Sunday, May 31, 2009

BEWARE OF SOCIALIZED MEDICINE





Barack Obama has called on his minions to put the pressure on Congress to pass his wholly socialist medicine plan this year. He is trying to stampede the herd into additional foolish decisions beyond those already made. Don't drink the single payer kool aid. Such a system is a documented failure in the UK and in Canada. We currently have the best health care available on the planet. Government run socialized medicine will ruin it here as it has elsewhere. After all, the rest of the world does not come to America for medical treatment because their system is superior to ours.


Our broken system of health care is much in need of repair, but not with what he is proposing. Read the tenants of the petition plus the information below. If you can understand the logic and reason involved, sign the petition.


This is critically important. Single payer government provided health care is represents a giant step into institutionalized socialism. Do not allow these far leftists to destroy this great country.


NATIONAL CENTER FOR POLICY ANALYSIS

Ten Steps to a Patient-Friendly Health Care System


We have a health care crisis because doctors, patients, employers and employees are trapped in a wasteful, broken system that is often only a little better than government-run health care in Canada. To solve our problems, your doctor needs the opportunity to produce higher-quality, less-costly care. As a patient, you need access to services you are not now getting. At the workplace, you need access to health insurance that costs less and gives you more. With appropriate changes in federal policy, we can do the following:


1. Free the Doctor: Your doctor will be able to act as your agent rather than the agent of your insurance company, your employer, or the government, and
help you make the best purchases of drugs, tests and specialist services. Your doctor will be able to communicate with you by telephone and email and
provide other services that today’s insurance won’t pay for.
2. Free the Patient: You will be able to manage more of your own care and more of the money that pays for that care, instead of having all your health care dollars controlled by your insurance company, your employer or the government. You will also be able to purchase services you do not now get (e.g.,
telephone and email consultations and house calls) and avoid paying for services you don’t want or need.
3. Free the Employee: Your employer will be able to help you obtain health insurance that is portable — going with you when you change jobs.
4. Free the Employer: Employers will be able to make a monthly fixed contribution to make the premium payment for your personal health
insurance.
5. Free the Workplace: Employers will be able to give their employees choices between taxable wages and non-taxed benefits. If you are covered
by a spouse’s plan, you will be able to obtain higher wages instead of duplicate coverage. If you are a part-time worker, you will be able to trade less pay for benefits you currently don’t get.
6. Free the Uninsured: If you must purchase your own health insurance, you will get the same tax relief that is currently given to employer-provided coverage.
7. Free the Kids: Children who have lost their private health insurance because of the lure of a free State Children’s Health Insurance Plan (S-CHIP) will be able to return to the private sector where access to care is much better. If you qualify, the money S-CHIP now spends will be available to you to help pay for private insurance.
8. Free the Parents: Instead of having one parent on Medicaid, another in an employer plan, and a child on S-CHIP, public dollars will be used to help enroll all three in one private-sector, family-friendly plan.
9. Free the Chronically Ill: Health plans will be able to specialize in treating such conditions as asthma, diabetes, cancer and heart disease. If you are chronically ill, these plans will compete to meet your special needs and they will be rewarded based on their success.
10. Free the Early Retiree: Employers will be able to help retirees who are not yet old enough for Medicare to obtain low-cost, high-quality health insurance with untaxed dollars — just as they do for their active employees. You will be able to pay your share of the premium with pre-tax dollars as well; and the insurance will be owned by you.


A more complete discussion of how to produce these changes is at
John Goodman’s Congressional Testimony.


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Saturday, May 30, 2009

WHY BIGGER GOVERNMENT IS A BAD THING

Do you think more government is the solution? If so, you are a part of an ever increasing problem. Bigger government is a bad thing in oh so many ways.

The accompanying story outlines just one of the less often cited reasons why that is true. One thing you can count on, other than the sun rises in the east, is that with big government comes waste, fraud and abuse. And the bigger the government, the more we get of each.

All those stimulus tax dollars that are supposed to drive our economic recovery must first pass through the filter of government waste, fraud and abuse. And not just the zillions of government employees referred to in the article. But that is another discussion.

Sending our money to government for them to spend is exceeding less productive then spending it ourselves. We are far less wasteful with our own funds than is the bureaucracy that is big government.

Those who advocate bigger government in order to better serve the public simply do not understand how counter productive that idea is in practice. Taxpayers are basically robbed of a significant percentage of the resources they are required to contribute to government in the form of taxes.

As the story below illustrates, funds are filched at every turn. Everybody in the "system" seems to get their cut, except of course those hard working middle class families that foot the bill. They get left behind while the bureaucrats and our politicians laugh all the way to the bank.

Anyone who works hard and pays taxes and believes that big government is a good way to go should be made to send in everything they earn to that end. In their case, ignorance is it's own reward so who needs money.

Those in favor of growing government are no more than tools and fools. After all, "A fool and his money are soon parted".


Report chronicles abuse of federal travel cards
By JIM ABRAMS, Associated Press

WASHINGTON – Laser eye surgery may improve one's visual horizons, but it doesn't qualify as a travel expense, a congressional office says in a report on abuses of the federal travel card system.
The Congressional Research Service, in a recent survey, found that federal employees in a wide range of agencies misuse travel cards to buy goods for their personal use, travel first-class or simply bilk the government.
Among the examples: a Federal Aviation Administration employee who charged $3,700 for laser eye surgery; a Pentagon employee who received reimbursements for 13 airline tickets totaling almost $10,000 that he never purchased; and a State Department employee who took an unauthorized trip to Hawaii on a first-class ticket.
Auditors had also determined that certain agencies have not collected reimbursement for millions of dollars worth of unused airline tickets and had repeatedly failed to pay travel card invoices in a timely manner, according to the report.
"A private travel agency would be out of business running this kind of operation," said Scott Amey, general counsel of the independent Project on Government Oversight. He said the CRS report points out the need for immediate improvements, including better oversight of all transactions and increased penalties for misuse.
A 1998 law requires any federal employee who travels more than five times a year to use travel cards. The CRS said travel card spending increased from $4.39 billion in fiscal year 1999 to $8.28 billion in fiscal year 2008.
The report said one major problem is the failure of agencies to determine whether tickets have been used. It cited a Government Accountability Office study finding that over a seven-year period the Department of Defense may have purchased more than $100 million in airline tickets that were not used and had not been processed for refunds. Similarly, the State Department failed to seek reimbursement for $6 million in unused airline tickets over an 18-month period.
The report also referred to Office of Management and Budget data showing that the Pentagon had a delinquency rate on centrally billed travel card accounts of 20 percent. NASA's delinquency rate was almost 16 percent. Federal agencies received about $187 million in rebates from card vendors in fiscal 2008, and failure to pay bills in a timely fashion prevented agencies from earning the maximum rebates.
Finally, the CRS said some agencies did a poor job of ensuring that premium-class accommodations were used only when justified. A 2003 audit by the GAO found that over a two-year period the Pentagon bought $123 million in premium-class tickets. Of that, $90 million were not authorized, not justified, or both.
The CRS report dealt only with travel cards. Federal agencies also use purchase cards for supplies and services and fleet cards for fuel and service of vehicles.
Congress has held several hearings on abuses in the chargecard system, and last week the Senate Homeland Security and Government Affairs Committee approved legislation requiring agencies to establish safeguards and controls for card systems and set penalties for violations.
"Agencies can't continue to look the other way while employees are going on shopping sprees at the taxpayers' expense," said Sen. Charles Grassley, R-Iowa, sponsor of the Senate bill. He said that among the fraudulent or questionable charge card tabs have been kitchen appliances, sapphire rings, gambling, cruises, gentlemen's clubs and legalized brothels.
Rep. Joe Wilson, R-S.C., has a companion bill in the House.

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc

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Friday, May 29, 2009

HEALTH CARE NIGHTMARE

Most of us can agree on a few things about health care in America that are important to note. Those things include the following.

1. Among nations of any size, the United States has the best health care available in the world.
2. Our system of health care is broken and must be repaired. It cannot continue in its current form.
3. Single payer health care systems in the UK and in Canada do not work well at all and cannot begin to compare to the quality of care available here.
4. The 50 million people without health insurance in the United States number is oft repeated but never confirmed with actual hard evidence so the actual number is an unknown.
5. The answers to our health care issues are complex, not easily resolved and require careful, thoughtful consideration.

