Thursday, December 4, 2014

Everything Liberals Have Told Us About Energy Is Wrong

Everything Liberals Have Told Us About Energy Is Wrong

Everything Liberals Have Told Us About Energy Is Wrong

Reminder: We Are Never Going To Run Out Of Oil
In a chilling 2010 column, Paul Krugman declared: “peak oil has arrived.”
So it’s really not surprising that the national average for a gallon of gas has fallen to $2.77 this week – in 10 states it was under $2.60 – and analysts predict we’re going to dip below the two-dollar mark soon. U.S. oil is down to $75 a barrel, a drop of more than $30 from the 52-week high.
Meanwhile, the Institute for Energy Research estimates that we have enough natural gas in the U.S. to meet electricity needs for around 575 years at current fuel demand and to fuel homes heated by natural gas for 857 years or so – because we have more gas than Russia, Iran, Qatar and Saudi Arabia combined.
With prices returning to ordinary levels and a few centuries’ worth of fossil fuels on tap, this is a good time to remind ourselves that nearly every warning the Left has peddled about an impending energy crisis over the past 30 to 40 years has turned out to be wrong. And none of them are more wrong than the Malthusian idea that says we’re running out of oil.
Each time there’s a  temporary spike in gas prices, science-centric liberals allow themselves a purely ideological indulgence, claiming – as Krugman, Paul Ehrlich, John Holdren and countless others have – that we’re rapidly approaching a point when producers will hit the maximum rate of extraction of petroleum. Peak oil. With emerging demand, fossil fuels will become prohibitive. And unless we have our in solar panels in order, Armageddon is near.
81IVbPVdgfLIn a 2005 New York Times Magazine piece, ominously titled “The Breaking Point,” Peter Maass warned: “Few people imagined a time when supply would dry up because of demand alone. But a steady surge in demand in recent years — led by China’s emergence as a voracious importer of oil — has changed that.” I can remember sitting through a number of editorial board meetings during the 2000s watching peak oil cranks pull out charts that, with pinpoint accuracy, predicted exactly when this tragedy would hit– even as enormous new deposits were being discovered and advancements in productivity were debunking those claims in real-time.
And while everything is “finite” in a galactic sense, there has never been any consensus on when oil, gas and coal will hit peak production. Probably because we’re never going to run out of any of them. Julian Simon is still right, and spikes in oil’s price only create more innovation and better productivity:
The reason that the cost of energy has declined in the long run is the fundamental process of 1) increased demand due to the growth of population and income, which raises prices and hence constitutes opportunity to entrepreneurs and inventors; 2) the search for new ways of supplying the demand for energy; 3) the eventual discovery of methods which leave us better off than if the original problem had not appeared.
One thing is for sure, the technological advancements we’ve seen in extracting fossil fuels is light years ahead of the progress we’ve made in the state-planned alternative energy infrastructure. Yet, the same people who were skeptics of shale and are now skeptical of methane hydrate believe windmills will solve our non-existent crisis. Probably because progress can often be confused with wishful thinking.
After all, it might not be President Obama’s ideological obstinacy that sinks the Keystone pipeline, but economic reality. Saudi Arabia, the biggest OPEC producer, plans to cut its oil prices to preserve market share and hurt North American shale production. The Canadian Energy Research Institute estimates that the pipeline needs to extract a price of $85 a barrel to be profitable at all. The price is still right but it might not be for long.
So what’s the answer? Proposals to artificially spike energy prices, of course. One wonders why the Left never takes more credit for high gas prices. Isn’t that the objective? There are numerous benefits to high energy prices. For starters, it’s a great opportunity for politicians to get those speculators, predators, gougers and rent-seeking Big Oil executives into congressional hearings where they can be properly berated for an imaginary hold on fungible commodity prices.
But the truth is Democrats should be thanking them. As Steven Chu explained in 2008, “Somehow we have to figure out how to boost the price of gasoline to the levels in Europe.” President Obama conceded he favored a “gradual adjustment” in this direction. Now, an energy secretary doesn’t normally seek out ways to make energy more expensive, but these were heady times. There was still hope that Washington would pass cap-and-trade, a contrived marketplace that folds the arbitrary cost of progressive guilt into the price of energy use. Obama turned to other means to get the job done. But after six years of trying, we learned that the laws of economics can’t be circumvented. Which is great news for consumers, bad news for progressives.

