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Monthly Archives: May 2011

Campaign Finance: keeping up with the birthday boy

14 Saturday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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2012, campaign finance, governor, Jay Nixon, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission

After Lieutenant Governor Peter Kinder’s (r) birthday bash working people decided they needed to help Governor Jay Nixon (D) add to his reelection campaign coffers. Yesterday, at the Missouri Ethics Commission:

C001135 05/13/2011 JAY NIXON FOR MISSOURI IBEW Local Union # 545 421 S. 8th Street Saint Joseph MO 64501 5/12/2011 $1,000.00

C001135 05/13/2011 JAY NIXON FOR MISSOURI IBEW Local 53 Voluntary Political Fund 1100 Admiral Blvd Kansas City MO 64106 5/12/2011 $1,000.00

C001135 05/13/2011 JAY NIXON FOR MISSOURI IBEW Educational Committee 900 Seventh Street, NW Washington DC 20001 5/12/2011 $25,000.00

C001135 05/13/2011 JAY NIXON FOR MISSOURI IBEW Educational Committee 900 Seventh Street, NW Washington DC 20001 5/12/2011 $5,000.00

C001135 05/13/2011 JAY NIXON FOR MISSOURI IBEW Educational Committee 900 Seventh Street, NW Washington DC 20001 5/12/2011 $5,000.00

C001135 05/13/2011 JAY NIXON FOR MISSOURI IBEW Educational Committee 900 Seventh Street, NW Washington DC 20001 5/12/2011 $10,000.00

C001135 05/13/2011 JAY NIXON FOR MISSOURI Local 257 IBEW Voluntary Political Fund 209 Flora Dr Jefferson City MO 65101 5/12/2011 $1,000.00

[emphasis added[

Truman Days 2011 in Kansas City

14 Saturday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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2011, Kansas City, missouri, Truman Days

This evening Blue Girl, RBH, and I are attending Truman Days, sponsored by the Jackson County Democratic Committee, at the Holiday Inn Coco Key across from the Truman Sports Complex in Kansas City. We’re on the fifteenth floor and we have great views of the Kansas City skyline from the Plumbers and Gasfitters hospitality suite. The food and drink is good and plentiful.

In the parking lot. We knew we were at the right place.

The IBEW hospitality suite.

Uh, you got that right.

A play about money: Three acts with a cameo appearance by Claire McCaskill

13 Friday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

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campaign finance, Citizen United, Claire McCaskill, missouri

The first act was Citizen’s United. You know, the Supreme Court decision that opened the floodgates to potentially unlimited corporate money in political campaigns – anonymous donations in actual practice since the decision opened a loophole in campaign finance disclosure requirements.

The second act consisted of an effort to mitigate the mischief wrought by Citizens United via legislation, the Disclose Act, which would have enforced transparency in political giving. Unfortunately, the Disclose Act went down in flames – which suggests that it isn’t only corporations that don’t want folks knowing who will pay for what come next election.

Now comes the third act. President Obama, still in pursuit of transparency, has issued a draft executive order that would:

… require companies bidding for federal contracts to disclose contributions made by directors and officers to federal candidates and parties. It would also require the disclosure of corporate donations to third-party advocacy groups that support or oppose federal candidates with campaign ads.

 

Here I ask you to remember how our Democratic Senator, Claire McCaskill, was loud and clear in her support of the Disclose Act and about the importance of transparency in campaign finance. Now, however, guess who opposes the White House’s effort to secure just a little bit of that transparency that Senator McCaskill once regarded so highly. Senator McCaskill, that’s who.

McCaskill, the chairwoman of Homeland Security’s subcommittee on government contracting, is worried about how such knowledge might affect the contracting process, a concern she expressed in a letter in which she and Senator Joe Lieberman expressed their opposition to the President’s proposal:

We are concerned that requiring businesses to disclose their political activity when making an offer risks injecting politics into the contracting process,” the lawmakers wrote. “Federal contracting law already precludes the consideration of political activity in evaluating contract offers.

Gee, I’m glad to know that federal contracting law precludes such a consideration of political activity – but how do you know that that preclusion is effective if giving is secret? Apart from the issue of appearances, there’s always the old quid pro quo and you can bet the folks getting money from big government contractors know where it comes from.

