Wolf Exposed By Scrappy Scott Wagner

Wolf Exposed By Scrappy Scott WagnerWolf Exposed By Sen. Scott Wagner

This post is my first for 2016 – it is long – so please be patient – there are plenty of facts for you to read.

Before I get into that, I want you to know one thing – there is a huge difference between Governor Wolf and me.

Governor Wolf was born into an upper class family, he attended a private high school, attended Ivy League colleges and by all accounts, had a privileged upbringing.

He was also given an opportunity to buy his family’s business which was started over 100 years ago.

My background is much more humble – I grew up on a farm, graduated from Dallastown High School, and only attended college for one year.

In fact, I was not a very good student because I loved to work at my parents’ farm and neighboring farms, my uncle’s construction business, and I wanted to learn how things worked in the real world.

I started my first waste company from scratch over 30 years ago with two trucks and one other co-worker.

I drove the trucks for the first three months in business until we hired our first driver – and by the way, I still maintain my commercial drivers license and I can drive and operate any truck in our fleet.

Within 10 days after I started my first waste business, the new company was sued by Waste Management, and within 60 days we had accumulated over $100,000 in legal fees.

It took three years to pay off the legal fees to the two law firms that defended us.

Nothing has been handed to me – I have survived through at least five recessions starting with the 1980 recession when the prime interest rate went to 22 percent.

When I started my current waste company in 2000, I was again sued by the public company that I had sold my first company to three years earlier.

These lawsuits by public companies are routine in an effort to bury a small start-up competitor with legal fees and drive them out of business.

I am in an industry that is highly competitive, as are many other industries – smart business people are willing to compete as long as the competition is fair.

I had to learn to work hard, work smart, not to give up and to fight for things I believed in.

Defending what you believe in, whether it is starting a business, surviving in business, or defending a cause, fighting the fight is routine for me.

I fight for things I believe in because of my background and experience and I guess Governor Wolf does too. Unfortunately for the people of Pennsylvania, it seems all he believes in is scoring political points and raising taxes.

On June 30th of last year, the Republican House and Senate sent Governor Wolf a balanced and responsible budget that DID NOT increase taxes.

Governor Wolf chose to veto the budget completely – He DID NOT approve a single item.

Governor Wolf’s veto of the budget on June 30th and his continued fight over the budget until December 23rd when he approved certain items and vetoed others in another budget sent to him, may have set an historic record for his actions.

To be crystal clear, Governor Wolf has declared war on Republicans because he is not getting his union-friendly, liberal agenda approved.

Governor Wolf and his public sector union friends unleashed TV ads and sent mailers last summer bashing Republican lawmakers.

Last week more TV ads were aired again bashing Republican lawmakers.

It is time to take off the gloves with Governor Wolf and get out on the field and settle this once and for all.

Governor Wolf’s actions have caused hardships for many non-profits, charter schools, school districts, government entities and vendors.

In my Senate District, a charter school was going to close at the end of October if it did not receive funding.

I have not said much about the fact that I loaned money in October to a York City charter school to keep it from closing.

I will be loaning them an additional $169,869.73 this coming Wednesday so they are able to make payroll and pay necessary expenses – in total , I will have provided loans totaling $889,264.43 since Oct. 30.

I am borrowing from a personal line of credit and in turn, lending money to the charter school.

Why did I make the decision to lend money to this charter school?

It was simple – there were 530 students who would have been dumped onto the street and there are also almost 75 employees at the school, teachers and support staff who only wanted to do their jobs – unfortunately Governor Wolf did not care.

From July 1  to today this Charter School has not received any state funding even though Governor Wolf released funds to other schools in late December.

The first payment from the state that is anticipated to be received by the charter school is on Jan. 28  – the best estimate is that the school should receive more funding on Feb. 25.

It will take funding up to the end of March or April to get this school back on track with its finances and repay the loans to me.

