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Reason’s Michael Moynihan on the SEIU Chavistas

Reason’s Michael Moynihan on the SEIU Chavistas

by Ivan Osorio
10 July 2009 @ 5:25 pm

At Reason Hit & Run, Michael C. Moynihan looks at the Service Employees Internatinoal Union’s harassing of broadcasters who air ads opposing the so-called Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA).

According to this letter obtained by TPM, the Service Employees International Union (SEIU) is threatening television stations broadcasting this anti-card check advertisement produced by the…

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Posted in: Economy, Labor, RegulationComments (0)

Adding Insult to Auto Dealers’ Injury

Adding Insult to Auto Dealers’ Injury

by Ivan Osorio
10 July 2009 @ 3:25 pm

If anything could make finding yourself out of business overnight any worse, it is to have to pay a penalty for it. That’s what now threatens some GM and Chrysler dealers whose factory agreements are not being renewed as part of those companies’ government-led restructuring. Many of those soon-to-be-defunct dealers…

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Posted in: Bailout Watch, EconomyComments (0)

Church Leaders, Senators Oppose Forcing Honduras to Reinstate Ousted President and Would-Be Dictator

by Hans Bader
10 July 2009 @ 12:29 pm

Honduran church leaders, and 17 U.S. Senators, are now opposing outside pressure on Honduras to reinstate the corrupt president that it ousted last Sunday for seeking to eliminate constitutional term limits and become a dictator. The Obama Administration has joined Cuban dictator Castro, the anti-American Venezuelan dictator Hugo Chavez, and the Organization of American States in demanding that Honduras put ex-president Mel Zelaya back in power.

“Óscar Andrés Rodríguez Maradiaga, the Archbishop of Tegucigalpa, and a Cardinal, strongly warned against Zelaya’s return to Honduras, which could lead to a ‘blood bath.’ Rodriguez, in a televised speech on July 4, asked the Organization of American States (OAS), which has demanded Zelaya’s restoration, to examine the ‘illegal deeds’ under Zelaya’s regime:’” “‘The Honduras people are also asking why…

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Posted in: International, Legal, Personal Liberty, Politics as Usual, Sanctimony, TradeComments (0)

More Hot Air at Bottled Water Hearings

More Hot Air at Bottled Water Hearings

by Angela Logomasini
10 July 2009 @ 11:14 am

Dana Milbank has a great piece in the Washington Post this week about recent congressional hearings on bottled water. He notes: “The nation is entangled in two wars, a deep recession and a flu pandemic, and the people’s representatives are hard at work investigating the menace of . . . bottled water?”…

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Posted in: EnvironmentComments (0)

Forza Italia!

Forza Italia!

by Iain Murray
10 July 2009 @ 11:08 am

Italy’s Senate has overturned a 1987 ban on nuclear power, passed in panic after Chernobyl.  This is good news for Italians, as they face some of the highest electricity rates in Europe.  Of course, this being Europe, the plants will probably be built with significant government subsidy, so there won’t be…

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Posted in: Energy, Environment, Global Warming, InternationalComments (0)

CEI Weekly: Firsthand At the Tea Party

CEI Weekly: Firsthand At the Tea Party

by Charles Huang
10 July 2009 @ 10:17 am

CEI Weekly is a compilation of articles and blog posts from CEI’s fellows and associates sent out via e-mail every Friday. Also included in the Weekly newsletter is a brief description of CEI’s weekly podcast and a feature on a major CEI breakthrough made during the week. To sign up…

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Posted in: CEI Projects, Economy, Energy, Environment, International, Legal, Odds & Ends, Personal Liberty, RegulationComments (0)

A Second Stimulus?

