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Federal Government Wastes Millions on Vacant, Run-Down Buildings, Including a Pink Monkey House

by Hans Bader
02 September 2010 @ 2:41 pm

The Department of Veterans Affairs is spending millions annually on 314 run-down, vacant buildings, including a pink monkey house. “The buildings are home to rats, lead paint, wall-to-wall fungal growth, mold, radon, and spare tires,” notes the Washington Examiner.

“Billions of stimulus dollars have been wasted on programs” highlighted by Citizens Against Government Waste, such as “$554,763 for new windows in a visitor’s center that closed in 2007 in Washington. In several instances, stimulus spending has actually reduced private sector employment; in Normandy Park, Washington, $3.8 million was spent on a ’streetscaping’ project that drove customers away from local businesses, causing a local restaurant to fire two employees.”

As noted earlier, money from the stimulus package is being wasted on things such as “Saturday night…

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Posted in: Economy, Legal, Politics as Usual, Sanctimony, Stimulus to Nowhere, ZeitgeistComments (0)

Will Grading Cars Dispell or Enhance “MPG Illusion”?

by Marlo Lewis
02 September 2010 @ 2:16 pm

As discussed in my recent post “Obama’s EPA: School Marms R Us,” EPA and the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NTSHA) are proposing to revise the mandatory fuel economy label or “sticker” affixed to new cars to include letter grades based on the car’s fuel economy and carbon dioxide (CO2) emissions. Electric vehicles and plug-in hybrids would get an A+; the biggest, heaviest, gas guzzling SUVs would get a D.

To view the current sticker, click here. To see what the tut-tutting scolds at EPA and NHTSA want to replace it with, click here.

 Among other rationales for the new sticker design, the agencies claim that adding letter grades will help consumers make smarter purchases by combating something called the “MPG Illusion.”

The MPG Illusion refers to the common…

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Posted in: Global Warming, MobilityComments (1)

Greenhouse Protection Racket — An Update

by Marlo Lewis
02 September 2010 @ 11:57 am

Last week, the Obama Administration filed a brief  on behalf of industry petitioners urging the Supreme Court to vacate an appeals court decision (State of Connecticut et al. v. American Electric Power et al.) that would allow States and private parties to sue coal-burning electric utilities for their alleged contribution to global warming-related “injuries.”

The brief clearly lays out the absurdities of attempting to regulate greenhouse gases via common-law public nuisance litigation. Because global warming is, well, global, practically anyone on Earth could claim to be a victim. And because companies emit carbon dioxide (CO2) only as a byproduct of providing goods and services (electricity, cars, food, medical care, bites of information, etc.) to people, practically everyone on the planet could be sued as a contributor to the alleged injuries. In the memorable…

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Posted in: Global Warming, LegalComments (0)

Record Federal Spending Increase Due to Wasteful Spending Like the Failed Stimulus Package

by Hans Bader
01 September 2010 @ 4:12 pm

Federal domestic spending increased by a record 16 percent this year, thanks to wasteful spending by the Obama administration, such as its “huge economic stimulus package.”

The $862 billion stimulus package increased unemployment by wiping out thousands of jobs in America’s export sector, while giving 79 percent of its green-jobs funding to foreign firms.

Obama falsely claimed that the $787 billion stimulus package was needed to prevent “irreversible decline,” but the Congressional Budget Office admitted that it would actually shrink the economy “in the long run.”  As the Washington Examiner notes, “If his stimulus program was approved, Obama promised, unemployment would not go above 8 percent . . . The reality is that it passed 10.3 percent.”

“Nearly two-thirds of Americans do not believe the $787 billion stimulus package…

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Posted in: Bailout Watch, Deregulate to Stimulate, Economy, Employment, Energy, Environment, International, Natural Resources, Politics as Usual, Precaution & Risk, Regulation, Sanctimony, Stimulus to Nowhere, Trade, ZeitgeistComments (0)

Antibiotics and Meat DO Mix

Antibiotics and Meat DO Mix

by Greg Conko
01 September 2010 @ 9:52 am

CEI submitted comments this week on an FDA proposed guidance that “encourages” farmers and antibiotics manufacturers to stop using “medically important” antibiotics for livestock growth promotion purposes.  When I first started researching the topic, I was sympathetic to the view that at least some of the antibiotics that serve as essential human…

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Posted in: Agriculture, Culture, Environment, Health and Illness, Precaution & Risk, Regulation, ZeitgeistComments (1)

Video Exposes Labor Union Protesters - No “Living Wage,” No Health Insurance, No Union Membership

by Christine Hall
31 August 2010 @ 2:33 pm

Video: Unions hire non-union protesters?