Since July this school and others across the commonwealth have been held hostage by Governor Wolf – enough is enough.

Now let’s talk about Governor Wolf’s tax plan.

People need to be told that the tax increases Governor Wolf wanted for the 2015-16 budget were the equivalent of an additional two paychecks for a middle class family.

In fact, the Independent Fiscal Office looked at Gov. Wolf’s proposal and found that families in every income group – middle-class, rich, and poor – would all pay more.

Here is a link to download the report  –
http://www.ifo.state.pa.us/download.cfm?file=/resources/PDF/Revenue_Proposal_Analysis_April2015.pdf

Pages 21, 25, 37, 38, and 43 describe more in depth the effects of Governor Wolf’s tax plan.

Governor Wolf continues to demand that the natural gas industry pay a severance tax.

Governor Wolf should get a copy of this past Saturday morning’s Wall Street Journal and maybe he would learn that oil closed this past Friday under $30 per barrel, a historic low, and the DOW dropped almost 400 points – natural gas pricing is also at historic lows.
Just last week, the following headlines appeared in several business publications:

“Drug Firms Ring in Higher Prices” Wall Street Journal – Monday, January 11, 2016
“Kohl’s Weighs Sale or Split Up” Wall Street Journal – Monday, January 11, 2016
“Oil Drop Sparks Bankruptcy Fears” Wall Street Journal – Tuesday, January 12, 2016
“Arch Coal Files For Bankruptcy” Wall Street Journal – Tuesday, January 12, 2016
“Oil, at $31.41, Skids to 2003 Levels” Wall Street Journal – Tuesday, January 12, 2016
“CSX Revenue Hit By Coal Slump” Wall Street Journal – Wednesday, January 13, 2016
“PC Sales Decline to Historic Levels” Wall Street Journal  – Wednesday, January 13, 2016
“Stocks Take Beating as Alarm Grows” Wall Street Journal – Thursday, January 14, 2016
“$15 Oil? It’s Already Here, in Canada” Wall Street Journal –  Friday, January 15, 2016
“Wal-Mart to Shutter 154 Stores in US” Wall Street Journal – Friday, January 15, 2016
“Concerns are mounting over whether the U.S. economy and financial markets can withstand global weakness.” Wall Street Journal on Friday, January 15, 2016
“Wal-Mart’s Oakland Store Closure; Oakland’s Minimum Wage is Blamed” Forbes – January 18, 2016
“Oil Hits 2003 Low Below $28 as Iran Sanctions Lifted” Rueters – January 18, 2016

 

I have been a private sector business owner for over 35 years and I can smell that a recession is beginning to develop.

The Democrats and the public sector unions need to get realistic and stop beating the drum that the Republicans are letting the oil and gas industry off the hook.

In addition, due to Governor Wolf’s close friend Barack Obama and his grand Obamacare plan, nearly every American is paying more for healthcare coverage.

Governor Wolf’s tax plan to help his public sector union friends is simple – “Wage War on Pennsylvania’s working middle class.”

My job as a Republican PA State Senator is to stop Governor Wolf from imposing more taxes on Pennsylvanians and to force him to focus on the out of control spending in Harrisburg.

On Feb. 9 Governor Wolf will deliver his 2016 – 2017 budget address and I can assure you he will be proposing tax increases – Governor Wolf has three years left in office and be assured every single year he will be looking for more tax increases before he is willing to address out of control spending.

My job is to fight the war for all Pennsylvanians and protect middle-class citizens.

Welcome to the arena Governor Wolf.

Sen. Wagner represents the 28th District in the Pennsylvania Senate.

Wolf Exposed By Scrappy Scott Wagner

Bitcoin Dead Says Developer

A prominent British Bitcoin developer blogged last week that the potentially revolutionary concept is dead. Bitcoin Dead Says Developer

“Despite knowing that Bitcoin could fail all along, the now inescapable conclusion that it has failed still saddens me greatly,” wrote Mike Hearn, who was the Bitcoin guru at Google before becoming the Bitcoin guru with Silicon Valley venture capital firm Andreessen Horowitz.

