Joe “Way To Step In It” Sestak And Mayor Bloomberg

Joe Sestak, the Democrat’s pick to replace Arlen Specter as senator from Pennsylvania, has been dogged by claims that he harbors sympathies to radical Islamic organizations.

So to show that he is a true-blue maverick independent, the Admiral brought New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg to Philadelphia, yesterday, to endorse him.

What Bloomberg ended up doing was answering a lot of questions regarding his endorsement of  the Islamic Victory Mosque at the site of the 9/11 attacks.

Way to go Joe. It’s almost like getting the CAIR executive director to write a defense of your appearance at a CAIR rally.

Site Flunks Delco GOP On Liberty

LibertyIndex.com run by Bob Guzzardi of Bryn Mawr is a fascinating site full of useful information where each bill passed by the Pennsylvania legislature since 2003 is analyzed with regard as to how it effects the liberty of the residents of the Commonwealth. The legislators are then graded on their support for liberty based on their votes.

The site defines The Liberty Index rating as an  “assessment of whether a piece oflegislation advances or restrains individual liberty,particularly, economicfreedom to spend your money the way you think best.”

The highest grade for a Delaware County legislator is the B given to State Rep. Nick Miccarelli (R-162).  He is followed by Rep. Steve Barrar (R-160) who gets a C+ and Tom Killion (R-168) who gets a C-.

Then it gets pretty sad.

House Republicans Bill Adolph (165) gets a D+; Mario Civera (164) gets a D; and Nick Micozzie gets an F-.

House Democrats Bryan Lentz (161). Greg Vitali (166) , Thaddeus Kirkland (159), and Roger Waters (191) get F- leaving  Robert C. Donatucci (185) to shine with a F.

It’s even worse on the Senate side. Republicans Dominic Pileggi (9) and Ted Erickson (26), and Democrat Anthony H. Williams (8) get F-. Democrat Daylin Leach (17)  for some strange reason gets a mere F. That’s definitely a mistake.

In fairness to the Senate Republicans, the index heavily weighs votes concerning appropriations and if the state had a governor other than Ed “Spend For My Friends” Rendell, I suspect their grades would be higher. Pileggi should get some credit for fighting Eddie as hard as he did to keep spending from being even worse.

And kudos to Guzzardi for some heavy lifting and excellent work.

Joe “XXXXXX” Sestak Said Yes To Teachers

Congressman Joe “XXXXXX” Sestak was among the 247 representatives, 245 of which were Democrats, who voted yes, Aug. 10, on the XXXXXX Act of XXXX.

Really, that’s the name of the bill for which he voted. If you really want a good laugh — or  maybe cry — H.R. 1586 terms itself:  An act to modernize the air traffic control system, improve the safety,reliability, and availability of transportation by air in the UnitedStates, provide for modernization of the air traffic control system,reauthorize the Federal Aviation Administration, and for other purposes.

What it ended up doing was shovel $10 billion to the teachers unions while cutting money that had been budgeted for defense and energy research.

And, no the bill did not end up taxing the bonuses of CEOs of firms getting TARP ballots despite an attempt to do so.

And as far as I can see not much if anything went to modernizing the air traffic control system.

The Republicans voting for the bill were Michael “The Usual Suspect” Castle of Delaware and Joseph “Being From New Orleans Cuts Him A Lot Of Slack” Cao of Louisiana.


Cultural Heart Of USA Is Delco

Cultural Heart Of USA Is DelcoCultural Heart Of USA Is Delco — The cultural heart of America in the last century was not New York or LA but little old Delaware County, Pa. which is to Philadelphia almost as Staten Island is to the Bronx.

Feel free to laugh, who after all would call Staten Island a cultural center and the typical resident of Delco is more often perceived as what is described in this link rather than one wearing whatever it isthat happens to be in fashion on Rodeo Drive.

But the facts are what the facts are.

What brings this up is that Forbes Magazine just ranked Swarthmore and Haverford colleges as 7th and 14th best in the nation. U.S. News & World Report has ranked Villanova as the top school for its category. All are in Delaware County.  Granted all of them are vastly overrated and if one should want an education that would be actually useful in the real world, Widener — also in Delaware County — would be a much better choice. Recognition is recognition, though, and for BSing and brown-nosing ones way to power, influence and an easy workload a degree from Swarthmore can’t be beat.

None of which, however, has anything to do with the overwhelming effect Delaware County has had on American society since the end of World War II.