Should labor unions pay their protesters the wages and benefits that the unions demand of other employers? CEI labor policy attorney Vincent Vernuccio crashed a union protest in Washington, DC this week and questioned several people involved in the protest. The protesters – hired by a union, the Mid-Atlantic Region of Carpenters - appeared to not be compensated with the level of wages and benefits that the union itself demands of other employers – the protesters evidently lacked health insurance, for example (see 3:52).

Nor is it clear the protesters were union members (see 2:59). So, how could they even hope to benefit from any prospective wage or benefit concessions won from the business targeted by the protest?…

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Posted in: Labor, RegulationComments (1)

Obama’s EPA: School Marms R Us

by Marlo Lewis
30 August 2010 @ 5:12 pm

The Obama Administration’s EPA and National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NTSHA) are proposing new rules “labeling each passenger car with a  government letter grade from A to D based on its fuel efficiency and emissions,” the Wall Street Journal reports. The new rules “would be the most substantial changes in 30 years to the familiar price and mileage labels afixed to new cars on sale at dealership,” the article continues. Only in the make-work world of bureaucrats would the addition of the letters A, B, C, or D to product labels be considered “subtantial changes.”

The WSJ goes on to point out the obvious: “Currently the labels must show how many miles per gallon a car gets and its estimated annual fuel costs.…

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Posted in: Global Warming, Mobility, Nanny StateComments (0)

Government Insurance: Guaranteed to Fail

Government Insurance: Guaranteed to Fail

by Michelle Minton
27 August 2010 @ 3:06 pm

Few observers were shocked when the Federal Emergency Management Association (FEMA) asked for a nearly $20 billion bailout of its National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP). For years groups and individuals have warned that NFIP was underfunded and increasing its liability each year by not encouraging consumers to move or alter…

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Posted in: Insurance, Odds & EndsComments (2)

Expensive Jobs

Expensive Jobs

by Ryan Young
27 August 2010 @ 2:52 pm

Through June, the government spent about $620 billion of stimulus money. The Obama administration claims that the spending has saved or created 2.3 to 2.8 million jobs.

For the sake of argument, let’s assume those job creation numbers are true. In fact, let’s pick the rosiest number — 2.8 million jobs.

At…

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

More Mercantilist Claptrap

by Fran Smith
27 August 2010 @ 12:26 pm

No wonder people are confused about the trade issue when they read mercantilist articles like the front-pager by Howard Schneider in the Washington Post today - “Economic growth slowed by trade gap.”

According to this article’s premise, it sounds like we would all be better off if we just exported and didn’t import any goods and services.  Here’s the article’s lead sentence:

A widening U.S. trade deficit has become a substantial drag on economic growth as the country’s exports struggle to keep pace with the swelling sums that Americans are again spending on imported goods.

And then it goes on to say:

But the spike does raise fresh concerns about whether some of the same factors that led to the economic crisis, including U.S.…

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Posted in: Economy, International, TradeComments (0)

Federal Regulators Making Laundry More Costly And More Dingy

by Ben Lieberman
27 August 2010 @ 10:56 am

In a classic case of a government solution in search of a problem, Washington has for years set energy efficiency standards for home appliances. By now, refrigerators, air-conditioners, and many other appliances have been subjected to multiple rounds of successively tighter requirements from the Department of Energy (DOE). The Obama administration has taken this pre-existing regulatory blank check and run with it, finalizing standards for over 20 products. As might be expected, such arbitrary government mandates come at a cost — a higher purchase price for regulated appliances, but also compromised performance, features, and reliability. And the downside can easily swamp the often-modest energy savings. The regulations for clothes washers may be the worst of them all.

The clothes washer standards…

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Posted in: Energy, Nanny State, RegulationComments (2)

Money for Nothing

Money for Nothing

by Ryan Young
27 August 2010 @ 9:53 am

A man collected 12 years of salary and benefits from his government job in Norfolk, Virginia. Nothing unusual about that… except that he “had not reported to work in years.”

Yes, this is an outrage. But maybe the world would be a better place if more government employees took that approach…

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Posted in: Economy, Employment, Politics as Usual, ZeitgeistComments (0)

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OpenMarket.org is the blog of the Competitive Enterprise Institute. We believe that people improve their lives not through government regulation, but by making their own choices in a free marketplace. More››

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