Bitcoin is a currency based on a digital ledger  rather than a commodity like gold or the “full faith and credit” of a government. It has no central authority. It has been steadily growing in acceptance since its unveiling in 2009.

Hearn writes the the Bitcoin system can’t move money, has unpredictable fees, allows buyers to take back payments after obtaining goods and is controlled by China.

A vicious blow-up last summer involving death threats and malware attacks  between factions led  by Hearn and  California programmer Gregory Maxwell, an open-source advocate, prompted Hearn’s post of doom.

The Hearn side wants the Bitcoin system to allow for larger blocks of transaction data while the Maxwell side opposes this because it  would led to a centralization of authority, removing the “rule by math” and bringing politics into the decision process.

Well, it appears the Maxwell side won hence the Hearn column.

So is this end of Bitcoin or just growing pains? Time will tell.

The New York Times has a more detailed story about the matter here.

Bitcoin Dead Says Developer

 

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 1-18-16

Evel Knievel was a hunting guide for a while. He offered a money-back guarantee if customers didn’t get the animal they wanted. Things were going great until authorities caught on he was leading his safaris into Yellowstone National Park.

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 1-18-16

Defies Measurement Screening At Villanova

Defies Measurement Screening At VillanovaDefies Measurement Screening At Villanova — Defies Measurement, a film revealing how the worship of standardized testing is ruining schools, will be screened, 7 p.m., Feb. 2 in the cinema at Villanova University’s  Connelly Center.

The event is being co-sponsored by Parents Across America (Suburban Philadelphia). There will be a panel discussion following the one-hour movie.

Among those featured in the film is a Lower Merion parent.

Pro-education activist Joanne Yurchak of West Chester is strongly promoting the movie.

“It is time to start thinking about opting as many children out of these standardized tests as we can,” she said. “Some parents are actually putting up yard signs to publicize this issue and I have been told that folks who come to the screening can take one home.”

Defies Measurement Screening At Villanova

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 1-16-16

What was so special about the Battle of Cerignola in 1503? It was the first in which gunpowder-based small arms was responsible for the victory. Oh, the winner? It was Spain. France was the loser.

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 1-16-16

Trump Al Wilson And Snakes

Trump Al Wilson And SnakesTrump Al Wilson And Snakes — Donald Trump at a rally in Cedar Falls, Iowa read the lyrics from a song which few Millennials know by  a singer which few Millennials have heard to illustrate the wisdom of allowing Muslim refugees from ISIS controlled territory.

He made it work.

The singer is Al Wilson and the song is The Snake which was released in 1968.

Here are the lyrics.

On her way to work one morning, down the path along the lake, a tender-hearted woman saw a poor, half-frozen snake.  His pretty colored skin had been all frosted with the dew.  ‘Oh, well,’ she cried, ‘I’ll take you in and I’ll take care of you.’  ‘Take me in, O tender woman, take me in, for heaven’s sake.  Take me in, O tender woman,’ sighed the vicious snake.  She wrapped him up all cozy in a curvature of silk and then laid him by the fireside with some honey and some milk.  Now, she hurried home from work that night.  As soon as she arrived, she found that pretty snake she’d taken in and revived.  ‘Take me in, O tender woman.  Take me in, for heaven’s sake.  Take me in, O tender woman,’ sighed the vicious snake. 

“Now she clutched him to her bosom.  ‘You’re so beautiful,’ she cried, ‘but if I hadn’t brought you in, by now you would have died.’  She stroked his pretty skin, and then she kissed him and held him tight.  But instead of saying ‘thank you,’ that snake gave her a vicious bite.  ‘Take me in, O tender woman.  Take me in, for heaven’s sake.  Take me in, O tender woman,’ sighed the vicious snake.  ‘I saved you,’ cried the woman, ‘and you bit me.  Heavens, why?  You know your bite is poisonous, and now I’m going to die.’  ‘Oh, shut up, silly woman,’ said the reptile with a grin.  ‘You knew darn well I was a snake before you took me in.’