A Second Stimulus?

by Ryan Young
09 July 2009 @ 5:53 pm

There has been some chatter recently that the economy needs another stimulus package. The Brookings Institution’s Martin N. Baily cautions against one — unless growth remains sharply negative through the end of the year. Then he’d like to see a stimulus in the form of tax rebate checks, such as President…

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Posted in: Deregulate to Stimulate, Economy, Stimulus to NowhereComments (0)

Congress Sticks It to the Taxpayer by Supporting No-Strings-Attached Green Energy Loans

Congress Sticks It to the Taxpayer by Supporting No-Strings-Attached Green Energy Loans

by William Yeatman
09 July 2009 @ 12:11 pm

Earlier this week the House Appropriations Committee passed a $27 billion budget for the Department of Energy. You might think that the DOE already has enough trouble trying to spend the $39 billion it received in the federal stimulus act enacted earlier this year (that’s almost twice the DOE’s entire…

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Posted in: Odds & EndsComments (1)

Government health care monopoly–not in consumers’ interests

by Fran Smith
09 July 2009 @ 11:22 am

Regina Herzlinger, chair of Harvard Business School, in National Review takes on health care and the Obama Administration’s arguments that a government-run plan would increase competition, provide more choice, and lead to greater cost efficiencies:

But before we get swept away, let us remember that these health-insurance markets would be monopolies run by government, two characteristics that normally do not enhance consumer welfare. Picture the efficiency of your Division of Motor Vehicles, for example.

Also consider government-run monopoly liquor stores. Despite their ability as the single payer to extract better volume discounts from wholesalers than private liquor chains can, their prices are not lower than private stores’. Additionally, they slight consumers through shorter operating hours, inconvenient locations, limited brand availability, and inadequate…

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Posted in: Healthcare, Nanny State, Personal LibertyComments (0)

Leading trade lawyer: real problems with carbon tariffs

by Fran Smith
09 July 2009 @ 10:53 am

Leading trade lawyer Gary Horlick testified yesterday on carbon tariffs before the Senate Finance Committee.  As the Senate prepares an energy suppression/global warming bill, it is attempting to find ways to soften the “border adjustment” provisions in the House-passed bill (H.R. 2454).

Horlick points out some of the practical problems of setting up a carbon tariff system and cautions about the potential effects of such measures on the international trading system.  As he notes, if the production method rather than the end-product is focused on, such processes as agricultural biotechnology may face increased challenges in the World Trade Organization:

It is tempting to say that we can re-interpret existing WTO rules to permit whatever measures are necessary to protect our environment. But do…

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Posted in: Agriculture, Energy, Environment, Global Warming, International, Legal, TradeComments (1)

Regulation of the Day: Asphalt Emissions

Regulation of the Day: Asphalt Emissions

by Ryan Young
09 July 2009 @ 9:27 am

The fourteenth in an occasional series that shines a bit of light on the regulatory state.

Today’s Regulation of the Day comes to us from the Environmental Protection Agency ($7.3 billion 2007 budget, 17,964 employees).

EPA is proposing national emission standards for asphalt processing and asphalt roofing manufacturing.

Read all about it on pages…

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Posted in: Deregulate to Stimulate, Environment, RegulationComments (0)

Obama Nominee: Corrupt Foreign Rulers Have Right to Remain in Office Until They Receive “Judicial Process”

by Hans Bader
08 July 2009 @ 7:09 pm

Arturo Valenzuela, Obama’s nominee to be Assistant Secretary of State, falsely claims it was an illegal “coup” for Honduras to remove its corrupt would-be dictator, President Mel Zelaya, without providing more “judicial process,” even though courts said it was perfectly legal. Obama has joined Cuban dictator Castro and Venezuelan dictator Chavez in demanding that Zelaya be reinstated. He nominated Valenzuela despite his reputation as a loud defender of dictator Chavez. Obama, too, claims Zelaya’s removal was “illegal,” even though it was carried out on orders of Honduras’s supreme court, and ratified by Honduras’s Congress, pursuant to Articles 239 and 272 of the Honduran Constitution.

The Obama team’s idea that officeholders have a right to “judicial process” before being removed from office, a right that…

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Posted in: International, Legal, Personal Liberty, Politics as UsualComments (1)

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