number, in the end he did allow that someone who had an income of, say, $5 million could pretty definitely be said to be rich.

Yesterday’s Politico hooted that with this response Mr. McCain handed his opponent the perfect fodder for a TV commercial. That, of course, overlooks those who might actually find attractive Mr. McCain’s fuller explanation. “I don’t want to take any money from the rich,” he said, “I want everybody to get rich.”

Mr. Obama, by contrast, started out much more directly, suggesting that if you make $150,000 or less you may be poor or middle class. A family with an income above $250,000, he went on to say, is “doing well.” And if you find yourself in that category, he’s going to target you for a tax hike — all in the name of creating “a sense of balance, and fairness in our tax code.”

In fact, the idea of fairness is at the heart of his whole economic argument. And he goes back to it in almost every public appearance.

He talks about it as a general theme: “It is time for folks like me who make more than $250,000 to pay our fair share.”

He invokes it as a solution for Social Security: “[W]e will save Social Security for future generations by asking the wealthiest Americans to pay their fair share.”

He points to how it guides his energy policy: “The first part of my plan is to tax the windfall profits of oil companies and use some of that money to help you pay the rising price of gas.”

And he stuck to it on capital gains, even after ABC’s Charlie Gibson noted that the record shows increased taxes on capital gains — which would affect 100 million Americans — would likely lead to a decrease in government revenues: “Well, Charlie, what I’ve said is that I would look at raising the capital gains tax for purposes of fairness.”

Translated into ordinary English, what that means is that it doesn’t really matter whether a tax increase actually brings in more revenue. It’s not about robbing from the rich to give to the poor. Robbing from the rich will do, especially if it’s done in the name of fairness.

Now there are good reasons Mr. Obama is not likely to pursue the revenue side of the fairness question. As this newspaper noted in a recent editorial, the latest data from the Internal Revenue Service does not show to Mr. Obama’s advantage. As we come to the end of the Bush administration, the top 1% of American taxpayers already pay 40% of all income taxes — the highest level in 40 years. The top 10% of income earners pay 71% of the taxes.

Mr. Warren, a man of the cloth, has done us a great service by asking the candidates to answer a pretty secular question: What kind of income makes an American “rich”? Maybe in the more secular setting of an upcoming debate, one of our nonpastor moderators could ask the candidates the moral question: What specific rate of individual taxation would it take for the rich to be paying their fair share?

Next, we get another useful translation from today’s edition which tells it like it really is. Entitled “Obama’s Plan is Really a Welfare Plan”, it gets to the heart of the matter, or as one of the comments noted, “If you rob Peter to pay Paul, you’ll have a lot of friends named Paul.”

Barack Obama’s tax plan is the opposite of supply-side economics. He proposes to raise marginal rates for just about every federal tax. He also proposes a raft of tax credits that taxpayers can receive if they engage in various government-specified activities.

Moreover, the tax credits would mostly go to those who pay little or nothing in federal income taxes. His trick is to make the tax credits “refundable.” Thus, if the tax credit is for $1,000, but the taxpayer would otherwise only pay $200 in taxes, the government would write a check to the taxpayer for $800. If the taxpayer pays nothing in federal income taxes, the government would pay him the whole $1,000.

Such credits are not tax cuts. Indeed, they should be called The New Tax Welfare. In effect, Mr. Obama is proposing to create or expand a slew of government spending programs that are disguised as tax credits. The spending on these programs is then subtracted from the total tax burden, in order to make the claim that his tax plan is a net tax cut overall.

On the tax side of the ledger, the details released by his campaign last week confirm what a President Obama has in mind for our most productive citizens. The top individual income tax rate, for example, would be increased by 13%, to 39.6%; the next-highest rate would be raised to 36%. The top rates on capital gains and dividends would rise by a third, to 20%

The Social Security payroll tax would be raised between 16% to 32% for families making over $250,000 a year. This means that the real returns these people get from their lifetime payments into the retirement program will be driven below 0%, according to my own previous research, which was published by the Cato Institute and elsewhere.

Mr. Obama also wants a permanent federal estate tax, with a top rate of 45%; his health-insurance plan includes a new payroll tax on employers; and he also contemplates several increases in the corporate income tax, including a new so-called windfall profits tax on oil companies.

Then there is the spending side of the ledger. Mr. Obama proposes a fully refundable Making Work Pay Tax Credit, which would have the government pay out $500 to each worker and $1,000 to couples — reminiscent of George McGovern’s 1972 election proposal for the government to send a $1,000 check to everyone.

His American Opportunity Tax Credit would provide a $4,000, fully refundable tax credit for college tuition expenses. His Mortgage Interest Tax Credit would provide a 10% credit — refundable — to offset mortgage interest payments for lower- and middle-income families. His Health Care Tax Credits, which the campaign says “will ensure that health insurance is available and affordable for all families,” include “a new refundable 50 percent health tax credit on employee premiums paid by employers.”

Currently existing tax credits would also become spending programs in the Obama tax program. The Savers Credit would be made fully refundable, and would be expanded, according to the campaign, “to match 50% of the first $1,000 of savings for families that earn under $75,000.” The Child and Dependent Care Tax Credit would be made refundable and expanded to allow “low-income families to receive up to a 50 percent credit on the first $6,000 of child care expenses.”

The Earned Income Tax Credit is already refundable. Mr. Obama would expand it to “increase the number of working parents eligible for EITC benefits, increase the benefits available to noncustodial parents who fulfill their child support obligations, increase benefits for families with three or more children, and reduce the EITC marriage penalty, which hurts low-income families.” In short, welfare spending is to be increased by paying more money out to low-income income tax filers.

The latest Congressional Budget Office data shows the bottom 40% of income earners already pays no income taxes. Indeed, they receive a net payment from the federal income tax system — meaning from the taxpayers — equal to 3.8% of all federal income taxes, because of the refundable tax credits under current law. The middle 20% of income earners, the true middle class, pays 4.4% of federal income taxes.

Overall, the bottom 60% of income earners pay less than 1% of federal income taxes on net. When “tax credits” primarily go to this group in the form of checks from the government (rather than a reduction in their tax burden) it is simply an abuse of the language to call the spending a tax cut.

Consequently, to say, as the campaign does say, that the candidate’s tax plan is a tax cut on net — and that it would limit taxes to 18.2% of GDP — is grossly misleading. The Obama tax plan would sharply increase real taxes. It also would come nowhere near to paying for the massive increases in federal spending he has proposed, including the spending that is disguised in the form of refundable tax credits.

Now, I don’t care how you feel about Little Barry, the above is just a disaster for the country. As I’ve asked before, and not ONE liberal has ever answered, “Can you name one nation or civilization that has taxed its way to prosperity?”

Posted in Barack Hussein Obama is 1/2 White, Dumb Ideas, Grand Theft Taxes, Obamarama is an Illusion | Tagged: | Leave a Comment »