Archive for 2009

LOTS OF HALF-PRICE exercise and outdoor stuff. The economic slowdown does mean big savings, at least. The Insta-Daughter saved her Christmas money and has been hitting the desperation sales lately; she scored big yesterday on clothes she had looked at before Christmas, now 60 or 70% cheaper than they were a month ago.

AND WHY SHOULD THEY? The World Won’t Buy Unlimited U.S. Debt. In fact, their unwillingness to do so may be the only thing that saves us. “If any other country were to face these conditions, unpalatable measures such as severe government austerity or currency devaluation would be the only options.” Sooner or later, they’ll be our only options, too, if we keep it up.

JOEL KOTKIN: Height of Power: The Washington Fiefdom Looms Larger Than Ever.

For more than two centuries, it has been a wannabe among the great world capitals. But now, Washington is finally ready for its close-up.

No longer a jumped-up Canberra or, worse, Sacramento, it seems about to emerge as Pyongyang on the Potomac, the undisputed center of national power and influence. As a new president takes over the White House, the United States’ capacity for centralization has arguably never been greater. . . . The contrast between Washington and most of the United States has gradually become more pronounced. In good times and in bad, lawyers, lobbyists and other government retainers have continued to enrich themselves even as the Midwest industrial-belt cities have cratered and most others struggled to survive. “The vision of generations of liberals,” admitted the New Republic in the mid-1970s, “has created a prosperous and preposterous city whose population is completely isolated from the people they represent and immune from the problems they are supposed to solve.”

Not a positive development. But Washington has grown because rival power centers have suffered for their mistakes — while Washington’s mistakes produce more power for Washington. Great incentive system, huh? (Via NewsAlert).

CHRIS DODD AND HEALTHCARE:

On the first day of a listening tour on health care, an issue pivotal to the new Congress and his own re-election, U.S. Sen. Christopher J. Dodd got an earful Friday.

The first comment came from a furious homeless shelter manager: He and his clients have no coverage, yet insurance giant American International Group got an $85 billion federal loan.

And don’t forget Countrywide, which gave Dodd a sweetheart mortgage whose terms he has so far refused to disclose:

Dodd was reluctant Friday to talk about one source of his poor polling: a controversy over favorable treatment extended him on mortgages by Countrywide Financial. Dodd has declined to release all relevant documents until the Senate Ethics Committee concludes its inquiry.

Asked if he still intended to wait for its conclusion before releasing the documents, Dodd said, “Not necessarily. … At some point soon we’ll do it.”

What’s the healthcare equivalent of being a “Friend of Angelo?” You can bet that if Dodd gets his way, there’ll be one, and we won’t get disclosure there, either . . . .

UPDATE: And that question is answered. It’s all at your expense, of course. But, then, what isn’t, these days?

OBAMA SEEKS SPACE WEAPONS BAN: “President Barack Obama’s pledge to seek a worldwide ban on weapons in space marks a dramatic shift in U.S. policy while posing the tricky issue of defining whether a satellite can be a weapon.”

RON ROSENBAUM: My Caroline Kennedy Theory: The Crowd at Sylvia’s Got It Right. “The mystery is why Ms. Kennedy seemed to sabotage her bid so relentlessly, turning every advantage she had into a disadvantage, as if some submerged part of her was trying to subvert the part of her that wanted to do it, become a public servant, a senator like her father, JFK.”

HE SHOOTS, SHE SCORES. The folks at Media Matters may not know the meaning of the word “despite,” but “spite,” they certainly get . . . .

Plus, from the comments: “Just think about it Althouse: that lame, laughable post about you probably cost George Soros at least a thousand dollars!” Heh.

MAKE YOUR OWN Obamicon. Heh.

HEY, MAYBE THE ECONOMY REALLY HAS TANKED! “The name of a former payday loan mogul has been scrubbed from an athletics building at the University of Tennessee after he failed to follow through on a $2 million pledge.” I mean, when loan-shark-types are feeling the pinch . . . .

SORRY, but I don’t think this meeting puts the Supreme Court “in the tank” for Obama. It’s like claims that Scalia’s hunting trip with Dick Cheney disqualified him. (When, instead, it should have gotten him a medal for courage . . . .)

BUT THE PENSIONS ARE UNDERFUNDED: “Sport utility vehicles and big pickup trucks are the preferred forms of transportation among Knox County employees whose take-home vehicles have been reported so far to the County Commission task force examining fleet expenditures.”

THE EXAMINER: When state taxes rise, businesses and residents flee.

Maryland used to be in the middle of the pack of states with business-friendly environments. No more. The Tax Foundation now ranks Maryland as the sixth worst state in the nation in which to do business. Only Rhode Island, Ohio, California, New York, and New Jersey are more hostile to job- and revenue-producing enterprises. Maryland’s “remarkable drop” – from 24th in 2008 to 45th place this year – is attributed to last year’s passage of the largest tax hike in state history, coupled with other major tax policy changes that also put the Free State dead last in the personal income tax category. . . . Decades of empirical research prove that economic growth in high-tax states consistently lags behind states with lower tax burdens. The 10 states with the lowest taxes also attracted almost 10 percent more new residents during the last decade than their high-tax counterparts. Just last year, 144,000 people fled from California’s punishing taxes, the highest state-to-state migration in the U.S. The ramifications of losing revenue-producing busine