Liberalism in Ruins

Liberalism in Ruins
Obama’s hubristic promises have been followed by a total discrediting of his ideology.
By Victor Davis Hanson

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Obama’s Bogus Climate Deal with China

Obama’s Bogus Climate Deal with China 
Economic factors will make the Chinese ignore it, and should do the same for the U.S. 
Chinese president Xi XInping welcomes President Obama to Beijing. (Feng Li/Getty)

 
When the United States and China announced a surprise carbon-emissions deal, the environmental Left squealed in delight. Al Gore declared it “groundbreaking progress from the world’s largest polluter” (i.e., China), while John Kerry patted himself on the back in the New York Times, gushing about how “the world’s most consequential relationship has just produced something of great consequence in the fight against climate change.”
Despite the extraordinary fanfare, there’s abundant reason for skepticism. Though the announcement is politically expedient for both Barack Obama and Xi Jinping, China almost certainly won’t take significant steps to reduce carbon emissions.
That’s because the legitimacy of the Chinese Communist party’s government rests squarely on economic development. Energy — often produced by dirty coal — allows that economic development to occur, lifting millions out of hand-to-mouth poverty.
But China remains a developing country, and it will stay that way for quite some time. In 2010, the World Bank estimated that more than one Chinese person in five survives on less than $2 a day, using 2005 international prices. And just a few months ago, Chinese premier Li Keqiang estimated that 200 million Chinese continue to live on $1.25 a day or less.

“The biggest difficulty is that the demand [for energy] will still be there,” Wang Yi, a climate-change expert at the Chinese Academy of Sciences, told the New York Times. “Urbanization won’t be completed, industrialization won’t be over and there will still be these large regional disparities. The eastern regions will be quite developed, but there will still be poverty in the center and west.”
Also consider 2012 estimates from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences suggesting that the number of “mass incidents” — CCP-speak for protests — regularly exceeds 100,000 a year. Much of the unrest centers on economic dissatisfaction. And many of the most noteworthy incidents, including a knifing at the Kunming train station and a car explosion at Tiananmen Square, occurred or originated in the impoverished central and western regions.
China’s ruling class cares far less about carbon emissions — or about the international community’s opinion, for that matter — than it does about maintaining its chokehold on power. So don’t expect it to gamble economic progress on lofty environmental goals.
At the same time, Chinese frustration with constant smog, heavy pollution, and environmental recklessness is also growing, so Beijing benefits politically from agreeing to far-off carbon-emissions reductions. The announcement gives the illusion that China’s official environmental policy is gradually improving.
In reality, Beijing hasn’t actually agreed to much: It will try to “stop increasing” carbon emissions by 2030 — which is a slanted way of saying its emissions will continue to grow for another 16 years — and derive 20 percent of its energy from renewables by then, up from about 10 percent now. Though these goals may be codified into Chinese law, the CCP does not have a reputation for respecting the rule of law. And the United States and the international community won’t have any way of enforcing these goals. No wonder Reuters called it a “largely symbolic plan.”
The Obama administration and its allies in Congress surely know all of this, but they don’t care. The deal, realistic or not, offers a valuable talking point for ramming through radical environmental policy.
Critics of the president’s environmental policies have noted that even the most stringent emissions reductions from the First World won’t have much of an impact unless the developing world also cuts back. The environmental Left is marketing the new U.S.–China deal as a way to eliminate that objection and plow forward with the president’s hardline proposals for carbon regulations.
“Now there is no longer an excuse for Congress to block action on climate change,” Senator Barbara Boxer said in today’s New York Times. “The biggest carbon polluter on our planet, China, has agreed to cut back on dangerous emissions, and now we should make sure all countries do their part because this is a threat to the people that we all represent.”
Boxer ignores the myriad other valid objections to the Obama administration’s proposed regulations, which seek to cut carbon emissions 30 percent from their 2005 levels by 2030. In reality, it’s bad policy because, despite enormous economic cost, it would yield very few environmental benefits.
The U.S. Chamber of Commerce has estimated that these rules would cost $51 billion, as well as 224,000 jobs, every year between now and 2030. And a recent NERA Economic Consulting study puts the cost even higher — as much as $73 billion a year — while also predicting double-digit price hikes on utility bills in all but seven states. Notably, the EPA failed to mention what such stringent policies would accomplish: They’d cut global temperatures by less than two-hundredths of a degree Fahrenheit.
In other words, these costly regulations are largely symbolic — as is the U.S.–China emissions deal. Both underscore how fundamentally divorced from reality the president’s climate-change aspirations really are.
— Jillian Kay Melchior writes for National Review as a Thomas L. Rhodes Fellow for the Franklin Center. She is also a senior fellow at the Independent Women’s Forum.

