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Flu Watch Nov. 7 - What Swine Flu Isn’t Doing This Week

Flu Watch Nov. 7 - What Swine Flu Isn’t Doing This Week

by Michael Fumento
07 November 2009 @ 8:01 pm

Well, what swine flu isn’t doing this week is apparently less than what it wasn’t doing last week. In other words, it appears to have peaked.

How do we know?

Here we see it’s going down the right side of the bell curve both in terms of deaths and hospitalizations.

And there’s both a…

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Posted in: Health and Illness, Odds & EndsComments (0)

Muslim Soldier Kills 13 in Mass Shooting at Fort Hood: Political Correctness and Gun Control Cited by Critics

by Hans Bader
06 November 2009 @ 6:57 pm

A Muslim solder, Nidal Hasan, shot dead 13 people at Fort Hood yesterday. Hasan had earlier exhibited extremist, anti-American propensities, including applauding terrorist attacks against U.S. soldiers. There are different theories as to how this could have happened.

One school of thought attributes the tragedy to politically-correct double standards imposed on the military that kept the alarm bells from going off.

Other commentators point to a gun-control policy that disarms soldiers while on military bases to create “gun-free zones,” leaving them defenseless in the face of an attack.

These explanations are not mutually exclusive. Doubtless other factors could have contributed to the tragedy as well.

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Posted in: International, Legal, Nanny State, Personal Liberty, Politics as Usual, SanctimonyComments (1)

Virginia May Privatize ABC Stores; It’s about Time

Virginia May Privatize ABC Stores; It’s about Time

by Ivan Osorio
06 November 2009 @ 6:52 pm

In a time when the federal government’s involvement in the economy appears to only grow, it’s encouraging to see at least one industry where the trend may soon move in the opposite direction, even if at the state level. Virginia Governor-elect Bob McDonnell has proposed priviatizing the state’s liquor stores —…

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Posted in: Deregulate to Stimulate, Economy, Nanny State, RegulationComments (0)

European Regulators Target Another American Tech Company

European Regulators Target Another American Tech Company

by Elizabeth Jacobson
06 November 2009 @ 6:51 pm

The European Commission is once again targeting an American tech company with an antitrust investigation. This time the EC has its sights set on Oracle and it’s $7.4 billion bid for Sun Microsystems. In short, the worry is that if Oracle acquires Sun, along with it’s popular open-source database software MySQL,…

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Posted in: Tech & TelecomComments (0)

Cato Institute’s Ed Crane on limited government vs. the parties

by Wayne Crews
06 November 2009 @ 12:00 pm

Ed Crane writes today in the Los Angeles Times that “Limited-government conservatives have been undermined by big-government neoconservatives,” and that “it is difficult to find noninterventionists in either party.”

The Democrats demonstrate a disdain for capitalism, free trade and the validity of contracts. They cheer the restriction of certain types of speech on campus and in federal law….Lately, the Democrats have been popularly associated with principled opposition to waging war in far-flung corners of the globe. But evidence on the ground today tells a somewhat different tale.

As for the GOP, it has outwardly abandoned the limited-government principles of Barry Goldwater and Ronald Reagan. Little other evidence is needed than the Medicare prescription drug benefit — with its $13-trillion unfunded…

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Posted in: Agenda for Congress, Economy, Personal LibertyComments (0)

Free Kareem D.C. Rally Today!

Free Kareem D.C. Rally Today!

by Elizabeth Jacobson
06 November 2009 @ 11:20 am

The Free Kareem protest is going on today at 12 pm outside of the Egyptian Cultural and Educational Bureau on New Hampshire just south of Dupont Circle. If you’ll be in the area, please stop by and show your support for Kareem Amer, the blogger who is serving a four-year…

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Posted in: Bureaucrash, Odds & Ends, Personal LibertyComments (0)

Friday Fun: Brett Bowl II

Friday Fun: Brett Bowl II

by Ryan Young
06 November 2009 @ 11:03 am

Last Sunday’s Packers-Vikings game was a big one. Brett Favre beat his old team on its home turf. If you’re not sick of all the hype, check out my take on what the game means for Packer fans over at The American Spectator Online.