Why does McCaskill seem to think transparency good sometimes, but not when it comes to those who award plum contracts? I know, I know – what these geniuses are putatively worried about is the situation where a bidder may have donated lots of money to, say, Republicans, and a majority Democratic committee awards the contract in question to a big Democratic donor instead. Clearly, the assumption might be that there are grounds to suspect that political considerations rather than more appropriate criteria came into play.

There are, however, ways to circumvent such concerns. Wouldn’t it, for instance, be easier to codify procedures that rigorously document the selection criteria used?  After all, when nobody knows the source of campaign support for those politicians on the committees awarding all the big contracts – except the politician himself – who knows what kind of preferences may be represented in the selection process? Does McCaskill prefer that nobody knows enough to even raise a question, a what-you-don’t-know-won’t-hurt-you approach?

The draft executive order is just that – a draft, so it may change in a number of ways before it’s all done – we’ll just have to wait for the fourth act to see how it all comes out. I can tell you now, though, that I’d rather risk an appearance of political bias in awarding government contracts than wholesale corruption of the entire political process – which is what we’re facing if nothing is done.

Campaign Finance: it's my (birthday) party and I'll cry (all the way to the bank) if I want to

13 Friday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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2012, governor, missouri, Missouri Ethics Commission, Peter Kinder

Today, according to the Missouri Ethics Commission, Lieutenant Governor Peter Kinder (r) had a really good fundraising day on his birthday:

CONTRIBUTION OF MORE THAN $5,000.00 RECEIVED BY ANY COMMITTEE FROM ANY SINGLE DONOR – TO BE FILED WITHIN 48 HOURS OF RECEIVING THE CONTRIBUTION

C091145 FRIENDS OF PETER KINDER [pdf] 5/12/2011

Jerry Hall

13294 St Hwy BB

Monett, MO 65708

Jack Henry and Associates Executive

5/12/2011

$50,000.00

William Holekamp

5 Barclay Woods

St Louis, MO 63124

HoleKamp Capital Executive

5/12/2011

$50,000.00

[emphasis added]

Gee, we didn’t get an invitation to the party.

Is anybody bringing beer?:

CONTRIBUTION OF MORE THAN $5,000.00 RECEIVED BY ANY COMMITTEE FROM ANY SINGLE DONOR – TO BE FILED WITHIN 48 HOURS OF RECEIVING THE CONTRIBUTION

C000953 MO REPUBLICAN PARTY [pdf] 5/12/2011

Anheuser Busch Companies

One Busch Place

Saint Louis, MO 63118

5/12/2011

$25,000.00

[emphasis added]

Denying gravity

12 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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During the recent budget showdown, as House Republicans made their boldest effort yet-and failed, at least for now-to repeal mainstream climate science, Democratic Representative Ed Markey of Massachusetts managed to find some dark comedy in the situation. It’s customary during legislative debates for members of Congress to preface their remarks with “I rise” in support of (or opposition to) the bill under consideration. As the GOP majority on the House Energy and Commerce committee prepared to pass a bill prohibiting the Environmental Protection Agency from regulating carbon pollution, Markey said that although he opposed the bill, “I won’t rise physically, because I’m worried that Republicans will overturn the law of gravity, sending us floating around the room.”

Make fun, if you will, Rep. Markey, but just remember that the people who are manipulated by Republican puppeteers are happy. The gravity deniers would neither understand nor accept any of the hard science on climate change that Washington University physics professor Carl Bender hammered the audience with at last Monday’s West County Dems meeting.

Gravity deniers needn’t bother their fluffy little heads with the knowledge that humans have been sending greenhouse gases toward the ceiling these last fifty years, as this chart Bender showed us spells out.

Chart showing rise of greenhouse gasses

The horizontal numbers represent the years from 0 A.D. to the present. The vertical numbers are the concentrations of three gases in the atmosphere. You can see them begin to rise about 1750, with the start of the industrial revolution. At that point, the CO2 concentration was about 280 parts per million. By 1956, it had risen to 315 parts per million. Since then, the carbon dioxide level alone has risen almost 30 percent to 400 parts per million. To call that unprecedented doesn’t even begin to capture how astonishing it is what we’ve done.