http://www.nationalreview.com/article/392561/obamas-bogus-climate-deal-china-jillian-kay-melchior

Black Lives Matter

And so, therefore, must black perpetrators.
 
David McKenna, the screenwriter who penned Tony Kaye’s American History X , committed one of the great acts of intellectual cowardice in the history of modern American cinema. Telling the story of Derek Vinyard, a violent neo-Nazi who reexamines his squandered life while being tormented in prison, McKenna explores the origins of the angry young skinhead’s predispositions by revisiting Vinyard’shigh-school days: In flashback, we see a breakfast-table conversation between the young man and his father (played by the excellent Edward Norton and William Russ, respectively).
Vinyard and his father get into a discussion of affirmative action. His father, a fireman, makes a reasoned and principled case, if not an entirely eloquent one, that by promoting two black candidates over two better-qualified white candidates, affirmative action has put his life in danger. He resents that he must entrust his life to two men who are less qualified for their positions but who were hired nonetheless because of their race. “Is that what America’s about?” he demands. “No! America’s about the best man for the job.” But before the point can quite settle in, the father starts speculating about the “hidden agenda” and, finally, leans in and whispers conspiratorially to his son: “It’s n****r bulls***.”
 
Dramatically, that makes no sense. American History X would be an even more powerful story if the transformative moment in young Derek’s life — his father’s murder at the hands of black criminals during a firefighting call — had sparked a different and more radical sort of transformation in the Vinyard family, from the well-intentioned, best-man-for-the-job philosophy of the resentful but reasonable working-class father to the violent extremism of the son. Instead, the story is simply one of explicit, banal racism that deepens between generations, at a time when American society was overwhelmingly on the opposite course. But the father’s principled criticism of affirmative action cannot be allowed to stand; it must be thoroughly hosed down with racism, conspiracy-theory talk, and the totemic deployment of that infamous racial epithet.
 
In the view of America’s race-hustling professionals, there is no principled disagreement with them — there is only gross racism, either hidden or open.
It is possible — barely possible — that this is in fact how the Left sees the world: That behind every criticism of affirmative action, behind every anti-crime measure, behind every proposal for welfare reform, behind every expression of capitalism, behind every measure taken against voter fraud, behind every criticism of the Ferguson lynch mob — and even behind every fraction — a burning cross looms, men in white hoods await, and the lynching noose is being prepared. That view is borderline insane and contrary to the overwhelming evidence of contemporary American life as lived, but people hold all sorts of loopy views, so it is just within the boundaries of plausibility that people on the Left, so-called progressives, genuinely hold this view.
 