Thus, the argument presented by Obama in the article below, essentially a 'now or never' position, is simply specious. There is no emergency. No rush is necessary. In fact, hurrying the process appears to be nothing more than a 'stampede the herd' effort by the Obama gang to push through their preferred program before anyone has a clue how to pay for it or, more significantly, how it would impact our quality of medicine.

Politicians might want to get this done this year for their own self-serving reasons. Screw them. They have the best health care money can buy provided to them by us, the taxpayers. Maybe a good starting point in this discussion is to insure that they will end up with the same "free" health care coverage that they want to force upon the rest of us. That just might slow down the rush to get this done NOW.

There is no value in copying the UK or Canada. Both systems are rife with major problems and neither provides the kind of health care quality that we enjoy here.

We need a system that fits our needs, not a copy of something from somewhere else. So far, our national level efforts at medical care, namely Medicare and Veterans Health Care, are wholly or partially failed. Medicare especially.

Obama wants to create a stampede. That is a sure sign that we all need to take our time and do this right. In the most innovative nation in history, this can be achieved.

Just not overnight.



Obama says health care a must this year _ or never
By PHILIP ELLIOTTAssociated Press Writer

WASHINGTON (AP) - President Barack Obama warned Thursday that if Congress doesn't deliver health care legislation by the end of the year the opportunity will be lost, a plea to political supporters to pressure lawmakers to act.
"If we don't get it done this year, we're not going to get it done," Obama told supporters by phone as he flew home on Air Force One from a West Coast fundraising trip.
Obama's political organization, Organizing for America, invited campaign volunteers to a midday conference call to describe a nationwide June 6 kickoff for its health care campaign. The president's message to his re-election campaign-in-waiting was simple: If volunteers don't pressure lawmakers to support the White House's goal on health care, Washington would drag its feet and nothing would change.
"The election in November, it didn't bring about change. It gave us an opportunity for change," Obama said.
The presidential plea came as lawmakers prepare for an aggressive schedule of work aimed at producing comprehensive health care overhaul bills in the House and Senate by August.
Committee hearings—and soon thereafter votes—will start next week, as soon as lawmakers return to Washington from a weeklong recess. Many members of Congress spent the break holding town hall meetings and other forums with their constituents about health care, even as opponents and supporters of Obama's plans ramped up television and radio ads for and against.
"I think the status quo is unacceptable and that we've got to get it done this year," Obama repeated, ginning up his supporters for a door-to-door and phone-to-phone canvass similar to his presidential campaign.
Obama's top aides, including former campaign manager David Plouffe, told the supporters that they have a challenge ahead of them.
"If the country stands with the president and if the country is demanding health care reform than we'll get it done; Washington will not have any option but to follow us," Plouffe said on the call, which was not announced on the White House's official schedule.
The president's conversation with his supporters was part pep talk and part a nod to political reality. Obama is looking to use his network of supporters to deliver a campaign promise, and if he seeks a second term in 2012—an almost certainty—he hopes to keep many of those volunteers engaged in person and online.
The president said the costs of the nation's $2.5 trillion health care system are crushing families and businesses and pose the largest threat to the economy.
The White House is leaving it to lawmakers to work out the details of a health care plan, but Obama has said it should ensure choice and lower costs, while extending coverage to the 50 million Americans now uninsured. The cost of accomplishing that has been estimated around $1.5 trillion, and figuring out how to pay is emerging as a major challenge for Congress and the White House.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press.

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Thursday, May 28, 2009

CHICAGO MOB STYLE WHITE HOUSE

The style repeatedly demonstrated by Team Obama since landing in the White House would make Al Capone proud. The thuggery of Chicago politics is now fully on display in our nations capital. We should all be pleased as punch at what Obama has wrought within the Executive branch of our government.

The accompanying article reports the approach being taken by the White House relative to their just named SCOTUS nominee, Latina Sonia Sotomayor. It is unprecedented and it is telling.

What is publicly on display in this instance is the politics of a court nomination by intimidation. The message is unmistakable. It is: oppose us and we will come after you with a vengeance.

It is not an attempt to make the case in favor of Sotomayor. On the contrary! It is a warning that anyone who disagrees with their choice will end up sleeping with the political fishes.

Veiled threats, it would seem, would be far beneath the dignity of the spokesman for the President. It is stunning that this White House deems such behavior as appropriate and befitting of the single most powerful elected official in the world. But those with a background of punk and thug political street training are not really prepared to operate differently. What a travesty.

I doubt that mob style politics is what most "hope and change" voters were expecting. But it is what they, and we, get to live with.

Should we expect that opponents of Sotomayor will wake up to find a horse's head next to them in bed? Apparently the time has come to make good with the Don.


W.H. to Sotomayor critics: Be 'careful'
By: Alexander Burns and Josh Gerstein

White House press secretary Robert Gibbs issued a pointed warning to opponents of Judge Sonia Sotomayor’s Supreme Court nomination Wednesday, urging critics to measure their words carefully during a politically charged confirmation debate. “I think it is probably important for anybody involved in this debate to be exceedingly careful with the way in which they’ve decided to describe different aspects of this impending confirmation,” Gibbs said. He was replying to a question from CBS’s Chip Reid about a blog post by former House Speaker Newt Gingrich accusing Sotomayor of imposing identity politics on the bench and declaring: “A white man racist nominee would be forced to withdraw. A Latina woman racist should also withdraw.” “I think we're satisfied that, when the people of America and the people of the Senate get a chance to look at more than just the blog of a former lawmaker… they'll come to the same conclusion that the president did” about Sotomayor’s qualifications, Gibbs replied. In 2001, then-White House press secretary Ari Fleischer drew criticism in the press for suggesting Americans “need to watch what they say” in the overheated aftermath of the Sept. 11, 2001, terror attacks. Hispanic leaders cautioned that critics, such as Gingrich, risked alienating Latinos by seeming to pronounce judgment before Sotomayor has an opportunity to defend herself. “If there is the perception that somehow she is being treated unfairly or they are distorting her record or comments, I think there will be a backlash in the Latino community,” said Janet Murguía, president of the National Council of La Raza. “All we want is for the process to be respectful and fair. There could be great resentment within the Latino community if it is seen somehow that she is not being treated with the respect due to a Supreme Court nominee.” Murguía said Hispanics are “extremely excited” about the nomination. “This is a monumental moment for the Latino community. It’s a milestone moment,” she said. The White House also took shots at politicians and commentators who have questioned whether Sotomayor has the intellectual capacity for the Supreme Court. In a statement Tuesday, Senator John Ensign (R-Nev.) said he planned “to thoroughly review Judge Sotomayor’s record to make sure she has the right intellect and understands the proper role of a judge.” “A lot of people in the last couple of days…they've mentioned ‘intellect,” Gibbs said. “I'm not sure what number they graduated in their class at Princeton, but my sense is it's not second.”
Latino activists were up in arms over what one called “innuendo” challenging the smarts of Sotomayor, who graduated with highest honors from Princeton and was editor of the law review at Yale Law School. “Her intelligence is apparent. It is outrageous that she is being attacked on those grounds,” said Ramona Romero, president of the Hispanic National Bar Association. “I’m assuming these folks are grasping at straws….I wonder if she were a white male we would be hearing that about somebody with the same credentials.” Gingrich and other commentators leveling the charge that Sotomayor is racist have seized on her comments in a 2001 lecture about how her Hispanic background contributed to her judicial work. “I would hope that a wise Latina woman with the richness of her experiences would more often than not reach a better conclusion than a white male who hasn’t lived that life,” Sotomayor said.
The Hispanic Bar’s Romero accused Gingrich of deliberately savaging Sotomayor at a time when tradition dictates she maintain public silence in advance of her confirmation hearings. “It reflects extreme attention-seeking behavior,” she said. “He is doing it precisely because he knows the protocol and knows she cannot speak for herself on these issues right now.” Gibbs said critics had taken out of context Sotomayor’s attempt to declare that “she has lived a different life than some people have, based on her upbringing—that she understands that.” He said Sotomayor was simply acknowledging that a different background “could certainly lead to different conclusions.” Journalists at the White House briefing were dubious about the press secretary’s explanation, with several shouting back in unison: “She said ‘better.’” “Look at the totality of it,” Gibbs replied. To build momentum for the nominee, the White House organized a conference call Wednesday with several prominent attorneys who support Sotomayor. They touted her professionalism and fielded questions about rulings she might make in the future. “This is a lawyer’s lawyer,” said Martha Minow, a Harvard Law professor who attended Yale with Sotomayor. “I am so struck by her mastery….This is a pro. This is a very sophisticated person. This is what you see when you have a summa cum laude graduate of Princeton.” Several of those on the White House call argued that one of Sotomayor’s most controversial rulings—the terse dismissal of white New Haven firefighters’ complaint of reverse discrimination—illustrated that she respected her limits as a judge. “That case I also think is an example of her instincts for judicial restraint,” said William Marshall, a law professor at the University of North Carolina and former deputy counsel to President Bill Clinton. “She was part of a panel that decided they were bound by previous Second Circuit decisions.” Minow acknowledged that Sotomayor has a reputation for aggressively questioning lawyers who argue before her. “I think it’s fair to say she is often what you might describe as a ‘hot bench….. She’s very active and if somebody would prefer to have a passive bench, they’re not going to get that with her,” the law professor said. Asked how Sotomayor might rule on gay marriage or admitting gays to the military, Minow said, “It’s just a guessing game…She’s Catholic. I think that she’s had clerks that are gay. There really is no indication about that.” The White House said Sotomayor was making phone calls Wednesday to Senate leaders and was expected to begin in person visits to Capitol Hill next week. Meanwhile, in an effort to build support among Latinos, Obama sent out a Spanish language e-mail Wednesday calling Sotomayor’s nomination a “historic moment” and praising her as “distinguished in the academic field.” Obama’s message, distributed by the Democratic National Committee, urged recipients to join the “conversation” about his nominee. Backers of Sotomayor also rolled out a TV ad campaign Wednesday, while critics launched new Web ads and a Web site to oppose her confirmation.

