After signing a trillion-dollar spending bill into law, Obama claims that he will balance the budget by 2013 . Now, 2013 is not 2009; Obama promised to balance the budget every year. Of course, massive spending increases, coupled with a downturn in the economy and taxes on the creators of wealth is not a recipe for a balanced budget, and Obama’s bromides have the familiar ring of yesteryear’s "inflate your tires" solution to the gas crisis.
Speaking of broken campaign pledges, the Pentagon released a report stating that GTMO is legal and meets the requirements of the Geneva Convention . While there was certainly no campaign promise to find that the place violates international treaties, I disagree with those who don’t find anything wrong with the latest revelation . Obama’s campaign, as McCain astutely pointed out, was more in opposition to George Bush than to Sen. McCain and Gov. Palin. He promised "change," under the premise that the current situation (GTMO included) was intolerable – legally and morally. Had Obama, in a rally or town hall meeting, said, "GTMO is perfectly legal and complies with the Geneva Convention," he would never have gotten elected. He was either totally ignorant about the state of the detainee base, or knowledgeable about it and misrepresenting what it is. Either way, unacceptable.
More on campaign issues coming home to roost: conservatives long said that the housing crisis (and subsequent problems) was a manufactured issue – a wag-the-dog manoevre designed to turn a normal downturn into a disaster requiring government intervention, and, of course, a regime change in D.C.. Now, even the New York Times appears to agree . Conveniently missing: any discussion of the media’s own role.
I’m a libertarian/conservative, not a Republican, so it’s time for some equal-opportunity bashing. Some House Republicans have proposed a bill that would require internet service providers (ISPs) to keep a log of subscriber information and network data for two years, in order to aid law enforcement . Of course, the big issue is what is meant by "network data;" if it is just that Jane Doe signed up with RoadRunner and installed a wireless router in her home, that’s one thing. If they are required to keep track of the IP addresses of each and every computer that used Jane Doe’s wireless network, and other information (e.g. bandwidth, sites visited, etc.), then that’s an intrusion into personal privacy that is totally unwarranted. It is not the job of private companies and individuals to keep records to aid future legal investigations; we are not the ruled subjects of our nanny/police overlords. In free societies, we find a crime, then a perpetrator; we do not treat every human as a potential criminal who needs monitoring.


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