More likely, the spectral evidence of white supremacy in our modern Salem race trials is simply a rhetorical tool, a way for well-fed progressives to beat their critics into submission if one of them should happen to point out that progressive policies seem to produce reliably horrific results for people who are poor and, especially,poor and black . That Thomas Edsall sincerely believes that welfare reform is shaped in part by ugly stereotypes about blacks malingering on the dole is, despite the man’s intellectual dishonesty, more plausible than Jamelle Bouie’s daft and hallucinatory suggestion that my description of a thin black kid with long braids as resembling a scale-model of Snoop Dogg is a coded racist dog-whistle referring to the infamous Three-Fifths Compromise. Students of history will recall that Mr. Madison’s ugly political expedient did not refer to three-fifths of a Snoop Dogg.
 
It is a seldom-appreciated irony that irresponsible allegations of racism are politically effective in the American context precisely because American society takes racism so seriously; in a society with more cavalier attitudes toward racism, such dishonest opportunism would bear less fruit. Politicians in Spain and the Republic of Korea, for example, worry a good deal less about insinuations that they might harbor insensitive racial attitudes. But in the context of the United States, one can effectively win a political argument not by demonstrating to any reasonable standard of evidence that one’s opponent is a racist but simply by maneuvering him into explaining that he isn’t a racist. It’s the “Have you stopped beating your wife yet” gambit on a grand and nasty scale.
 
So when former New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani takes seriously the operative slogan of the Ferguson protests — “Black Lives Matter!” — and asks the obvious question — “Don’t they matter in the 93 percent of cases when the lives of black murder victims are taken violently by black criminals?” — the Left’s reflexive response is to denounce him as a racist. The Washington Post ’s hilariously Orwellian fact-check column labeled Giuliani a liar even as it confirmed that his observation is, as a matter of fact, entirely true. If David McKenna had been writing the scene, Giuliani would have leaned across a table and whispered to Sean Hannity that this is all “n****r bulls***.”
 
But real life doesn’t go according to script. That’s why we have the New York Times et al. — to write the script according to the Left’s dramatic imperatives, regardless of what actually happens. The media may not control the stage entirely, but they do control the lighting and the sound.
 
The reality is this: Black men, especially young black men, die violent deaths at appalling rates in these United States. But they do not die very often at the hands of the Ku Klux Klan, thugs reminiscent of characters from American History X , police officers of any race or motivation, lynch mobs, the Koch brothers, Karl Rove, Walmart, the Tea Party, Goldman Sachs, carbon dioxide , or any other bogeyman currently in vogue among so-called progressives. As Giuliani noted, blacks die violent deaths almost exclusively at the hands of black criminals. But attempting to accommodate that reality in any serious way does not pay any political dividends for the Left. It does not put any money in Jesse Jackson’s pockets or create any full-time jobs for graduates of grievance-studies programs.
 
And thus we have the very peculiar situation in which “Black Lives Matter!” but black perpetrators don’t. Only white perpetrators matter. And if, as in the case of George Zimmerman, they are not exactly white, then they can be declared white by the New York Times. Only white perpetrators matter to the people behind the Ferguson protests because only white perpetrators are politically useful.
 
The overwhelming majority of violent deaths suffered by black Americans are the result of simple crime, and crime is, as an issue, of no use to the Left. But when a black man dies at the hands of a white man — especially a white police officer — then that breathes life into the ghost of “white supremacy,” the infinitely malleable, endlessly useful set of imperial robes detectable only by the finest sensibilities on MSNBC. Actual white supremacists represent a dwindling and (metaphorically and, more often than you might expect, literally ) toothless tendency restricted mostly to hillbilly precincts and anonymous Internet cowards. But if one already wants to boycott Walmart, and a white cop shoots a young black man, then — abracadabra! — the Left is boycotting Walmart because of . . . white supremacy, or something. Agitating for a $40 minimum wage? “Justice for Mike Brown!” Looking for even more generous solar-power subsidies? “Justice for Mike Brown!” Anointing AFL-CIO boss Richard Trumka president-for-life? “Mike Brown would have wanted it that way!”
 
If you believe that black lives matter, then you should be working for school reform, economic growth, and — yes — more effective law-enforcement and crime-prevention measures to protect black communities, which suffer an enormously disproportionate share of crime and violence. Never mind the stagecraft: That’s what you actually do if you think black lives matter.
And the drama that’s going on in Ferguson right now? That’s what you do if you think black lives are merely useful to you — and, in the end, expendable.
 
