News/Politics 5-17-13

What’s interesting in the news today?

The various scandals are leading the race of course, but they’re not the only interesting ones. I’ll give you some on that, but first some others.

Like this one. It makes sense to me. After all, very few liberals appreciate alpha males. It’s contrary to their teachings. 🙂

Seriously though, it’s something to consider. From TheDailyMail

“Men who are strong are more likely to take a right-wing stance, while weaker men support the welfare state, researchers claim.

Their study discovered a link between a man’s upper-body strength and their political views.”

“The figures revealed that men with higher upper-body strength were less likely to support left-wing policies on the redistribution of wealth.

But men with low upper-body strength were more  likely to put their own self-interest aside and support a welfare state.”

Could this be why the left seems to prefer a softer, less manly version of men? They do seem to prefer a metro sexual type male. Or am I just being a sexist right-winger? I’m never sure. 🙂
____________________________________________________
Next up, another case that exposes the hypocrisy of saying abortion isn’t murder. He does it, and it’s prison for murder, she does it and it’s exercising her right to choose. Now I’m not taking his side here. What he did is repulsive and he should go to jail for murder and forgery and everything else. But how can you say it’s not if she did the same and took the pill on her own? The method and result are the same. Seems hypocritical to me. From TheTampaBayTimes
“The son of a Lutz fertility doctor killed a girlfriend’s unborn child by tricking her into taking an abortion drug, federal authorities said Wednesday.The act could put John Andrew Welden, 28, in prison for life.Welden forged the doctor’s signature on a prescription for Cytotec, relabeled a pill bottle as “Amoxicillin” and told the woman that his father wanted her on antibiotics, a federal prosecutor asserted Wednesday.”
Sadly she took the pills, and lost the baby. He’s in jail without bail, as he should be.
____________________________________________________

Next up, an update on Boston bomber #2. From CBSNews

“Boston bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev left a note claiming responsibility for the April 15 attack on the Boston Marathon, reports CBS News senior correspondent John Miller.

Sources tell Miller that Tsarnaev wrote the note in the boat he was hiding in as police pursued him, and as he bled from gunshot wounds sustained in an earlier shootout between police and his older brother, Tamerlan Tsarnaev. It reads as part manifesto, part suicide note and part justification for the killing and maiming of innocent civilians.

The note — scrawled with a marker on the interior wall of the cabin — said the bombings were retribution for U.S. military action in Afghanistan and Iraq, and called the Boston victims “collateral damage” in the same way Muslims have been in the American-led wars. “When you attack one Muslim, you attack all Muslims,” Tsarnaev wrote.

Tsarnaev said he didn’t mourn older brother Tamerlan, the other suspect in the bombings, writing that by that point, Tamerlan was a martyr in paradise — and that he expected to join him there soon.”

That should lay to rest any assertions that his religion didn’t motivate this.

____________________________________________________

Now we’ll start getting to those scandals… First up, a good question. From IllumeMagazine

Do Muslim Nonprofits Have it Easier Than Tea Party Groups?

“Having spent most of my legal career working with tax exempt entities, the IRS scrutiny on the Tea Party isn’t news to me. In my days at large law firms, I handled a portfolio of nonprofit Tea Party organizations and saw firsthand how the IRS treated them when it came to granting exemptions.”

“In many cases, the organizations fight tooth-and-nail to get through IRS scrutiny, often facing pages of questions from the IRS on their activities.”

“On the flip side, I’ve worked with numerous Muslim organizations as well. And every single application of a Muslim nonprofit has gone through the IRS, with less scrutiny. Of course, they still did get scrutiny– after all, Islamophobia is still pretty rampant everywhere and it’s inaccurate to say that they got a free pass. But truth be told, they never got a 10-page questionnaire on each and every one of their grantees.

What does this say about the way that the IRS is handling applications from Muslim nonprofits? For one, in the application phase, Muslim nonprofits seem to have an upper hand over Tea Party groups. Of course, the Muslim groups face their struggles post-determination, when they’re suddenly placed under investigation. And the IRS isn’t the agency that tends to target Muslim nonprofits, even though the Treasury has a list of “scary Muslims” (ever heard of the OFAC list?).  It’s usually  the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security who run Muslim nonprofits to the ground and put their founders in jail. But going back to the IRS Tea Party scandal, the IRS certainly makes it hard for Tea Party groups to make it through the door.”

We already know how the IRS treated Franklin Graham’s ministry, and other Christian groups as well. Why the disparity?

____________________________________________________

If the White House is the one who encouraged this behavior from the IRS, then this must be how they rewarded the behavior. From ABCNews

“The Internal Revenue Service official in charge of the tax-exempt organizations at the time when the unit targeted tea party groups now runs the IRS office responsible for the health care legislation.

Sarah Hall Ingram served as commissioner of the office responsible for tax-exempt organizations between 2009 and 2012. But Ingram has since left that part of the IRS and is now the director of the IRS’ Affordable Care Act office, the IRS confirmed to ABC News today.”