And those figures don’t even take into account the CFCs we began manufacturing in the 1950s. Before 1950, the concentration of any CFC was absolute zero because it’s a gas that does not occur naturally. You can see what we’ve been adding to the atmosphere.

CFCs in earth's atmosphere

All these gases act like a blanket keeping the earth’s heat in and raising its temperature, as you can see in the last chart. The black wavy line showing the earth’s temperature doesn’t rise steadily, but it is rising inexorably.

Chart showing rise of earth's temperature

None of these absolute scientific verities trouble right wing ostriches. They stick their heads further into the sand so as to avoid hearing what the likes of Dr. Bender would have them know:

There are predictions that range … various computer models predict a temperature rise of two degrees, and some other models, eight degrees. Just to give you a feeling, a half a degree is enough to cause a major dessication. I mean, we’ve had summers, famous summers, where essentially all of the crops just shriveled up, where water had to be carried out to farms across the country in tanker trucks in order to have any food at all. That’s the kind of dry spell that you get from a half a degree. Okay, and they’re predicting somewhere between two degrees and eight degrees. So this is serious business.

There’s no way to put a cheerful spin on that information. I didn’t like hearing it.

You and I, Mr. Markey, understand that humanity, not to mention thousands on thousands of blameless species, could well face extinction. You have every right to make fun of the willfully ignorant power brokers who are taking this planet to perdition. I scorn the fools who adore them. But I envy them too. They are blissfully unaware.

Worse Than China: Internet Blacklist Bill is Back and Worse Than Before

12 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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WASHINGTON, DC – The Internet Blacklist Bill is back — and even worse than before. New draft language show Senator Leahy plans to reintroduce it as the PROTECT IP Act, complete with even more draconian censorship measures that would force search engines and web browsers to censor individual web pages.

According to the text, not only would ISPs have to block access to blacklisted sites but they’d also have to censor any links to blacklisted sites. Web browsers would also have to edit web pages people visit to ensure they didn’t display any links to blacklisted websites. Recently the popular Firefox browser refused a DOJ request to block access to certain sites; the new bill would allow the Attorney General to get an injunction against Firefox forcing them to comply.

Furthermore, it wouldn’t just be the Attorney General who could add sites to the blacklist, but the new bill would allow any copyright holder to get sites blacklisted — sure to result in an explosion of dubious and confused orders.  These individual holders would also be able to force advertisers and others off of the blacklisted sites that they suspected of infringement.  Imagine if Viacom had possessed this unilateral ability to choke off sites when it went after YouTube a few years go, what would have happened to video sharing and Web 2.0?

Demand Progress Executive Director and Internet activist Aaron Swartz said:


“This new Internet censorship bill is the worst net-related bill to be considered by Congress this year. Even China hasn’t gone so far as to insist web browsers delete any mention of censored sites. The PROTECT IP Act is like a virtual 1984 where ISPs and browsers would be forced to send any mention of blacklisted sites down the memory hole.”

Your help is needed to stop this despicable, unjust and illogical bill.  Stop by DemandProgress.org and sign the petiton!

http://act.demandprogress.org/…

An ethical double standard in play for Dana Loesch?

12 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 2 Comments

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Dana Loesch, missouri

What does Dana Loesch have in common with Jayson Blair, Janet Cooke and Mike Barnacle? As the St. Louis Activist Hub has demonstrated very clearly, she like Blair, Cooke and Barnacle has posed as a journalist while making up facts to suit her own ends.

The real question, though, is how Loesch differs from Blair, Barnacle and Cooke.  And it’s an easy question to answer – they all lost their jobs and reputations. So far as I know, Loesch is still on for her CNN gig and she’s still got her talk show, right? Of course there couldn’t  possibly be a downside for her job at Big Government where what Loesch does so well is clearly considered a feature, not a bug – although, on second thought, shouldn’t an association with a site which seems to have as its raison d’être the dishonest political smear perhaps tarnish her credibility elsewhere?  

Nobody has denounced Loesch in the local press, there’ve been no tears and recriminations about tilting the playing field for tea partiers (a la the affirmative brouhaha occasioned by Blair’s lapses). To the contrary, I expect that I’ll continue to see her self-promotion supported in the local press for some time to come.  