Arguably, the  most influential American book of the second half of the 20th century — not necessarily a good thing —  is Catcher in the Rye by J.D. Salinger.  Where does it start? In Delaware County. A fictional location, yes, but a fictional location in Delaware County, nonetheless, since Pencey Prep is based on Valley Forge Military Academy in Radnor Township, the expulsion from which was the inspiration for Salinger.

Arguably, the most influential American artist of the second half of the 20th century  was Andrew Wyeth. His home was Chadds Ford  and much of his paintings were set in the area.

Indisputably, the most influential form of music on the entire world of the second half of the 20th century  is rock and roll. Credit for starting it most often  goes to Bill Haley & His Comets, who were from and worked from Chester.

The county has made a bit of a mark in music, actually. One of the two best female blues singers of the last century, Ethel Waters, was born in Chester. The other, Bessie Smith, is buried in Sharon Hill. Jim Croce and Todd Rundgren both come from Upper Darby, while Tom Keifer, leader of hair band Cinderella, and the late Robert Hazard came from Springfield.

So, Delaware Countians as you sip your Wawa frozen cappuccinos ponder the influence you’ve had on the world at large.

Cultural Heart Of USA Is Delco 

Trustees Weren’t Forthcoming Says Mcare Actuary

The Trustees of the Medicare Trust Fund announced, Aug. 5, that the Fund’s solvency has been extended 12 years by the ‘Affordable’ Care Act better known as ObamaCare and now frequently referred to as 0Care with the first symbol being a numeral and not a letter.

The fund’s trustees include Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen “Wash-Your-Hands-After-You-Sneeze-Or Swine-Flu-Will-Kill-Us-All” Sebelius; Treasury Secretary Tim “Taxes-For-Thee-But-Not-For-Me”  Geithner; Labor Secretary Hilda “Illegals Need Raises ” Solis, and  Social Security Commissioner Michael J. “Tough Break Kids” Astrue, all of whom are members of the 0 Administration. These were the ones who appeared at the press conference to provide the pretty picture of unicorns and rainbows .

Was what they said true?  Maybe, which is rather remarkable since they are members of the 0 Administration and their lips were moving. They did, however, have to struggle to ignore Mephistopheles leeringly grinning over their shoulders as he pondered his future payment for this small and temporary possible success.

The report can be found here as a pdf.  Skip the baloney which is basically everything up until “Statement Of Actuarial Opinion” which was written by the widely respected Richard S. Foster, who chief actuary for the centers of Medicare & Medicaid Services, and says:

While the Part B projections in this report are reasonable in their portrayal of future costs under current law, they are not reasonable as an indication of actual future costs. Current law would require physician fee reductions totaling an estimated 30 percent over the next 3years — an implausible result.
Further, while the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, as amended, makes important changes to the Medicare program and substantially improves its financial outlook, there is a strong likelihood that certain of these changes will not be viable in the long range. Specifically, the annual price updates for most categories of non-­physician health services will be adjusted downward each year by the growth in economy-­wide productivity. The best available evidence indicates that most health care providers cannot improve their productivity to this degree — or even approach such a level — as a result of the labor-­intensive nature of these services.
Without major changes in health care delivery systems, the prices paid by Medicare for health services are very likely to fall increasingly short of the costs of providing these services. By the end of the long-­range projection period, Medicare prices for hospital, skilled nursing facility, home health, hospice, ambulatory surgical center, diagnostic laboratory, and many other services would be less than half of their level under the prior law. Medicare prices would be considerably below the current relative level of Medicaid prices, which have already led to access problems for Medicaid enrollees, and far below the levels paid by private health insurance. Well before that point, Congress would have to intervene to prevent the withdrawal of providers from the Medicare market and the severe problems with beneficiary access to care that would result. Overriding the productivity adjustments, as Congress has done repeatedly in the case of physician payment rates, would lead to far higher costs for Medicare in the long range than those projected under current law.
For these reasons, the financial projections shown in this report for Medicare do not represent a reasonable expectation for actual program operations in either the short range (as a result of the unsustainable reductions in physician payment rates) or the long range (because of the strong likelihood that the statutory reductions inprice updates for most categories of Medicare provider services will not be viable.)

Foster encourages readers to check his projections at this pdf . To sum it up in one sentence he is saying “Soylent Green is people”

Gonzo The Bigot

Philadelphia Inquirer sports columnist John “Gonzo” Gonzalez wrote a column today on how Eagles lineman Todd Herremans was duly chastised for tweeting an opinion about a television show.