© 2009 Capitol News Company, LLC

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Wednesday, May 27, 2009

WHAT HIS GITMO SPEECH REVEALS ABOUT OBAMA

To begin with, Obama did not want to have to make a Gitmo speech at all. Having to defend himself on what he believed was a popular position, namely closing Gitmo post haste, was not in his game plan. He considered the issue a winner, not one on which he had to take up the cause of self-defense. Right out of the blocks that tells us that our President is out of touch with the preferences of most Americans on this issue. It appears he suffers from being a bit self absorbed relative to his view of his own elitist opinions.

Then we see a bit of a know-it-all thought process on the part of team Obama. They suffer somewhat from the delusion that by ascending to the presidency with ease, they accrued the automatic endorsement of the public relative to their various plans and positions. Thus Obama early on went to Congress with a request for the money necessary to close Gitmo. But he did not, at the same time, provide a plan to do so. He assumed that issues like where the world's worst terrorists would go post closing was a detail that really was no one else's business. But the Democrat dominated Congress tends to be much more responsive to public opinion and thus refused to provide the funding. Such an open rebuke forced Obama to directly address the entire Gitmo issue. A serious political miscalculation that belies his image of polished post partisan politician.

So he goes to the National Archive to deliver his remarks. What he had to say, provided below, and the fact that he had to say it reveals much about the 44th POTUS including the following observations.

Notably, he spoke for almost an hour which immediately tips us off to the fact that he was feeling the need to present a lengthy defense of his long held position. Normally, if someone is confident they are in the right there is little need to attempt to overwhelm the opposition with argument. Certainly the less confident one is, the more argument they will put forth.

In a style true to the mindset of this President, his tone and tenor was that of a college law professor lecturing his somewhat uninformed students. Obama seems to be a man who sees himself as somewhere above most Americans, those church going gun advocates who make up the bulk of our population. His holier than thou, condescending attitude often is manifest, as was the case in this speech, by the 'looking down his nose' angle with which he holds his head when speaking. But his words and arguments often reveal this tendency as well. Obama projects an Ivy League elitist air which puts lots of people ill at ease.

He played the role of a legal advocate throughout this speech. Not a surprise, since that is the extent of his training. The problem here is that most of his countrymen have a rather low opinion of lawyers and playing one while in the White House is not useful. Lawyers are often poor leaders.

Far too much of his speech was self-centered. Early on he had an entire paragraph of the speech dedicated to his own "American journey". Worst of all, he referred to himself through the use of 'I, me or my' in this speech at least 113 times. It is well established that the best leaders lead by inspiring and providing clear vision, not by talking about themselves. Doing so makes Obama appear insecure and immature. Not a reassuring thought for most of us.

Presenting the standard far left mantra in this speech about how "torture" exacerbates our position in the world vis-a-vis terrorists was a poor man's substitute for what was really called for on this occasion: a plan on how to close Gitmo. None was forthcoming. Obama rushed out to defend himself relative to his announcement to close Gitmo, but continued to have no plan whatsoever to gain that end. In other words, no vision. No inspirational goal for the nation to follow. Blathering on about "torture", something most Americans disagree with Obama on, was an indicator of an ill prepared effort to justify oneself, nothing more.

What may be the most disturbing aspect of his remarks was the effort throughout the speech to remind the world that he inherited all of the problems related to Gitmo. He repeatedly pointed the finger of blame at the Bush administration. In other words, he made excuses for the difficulties he faces in closing Gitmo. In essence, he was like a child caught by a parent doing something wrong. His defense: it is not my fault. As anyone paying attention understands, excuse making is for losers, not leaders. Obama did not create Gitmo but he did pledge to close it. The difficulties he faces in that process are his, not his predecessors. Obama is the one who promised to close it down by a date certain. Not anyone else.

His summary message of this speech is of interest as well. "We will not be safe if we see national security as a wedge that divides America - it can and must be a cause that unites us as one people, as one nation." Who could disagree with that? Reasonable people across the political spectrum can agree on that sentiment.

So which political party declared the war in Iraq lost, called Bush a criminal under international law, called for the closing of Gitmo (but won't provide the funds to do so), accused our troops of being 'Nazis' and even had high profile members, including Obama, vote against funding for our troops in the field during a time of war?

There is no doubt that partisanship should stop at the 'water's edge' but the truth is that our war on terrorism has been politicized almost from the beginning by Democrat opponents of Bush, Obama among them.

Obama's closing thought sounds wonderful on paper but it is something he himself has refused to practice. What he is really saying is that, as long as you fully and completely - without question - agree with him, we will be united as a people and a nation. However, if he does not agree with a counter position, it is the other side that is being disingenuous and disloyal.

What that tells us is that there is no "hope and change" here. There is only partisan politics as usual but with a cool and hip, biracial, smooth speech making veneer.

Beneath that surface lurks the real Obama who is not the same as advertised.