So how is Loesch really different from all the other lying journos we’ve learned about in the past? She’s a right winger who has had the great, good fortune to work after Fox News freed conservative would-be journalists like Loesch from the constrictions of truth, permitting them to play fast and loose with the facts to their hearts content. The new motto is “If  you’re on the right, you’re right, even if you’re straight-out lying.”

* Last sentence corrected for clarity.

Claire McCaskill: Spending cap or dunce cap?

12 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Budget cuts, Claire McCaskill, Deficit, McCaskill-Corker, missouri

By now you’ve heard lots and lots about how our esteemed Senator Claire McCaskill has been trying to establish some of the thrifty granny cred beloved, she believes, in outstate Missouri, by shopping around a plan to institute draconian automatic spending caps. You’ve probably also heard that this plan is  “insane” and “a depression maker” – and arguments substantiating these labels are more than convincing. So why hasn’t McCaskill been willing to cut her losses and walk away from this very bad idea?

It isn’t as if her own party doesn’t know better. An article in the Wallstreet Journal reported that the White House and leading Democrats “have mounted a drive to discredit the idea,” even bringing in White House budget director Jacob Lew to school Senators about why caps such as those proposed by Senator McCaskill and Tennessee’s Senator Bob Corker are a really dumb idea. Even Jay Rockefeller, no slacker when it comes to stiffing his own party, has called out the McCaskill-Corker legislation as not too smart. MoveOn.org released a letter signed by 75 prominent economists outlining the ways that McCaskill’s spending cuts approach would be a very serious mistake indeed.

So, once again, why is our ostensibly Democratic senator holding firm in the face of overwhelmingly strong evidence that that what she is proposing is economic idiocy? Could it be that she is that worried about the accusations of “socialism” sure to come from Tea Partying opponents like Sarah Steelman and, possibly, Rep. Todd Akin? Hasn’t she figured out that they are vulnerable now that people are beginning to wake up to the fact that taking an out-of-control chain-saw to government spending may mean cutting more than foreign aid and inner city welfare?  Getting rid of things like Social Security and Medicare isn’t really as popular as one might suppose.

Speaking of cutting Medicare and Social Security, identifying oneself with this particular spending cap proposal may be bad politics as well as bad policy.  McCaskill has stated that she does not support Medicare or Social Security benefit cuts (although she has also indicated that she would be willing to push up the eligibility age for Social Security benefits – a de facto cut). However, a big part of the problem with the McCaskill-Corker  spending caps is that they would entail such massive cuts to both programs that it makes the cuts proposed in Rep. Paul Ryan’s GOP budget fiasco seem mild. Does McCaskill really want to tar herself with that particular brush?

Instituting automatic spending caps is one of those ideas that seem reasonable at first blush and it’s easy to explain to the economically unsophisticated. However, it addresses the wrong problem – the deficit is not caused by out-of-control spending, but by the recession, the Bush tax cuts and two expensive wars in the Mideast. Its effects would be disastrous for those middle class and working people McCaskill claims to support. It reinforces false Republican narratives and weakens the Democratic brand. It doesn’t even make good political sense – why would a Democrat want to be known for trying to shove Medicare into a grave while it is still alive and kicking?  

Could it be that McCaskill believes that at this point she has gone so far out on this particular rotten limb that she has no choice but to hang on? I have often been disturbed by Claire McCaskill’s choices – but I’ve never thought she was dumb. At least not until now.

 

Senator Roy Blunt (r): let's keep Big Oil on the dole

12 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

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Big Oil, missouri, Roy Blunt

“…If the proposed changes in tax policy result in increases in the price of gasoline, it would generally be through an increase in the price of oil. However, the price of oil is determined on world markets and tends not to be sensitive to small cost variations experienced in regional production areas. In the recent market environment, with the price of oil averaging approximately $90 per barrel over the period December 2010 through February 2011, and the current price over $100 per barrel, prices are well in excess of costs and a small increase in taxes would be less likely to reduce oil output, and hence increase petroleum product (gasoline) prices…” – Congressional Research Service, May 11, 2011

Senator Roy Blunt (r) never seems to miss an opportunity to promote corporate welfare:

Blunt Slams Higher Oil Tax Plan

Thursday, May 12, 2011

With gasoline prices approaching $4 a gallon in Missouri, and even higher elsewhere, Democrats in Congress,including Senator Claire McCaskill are calling  for higher taxes on domestic oil and gas production.