— Kevin D. Williamson is roving correspondent at National Review.

Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Big Truthy Is Watching (Some of) You

Big Truthy Is Watching (Some of) You 
A government-funded study snoops into how conservatives use Twitter. 


Be careful what you say... (Lucian Milasan/Dreamstime)

This week, President Obama launched a prominent social-media campaign on behalf of “net neutrality” and urged the FCC to “keep the Internet free and open.”
The man has gall.
This is the same speech-squelcher-in-chief whose administration snooped on reporters; vengefully audited the Tea Party, pro-life activists, and conservative election watchdogs, and slow-walked the probe into the IRS witch hunt against them; entertained a government scheme to monitor story selection in TV newsrooms; and forked over $1 million to a researcher building a Twitter-snooping database.
On Monday, House Committee on Science, Space, and Technology chairman Representative Lamar Smith (R., Texas) requested that the National Science Foundation send him all information about how and why the taxpayer-subsidized “Truthy” data-mining project came into existence. Its lead researcher is Filippo Menczer — professor of informatics and computer science and the director of the Center for Complex Networks and Systems Research at the Indiana University School of Informatics and Computing — who is now on sabbatical at Yahoo! Labs.
Menczer and Indiana University vehemently deny that Truthy is a “political watchdog,” a “government probe of social media,” “an attempt to suppress free speech or limit political speech or develop standards for online political speech,” “a way to define “misinformation,” a partisan political effort, “a system targeting political messages and commentary connected to conservative groups,” “a mechanism to terminate any social media accounts,” or “a database tracking hate speech.”
But Menczer himself admits the project arose after he learned about a conservative Twitter-bomb campaign against failed Democratic Senate candidate Martha Coakley in 2010. His information-gathering system bears liberal comedian Stephen Colbert’s neologism “truthy.” And the Washington Free Beacon’s Elizabeth Harrington reports that Menczer “proclaims his support for numerous progressive advocacy groups, including President Barack Obama’s Organizing for Action, Moveon.org, Greenpeace, the Sierra Club, Amnesty International, and True Majority.”
In presentations to academic groups, Menczer has specifically highlighted his team’s research on conservative groups, individuals, and hashtags. I’ve seen it. At Harvard University’s “Truthiness Conference” in March 2012, for example, he showed his audience the results of monitoring and mapping the hashtag “#obamacare” and singled out the D.C.-based Heritage Foundation for using it. His government-funded database mined information on who was retweeting #obamacare-labeled tweets and pinpointed “patterns of propagation.”
Menczer and company also policed Twitter users who opined that Obama supported policies that promote Sharia law. Truthy targeted pro–Sarah Palin tweets and tweets using the hashtag “#tcot” — which stands for “Top Conservatives on Twitter” and which I’ve used since 2009. The government-funded researchers also went after opponents of Delaware Democratic senator Chris Coons, as well as a “Republican activist in Pennsylvania” whose Twitter account was then shut down after Truthy identified tweets that included Web links to John Boehner’s official congressional leadership page.
The goal, Menczer explained, is to “detect” Twitter users’ themes and memes “early before damage is done — that is what we’re trying to do.” Truthy will “automatically detect language,” and its overseers will conduct “sentiment analysis” to control and prevent “damage.”
Nope, no political goals or ideological agenda there. Nothing to see here. Run along.
Menczer defends against charges of left-wing bias by claiming that “almost all of the most popular hashtags, the most active accounts, and the most tweeted URLs, are from the right. We looked really hard for any ‘truthy’ memes from the left.”
Look harder, pal.
As conservative radio giant Rush Limbaugh and his staff discovered (no tax-grant money necessary), the astroturfed social-media boycott campaign against his show for the past several years has been spearheaded by only ten Twitter users who account for almost 70 percent of all “StopRush” tweets to advertisers, amplified by illicit software. Moreover, they found, “almost every communication from a StopRush activist originates from outside the state of the advertiser.” These lib bots constitute “a small number of extremists sending tens of thousands of tweets and other messages” to bully and intimidate advertisers.
Yet, there hasn’t been a peep about the insidious #StopRush smear campaign from Menczer and his Obama administration–backed liberal snitch squad. It’s time for some truth in Truthy advertising.
— Michelle Malkin is the author of Culture of Corruption: Obama and His Team of Tax Cheats, Crooks and Cronies (Regnery, 2010). Her e-mail address ismalkinblog@gmail.com. © 2014 Creators.com
http://www.nationalreview.com/article/392529/big-truthy-watching-some-you-michelle-malkin