President Obama today gives a speech on "Protecting Our Security and Our Values" at the National Archives Museum. His remarks, as prepared for delivery, follow:
These are extraordinary times for our country. We are confronting an historic economic crisis. We are fighting two wars. We face a range of challenges that will define the way that Americans will live in the 21st century. There is no shortage of work to be done, or responsibilities to bear.
And we have begun to make progress. Just this week, we have taken steps to protect American consumers and homeowners, and to reform our system of government contracting so that we better protect our people while spending our money more wisely. The engines of our economy are slowly beginning to turn, and we are working toward historic reform of health care and energy. I welcome the hard work that has been done by the Congress on these and other issues.
In the midst of all these challenges, however, my single most important responsibility as President is to keep the American people safe. That is the first thing that I think about when I wake up in the morning. It is the last thing that I think about when I go to sleep at night.
This responsibility is only magnified in an era when an extremist ideology threatens our people, and technology gives a handful of terrorists the potential to do us great harm. We are less than eight years removed from the deadliest attack on American soil in our history. We know that al Qaeda is actively planning to attack us again. We know that this threat will be with us for a long time, and that we must use all elements of our power to defeat it.
Already, we have taken several steps to achieve that goal. For the first time since 2002, we are providing the necessary resources and strategic direction to take the fight to the extremists who attacked us on 9/11 in Afghanistan and Pakistan. We are investing in the 21st century military and intelligence capabilities that will allow us to stay one step ahead of a nimble enemy. We have re-energized a global non-proliferation regime to deny the world's most dangerous people access to the world's deadliest weapons, and launched an effort to secure all loose nuclear materials within four years. We are better protecting our border, and increasing our preparedness for any future attack or natural disaster. We are building new partnerships around the world to disrupt, dismantle, and defeat al Qaeda and its affiliates. And we have renewed American diplomacy so that we once again have the strength and standing to truly lead the world.
These steps are all critical to keeping America secure. But I believe with every fiber of my being that in the long run we also cannot keep this country safe unless we enlist the power of our most fundamental values. The documents that we hold in this very hall - the Declaration of Independence, the Constitution, the Bill of Rights -are not simply words written into aging parchment. They are the foundation of liberty and justice in this country, and a light that shines for all who seek freedom, fairness, equality and dignity in the world. I stand here today as someone whose own life was made possible by these documents.
My father came to our shores in search of the promise that they offered. My mother made me rise before dawn to learn of their truth when I lived as a child in a foreign land. My own American journey was paved by generations of citizens who gave meaning to those simple words - "to form a more perfect union." I have studied the Constitution as a student; I have taught it as a teacher; I have been bound by it as a lawyer and legislator. I took an oath to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution as Commander-in-Chief, and as a citizen, I know that we must never - ever - turn our back on its enduring principles for expedience sake.
I make this claim not simply as a matter of idealism. We uphold our most cherished values not only because doing so is right, but because it strengthens our country and keeps us safe. Time and again, our values have been our best national security asset - in war and peace; in times of ease and in eras of upheaval.
Fidelity to our values is the reason why the United States of America grew from a small string of colonies under the writ of an empire to the strongest nation in the world. It is the reason why enemy soldiers have surrendered to us in battle, knowing they'd receive better treatment from America's armed forces than from their own government. It is the reason why America has benefited from strong alliances that amplified our power, and drawn a sharp and moral contrast with our adversaries.
It is the reason why we've been able to overpower the iron fist of fascism, outlast the iron curtain of communism, and enlist free nations and free people everywhere in common cause and common effort.
From Europe to the Pacific, we have been a nation that has shut down torture chambers and replaced tyranny with the rule of law. That is who we are. And where terrorists offer only the injustice of disorder and destruction, America must demonstrate that our values and institutions are more resilient than a hateful ideology.
After 9/11, we knew that we had entered a new era - that enemies who did not abide by any law of war would present new challenges to our application of the law; that our government would need new tools to protect the American people, and that these tools would have to allow us to prevent attacks instead of simply prosecuting those who try to carry them out.
Unfortunately, faced with an uncertain threat, our government made a series of hasty decisions. And I believe that those decisions were motivated by a sincere desire to protect the American people. But I also believe that - too often - our government made decisions based upon fear rather than foresight, and all too often trimmed facts and evidence to fit ideological predispositions. Instead of strategically applying our power and our principles, we too often set those principles aside as luxuries that we could no longer afford. And in this season of fear, too many of us - Democrats and Republicans; politicians, journalists and citizens - fell silent.
In other words, we went off course. And this is not my assessment alone. It was an assessment that was shared by the American people, who nominated candidates for President from both major parties who, despite our many differences, called for a new approach - one that rejected torture, and recognized the imperative of closing the prison at Guantanamo Bay.
Now let me be clear: we are indeed at war with al Qaeda and its affiliates. We do need to update our institutions to deal with this threat. But we must do so with an abiding confidence in the rule of law and due process; in checks and balances and accountability. For reasons that I will explain, the decisions that were made over the last eight years established an ad hoc legal approach for fighting terrorism that was neither effective nor sustainable - a framework that failed to rely on our legal traditions and time-tested institutions; that failed to use our values as a compass. And that is why I took several steps upon taking office to better protect the American people.
First, I banned the use of so-called enhanced interrogation techniques by the United States of America.
I know some have argued that brutal methods like water-boarding were necessary to keep us safe. I could not disagree more. As Commander-in-Chief, I see the intelligence, I bear responsibility for keeping this country safe, and I reject the assertion that these are the most effective means of interrogation. What's more, they undermine the rule of law. They alienate us in the world. They serve as a recruitment tool for terrorists, and increase the will of our enemies to fight us, while decreasing the will of others to work with America. They risk the lives of our troops by making it less likely that others will surrender to them in battle, and more likely that Americans will be mistreated if they are captured. In short, they did not advance our war and counter-terrorism efforts - they undermined them, and that is why I ended them once and for all.
The arguments against these techniques did not originate from my Administration. As Senator McCain once said, torture "serves as a great propaganda tool for those who recruit people to fight against us." And even under President Bush, there was recognition among members of his Administration - including a Secretary of State, other senior officials, and many in the military and intelligence community - that those who argued for these tactics were on the wrong side of the debate, and the wrong side of history. We must leave these methods where they belong - in the past. They are not who we are. They are not America.
The second decision that I made was to order the closing of the prison camp at Guantanamo Bay.
For over seven years, we have detained hundreds of people at Guantanamo. During that time, the system of Military Commissions at Guantanamo succeeded in convicting a grand total of three suspected terrorists. Let me repeat that: three convictions in over seven years. Instead of bringing terrorists to justice, efforts at prosecution met setbacks, cases lingered on, and in 2006 the Supreme Court invalidated the entire system. Meanwhile, over five hundred and twenty-five detainees were released from Guantanamo under the Bush Administration. Let me repeat that: two-thirds of the detainees were released before I took office and ordered the closure of Guantanamo.
There is also no question that Guantanamo set back the moral authority that is America's strongest currency in the world. Instead of building a durable framework for the struggle against al Qaeda that drew upon our deeply held values and traditions, our government was defending positions that undermined the rule of law. Indeed, part of the rationale for establishing Guantanamo in the first place was the misplaced notion that a prison there would be beyond the law - a proposition that the Supreme Court soundly rejected. Meanwhile, instead of serving as a tool to counter-terrorism, Guantanamo became a symbol that helped al Qaeda recruit terrorists to its cause. Indeed, the existence of Guantanamo likely created more terrorists around the world than it ever detained.
So the record is clear: rather than keep us safer, the prison at Guantanamo has weakened American national security. It is a rallying cry for our enemies. It sets back the willingness of our allies to work with us in fighting an enemy that operates in scores of countries. By any measure, the costs of keeping it open far exceed the complications involved in closing it. That is why I argued that it should be closed throughout my campaign. And that is why I ordered it closed within one year.
The third decision that I made was to order a review of all the pending cases at Guantanamo.
I knew when I ordered Guantanamo closed that it would be difficult and complex. There are 240 people there who have now spent years in legal limbo. In dealing with this situation, we do not have the luxury of starting from scratch. We are cleaning up something that is - quite simply - a mess; a misguided experiment that has left in its wake a flood of legal challenges that my Administration is forced to deal with on a constant basis, and that consumes the time of government officials whose time should be spent on better protecting our country.