And don’t buy the “we fired the guy responsible” meme from the WH. He was leaving in June anyway. He was an obvious choice to go under the bus.

____________________________________________________

About those Benghazi e-mails….

Where’s the rest, you know the ones where the shenanigans took place? Where are the first 2 days? From TheDailyCaller

“The Benghazi-related emails released by the White House late May 15 exclude the critical emails between  administration officials that were sent during the crucial first two days  after the deadly jihadi attack that killed four Americans last September.”

“The two-day gap — the first released email was sent 67 hours after the attack  began — plus the Petraeus comment, undermines the White House’s explanation for  the rewrite.”

____________________________________________________

Next up, Holder’s abdication. From WaPo

“As the nation’s top law enforcement official, Eric Holder is privy to all kinds of sensitive information. But he seems to be proud of how little he knows.”

“On and on Holder went: “I don’t know. I don’t know. . . . I would not want to reveal what I know. . . . I don’t know why that didn’t happen. . . . I know nothing, so I’m not in a position really to answer.”

Holder seemed to regard this ignorance as a shield protecting him and the Justice Department from all criticism of the Obama administration’s assault on press freedoms. But his claim that his “recusal” from the case exempted him from all discussion of the matter didn’t fly with Republicans or Democrats on the committee, who justifiably saw his recusal as more of an abdication.

“There doesn’t seem to be any acceptance of responsibility in the Justice Department for things that have gone wrong,” said Rep. James Sensenbrenner (R-Wis.), after Holder placed the AP matter in the lap of his deputy. “We don’t know where the buck stops.””

Well it ain’t stoppin’ at Obama’s desk either, that’s for sure. I guess this is Bush’s fault too.

____________________________________________________

A second court has handed Obama a loss on the NLRB issue. Good. From Politico

“A second appeals court has joined the D.C. Circuit in ruling that President Barack Obama’s recess appointments to the National Labor Relations Board were unconstitutional, concluding that some board actions taken in the wake of those appointments were also invalid.

The issue has far-reaching implications for both the NLRB and other boards, including Obama’s Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, which has been a frequent target of conservatives and whose director was a recess appointment.

The 2-1 decision Thursday from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (posted here) found that the presidential recess appointment power is limited to breaks between sessions of Congress, not breaks within sessions or other adjournments during which the Senate might meet in pro forma sessions. The reasoning mirrors that in a ruling of the D.C. Circuit Court in January.”

____________________________________________________

These last two are on the next potential scandal, the one emerging at the EPA that I posted about yesterday. From TheHill

Rep. Ed Whitfield (R-Ky.) on Wednesday accused the Environmental Protection  Agency (EPA) of exempting left-leaning political groups and green energy  producers from various fees and fines that it routinely assesses to  right-learning groups.

Whitfield, who chairs the House Energy &  Commerce Subcommittee on Energy & Power, called the EPA’s actions a “pattern  of conduct in which this administration rewards its friends and punishes its  opponents.”

“We cannot afford a government that systematically goes against groups that  it opposes, and yet rewards groups that it favors,” he said on the House floor.  Whitfield’s charges come just as the Internal Revenue Service has admitted that  some of its officials were targeting conservative groups for closer  scrutiny.”

Also From TheHill

“The Environmental Protection Agency’s inspector general will review claims  the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) refuses to waive public records  fees for conservative groups while granting the waivers for environmental  organizations.”

“Republicans compared the CEI report to recent revelations that IRS officials  improperly targeted Tea Party groups and pressed for unnecessary information  when those groups sought tax-exempt status.
“When we take this in the  context of what has just been exposed at the IRS … it seems at the EPA, the  same thing is happening,” said Rep. Steve Scalise (R-La.).

“It certainly appears there is a bias,” said Rep. Joe Barton (R-Texas).”

All this makes the scheduled Senate vote for a new EPA head on Thursday a bit more interesting.

____________________________________________________

14 thoughts on “News/Politics 5-17-13

  1. A 180-year-old Baptist newspaper said on Thursday that it was targeted by the Internal Revenue Service for extra scrutiny.

    The Biblical Recorder, published by the North Carolina Baptist State Convention, said it was singled out by the agency in March, Fox News reports.

    Last summer, the Recorder gained national attention after Allan Blume, its editor, published an interview with Chick-fil-A President Dan Cathy.

    Newsmax.com

    http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/baptist-newspaper-irs-target/2013/05/16/id/504951?s=al&promo_code=13856-1#ixzz2TYTLNF5b

    Like

  2. Good article, michelle. To ESPN’s credit (at least last I knew), they hadn’t fired the guy (yet) at any rate. 😉

    Here’s another about how society’s sudden “coming together” in support of gay marriage is a reflection not of a new consensus on the matter, but rather of “conformism” (and that built upon the rubble of what’s been a deteriorating state of marriage that’s been ongoing for years now).

