Author Archives: Admin

Executive Encephalitis

Analysis: Like newly pubescent teens stumbling drunk in a cheap whorehouse with their parent’s credit cards, the US Congress is buying everything without regard to the health, protection, or the financial survival of taxpayers.  The stimulus package will not stimulate and may well decimate the economy of America.

 

Congress first failed to regulate government housing programs (although
clearly warned) which began the current economic crisis.  Then the first
stimulus package last year failed to accomplish any lasting economic
boost.  Then Congress stampeded President Bush into the foolish Troubled
Assets Relief Program (TARP) now discovered to have wasted over $78
BILLION
(strike two on the Constitutional responsibility of Congress
as good fiscal stewards).  Next auto makers supported by corrupt unions
pandered for $17.4 billion to continue failed inefficiencies.  Now, the
non-partisan Congressional Budget Office reports the stimulus bill will
harm our economy and cause our Gross Domestic Product to decrease over
the long term. 

Where is the responsibility?  If taxpayers must mortgage their grandchildren’s future to pay for irresponsible, inattentive or fraudulent oversight within various institutions, then public inquiries must be required.  Without it, this is not change.  This is a crazy left turn to policies of socialism that have failed at every time and in every country throughout history including our own.

President Obama campaigned on pure personality and glittering generalities, therefore, the only change voters approved was a different persona in office.  We did not vote on this Socialist/Marxist takeover of private business – yes, I know this site warned you, but most other media did not. 

Author Paul Davidson has included a revealing note in his book on growing up in Oklahoma during the Great Depression.  Davidson reports workers called the Works Progress Administration (WPA) the “We Piddle Around.”  Government has never been efficient in such programs – see the former Soviet Union for more detail.  Yes, “bricks and mortar” projects were completed – at triple the costs over ten times the time a private company could build the same.

Oklahoma Senator Dr. Tom Coburn said, “The concerns that many members of Congress have expressed about this bill are not based on the failed policies of the past but sobering facts of present and the future.  As the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has stated, this bill will not work.  In fact, this bill will hurt our economy.  A majority of Americans also do not believe this bill will work because they possess a level of common sense that does not exist in Washington.

“Congress and the president have a choice, Dr. Coburn continued.  “They can pull this bill and fix it, or they can ram it through and claim victory.  Republicans and the Bush administration faced, and failed, this test many times.  For years, Republicans passed bloated and reckless spending bills that were harmful to the economy.  Yet, even as Republicans grew the government they touted their bills as sound and fiscally responsible vehicles for job creation.  Republican hypocrisy and spin met its logical conclusion with the most recent election.  Democrat attempts to call failures successes won’t be any more successful.  The biggest loser in this game won’t be either party, but the country.”

Common in young people new on the job, Obama has a bad case of “Executive Encephalitis” (coined here as acutely inflated inflammation of an unearned sense of self-importance).  Obama failed to produce a work product.  Obama’s staff could have drafted a stimulus plan, but instead Obama relied on Congress to write the details.  Thus without adult supervision, Democrat members retreated to the same old failed socialist programs to grow government, push pet projects and promote idiotic ideology.  Here is a clue Mr. President, you took an oath to work for all citizens not just socialists, trade unions, and welfare recipients – how about a break for people expected to pay for this largess.  

Pork details so bad that if you can read the list of projects without getting mad as hell at the waste – you need to return to high school for a basic economics class.  Sadly, we may not have the time the national media needs to get such a basic education and crawl out of the goose-stepping-tank in time.

Politico reports Sen. John McCain took his most direct shot at President Barack Obama since the presidential campaign on last Friday morning, using a Senate floor speech to criticize the president for mocking Republican concerns over the massive economic package.

“The whole point, Mr. President, is to enact tax cuts and spending measures that truly stimulate the economy,” McCain said. “There are billions and tens of billions of dollars in this bill which will have no effect within three, four, five or more years, or ever. [pause] Or ever.”

Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.) told Politico that he believed Obama was "AWOL" on bipartisan negotiations on the stimulus, further showing the discontent on the GOP side of the aisle.

“$50 million in funding for the National Endowment for the Arts — all of us are for the arts,” McCain said. “Tell me how that creates any significant number of jobs?  After-school snack program is probably a good idea.  Do we really want to spend $726 million on it?”

With Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mass.) recovering from brain cancer and the Minnesota Senate race still unresolved, Democrats have 57 seats and need to keep their caucus unified while pulling support from three GOP senators to pass the bill.

McCain rejected that strategy and said Democrats should not call the measure “bipartisan” if only a handful of Republicans support it. “You can call it an agreement, but you cannot call it a bipartisan agreement,” McCain said.

This stampede to do anything and everything throwing money with no detailed investigation, little justification and no foreseeable end while being entertained with glittering generalities of no substance without regard for the long term health of a nation has happened before in history. 

“Already long ago, from when we sold our vote to no man, the People have abdicated our duties; for the People who once upon a time handed out military command, high civil office, legions — everything, now restrains itself and anxiously hopes for just two things: bread and circus,” wrote Roman poet Juvenal of the late 1st and early 2nd centuries.  Wikipedia reports, "

Bread and circuses" (or Bread and games) (from Latin: panem et circenses) is a metaphor for handouts and petty amusements that politicians use to gain popular support, instead of gaining it through sound policy. The phrase is invoked not only to criticize politicians, but also to criticize their supporters for giving up their civic duty.

More than being criticized, future generations will damn us if we allow this to happen.  Assuming of course we and they survive the barbarians at the gates. 


About the author:

David Arnett began his career in professional journalism in 1985 and has published Tulsa Today since 1996 – before Al Gore invented the Internet.  He has won two national awards as a First Amendment Publisher.  Arnett is an idea guy, a Constitutional Republican, a Conservative Media Critic and a proud pain in the political derriere of the disingenuous. This analysis may be reproduced without charge with proper attribution and links to the original source.  Arnett is available for interview by recognized media.

 

Oklahoma Senate Update

Every legislative session has its own challenges and opportunities, and the 2009 session is certainly no different.  The greatest challenge we face this year is the fact that the national and international recession has now impacted Oklahoma.  Our economy is still much stronger than many other states, but we are not immune to what is happening. 

However, unlike the federal government, in Oklahoma our constitution requires us to write and pass a balanced budget.  Unlike Washington D.C., we must live and operate within our means. 

The reality is that we are faced with state revenue decreases and anticipated reductions in federal dollars to the tune of about $600 million.  This is a significant challenge, but not insurmountable. 
In 2003, we were facing an even larger shortfall, yet we worked together to identify specific areas where we could make reductions and still make keep essential state services like education, public safety and critical infrastructure needs funded.  We also worked to lay the groundwork for economic growth, and those efforts paid off—in fact those efforts and Oklahoma’s vibrant energy industry are why we remain in better economic shape than in other parts of the nation.

Senate Republicans have also fought to enact policies that can help us to identify waste, eliminate outdated and unproductive programs, and enact reforms that will ultimately make state government more efficient and our economy more productive.   The unique opportunity we have been entrusted with in the 2009 session is that for the first time in Oklahoma’s history, we hold the majority in the Senate and in the House. 

{mosimage}Initiatives and reforms that were stonewalled and buried in the past now can be fully vetted and debated.  We can stop the loss of medical professionals and assure greater access to healthcare by finally passing meaningful lawsuit reform.  By enacting legislation to ensure reliable, objective information on student achievement and graduation rates, we can do a better job of preparing Oklahoma students for success throughout their lives. 

We’ve already been able to achieve major successes in securing critically needed resources in our transportation infrastructure.  We’ve also worked to ensure Oklahomans can keep more of their hard-earned dollars.  Our members will continue to develop reforms and innovations that will enable us to build on those successes when the economy does begin to improve.  I want to assure you that we do not take for granted the faith Oklahomans have placed in us, and are devoted to making our state stronger and more prosperous for all our citizens in the years to come.

OK GOP fast-tracks voter fraud measure

The House Rules Committee voted yesterday to target voter fraud by requiring that Oklahoma citizens provide proof of identify before voting in an election. The measure now goes to a vote in the full House.

“Any election reform package approved this year must start with voter ID as its foundation,” said House Speaker Chris Benge, R-Tulsa. “Our top priority is to ensure the integrity of our elections, and to do that we must ensure that only eligible voters cast ballots.”