Indeed, the legal challenges that have sparked so much debate in recent weeks in Washington would be taking place whether or not I decided to close Guantanamo. For example, the court order to release seventeen Uighur detainees took place last fall - when George Bush was President. The Supreme Court that invalidated the system of prosecution at Guantanamo in 2006 was overwhelmingly appointed by Republican Presidents. In other words, the problem of what to do with Guantanamo detainees was not caused by my decision to close the facility; the problem exists because of the decision to open Guantanamo in the first place.
There are no neat or easy answers here. But I can tell you that the wrong answer is to pretend like this problem will go away if we maintain an unsustainable status quo. As President, I refuse to allow this problem to fester. Our security interests won't permit it. Our courts won't allow it. And neither should our conscience.
Now, over the last several weeks, we have seen a return of the politicization of these issues that have characterized the last several years. I understand that these problems arouse passions and concerns. They should. We are confronting some of the most complicated questions that a democracy can face. But I have no interest in spending our time re-litigating the policies of the last eight years. I want to solve these problems, and I want to solve them together as Americans.
And we will be ill-served by some of the fear-mongering that emerges whenever we discuss this issue. Listening to the recent debate, I've heard words that are calculated to scare people rather than educate them; words that have more to do with politics than protecting our country. So I want to take this opportunity to lay out what we are doing, and how we intend to resolve these outstanding issues. I will explain how each action that we are taking will help build a framework that protects both the American people and the values that we hold dear. And I will focus on two broad areas: first, issues relating to Guantanamo and our detention policy; second, issues relating to security and transparency.
Let me begin by disposing of one argument as plainly as I can: we are not going to release anyone if it would endanger our national security, nor will we release detainees within the United States who endanger the American people. Where demanded by justice and national security, we will seek to transfer some detainees to the same type of facilities in which we hold all manner of dangerous and violent criminals within our borders - highly secure prisons that ensure the public safety. As we make these decisions, bear in mind the following fact: nobody has ever escaped from one of our federal "supermax" prisons, which hold hundreds of convicted terrorists. As Senator Lindsey Graham said: "The idea that we cannot find a place to securely house 250-plus detainees within the United States is not rational."
We are currently in the process of reviewing each of the detainee cases at Guantanamo to determine the appropriate policy for dealing with them. As we do so, we are acutely aware that under the last Administration, detainees were released only to return to the battlefield. That is why we are doing away with the poorly planned, haphazard approach that let those detainees go in the past. Instead, we are treating these cases with the care and attention that the law requires and our security demands. Going forward, these cases will fall into five distinct categories.
First, when feasible, we will try those who have violated American criminal laws in federal courts - courts provided for by the United States Constitution. Some have derided our federal courts as incapable of handling the trials of terrorists. They are wrong. Our courts and juries of our citizens are tough enough to convict terrorists, and the record makes that clear. Ramzi Yousef tried to blow up the World Trade Center - he was convicted in our courts, and is serving a life sentence in U.S. prison. Zaccarias Moussaoui has been identified as the 20th 9/11 hijacker - he was convicted in our courts, and he too is serving a life sentence in prison. If we can try those terrorists in our courts and hold them in our prisons, then we can do the same with detainees from Guantanamo.
Recently, we prosecuted and received a guilty plea from a detainee - al-Marri - in federal court after years of legal confusion. We are preparing to transfer another detainee to the Southern District of New York, where he will face trial on charges related to the 1998 bombings of our embassies in Kenya and Tanzania - bombings that killed over 200 people. Preventing this detainee from coming to our shores would prevent his trial and conviction. And after over a decade, it is time to finally see that justice is served, and that is what we intend to do.
The second category of cases involves detainees who violate the laws of war and are best tried through Military Commissions. Military commissions have a history in the United States dating back to George Washington and the Revolutionary War. They are an appropriate venue for trying detainees for violations of the laws of war. They allow for the protection of sensitive sources and methods of intelligence-gathering; for the safety and security of participants; and for the presentation of evidence gathered from the battlefield that cannot be effectively presented in federal Courts.Now, some have suggested that this represents a reversal on my part. They are wrong. In 2006, I did strongly oppose legislation proposed by the Bush Administration and passed by the Congress because it failed to establish a legitimate legal framework, with the kind of meaningful due process and rights for the accused that could stand up on appeal. I did, however, support the use of military commissions to try detainees, provided there were several reforms. And those are the reforms that we are making.
Instead of using the flawed Commissions of the last seven years, my Administration is bringing our Commissions in line with the rule of law. The rule will no longer permit us to use as evidence statements that have been obtained using cruel, inhuman, or degrading interrogation methods. We will no longer place the burden to prove that hearsay is unreliable on the opponent of the hearsay. And we will give detainees greater latitude in selecting their own counsel, and more protections if they refuse to testify. These reforms - among others - will make our Military Commissions a more credible and effective means of administering justice, and I will work with Congress and legal authorities across the political spectrum on legislation to ensure that these Commissions are fair, legitimate, and effective.
The third category of detainees includes those who we have been ordered released by the courts. Let me repeat what I said earlier: this has absolutely nothing to do with my decision to close Guantanamo. It has to do with the rule of law. The courts have found that there is no legitimate reason to hold twenty-one of the people currently held at Guantanamo. Twenty of these findings took place before I came into office. The United States is a nation of laws, and we must abide by these rulings.
The fourth category of cases involves detainees who we have determined can be transferred safely to another country. So far, our review team has approved fifty detainees for transfer. And my Administration is in ongoing discussions with a number of other countries about the transfer of detainees to their soil for detention and rehabilitation. Finally, there remains the question of detainees at Guantanamo who cannot be prosecuted yet who pose a clear danger to the American people.
I want to be honest: this is the toughest issue we will face. We are going to exhaust every avenue that we have to prosecute those at Guantanamo who pose a danger to our country. But even when this process is complete, there may be a number of people who cannot be prosecuted for past crimes, but who nonetheless pose a threat to the security of the United States. Examples of that threat include people who have received extensive explosives training at al Qaeda training camps, commanded Taliban troops in battle, expressed their allegiance to Osama bin Laden, or otherwise made it clear that they want to kill Americans. These are people who, in effect, remain at war with the United States.
As I said, I am not going to release individuals who endanger the American people. Al Qaeda terrorists and their affiliates are at war with the United States, and those that we capture - like other prisoners of war - must be prevented from attacking us again. However, we must recognize that these detention policies cannot be unbounded. That is why my Administration has begun to reshape these standards to ensure they are in line with the rule of law. We must have clear, defensible and lawful standards for those who fall in this category. We must have fair procedures so that we don't make mistakes. We must have a thorough process of periodic review, so that any prolonged detention is carefully evaluated and justified.
I know that creating such a system poses unique challenges. Other countries have grappled with this question, and so must we. But I want to be very clear that our goal is to construct a legitimate legal framework for Guantanamo detainees - not to avoid one. In our constitutional system, prolonged detention should not be the decision of any one man. If and when we determine that the United States must hold individuals to keep them from carrying out an act of war, we will do so within a system that involves judicial and congressional oversight. And so going forward, my Administration will work with Congress to develop an appropriate legal regime so that our efforts are consistent with our values and our Constitution.
As our efforts to close Guantanamo move forward, I know that the politics in Congress will be difficult. These issues are fodder for 30-second commercials and direct mail pieces that are designed to frighten. I get it. But if we continue to make decisions from within a climate of fear, we will make more mistakes. And if we refuse to deal with these issues today, then I guarantee you that they will be an albatross around our efforts to combat terrorism in the future. I have confidence that the American people are more interested in doing what is right to protect this country than in political posturing. I am not the only person in this city who swore an oath to uphold the Constitution - so did each and every member of Congress. Together we have a responsibility to enlist our values in the effort to secure our people, and to leave behind the legacy that makes it easier for future Presidents to keep this country safe.
The second set of issues that I want to discuss relates to security and transparency.National security requires a delicate balance. Our democracy depends upon transparency, but some information must be protected from public disclosure for the sake of our security - for instance, the movements of our troops; our intelligence-gathering; or the information we have about a terrorist organization and its affiliates. In these and other cases, lives are at stake.
Several weeks ago, as part of an ongoing court case, I released memos issued by the previous Administration's Office of Legal Counsel. I did not do this because I disagreed with the enhanced interrogation techniques that those memos authorized, or because I reject their legal rationale - although I do on both counts. I released the memos because the existence of that approach to interrogation was already widely known, the Bush Administration had acknowledged its existence, and I had already banned those methods. The argument that somehow by releasing those memos, we are providing terrorists with information about how they will be interrogated is unfounded - we will not be interrogating terrorists using that approach, because that approach is now prohibited.