Missouri’s junior Senator Roy Blunt says that’s a recipe for economic disaster. Blunt says while nobody wants to defend big oil, we should be doing more to encourage domestic production.

Blunt says not only will higher taxes be passed along at the pump, it will make  us MORE dependent on foreign oil not less.

Blunt made his comments on the KSGF Morning Show with Nick Reed.

Wrong again, Roy.

The full Congressional Research Service memorandum:

Congressional Research Service

MEMORANDUM May 11, 2011

To: Honorable Harry M. Reid

Subject: Tax Policy and Gasoline Prices

This memorandum is written in response to your request for an analysis of the extent to which proposed tax changes on the oil industry are likely to affect domestic gasoline prices. The specific tax proposals that you requested be considered are the Section 199 deduction for domestic production, the repeal of the current expensing of intangible drilling costs provision, revision of the dual capacity taxpayer rules, percentage depletion, and the tertiary injectants deduction.

Background

The oil and natural gas industries benefit from existing tax policies. These provisions of the tax code, which many identify as tax subsidies, reduce the tax liability of the industries, and/or result in tax treatment that differs from that applied to other industries. As a result, these tax provisions encourage related activities to a greater extent than under a more neutral tax system, possibly altering the decisions made by affected firms with respect to investment, output, and pricing. If these provisions are repealed, it is likely that the economic behavior of the industries might be altered to an extent related to the size of the tax changes. The economic theory of taxation takes the point of view that corporations do not have an independent capability to pay taxes, only people can pay taxes. The implication of this viewpoint is that corporate income tax payments will ultimately be shifted to shareholders, owners of the factors of production, or consumers. Using this framework, the question of whether the tax provisions identified in your request will affect gasoline prices is one of whether the nature of the tax provision is such that forward shifting of the burden of the tax to consumers is likely, or whether the tax burden will fall on the shareholders in the form of reduced profit. The price of gasoline is composed of four components. The largest component of the price is crude oil,67%, followed by federal, state, and local excise and sales taxes on gasoline sales, 13%, refining expenses, 11%, and distribution and marketing expenses, 9%. If the proposed changes in tax policy result in increases in the price of gasoline, it would generally be through an increase in the price of oil. However, the price of oil is determined on world markets and tends not to be sensitive to small cost variations experienced in regional production areas. In the recent market environment, with the price of oil averaging approximately $90 per barrel over the period December 2010 through February 2011, and the current price over $100 per barrel, prices are well in excess of costs and a small increase in taxes would be less likely to reduce oil output, and hence increase petroleum product (gasoline) prices.

Section 199

The Section 199 deduction for the oil industry is a 6% deduction from net income, capped by limitations of payroll size. For the purpose of economic analysis, the repeal of the Section 199 deduction is equivalent to an increase in the tax on corporate profit. It is widely accepted that a proportional change in taxes on profit affects neither the firm’s incremental costs or revenues, and therefore does not change its behavior with respect to output. Since output does not change, there is little reason to believe that the price of oil, or gasoline, consumers face will increase.4Because Section 199 provides an incentive for domestic production compared to foreign production, some have claimed that the result of repeal would be greater dependence on foreign sourced oil and natural gas. In the short-run it is unlikely that this would occur due to the nature of oil and natural gas production. Once a well is in the producing phase, production tends to be maximized, within the limits of sound oilfield management techniques. With current oil prices at, or near, $100 per barrel in the United States, it is unlikely that firms will slow production, or close wells as the result of the loss of the Section 199 deduction.

Intangible Drilling Costs

Repeal of the immediate expensing of intangible drilling costs provision and replacement with a form of cost amortization more consistent with depreciation methods common in other industries likely will have no effect on current U.S. oil production, and hence no effect on current gasoline prices. The purpose of the expensing provision is to enhance the investment returns for investors in what has historically been a risky activity: exploring for, and developing hydrocarbon resources. Since the provision has little effect on wells already in production, available output and prices should be unaffected if the provision is repealed and replaced with less favorable amortization procedures. Wood MacKenzie, a consultancy, determined that the sum effect of eliminating the Section 199 deduction and the repeal of the expensing of intangible drilling expenses would have an effect on the rate of return to exploration, lowering the return of marginal projects, and reducing over-all domestic exploration and development activity by U.S. firms. However, the conclusion is sensitive to the level of oil and natural gas prices. High prices can raise rates of return substantially. Natural gas projects are more likely than oil projects to be affected by the tax changes because they are experiencing low market prices due to the volume of non-conventional gas production that has entered the market in the past several years. The Wood MacKenzie study did not conclude that U.S. gasoline prices would be affected by the tax changes.