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Posted in: Culture, Odds & EndsComments (0)

More on Secy. Chu’s convoluted climate economics

by Marlo Lewis
05 November 2009 @ 6:34 pm

In recent testimony before the Senate Environment and Public Works Committee, energy secretary Steven Chu makes a convoluted case for S. 1733, the Clean Energy Jobs and American Power Act, a.k.a. the Kerry-Boxer cap-and-trade bill.

Chu argues roughly as follows. Global investment in wind turbines and solar panels could reach $3.6 trillion by 2030. China is investing heavily. If we don’t ramp up our investment in “clean tech” products, we’ll be left behind, become increasingly dependent on foreign producers, and China will eat our lunch. The key to growing the U.S. clean-tech sector is to “put a price on carbon” — establish a “cap on carbon emissions that ratchets down over time.”

This is poppycock, as I explain today on MasterResource.Org, the free-market energy blog. 

Yes, China…

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Posted in: Global WarmingComments (0)

Climate Policy Imperils China, India

by Marlo Lewis
05 November 2009 @ 1:39 pm

Jonathan Pershing, head of the U.S. delegation at the UN climate talks in Barcelona, says China should cut its CO2 emissions 50% by 2050.

Reuters reports:

BARCELONA, Spain, Nov 5 (Reuters) - China should roughly halve its greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 to keep the world on a safe climate path, the head of the U.S. delegation at U.N. climate talks in Barcelona said on Thursday.

Leading industrialised countries say that the world must halve greenhouse gases by 2050 to avoid the worst effects of climate change, and have committed to lead by cutting their own emissions by 80 percent.

China should cut by about 50 percent, leaving space for poorer countries to grow their economies, Jonathan Pershing told Reuters.

“If you put China in there at…

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Posted in: Global WarmingComments (2)

Unfunded Mandates

Unfunded Mandates

by Ryan Young
05 November 2009 @ 11:13 am

Today’s American Spectator Online has a piece by CEI VP Wayne Crews and I on curbing Congressional abuse of unfunded mandates. If the term is new to you, unfunded mandates are basically an accounting gimmick that lets government understate how much it costs taxpayers:

rather than fund a new federal job…

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Posted in: Deregulate to Stimulate, Economy, Politics as Usual, RegulationComments (0)

Just what IS in those enormous health care bills?

by Michael Fumento
04 November 2009 @ 4:59 pm

With the House version stacked bigger than Dolly Parton at about 2,000 pages, anybody who says they know for certain is lying. It’s not just the verbiage but how it will be interpreted in the years to come. Still, there’s more than enough to be alarmed enough to want to kill the bills off.
“Rather than overwhelm you with arcane details of each bill,” writes Robert Bidinotti in an engaging and highly annotated essay, “it is more important that you understand in principle what ObamaCare will mean for you and your family.” Going into detail (but not too much), he says they include:

Outrageous Costs.
Soaring Taxes.
Perverse Incentives.
Government rationing.
Broken promises.

He states:

A single-payer, government-run program of socialized medicine is the…

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Posted in: HealthcareComments (0)

Nvidia Rumored to Compete in Supposedly Uncompetitive Market

Nvidia Rumored to Compete in Supposedly Uncompetitive Market

by Elizabeth Jacobson
04 November 2009 @ 12:56 pm

Rumors abound that graphics chip maker Nvidia is getting set to enter the x86 processor market. Recall that, according to AMD’s lawyers, the processor market is uncompetitive and being unfairly monopolized by Intel.

Now, if the antitrust lawyers are correct, and the CPU market is uncompetitive and needs government intervention, then there must…

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Posted in: Tech & TelecomComments (6)

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