Don's Tuesday Column

THE WAY I SEE IT   by Don Polson  Red Bluff Daily News   12/02/2014

Just verdict; lawless Emperor

Tehama County Planning Director Sean Moore will address the Tea Party Patriots tonight, 6 PM at the Westside Grange on Walnut Street. The County Planner may have some insight and positions on the proposed Community Corrections Reentry and Day Reporting Center on Madison Street. Likewise, the rezoning of the acreage off of Baker into high-density-housing.

I wrote a column for August 26 on the unfortunate killing of Michael Brown by Officer Wilson in what has now turned out—based on the forensic evidence and facts contained in the grand jury report—to be an entirely justified shooting. In the course of an attempt by Brown to grapple with Wilson for his gun, involving a violent physical assault on the officer inside his cruiser after Brown’s strong-arm robbery and assault in a convenience store, his charging of the officer left Wilson with no option but to fatally shoot him.

Every word of my August 26 column has been borne out as the truth; I will post it today at DonPolson.blogspot.com for anyone doubting my veracity and accuracy. When large portions of the African-American community, the liberal elite in news media, public office and the Democrat Party are so possessed by, and willing to act and speak from, some combination of ignorance, malintent, delusion and falsehood—it is nothing short of disturbing. Even the AP wrote and admitted that the whole “hands up; don’t shoot” chant has no basis in fact.

Those same groups heap scorn, invective and condemnation on conservative Republicans like Rudy Giuliani and Rich Lowry for rightly pointing out the simple undeniable truth that crime and anti-social behavior prompts police to protect minority areas the only way they know how—with tough law enforcement. Even black witnesses that backed up Officer Wilson’s story repeatedly expressed fear for their safety should their identity become known, such is the mob mentality, vindictiveness and group-think of parts of out citizenry.

I wish that the correct lessons were being taken from the
About the curious case of the President Who Would Be Emperor, Barack Obama, Charles C. W. Cooke penned, “Obama’s Imperial Transformation Is Now Complete—The president has become everything he ran against” (11/20, NationalReview.com). While his executive orders legalizing millions of illegal aliens constitute an unprecedented usurpation of the legislative branch’s Constitutional powers, the truest standard of hypocrisy starts with Obama’s own words. Then-Senator Obama condescendingly pronounced in 2008 that he “taught constitutional law for ten years” and took “the Constitution very seriously…(and that) the biggest problems that we’re facing right now have to do with George Bush trying to bring more and more power into the executive branch and not go through Congress at all. That is what I intend to reverse when I’m president.”

Obama eagerly reminded “immigration activists” in 2011, in a speech at Bell Multicultural High School in Washington, D.C., that he was not a king. “With respect to the notion that I can just suspend deportations through executive order, that’s just not the case. Because there are laws on the books that Congress has passed…The executive branch’s job is to enforce and implement those laws…There are enough laws on the books by Congress that are very clear in terms of how we have to enforce our immigration system that for me to simply, through executive order, to ignore those congressional mandates would not conform with my appropriate role as president.”