In short, I released these memos because there was no overriding reason to protect them. And the ensuing debate has helped the American people better understand how these interrogation methods came to be authorized and used.
On the other hand, I recently opposed the release of certain photographs that were taken of detainees by U.S. personnel between 2002 and 2004. Individuals who violated standards of behavior in these photos have been investigated and held accountable. There is no debate as to whether what is reflected in those photos is wrong, and nothing has been concealed to absolve perpetrators of crimes. However, it was my judgment - informed by my national security team - that releasing these photos would inflame anti-American opinion, and allow our enemies to paint U.S. troops with a broad, damning and inaccurate brush, endangering them in theaters of war.
In short, there is a clear and compelling reason to not release these particular photos. There are nearly 200,000 Americans who are serving in harm's way, and I have a solemn responsibility for their safety as Commander-in-Chief. Nothing would be gained by the release of these photos that matters more than the lives of our young men and women serving in harm's way.
In each of these cases, I had to strike the right balance between transparency and national security. This balance brings with it a precious responsibility. And there is no doubt that the American people have seen this balance tested. In the images from Abu Ghraib and the brutal interrogation techniques made public long before I was President, the American people learned of actions taken in their name that bear no resemblance to the ideals that generations of Americans have fought for. And whether it was the run-up to the Iraq War or the revelation of secret programs, Americans often felt like part of the story had been unnecessarily withheld from them. That causes suspicion to build up. That leads to a thirst for accountability.
I ran for President promising transparency, and I meant what I said. That is why, whenever possible, we will make information available to the American people so that they can make informed judgments and hold us accountable. But I have never argued - and never will - that our most sensitive national security matters should be an open book. I will never abandon - and I will vigorously defend - the necessity of classification to defend our troops at war; to protect sources and methods; and to safeguard confidential actions that keep the American people safe. And so, whenever we cannot release certain information to the public for valid national security reasons, I will insist that there is oversight of my actions - by Congress or by the courts.
We are launching a review of current policies by all of those agencies responsible for the classification of documents to determine where reforms are possible, and to assure that the other branches of government will be in a position to review executive branch decisions on these matters. Because in our system of checks and balances, someone must always watch over the watchers - especially when it comes to sensitive information. Along those same lines, my Administration is also confronting challenges to what is known as the "State Secrets" privilege. This is a doctrine that allows the government to challenge legal cases involving secret programs. It has been used by many past Presidents - Republican and Democrat - for many decades. And while this principle is absolutely necessary to protect national security, I am concerned that it has been over-used. We must not protect information merely because it reveals the violation of a law or embarrasses the government. That is why my Administration is nearing completion of a thorough review of this practice.
We plan to embrace several principles for reform. We will apply a stricter legal test to material that can be protected under the State Secrets privilege. We will not assert the privilege in court without first following a formal process, including review by a Justice Department committee and the personal approval of the Attorney General. Finally, each year we will voluntarily report to Congress when we have invoked the privilege and why, because there must be proper oversight of our actions.
On all of these matter related to the disclosure of sensitive information, I wish I could say that there is a simple formula. But there is not. These are tough calls involving competing concerns, and they require a surgical approach. But the common thread that runs through all of my decisions is simple: we will safeguard what we must to protect the American people, but we will also ensure the accountability and oversight that is the hallmark of our constitutional system. I will never hide the truth because it is uncomfortable. I will deal with Congress and the courts as co-equal branches of government. I will tell the American people what I know and don't know, and when I release something publicly or keep something secret, I will tell you why.
In all of the areas that I have discussed today, the policies that I have proposed represent a new direction from the last eight years. To protect the American people and our values, we have banned enhanced interrogation techniques. We are closing the prison at Guantanamo. We are reforming Military Commissions, and we will pursue a new legal regime to detain terrorists. We are declassifying more information and embracing more oversight of our actions, and narrowing our use of the State Secrets privilege. These are dramatic changes that will put our approach to national security on a surer, safer and more sustainable footing, and their implementation will take time.
There is a core principle that we will apply to all of our actions: even as we clean up the mess at Guantanamo, we will constantly re-evaluate our approach, subject our decisions to review from the other branches of government, and seek the strongest and most sustainable legal framework for addressing these issues in the long-term. By doing that, we can leave behind a legacy that outlasts my Administration, and that endures for the next President and the President after that; a legacy that protects the American people, and enjoys broad legitimacy at home and abroad.
That is what I mean when I say that we need to focus on the future. I recognize that many still have a strong desire to focus on the past. When it comes to the actions of the last eight years, some Americans are angry; others want to re-fight debates that have been settled, most clearly at the ballot box in November. And I know that these debates lead directly to a call for a fuller accounting, perhaps through an Independent Commission. I have opposed the creation of such a Commission because I believe that our existing democratic institutions are strong enough to deliver accountability. The Congress can review abuses of our values, and there are ongoing inquiries by the Congress into matters like enhanced interrogation techniques. The Department of Justice and our courts can work through and punish any violations of our laws.
I understand that it is no secret that there is a tendency in Washington to spend our time pointing fingers at one another. And our media culture feeds the impulses that lead to a good fight. Nothing will contribute more to that than an extended re-litigation of the last eight years. Already, we have seen how that kind of effort only leads those in Washington to different sides laying blame, and can distract us from focusing our time, our effort, and our politics on the challenges of the future.
We see that, above all, in how the recent debate has been obscured by two opposite and absolutist ends. On one side of the spectrum, there are those who make little allowance for the unique challenges posed by terrorism, and who would almost never put national security over transparency. On the other end of the spectrum, there are those who embrace a view that can be summarized in two words: "anything goes." Their arguments suggest that the ends of fighting terrorism can be used to justify any means, and that the President should have blanket authority to do whatever he wants - provided that it is a President with whom they agree.
Both sides may be sincere in their views, but neither side is right. The American people are not absolutist, and they don't elect us to impose a rigid ideology on our problems. They know that we need not sacrifice our security for our values, nor sacrifice our values for our security, so long as we approach difficult questions with honesty, and care, and a dose of common sense. That, after all, is the unique genius of America. That is the challenge laid down by our Constitution. That has been the source of our strength through the ages. That is what makes the United States of America different as a nation.
I can stand here today, as President of the United States, and say without exception or equivocation that we do not torture, and that we will vigorously protect our people while forging a strong and durable framework that allows us to fight terrorism while abiding by the rule of law. Make no mistake: if we fail to turn the page on the approach that was taken over the past several years, then I will not be able to say that as President. And if we cannot stand for those core values, then we are not keeping faith with the documents that are enshrined in this hall.
The Framers who drafted the Constitution could not have foreseen the challenges that have unfolded over the last two hundred and twenty two years. But our Constitution has endured through secession and civil rights - through World War and Cold War - because it provides a foundation of principles that can be applied pragmatically; it provides a compass that can help us find our way. It hasn't always been easy. We are an imperfect people. Every now and then, there are those who think that America's safety and success requires us to walk away from the sacred principles enshrined in this building. We hear such voices today. But the American people have resisted that temptation. And though we have made our share of mistakes and course corrections, we have held fast to the principles that have been the source of our strength, and a beacon to the world.
Now, this generation faces a great test in the specter of terrorism. Unlike the Civil War or World War II, we cannot count on a surrender ceremony to bring this journey to an end. Right now, in distant training camps and in crowded cities, there are people plotting to take American lives. That will be the case a year from now, five years from now, and - in all probability - ten years from now. Neither I nor anyone else can standing here today can say that there will not be another terrorist attack that takes American lives. But I can say with certainty that my Administration - along with our extraordinary troops and the patriotic men and women who defend our national security - will do everything in our power to keep the American people safe. And I do know with certainty that we can defeat al Qaeda. Because the terrorists can only succeed if they swell their ranks and alienate America from our allies, and they will never be able to do that if we stay true to who we are; if we forge tough and durable approaches to fighting terrorism that are anchored in our timeless ideals.
This must be our common purpose. I ran for President because I believe that we cannot solve the challenges of our time unless we solve them together. We will not be safe if we see national security as a wedge that divides America - it can and must be a cause that unites us as one people, as one nation. We have done so before in times that were more perilous than ours. We will do so once again. Thank you, God Bless you, and God bless the United States of America.