Dual Capacity Rules

The oil industry has benefited from the ability to deduct very broadly defined foreign income tax payments from their U.S. tax liability since the 1950s. If the definition of what constituted an actual income tax payment were tightened and foreign governments did not reduce their charges correspondingly, the industries’ domestic, as well as total income tax burden would likely increase. However, this provision again is a tax on profit, and in line with the economic theory of taxation, should have no effect on the firms output or pricing decisions, and therefore no effect on the price of gasoline. The incidence of the tax would appear to be on shareholders. The change in the dual capacity tax payer rules might make over
seas investment that leads to foreign profits less attractive to the companies than investment in the United States. This could lead the firms to enhance domestic capital spending leading to increased domestic production and reduced oil dependency.

Percentage Depletion

The percentage depletion allowance was repealed for the major oil companies by the Tax Reduction Act of 1975 (Pub.L. No. 94-12). Percentage depletion remains generally in effect only for the independent oil companies. As a result the percentage depletion allowance should no longer be a factor in investment, output and pricing decisions by the five major oil companies.

Teritiary Injectants Deduction

Costs associated with the use of tertiary injectants are currently treated as deductible expenses. Expensing of these costs encourages their use and enhances oil production levels. For smaller, independent exploration and development firms the cost incentive could be important. However, the five major oil companies, to which repeal would apply, earned over $32 billion in net income in the first quarter of 2011. Repeal of the deduction for the industry is estimated by the Obama administration to yield only $6million in revenue in 2012. Only a part of the $6 million revenue estimate would be paid by the five major oil companies. As a result, it is likely that repeal of the deduction, with a change to capitalization, or amortization, of these costs, would have only a small effect on oil production or pricing, especially in a market where oil returns over $100 per barrel. In periods of low oil prices the repeal of the deduction could have a larger effect. The effect on domestic gasoline prices is likely to be small.

General Considerations

The magnitude of the revenue effects of these tax changes might be important in evaluating their effects on the oil industry. The five provisions, taken together, are expected to raise approximately $1.2 billion in 2012. For the calendar year 2010, the revenues of the five largest oil companies were approximately $1.5 trillion with additional revenues accruing to the non-majors. The net incomes, after tax, of these five companies totaled over $76 billion with additional earnings accruing to the non-majors. The total expected tax revenues are only 5% of the earnings of the five largest firms in the industry and a smaller percentage of the total industry. Even if the changes in taxes did impact domestic, or overseas exploration and development activity, that does not necessarily imply that less oil would be available in the U.S. market. More might be imported, with little or no effect on gasoline prices. Political unrest, expectations effects on financial markets, macroeconomic growth trends, the value of the dollar and a host other factors have contributed to fluctuations in the price of oil and gasoline. Any effect due to changes in the tax treatment of the oil industry would be hard to separate from the changes due to other factors, given the size of the relative magnitudes.

Previously: Senator Claire McCaskill (D): end giveaways for Big Oil (May 10, 2011)

A proposed constitutional amendment would guarantee the right to privately pray

12 Thursday May 2011

Posted by Michael Bersin in Uncategorized

≈ 1 Comment

in public places in Missouri. We should also put on the ballot a proposed constitutional amendment guaranteeing the right to criticize politicians who pander to religious paranoids. Oh wait. That’s already a right.

My point exactly.

Democrats in the lege pointed out that the right to privately pray is already guaranteed in both the U.S. and Missouri constitutions. They didn’t bother opposing this silliness, apparently believing that there’s nothing to be gained from rattling the chains of folk who would be better served if they noticed how Corpublicans are picking their pockets.

How many times do we need to enshrine this already firmly planted idea? Apparently as often as Republicans deem it useful to get their patsies to the polls.

Hands in prayer

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