Obama made that or similar arguments more than 20 times. Yet, in 2012, he did exactly what he insisted he could not: Obama simply pronounced the implementation of DACA, absent legislation, to legalize (not deport) children here illegally. Again, in 2013, he eloquently explained to impatient illegal immigrants that he cannot waive deportation for an entire category of people with the stroke of a pen: “I’m not the emperor of the United States. My job is to execute laws that are passed…”

From “Obama’s Will to Power” (Mona Charen, NationalReview.com, 11/23): “He showed no fealty to the law when he dictated terms to the auto industry in violation of bankruptcy law…(obtained no) congressional approval for military action in Libya; when he made ‘recess’ appointments to the NLRB while congress wasn’t in recess; when he waived the work requirements of the welfare laws” or abandoned enforcement of federal marijuana laws. Not to mention the dozens of extralegal, executive changes to Obamacare.

Hence, I said last week that he is, by his own admission, “Emperor Obama” and I share Sen. Jeff Sessions’ sentiments in a USA Today editorial: “We must stop Emperor Obama.”

Don's August 26 column with prescient observations on the Brown/Wilson incident

THE WAY I SEE IT   by Don Polson  Red Bluff Daily News  8/26/2014

From idyllic to barbaric

This week finds us at another idyllic spot along the McKenzie River on the west flanks of Oregon’s Cascade Mountains, serenaded 24/7 by the gently whooshing white water of premier class I, II and III rapids. It is hardly swim-able at 42 to 46 degrees (McKenzie’s source waters, Clear Lake, are fed by snowmelt and underground springs of snowmelt for a mid-summer bone-chilling 39 degrees). However, with neoprene booties and splash jackets, guided floating on the river becomes a nearly 3-hour thrill ride. Our guide, Dennis, like many recreation workers, is also employed at Hoodoo ski area and skis at Mt. Bachelor so we’ll have another friend to look for.
In yet another mostly Internet-free zone (yes for Barb’s smart phone; no for my notebook), we would remain blissfully unaware of the news but for having radio with hourly reports, and talk show hosts. Apparently, the unrest in Ferguson, Missouri, has continued, mostly absent provable, verifiable facts substituted for with rumors, accusations, word-of-mouth and, well, simply lies about what happened when 18-year-old Mr. Brown was shot dead by police Officer Wilson.
My thoughts are informed not only by the short top-of-the-hour news segments, but also by descriptions of copycat, repetitive mainstream media (MSM) reporting. Likewise, I consider the information ignored by the MSM but provided by talk radio. I recall other incidents, particularly the Trayvon Martin shooting, when considering the mob psychology of rushing to judgment, blind belief in rumors, and negative emotions that provide a fertile stew for violence. More importantly, the truthful account by Mr. Zimmerman of his altercation with Martin proved accurate. I believe Officer Wilson’s account of what led to shooting Brown will likely be borne out by facts.
I am also reminded of Ann Coulter’s book, “Demonic,” about the predominantly leftist and Democrat use of mobs. Make no mistake—peaceably gathering is a Constitutional right but that can still give rise to mob-ism that slides into or encourages violence, if only by outsiders from distant areas as has happened in Ferguson (coming from New York and Oakland, even). Such is the face of evil, hence Coulter’s appropriation of the term “Demonic.”
First, I reliably take the side of law enforcement whenever there is any doubt or conflicting statements by witnesses because I believe that police carry out their responsibilities with exceptional skill and attention to law and procedures—exceptions must be proven and punished. I don’t allow despicable, racist police practices from the distant past and far-off, mostly Southern, locales to color my perceptions of the Ferguson shooting. I condemn activist inciters of racial animosity that make thinly veiled, self-serving, pleas to protesters.
Every officer-involved shooting is investigated and usually found justified—not because of bias but because law enforcers are professional and well trained. MSM reporters often exhibit far less professionalism and training—and can get people killed for it—when they promote unproven allegations without including balancing conflicting reports. Also, they often fail to keep a healthy dose of skepticism over anecdotal statements by parties with a potentially agenda-driven desire to inflame mobs of protesters.
In this case, it’s quite rare that black men are shot by white officers; black men, women and children are shot and killed by other black men by the dozens, even hundreds over weekends throughout any given year in our cities. Officers and deputies have been shot with their own guns dozens of times by “unarmed” suspects of various races. Unjustified officer-on-civilian shootings happen, unfortunately, but they are the exceptions. It’s also very rare that a person is subjected to “Tasing,” pepper spray, tear gas, the blunt end of a nightstick or the display, let alone use, of the officer’s firearm, when politely complying with the officer’s requests or instructions.
I concluded that Trayvon Martin was a drug-using thug and punk, as did honest African-Americans, based on his own voluminous Facebook posts as well as testimony from his female friend in court and in subsequent interviews. I likewise believe Michael Brown to be a drug-using thug and punk who wrote his own death sentence by assaulting Wilson, grabbing the officer’s gun and ultimately taunting Officer Wilson just before charging him in an apparently threatening manner. When the first shots failed to stop the 6-foot 4-inch, 300-pound behemoth, Wilson understandably shot the head of the man rushing him with malintent. That’s how I see it.
News media, under pressure from the Obama/Holder racialist Justice Department, delayed the release of indisputable video footage showing Brown robbing a convenience store of the kind of cigars preferred for creating marijuana “blunts,” and assaulting the clerk/owner on the way out. Brown had pot in his system. Witnesses and the hospital corroborate the officer’s account of Brown punching and injuring Wilson, Wilson drawing on Brown, and Brown charging and getting himself fatally shot by Wilson.