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Tuesday, May 26, 2009

STATEISM: OBAMA TO TELL US WHAT TO EAT

Get ready America, Barack Obama is pulling together the pieces that will allow him to tell us what we can and cannot eat. George Orwell couldn't dream up this stuff.

As the article that follows notes, Obama has put a food crusader in charge of the CDC. That's not a good sign for the millions of our fellow countrymen who allow themselves to enjoy eating beyond the confines of tofu and soy or to partake in a beverage with a little more taste than water.

Stateists like Obama believe they should be the ones to determine what the rest of us eat and drink. Naturally, the cost of health care is their reason for being and the justification for dictating the behavior of the masses.

Spending time figuring out ways to run the lives of other people is a sickness unto itself. Those who believe they know better than virtually everyone else actually know little of value. In a nation that practices individual freedom, no one, not even Obama, can dictate how others live their lives.

Given that as current reality, beware the reach of "free" health care for all Americans. Once in place, the state will be able to dictate much of what people do. That includes what they eat, what they drink, how much they exercise, what vices they can no longer indulge in and so on.

It will not be a pretty picture but the pieces are slowly and inexorably being assembled in Washington DC. Shall we bow down to the all powerful State?


Memorial Day Makeover
Congress has an eye on your holiday menu.


Hot dogs, potato chips, soda and beer are staples of the traditional Memorial Day cookout, but Washington wants to redesign the menu. Just in time for your neighborhood block party, the Obama Administration and Senate Finance Committee are signalling a change in your diet.
President Obama has named Thomas Frieden, the New York City health commissioner who championed a ban on artificial trans fats, as the new director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Dr. Frieden's campaign forced McDonald's to change the way it cooks french fries -- you may have noticed the taste -- and he has lately called for all restaurants to use less salt. Let's hope he spends at least some of his time considering flu pandemics and bioterrorism.
In any case, when Dr. Frieden arrives in Washington, he'll find an ally in Michael Jacobson, head of the Naderite Center for Science in the Public Interest. Mr. Jacobson has made a career attacking ethnic restaurants, fast-food chains and grocery manufacturers for allegedly unhealthy fare. While he may be the last guy you'd want at your barbecue, Mr. Jacobson was recently an honored guest at Senate Finance. At a hearing to brainstorm on ways to pay for Mr. Obama's new health-care entitlement, Mr. Jacobson recommended that Congress enact a 50% reduction in the salt content of America's food supply, a tax of up to one cent per ounce on soft drinks, and a tripling of the federal excise tax on beer, to roughly 16 cents a can.
Is government to be the servant of the people, or their (thigh)master? Mr. Jacobson's view of the role of government was illuminated by his gripe that since 1991 beer has been taxed at a flat $18 per barrel. "Since then, inflation has robbed the Treasury of more than one-third the value of the taxes," he said.
The committee staff was apparently listening, because a Senate Finance report released this week listed a federal beer tax increase and a new levy on soft drinks among the options for financing new health-care spending. In sum, Washington looks set to provide you with a host of new incentives to enjoy grilled veggies and a refreshing glass of water at your next cookout.
This doesn't mean that the feds are taking all the fun out of the weekend when we rightly honor Americans who have sacrificed their lives in war. After all, many Americans tune in each year to watch the Indianapolis 500 auto race, and the sport is sure to win new suburban fans now that Detroit has been ordered to make more fuel-efficient cars. We can only imagine the thrill of hearing the high-pitched whine of hybrid engines as low-emission vehicles achieve speeds exceeding 80 miles per hour. Though perhaps "the greatest spectacle in racing" will soon be presenting itself as "a sustainable activity, when appropriately balanced with carbon offsets."

Copyright 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.

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Monday, May 25, 2009

HOW'S THAT HOPE & CHANGE WORKING OUT?

The counter argument is being repeated everywhere: give Obama a chance, he has barely been in office. It is true that he has been President for a mere four months. But we can make judgements on his progress so far and the fact is that most of it has been in the wrong direction for the majority of Americans.

Actually, it is somewhat hard to believe how upside down our world has become in so very few weeks. Let's look at developments since inauguration day.

1. We have yet to sit down to talk Mano-a-Mano with Iran but the Iranians have morphed into a much more brazen bully than before Obama. They have put warships into international waters. They have announced that they will eliminate the state of Israel in no more than 13 days of warfare. They have tested a new, far more effective rocket powered weapons delivery system. They have rejected out of hand Western proposals for a nuclear freeze. And their puppet president, I'madimjihad, has challenged Obama to a debate in front of the United Nations. Oh, but we are trying to arrange a soccer match between the US and Iran! How's that hope and change working?

2. The North Koreans have now successfully tested a nuclear bomb equivalent to the power of the Hiroshima blast and they have the rocket system in place to deliver it not only to Japan but to the United States. Obama's reaction: condemn the action and call on the international community to respond. In other words, take it to the UN. Given that China and Russia are on the Security Council, do not hold out a lot of hope for any meaningfully action from the "international community". And while our allies in South Korea and Japan go into panic mode, China, puppet master of North Korea, measures how Obama handles an open confrontation. The Chinese must be encouraged that the time is right to take their next step. How's that hope and change working?

3. Israeli President Netanyahu came to Washington to meet with Obama, politely listened to the Obama directive that no more new Israeli settlements were to be built in the West Bank and promptly went home to essentially flip off the President long distance. In other words, relations with our longtime Israeli ally are heading south. Apparently Obama is not as well loved there as prior Presidents starting with Harry Truman. How's that hope and change working?

4. British bankers and stockbrokers are, due to policies being pushed forward by Obama, seriously considering no longer doing business with American customers. That's our ally the British, about to tell us to shove off. How's that hope and change working?

5. Worse yet, we have a world poised to engage in a trade war if Obama pushes forward the union protectionist agenda that could easily provide the nudge our economy needs to go into a full depression. What is astounding is that Congress and Obama are even considering such foolishness. That would be hope and change that will ruin the nation.

6. Chrysler has been forced into bankruptcy with more than half of it's ownership interests going forward being handed to the UAW supporters of Obama. Other creditors are being stiffed. The type of vehicles that they will be allowed to build will be dictated from Washington. Does anyone believe that the best and the brightest design, development and management talent is staying at Chrysler? They are off to Ford and the foreign auto makers. Union run corporations have a very bad track record and given the need to pay themselves big money while providing fat benefits, is there anyone out there who expects their vehicle prices to be affordable? Truth be told, the only chance Chrysler has left is ongoing federal taxpayer funded bailouts. The company will never make a profit on it's own. Oh, and GM is the next victim that will follow the same path. How's that hope and change working?

7. Lets see:

The federal budget deficit is now so large that it exceeds the budget deficits of all previous Presidents combined. And it is slated to grow larger.

GDP has dropped by over six percent.

Consumer spending was down in April after a slight upturn in March.

Taxes are on the rise. Energy prices are increasing. The pending tax increases to pay for our other worldly deficits will lead to inter generational burdens like none ever seen in this country. Government employment is the only growth sector in our economy and that will require even more taxes. "Free" health care will crush the middle class. Medicare is on the cusp of collapse and our Social Security system is on it's last legs.

$13 billion of the more than $700 billion stimulus spending package has been allocated for shovel ready infrastructure spending. To date only $53 million is actually currently in use. So much for shovel ready. One suspects that the $53 million will have little to no stimulus effect on the economy.

Players in the international economy are seriously considering, for the first time in modern history, replacing the dollar as the base currency for international trade.

According to a weekend CSPAN exclusive interview, Obama says the United States government is out of money because we are already operating in deep deficits.

The war on terrorism in Afghanistan has degenerated, Obama has sent more American troops in harms way and our NATO friends are mostly staying on the sidelines. Keep in mind that Obama and his Democrat buddies said from the get go that this was the right war, not Iraq now living in relative peace. Obama and his gang own the Afghan war as well as the responsibility to find Bin Laden. Notice how well it has gone now that they have their eye on that ball? Oh, while we are at it, let's not forget the associated mess in Pakistan now that Obama is in charge and how that has gotten far worse.

Drug wars on our southern border are escalating and it appears that having Obama travel to Mexico to apologize for us causing the problem has not been of any assistance. As Obama delivers speeches about the mistreatment of terrorists at Gitmo, real time terrorists run free along the border, murdering hundreds of Mexicans and some Americans.

Despite all the bailouts, banks continue to fail. Thirty-six so far this year. That included BankUnited Friday in Florida, the largest bank failure in 2009 which has cost the taxpayer just short of $5 billion for that one bank. The Geithner plan must still need some additional tweaking.

Unemployment has continued a steep increase on the watch of Obama. In fact some of his policy moves have managed to put people out of work who were gainfully employed with no problems on the horizon (see the Cessna aircraft plant in Oregon where 1,6oo jobs were lost thanks to Obama or see the hospitality industry employees in Las Vegas, now out of work due to Obama misstatements). It has gotten so bad that we are literally celebrating the fact that ONLY 613,000 jobs were lost in April. Just makes you feel better doesn't it?

And the promise to close Gitmo has not gone well to date. Not only are a majority of the American people against bringing the world's worst terrorists onshore into the homeland but the Democrat controlled Congress has refused to provide the funding necessary to close that Cuban prison. Maybe someday, but the truth is it would have closed someday anyway. Everything does eventually.

Let's not dwell on such things as the Tea Parties last month, the anti-tax increase vote in California this month or the ever increasing protests greeting Obama wherever he travels domestically off of government property. After all, he's only been in office four months.

How's all that hope and change working out so far?


How’s That Hope n’ Change Working Out For You?
By Monica Crowley

The Bama did two things this week that actually add up to one big point about how he’s governing.
He called Congressman Steve Israel (D-NY) and “asked” (read: told) him NOT to challenge Senator Kirsten Gillibrand in the New York Senate Democratic primary in the special election next year.
He also blew off Nevada’s Governor Jim Gibbons, because Gibbons had the audacity to criticize The Bama’s economic policies and his comments critical of Nevada that have hurt that state’s economy. The Governor was notified today that the Bama has “refused” to meet with him.
Up next: a horse’s head in the bed.
This is supposed to be “hope and change?” This is supposed to be “a new era of civility?” This is supposed to be a time when we “put away childish things?”
It’s more like old-time politics, Chicago-style.
And both episodes fit right in with a pattern of strong-arm tactics this White House has used on the banks (want to pay back that TARP money? Too bad!), the auto industry (the political hit on GM’s Rick Wagoner, anyone?), hedge funds, etc. Tony Soprano is running the country.
This is not the kind of politics in which the Bama promised he’d engage. He’s looking less and less transformational and more and more like a Chicago machine pol.
Because that’s what he is.