    Easily led, indeed.

    http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/2013/05/16/gay-marriage-conformism/

    Like

  3. The above link also refers to our current lack of critical thinking.

    But moving on, this WSJ piece by Peggy Noonan (which is getting widespread criticism from the left, naturally, who imply that she’s finally “lost it”) touches on a point that has long bothered me about the current president. She writes:

    “The president speaks in the passive voice. He attempts to act out indignation, but he always seems indignant at only one thing: that he’s being questioned at all. That he has to address this. That fate put it on his plate.”

    http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424127887323582904578487460479247792.html

    Like

  4. Michelle,

    Good read from Noonan. The Obama admin’s IRS went after these people because he put a target on them with his rhetoric. But he’s not the only one. This was an orchestrated attack from the left including House and Senate Dems, as well as liberal activist groups and the WH. Now they all act shocked. I’d recommend this as a nice followup.

    http://dailycaller.com/2013/05/17/flashback-schumer-franken-urged-irs-to-target-tea-party-in-2012/

    “Long before the Internal Revenue Service revealed it had improperly targeted conservative 501(c)(4) groups, a group of Democratic senators led by New York Sen. Chuck Schumer urged the IRS to do just that.

    The IRS’s admission last Friday that it had singled out tea party and other groups for extra audits and delays has raised concerns that President Barack Obama’s administration quietly attempted to stymy opponents through intimidation. But many prominent Democrats — including Montana Sen. Max Baucus, Americans United for the Separation of Church and State and the New York Times editorial board — had been publicly calling for tighter restrictions on 501(c)(4) groups affiliated with the tea party and conservatives.

    Last year, Schumer, along with Democratic Sens. Michael Bennet, Sheldon Whitehouse, Jeff Merkley, Tom Udall, Jeanne Shaheen and Al Franken, penned a letter calling on the agency to cap the amount of the political spending by groups masquerading as “social welfare organizations.””

    I guess the Obama admin has decided to go with feigned indignation. And doing what they all do best, play dumb.

    Like

  5. It just keeps getting better.

    http://hotair.com/archives/2013/05/17/lanny-davis-did-wh-counsel-know-irs-was-targeting-conservatives/

    “If it’s true, it would be the first time anyone has linked the issue in any way to the White House. Lanny Davis writes in The Hill today that he’s heard White House counsel Kathryn Ruemmler knew for “several weeks” without informing Barack Obama, and she needs to resign … if his sources are correct.

    So who are his sources? Hmmmm:

    I’ve been told today by several reporters that President Obama’s White House counsel, Kathryn Ruemmler, knew for several days — perhaps weeks —that some Internal Revenue Service officials were engaging in political targeting of conservative groups, and that she did not tell the president as soon as she knew even partial reports about the story.

    With all due respect to someone who has impeccable legal credentials, if she did have such foreknowledge and didn’t inform the president immediately, I respectfully suggest Ms. Ruemmler is in the wrong job and that she should resign.”

    Like

  6. We know IRS chief Miller lied. He did so again today. His contradictory testimony on 3 seperate occasions shows this. We know Carney’s been lying from the get go, we know prominent Dems have been less than truthful of their involvment and knowledge of this, and now another liar exposed. Again. Or still. There’s a whole lot of lyin’ goin’ on.

    http://www.nationalreview.com/article/348428/nine-lies-lois-lerner-kevin-williamson

    “Lie No. 1: Lois Lerner’s apology last Friday was a spontaneous reaction to an unexpected question from an unknown audience member. In fact, the question came from tax lawyer and lobbyist Celia Roady. Ms. Roady has some interesting career highlights: She was part of the 1997 ethics investigation of Newt Gingrich, but, more to the point, she was appointed to the IRS’s Advisory Council on Tax-Exempt and Government Entities by IRS commissioner Douglas Shulman. She is a longtime colleague of Lerner, who is director of tax-exempt organizations. Ms. Roady has declined to comment on whether her question was planted, but it obviously was. The IRS had contacted reporters and encouraged them beforehand to attend the otherwise un-newsworthy event, and it had an entire team of press handlers on hand. So what we have is the staged rollout of what turns out to be — given the rest of this list — a disinformation campaign.”

    “Lie No. 9: Lerner says that there was no political pressure to investigate tea-party groups. In fact, Senator Carl Levin (D., Mich.) repeatedly pressed the agency to investigate conservative groups falling under Lerner’s jurisdiction. What we have, then, is this: Under a Democratic administration, the IRS was under pressure from Democratic elected officials to investigate political enemies of the Democratic party. The agency did so. Its commissioner lied to Congress about its doing so. When the inspector general’s report was about to make these abuses public, the agency staged a classic Washington Friday news rollout at a sleepy American Bar Association tax-law conference, hoping to minimize the bad publicity. Lerner lied to the public about the nature, scope, and extent of the IRS intimidation campaign.”

    Like

Leave a reply to Chas Cancel reply