“So.. caught up on Trueblood last nite,”  Herremans wrote on Twitter. “Not a fan of how they get u hooked with the 1st 2 seasons then bring on a barrage of homosexuality.”

Gonzalez caught the comment immediately and took issue with it even faster. He tweeted Herremans asking if he wanted to take it back or apologize.

Herremans responded by tweeting “@gonzophilly I have no issues with homosexuality to each his/her own… Its jus not for me.. #jussaying”

This was not good enough for Gonzalez, who described the opinion as “insulting”. He asked  Herremans how a gay Eagles employee might feel about what he wrote.

Herremans response was “@gonzophilly like I said .. To each his/her own”

Of course what happened next was Eagles management got involved and Herremans had to write an apology.

Gonzalez said he wasn’t sure if Herremans was sincere, which is rather flabbergasting to think that someone might actually think it possible he was.

Gonzalez also said he knew members of the Eagles who are gay and thought it a shame that they must remain in the closet because  some might not like True Blood.

So let’s summarize: we have a fellow who makes a living expressing his opinion attacking someone else for expressing an opinion, and a rather mild — and in a sane world inconsequential — one at that. Remember, Herremans was not mocking those who like the show nor was he demanding it be removed from HBO he was simply giving an honest opinion as to why he stopped liking it.

And for this an apology was forced.

Here is the definition of bigot: a person obstinately or intolerantly devoted to his or her own opinions and prejudices. The correct use of the term requires the elements of intolerance, irrationality, and animosity toward those of differing beliefs.

Who is the bigot in this matter? Hint, it is not the one who says “To each his/her own”

High Speed Trains And Stupid Solutions

The feds, since 1991, have had a plan  of creating high speed rail corridors throughout the nation including one between Pittsburgh and Philadelphia and since Obama took office $8 billion has been shoved into this opium-pipe dream with billions more expected although that hope may change come November.

Texas and the Sourth outside Florida haven’t gotten much of this loot for some strange reason albeit Pennsylvania’s not much ahead nabbing a paltry $25.6 million for the Keystone Corridor project.

Grand schemes like this would be great if resources were infinite and the simple building of it was the hardest and most expensive part. The real problems, however, start after the tracks are laid and the shiny new stations open, namely getting people to use it. Remember these things are being built not with the jaundiced eye of someone weighing the risks to his own time and money against the benefits of possible future rewards, but in accordance with starry visions of bureaucrats and trained academic parrots who have literally nothing to lose in the construction.

So the only way people are going to use this thing is by discouraging them — them not including the bureaucrats and parrots — from using alternatives namely the planes and automobile parts of the story.

Hmmmm, you think that might happen?

A much better way of improving transportation efficiency would be to use that money for our highways. That $8 billion could turn a whole lot of  turnpikes into freeways eliminating artificial traffic bottlenecks and general headaches. Or if construction is what one desires, there are plenty of places where the money could be used to improve traffic flow cutting commuter time and saving gasoline. 

Consider Route 322 in Delaware County, Pa. Coming north from I-95 it hits Route 1 in Concord, follows that road south for a couple of miles until it reaches Route 202 at a massive bottleneck of an intersection where it then follows 202 north into Chester County before getting exclusive use of  blacktop.

What if the some of the money Obama wants to use on choo choos was spent sending Route 322 directly into Route 202 with a cloverleaf at Route 1. If the money was properly used those whose land would be needed for the project would have big smiles on their faces after negotiations for it, and dollars to donuts say more time and gas would be saved than a bullet train to Pittsburgh.

And situations like this can be found throughout the nation. But cars mean freedom whereas trains mean control.

And this does not mean that trains are bad or that passenger trains don’t have their purpose. Something else to ponder — America’s freight railroads are owned and operated by private companies. In Europe, they are owned and operated by government. In the 1950s, the percent of freight shipped was about the same. Today, about 38 percent of freight is shipped on railroads in the U.S. compared to 8 percent in the European Union.  

Maybe to make passenger trains viable again, we should get the government out of Amtrak.

Greg Skrepenak and His Luzerne County Crucifixion

Greg Skrepenak and His Luzerne County Crucifixion
Greg Skrepenak was warmly greeted when he appeared Sunday, two days after his sentencing, at the Festival and Flea Market at St. Mary’s Byzantine Catholic Church in Wilkes Barre. Parishioners offered him sympathy and support, and many expressed disgust at some of the things being said about him. With him is parish priest Father James Hayer.