And here is the song.

Trump Al Wilson And Snakes

Hat tip Rush Limbaugh

Fiscal Code Bill Sneaks In Spending

Fiscal Code Bill Sneaks In SpendingFiscal Code Bill Sneaks In Spending — State Rep. Russ Diamond (R-102) is one of the good guys. He explains on his Facebook page why he voted against the final version of HB 1327 which made changes to the state’s fiscal code.

“This bill, HB1327, passed the House unanimously the first time around, when it was a small tweak to the fiscal code regarding investments by the State Workers’ Insurance Board,” he said. “But after the Senate loaded it up, I was forced to vote against it on concurrence.”

Commonwealth Foundation notes the final passage includes 45 earmarks that funnel more than $40 million to “lobbyist priorities.”

For instance one earmark gave  $450,000 “to a multimunicipal revitalization organization in a county of the sixth class with a population, based on the most recent Federal decennial census, of at least 68,000 but not more than 70,000 for sidewalks and repairs associated with downtown revitalization.”

Another $1,500,000 earmark is set aside for “a physician practice plan serving a health system located in a city of the first class and a contiguous county of the second class A which did receive funding during fiscal year 2014-2015.”

Fiscal Code Bill Sneaks In Spending

 

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 1-15-16

No Miranda, it was Noah Hathaway not Daniel Radcliffe who was the first to play Harry Potter on film.

William Lawrence Sr Omnibit 1-15-16

Chris Freind — Obama Gun Orders Sensible

 Obama Gun Orders Sensible By Chris Freind Obama Gun Orders Sensible

It’s not exactly taking a shot in the dark to predict that the sniping over President Obama’s executive orders on guns will intensify. As the elections draw near, both sides will aim to put the issue directly in their sights and blast away at those who disagree.

But like most important issues, there’s too much rapid-fire rhetoric and not enough common sense, which serves only to move the debate off-target. If the politicians truly care about reducing violence, both sides would holster their weapons and keep their powder dry, and instead hone in on the real problems with sharpshooter precision.

Let’s look at the smoking guns in this latest firestorm:

• Policy: The president, stating he was fed up with a Republican Congress that he saw as doing nothing to tackle gun violence, announced executive orders to increase the scope of background checks for prospective gun buyers, including sales conducted online and at gun shows. Anyone selling firearms would be required to obtain a federal license, and the loophole allowing individuals to buy weapons through a trust or corporation without a background check would be closed.

The GOP, predictably, has been shooting from the hip about how such measures violate Second Amendment freedoms.

One question: How?

How does requiring a criminal background check using the FBI’s database in any way violate one’s rights? Put another way, do these people really believe we shouldn’t have background checks at all? Talk about firing blanks.

Contrary to claims by conspiracy theorists, background checks are not federal gun registries. Neither do they lead to them.

For those who believe that expanding background checks will lead to gun registries, where have they been for the last decade? Background checks aren’t new, so, by definition, if we are simply expanding and modernizing an existing system, then under the critics’ rationale, wouldn’t we already have such a registry? They can’t have it both ways.

Background checks are not a conservative/liberal, Republican/Democrat issue. And since they do not infringe upon a law-abiding citizen’s right to own a firearm, it’s not “gun control.” It’s criminal control.

Undeniably, such checks work. There have been 1.8 million denials since 1998. In 2010, half of those denied had felony convictions or indictments, almost 20 percent were fugitives, and 11 percent had violated state laws.

To allow convicted felons or the mentally ill to buy a gun with quasi-legal impunity is crazy, since savvy criminals will choose the no-background-check loophole rather than risk getting caught in an undercover sting. It’s a no-brainer.