That violent, barbaric attempt on Officer Wilson’s life has been the pretext for barbaric rioting by a hysterical minority of black citizens. Society ought to be asking other questions: Where was Brown’s father? Is this how his mother raised him? Where’s the similar outrage for the predominantly black victims of violent, young black men?

Monday, December 1, 2014

California Now Has Highest 'Poverty' Rate

California Now Has Highest 'Poverty' Rate
By Michael Reagan
A recent report by the Census Bureau that features a new way of measuring the poverty rate shows California boasts the nation’s highest level. Higher than Mississippi. Higher than West Virginia. Higher than all of the other states the swells in Los Angeles like to ridicule.
This is probably because the residents of those states have moved to California to take a seat aboard the Sacramento gravy train.
In 2012, California, using money from federal, state and local sources, spent an incredible $69.1 billion on welfare. That’s almost one-third of all of state spending. That figure alone might explain why although the Golden State only has only one-eighth of the nation’s total population, it has one-third — there’s that number again — of the nation’s population that collects welfare benefits.

According to the new Census Bureau calculations, which include more data on income and cost of living expenses, California has 23.4 percent of its population living in what federal bureaucrats define as poverty. The second highest jurisdiction is that other exemplar of the government handout, Washington, D.C. — at 22.4 percent.
Before we go on, it is important to put context behind what is called poverty. As Dennis Prager pointed out earlier this week, “Over 99 percent [of those defined as poverty–stricken] have a refrigerator, television, and stove or oven. Eighty-one percent have a microwave; 75 percent have air conditioning; 67 percent have a second TV; 64 percent have a clothes washer; 38 percent have a personal computer.
"Seventy-five percent of the poor have a car or truck. Only 10 percent live in mobile homes or trailers, half live in detached single-family houses or townhouses, and 40 percent live in apartments. Forty-two percent of all poor households own their home, the average of which is a three-bedroom house with one-and-a-half baths, a garage and a porch or patio.”
And should they need to reach their caseworker, 80 percent own a cellphone. In other words, people living in poverty in California would be called middle class in most of the rest of the world.
California’s poverty rate isn’t a symptom of the failure of the state’s taxpayers to do enough. It’s a symptom of leftist Democrats and their bureaucrats doing too much.
Lavish welfare spending combined with a benefits-first, accountability-later (if ever) mentality means that California is attracting low income people that come here to take advantage of taxpayer generosity.
It’s a problem that will never be solved, or reduced for that matter, as long as the engineers in Sacramento continue to shovel tax dollars into the gravy train’s firebox.
Michael Reagan is the son of former President Ronald Reagan and chairman of the League of American Voters. His blog appears on reaganreports.com

Progressive Mythography

Progressive Mythography
Officer Wilson should never even have been brought before the grand jury.
By Andrew C. McCarthy