House Bill 1037, by Rep. Sue Tibbs, would require citizens to provide “proof of identify” before voting. Under the bill, proof of identify could be established by producing a document containing a photograph of the voter that was issued by a state, federal, county, municipal, or tribal government.
“For Oklahomans to have faith in our election process, we cannot tolerate any opportunity for voter fraud,” said Tibbs, R-Tulsa. “This legislation provides a simple, cost-effective way to guarantee that no Oklahoman is disenfranchised as the result of illegal votes.”
Under the bill, if a voter is unable to produce a photo ID, that person can sign a statement under oath swearing to his or her identity. Anyone found to have signed the oath falsely would be subject to felony punishment.
In recent election cycles there have been reports of voter fraud in numerous states, prompting lawmakers to enact new reforms. For example, ACORN, a liberal activist group that has registered millions of voters across the country, has been embroiled in countless fraud allegations and was the subject of an FBI investigation.
Some ACORN employees were accused of submitting false voter registration forms – including some signed `Mickey Mouse’ and several in Nevada listing Dallas Cowboys players’ names, though none of the players live in the state. Another Nevada ACORN worker was caught filling out voter registration forms using names and addresses copied out of the telephone book.
The U.S. Supreme Court has upheld a similar law in Indiana that required voters to show photo identification.
Last week, former Federal Election Commissioner Hans von Spakovsky noted in the Wall Street Journal that Georgia and Indiana saw record numbers of Democrats vote in November, despite having some of the nation’s toughest voter ID laws.

"With every election that has occurred since states have begun to implement voter ID, the evidence is overwhelming that it does not depress the turnout of voters,” von Spakovsky said in the Journal. "Indeed, it may actually increase the public’s confidence that their votes will count."

House Bill 1037 passed out of the House Rules Committee. It will next receive a vote from the entire Oklahoma House of Representatives.


About the author:
Mike McCarville has covered Oklahoma politics and government since he became State Capitol Correspondent for The Tulsa Tribune in 1966. Since, he has been a governor’s press secretary, investigative reporter, television station news executive, radio station program director and talk show host, and political consultant. In 1980, he founded the McCarville Report and it is the nation’s longest-running state political publication. In its online version, it has been called "The best political blog" by Dr. Keith Gaddie, pollster and pundit and "Oklahoma’s venerable McCarville Report" by The Arkansas Times.  McCarville, also a real estate investor and commentator for the National Rifle Association on NRANews.com and Sirius Satellite Radio, is a regular contributor to Tulsa Today.

Taken for revenge fantasy

Taken

France, 2008

Directed By: Pierre Morel

Written By: Luc Besson & Robert Mark Kamen

Starring: Liam Neeson, Maggie Grace, Famke Janssen

Running Time: 93 minutes

Rated PG-13 for intense sequences of violence, disturbing thematic material, sexual content, some drug references and language

4 out of 5 stars

Taken offers little in the way of originality (ok, let’s be frank, it offers nothing original); it requires you to suspend an obscene amount of disbelief; and it’s borderline exploitative – 3 nasty strikes that would handily damn any other film.  Director Pierre Morel (District B13), however, disregards such concerns in lieu of one thing: delivering on the promise that his chosen genre (revenge fantasy) requires of him (vengeance, preferably of the extremely prejudicial variety).  And ohmygosh, Taken delivers on said promise so magnificently that it reduces the intellect to a collection of giddy valley girl-isms: “Do you, like, TOTALLY BELIEVE THAT JUST HAPPENED?” 

The film is a slice of pure, guilt-riddled pleasure that satisfies some primal need you didn’t realize needed satisfying until you’re watching Liam Neeson exact sinfully sweet revenge upon horde after horde of scumbags and you’re cheering – audibly cheering.  Taken’s faults, both egregious and painful, thoroughly drown in the pure fist-pumping pleasure of watching its bad guys bleed out in oh-so gratifying ways. Mr. Neeson plays Bryan Mills, an ex-CIA spook who’s hanging up his guns and gadgets in order to reconnect with his daughter (Lost’s Maggie Grace, pulling off a much too believable teenage ditz).  She’s desperate to go on a cross-Europe tour but needs daddy-o’s permission, which he begrudgingly gives.  Wouldn’t ya know it, first thing she does is get nipped by a gang of Armenian human traffickers, and Mills sets off in bloody hot pursuit.  Any additional plot points are inconsequential and besides, they’re quickly buried underneath the body count.