But while background checks are useful, they are not a panacea. The FBI database is only as good as the information it receives from states. If criminal and mental health records aren’t routinely sent and/or updated, it won’t be as effective, which is why the administration is boosting its efforts to have states increase their records reporting. It’s also why the president is mandating the FBI upgrade its NICS database system, and providing for additional manpower to staff it. That modernization will greatly reduce the number of gun applicants who, by law, are permitted to take possession of a gun if their background check isn’t completed within three days.

Background checks certainly aren’t perfect, but that’s not a reason to opposes expanding them. Nothing will ever fully prevent lunatics from engaging in a shooting spree, but a background check system is a solid first line of defense.

Political: While idiocy is not illegal, it would behoove some gun-rights people to get a shot of common sense. For example, don’t show up at a gun rally or counter-protest with AK-47s on full display, as some routinely do. And don’t blame the “liberal media” when they post that shot on the front page. Do you want to look cool by touting guns in public, or do you really care about protecting gun rights?

The two never go hand-in-hand. Leave the guns at home, wear something that isn’t camouflage, and articulate a reasonable message with a calm demeanor. You’d be surprised how much more effective you’d be at convincing the Great American Middle – and it is they who will ultimately decide this issue.

Take it to the bank, expanding background checks is a winning political issue.

• Principle: Here’s the problem: President Obama’s executive orders may well get shot down by the courts faster than a speeding bullet – as they should. The Constitution makes it abundantly clear that presidents are elected to implement laws passed by Congress – not do end-runs around the legislative branch.

By no means is that criticism leveled simply at Mr. Obama, since both Republican and Democratic presidents have used executive orders. But wrong is wrong.

The GOP would do well to remind itself of that the next time one of its own occupies the Oval Office, as many will undoubtedly shelve their criticism of executive orders when it happens to be on an issue near and dear to them.

(As an aside, the most egregious executive order of this administration was its agreement with Iran. What is clearly a treaty – which legally should have been subject to ratification by the Senate – was accomplished instead by executive fiat. While the GOP-controlled legislature tried to kill this via legislation, they were unable to muster enough Democratic support to overcome the 60-vote cloture rule in the Senate. Having said that, the question remains why Congress has not filed suit to undue the usurping of its powers.)

• Practicality: Whether executive orders or Congress-passed laws, these measures, while valuable, will simply not stop terrorists and mass killers, and to think otherwise is stunningly naïve. From the San Bernardino terror cell to the Sandy Hook shooter, these people have no regard for laws in the first place, and won’t be deterred by gun restrictions or background checks, especially when they know they won’t live to see another sunrise. All too often, they steal and kill in their quest to obtain weapons.

The answer to stopping these attacks isn’t rooted in limiting magazine size or types of weapons. It’s finding out what we’ve done that has destroyed empathy in many of our young people and fostered a mentality that killing with abandon is somehow a viable option.

Remember that this mass violence didn’t happen in the 1950s – or even the 1980s or most of the ‘90s – when access to guns was considerably easier than now. We didn’t bolt school doors a generation ago, we didn’t have lockdowns, we didn’t whitewash everything, we didn’t constantly coddle our kids, and we didn’t get a trophy even when we lost. And we didn’t kill people when something didn’t go our way or we had hurt feelings in a warped but somehow romanticized outlook of going out in a “blaze of glory.”

There is no single cause for these mass shootings, and it will take a comprehensive effort to stop such tragedies, from increasing efforts to identify and assist the mentally ill to stemming the entitlement mentality of coddled youth.

A good start would be would be to stop sniping at each other, and instead keep our eye on the real target – the bad guys.

Obama Gun Orders Sensible

Ellingsen Interview Podcast Available

Ellingsen Interview Podcast AvailableEllingsen Interview Podcast Available — Kim Kennedy’s interview of Elk Township Republican committeewoman broadcast this morning, Jan. 14, is now available and can be found here at WFYL.