The holy and sainted Democrats who run Pennsylvania’s Luzerne County drafted local sports legend and political neophyte Greg Skrepenak to run for county commissioner in 2003. He easily won as expected and was promptly named chairman of the board.

Skrepenak, known in the area as Skrep, won All-American honors in football and basketball at Wilkes Barre’s G.A.R. Memorial Junior Senior High School in the 1980s and was an MVP in baseball. Skrep went on to the University of Michigan were he became an All-American offensive lineman and was the Gator Bowl MVP in 1991. He went on to a respectable pro career with the Los Angeles and Oakland Raiders and the Carolina Panthers.

Skrep’s life was not a bed of roses, however. Personal issues led to his retirement from football. His wife had become addicted to drugs and he was raising by himself his daughter and two sons.

Skrep as commissioner did as he was told and in return was given rein to indulge his dreams of expanding services to those with drug problems and youth at risk.  He ran for re-election in 2007 and again easily won.

Maybe the most damning thing Skrep  did in his tenure as Democrat Party puppet was vote to use private detention centers for juveniles. These centers were paid on a per prisoner basis. This resulted in horrifying abuse. Kids who committed rather minor offenses were ordered incarcerated by judges who received kickbacks. Anyway, the sin was not the vote, as dumb as it may have been in hindsight, but the kickbacks and Skrep has not been connected to them in the slightest.

What Skrep was connected to was taking a $5,000 discount from the fellow who was building his condo, a fellow who then at Skrep’s behest received some sweet tax breaks from the county. Skrep initially denied seeing anything wrong in this. He thought the discount was due to friendship and said he would have pushed for a tax break for the fellow anyway because, well, he was his friend. Those who know him believe him. Skrep could safely be described as the dream commissioner for a Luzerne County party boss.

Anyway, a hungry federal prosecutor couldn’t resist such an easy chance to put a new head on the wall and Skrep was charged with bribery, a charge to which he would eventually plead guilty.

With the big man safely down, the local media jumped on him with both feet. Every word he uttered in his defense was questioned. His children were ridiculed. The references to his religion he made during his apology at his sentencing were mercilessly mocked.

U.S. District Judge Richard P. Conaboy gave him 24 months and those who leech pleasure from others’ pain gave themselves pats on the back.

Oh, if only Skrep had been a billionaire pedophile like Jeff Epstein for whom our courageous men and women in federal law enforcement managed to also get a two-year sentence. Then Skrep could have daily furloughs to his office for his first year and serve his second year under house arrest.

But the feds have their priorities, one guesses.

 

The Crucifixion Of Greg Skrepenak

 

Greg Skrepenak and His Luzerne County Crucifixion

 

The Crucifixion Of Greg Skrepenak

 

Greg Skrepenak and His Luzerne County Crucifixion

10,000 To Take A

David Kliss became perturbed when he was told he would have to connect his Pheasant Road home to a new sewer line  East Hanover, Pa. and learned that what the new, and, for him, undesired service would set him back  $10,000. $10,000 to take a David Kliss became perturbed when he was told he would have to connect his Pheasant Road home to a new sewer line East Hanover, Pa. and learned that what the new, and, for him, undesired service would set him back $10,000

He placed protest signs on his yard which code enforcement made him edit. The signs now read “$10,000 To Take A”. Feel free to use your imagination as to what the edit was.

There were a few other issues with the signs but Kliss says Code Enforcement Officer David Smith was “extremely helpful” in fixing the matters and the edited signs remain.

10,000 To Take A

 

Did 35,000 Scouts Boo Obama?

The National Boy Scout Jamboree ended, Wednesday, and President Obama broke a quasi-tradition by declining to address the Scouts.

The quadrennial event has been held at Fort A.P. Hill near Washington D.C. since 1981. This year’s event celebrated the 100th Anniversary of the organization.

In lieu of an appearance at the 10-day-long Jamboree, Obama appeared on the View, attended several Democrat fundraisers and visited Detroit.

He did send a short videotaped message which reportedly was shown in a mix of several other presentations. When the president appeared he was roundly booed by the 35,000 Scouts, one man who was there said. Some Scouts attempt to shush their comrades out of respect for the office, but were ignored. The adults  did not participate in the booing but many, however, turned their backs on the screen.

Further, the shotgun range which had been deemed The Presidential Range at past jamborees was not done so this year in an apparent snub at Obama.

This does not appear to be partisan. President Clinton was greeted warmly by the Scouts.