There is a moment in the film that encapsulates the thrill that Taken offers, a moment so deliciously realized that even the marketing team couldn’t pass it up (the trailer includes the scene verbatim, and the entire line adorns the poster).  Mills’ daughter contacts him by phone when masked men enter her apartment, and after she is taken, he has one chance to speak to her kidnapper: “I don’t know who you are.  I don’t know what you want.  If you are looking for ransom, I can tell you I don’t have money.  But what I do have are a very particular set of skills; skills I have acquired over a very long career; skills that make me a nightmare for people like you.  If you let my daughter go now, that’ll be the end of it.  I will not look for you, I will not pursue you.  But if you don’t, I will look for you, I will find you, and I will kill you.”

This is a one-note role for Neeson, who’s done much richer work before (Kinsey, Rob Roy, Schindler’s List), but he sells the conviction of that one line so fully that it is impossible to look away.  Taken, in a nutshell, is that one line and the fulfillment of its promise. Watch the trailer.  If you get chills as Neeson calmly delivers his ultimatum, then run to the theater; you will not be disappointed.

With so much wrongness in the world, both global and the kind we experience personally, we ache for justice to be served (clichéd but true).  Sometimes we’re satisfied: corporate criminals jailed, ruthless dictators overthrown, serial killers executed.  But more often, we’re left wanting.  “Life isn’t fair” isn’t a saying for nothing.  Injustice is, sadly, the status quo and not the exception.

Which is why, despite all its flaws, Taken appeals so deeply.  After the day’s tragic avalanche of internet headlines and bobble-headed pundits and evening news zingers (”Child found decapitated! More at 11!”), you just want to see Evil receive its righteous comeuppance.  Liam Neeson going Rambo on a bunch of make-believe strawmen isn’t realistic, nor does it affect any kind of real change, but it is intensely gratifying.  Not a cure for your woes, but a nice nightcap to soothe them.  Can one ask for much more from one’s entertainments?

About the author:

Evan Derrick loves movies, loves talking about movies, and even makes them from time to time. In addition to being the founder and senior editor for MovieZeal.com, he is also a member of the Oklahoma Film Critics Circle and a father of two beautiful children. He can be reached for comment or complaint at evan@moviezeal.com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .

Disco Biscuits Thursday at Cain’s

When a band sports a name like The Disco Biscuits, it’s fairly easy to guess where its members are coming from: quirky, ironic, perhaps a bit on the electronic side, and self-consciously indie.  That turns out to be more or less accurate with the Philadelphia-based quartet to be rocking Cain’s Ballroom with their unique brand of electronic jam band music Thursday night.

The Biscuits, who are known for combining various rock, classical and jazz elements, in addition to extending songs into ten-, twenty-, and even thirty-minute jam sessions, are distinguished from many of their jam band peers in one way:  they’re not afraid to use some electronic effects to keep things interesting—hence the “Disco” part of the name.

The group, which consists of guitarist Jon Gutwillig, bassist Marc Brownstein, drummer Allen Aucoin, and keyboardist Aron Magner, perform complex, improvisation-oriented numbers—often backwards or inside-out—that meander from pop/rock songs to jazzy experimentations to techno breakdowns.
The group has been active since 1995, and has successfully made a name for itself in the jam band and electronic underground scenes—going so far as to found “Camp Bisco,” an annual music festival that has featured a wide swath of artists including Snoop Dogg, STS9, Thievery Corporation, Umphrey’s McGee and The Roots. With such a wide range of musical affinities, it should come as no surprise that the Biscuits are planning to release a new album that will be roughly divided between rock- and hip-hop-oriented tracks.  In other words, nearly fifteen years into the game, the Biscuits are still trying new things and keeping their sound fresh—so if you’re looking to hear challenging, mind-expanding music, Cain’s is the place to be this Thursday.

The Disco Biscuits will play Cain’s with special guests Montu February 5. Click here for tickets.

About the author:
Luke Harrington is a freelance entertainment critic whose work appears regularly in Tulsa Today and at MovieZeal.com. Contact him at luke.t.harrington@gmail.com This e-mail address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it .