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Sunday, May 24, 2009

NEVER FORGET: MEMORIAL DAY 2009

This weekend, take a little time to pause and remember that freedom is not free. For generations, Americans have paid the ultimate price so that their countrymen could experience the fruits of liberty. Recognize and honor their sacrifice.

What follows is another story that serves to remind us all that what we have should never, ever be taken for granted. Enjoy your Memorial Day. Millions have served so that you can.





An American Hero
by Beth Reece Adapted from Soldiers Magazine

Corporal Tibor "Ted" Rubin TIBOR "Ted" Rubin knows what it's like to slowly starve to death, how lice itch when crawling over skin and how giving up on life can seem easier than fighting for it.
Nazi guards made sure Rubin understood despair at the age of 13. A Hungarian Jew, he was forced into the Mauthausen Concentration Camp toward the end of World War II. But Rubin defied odds: He survived. After the war he moved to New York, and eventually joined the same Army that liberated him from hell on earth.
From the horror of the Holocaust arose a bravery that few can match. Rubin went on to fight in the Korean War and was taken prisoner by the Chinese communists. This time, he breathed life into his fellow captives, who were dying at the rate of 40 a day in the winter of 1950-1951.
"He saved a lot of GI's lives. He gave them the courage to go on living when a lot of guys didn't make it," said SGT Leo Cormier, a fellow POW. "He saved my life when I could have laid in a ditch and died -- I was nothing but flesh and bones."
Rubin was nominated for the Medal of Honor four times by grateful comrades. A medal he might otherwise have received at age 23 is scheduled to be draped over his neck by President George W. Bush in a White House ceremony Sept. 23. While most military decorations are awarded for a single act, Rubin's was earned by courage that withstood battle on the front lines, and then thrived in the face of death for two and a half years.
"People ask, 'How the hell did you get through all that?'" said Rubin, now 76. "I can't answer, but I figured whatever I did, I was never going to make it out alive." Valor
At the end of October 1950, thousands of Chinese troops were laying in wait. Masters of camouflage, they blended into the brush and burned fires to produce smoke to mask their movements. When Soldiers of the 8th Cavalry Regiment were stretched before them like sitting ducks, the Chinese swarmed in.
"The whole mountain let loose," said Rubin, who was then a corporal serving in the 8th Cav.'s 3rd Battalion. On Oct. 30 the 3rd Bn.'s firepower dwindled to a single machine gun, which three Soldiers had already died manning. By the time Rubin stepped up to fire, most of his fellow Soldiers felt doomed in the confusion of battle.
"Nobody wanted to take over, but somebody had to. We didn't have anything else left to fight with," he said. Rubin's buddies say he was a hero, selflessly defending his unit against thousands of Chinese troops.
Battle raged for three days around Unsan, then the Chinese pushed the Soldiers south. Those who survived retreated with little or no ammunition and hundreds of wounded. More than 1,000 men of the 8th Cav. were listed as missing in action after the battle, but some returned to friendly lines or were rescued by tank patrols in the following weeks.
Earlier in the war, as the 8th Cav. moved toward the Pusan Perimeter, Rubin kept to the rear to ward off North Koreans nipping at his battalion's heels. At 4 a.m., while defending a hill on his own, Rubin heard gunfire from what sounded like hundreds of enemy troops. "I figured I was a goner. But I ran from one foxhole to the next, throwing hand grenades so the North Koreans would think they were fighting more than one person," he said. "I couldn't think straight -- in a situation like that, you become hysterical trying to save your life." "He tied up the enemy forces, allowing the safe withdrawal of Allied troops and equipment on the Taegu-Pusan road. The enemy suffered, not only tremendous casualties ... but it slowed the North Korean invading momentum along that route, saving countless American lives and giving the 8th Cav. precious time to regroup to the south," wrote CPL Leonard Hamm in his nomination of Rubin for the MOH.
And when Hamm himself later lay fallen, it was Rubin who fought to go back for him when the first sergeant issued orders to leave him behind. "But we didn't know if he was dead," Rubin said. "All I could think about was that somebody back home was waiting for him to return." Rubin was pinned down by snipers and forced to low-crawl for several hundred yards when rescuing Hamm, whose body was so loaded with shrapnel that he could hardly lift a limb.
"Rubin not only saved my life by carrying me to safety; he kept the North Korean snipers off our butts," said Hamm.
A Prisoner AgainWhen battle ended in Unsan, hundreds of Soldiers were taken prisoner by the Chinese. They were forced to march to a camp known today as "Death Valley," ill-dressed for winter's freezing temperatures, exhausted and hungry. Many of them grew sick with dysentery, pneumonia or hepatitis. Others died. "It was so cold that nobody wanted to move, and the food we got was barely enough to keep us alive," said former Sgt. Richard A. Whalen. "But Rubin was a tremendous asset to us, keeping our spirits up when no one felt good."
Years in a Nazi concentration camp had taught Rubin ways of survival that most humans never need know. He knew how to make soup out of grass, what weeds had medicinal qualities and that the human body can sometimes prevail if a person's mind is in the right place.
What his comrades needed, Rubin knew, was hope -- hope to keep them moving and hope to make them fight for their lives.
"Some of them gave up, and some of them prayed to be taken," Rubin remembers. He held pep talks, reminding the Soldiers of the families awaiting their safe return home. He stole food for them to eat, nagged them to "debug" themselves of the relentless lice and even nursed them through sickness.
"He'd go out of his way to do favors to help us survive," said Cormier. "I once saw him spend the whole night picking lice off a guy who didn't have the strength to lift his head. What man would do that? I'd have told him to go down and soak in the cold water so the lice would all fall off. But Ted did things for his fellow men that made him a hero in my book."
Rubin thought the best way to overpower his captors was by hitting them where it hurt most -- their bellies.
"They didn't have much more food to eat than we did," Rubin said. "One potato would have been worth a million dollars if any of us had had it to give." So when night fell he stole corn, millet and barley. And when the Chinese planted a "victory" garden, he snuck past armed guards to reap the harvest, stuffing his pants full of radishes, green onions and cucumbers. "The Chinese would've cut Ted's throat if they'd caught him stealing. It still amazes me that they never did catch him," said Cormier. "What he did to help us could have meant the sacrifice of his own life."
Rubin and Cormier became fast friends as POWs. They were assigned as "bunkmates," although mud floors served as beds for the hundreds of men confined together in small rooms. When dysentery seized Cormier's body, Rubin stayed at his side and nursed him. Fellow prisoners credit Rubin with saving the lives of more than 40 Soldiers during his imprisonment at "Death Valley" and later at Camp 5 in Pyoktong. About 1,600 U.S. Soldiers died in Camp 5 in early 1951.
Rubin was repatriated under "Operation Little Switch," the initial exchange of sick and wounded prisoners from April 20 to May 3, 1953.
A Hero is BornLife as a prisoner under the Nazis and the Chinese are incomparable for Rubin. Of his Chinese captors, Rubin says only that they were "human" and somewhat lenient.
Of the Nazis, Rubin remains baffled by their capacity to kill. He was just a boy when he lost his parents and two little sisters to the Nazi's brutality. "In Mauthausen, they told us right away, 'You Jews, none of you will ever make it out of here alive'," Rubin remembers. "Every day so many people were killed. Bodies piled up God knows how high. We had nothing to look forward to but dying. It was a most terrible thing, like a horror movie." American Soldiers swept into the camp on May 5, 1945, to liberate the prisoners. It is still a miraculous day for Rubin, indelibly imprinted in his heart. "The American Soldiers had great compassion for us. Even though we were filthy, we stunk and had diseases, they picked us up and brought us back to life." Rubin made a vow that day that he's fulfilled ten times over.
"I made a promise that I would go to the United States and join the Army to express my thanks," said Rubin. Three years later he arrived in New York. Two years after that he passed the English language test -- after two attempts and with "more than a little help," he jokes -- and joined the Army. He was shipped to the 29th Infantry Regiment in Okinawa. When the Korean War broke out, Rubin was summoned by his company commander.
"The 29th Inf. Regt. is mobilizing. You are not a U.S. citizen so we can't take you -- a lot of us are going to get killed. We'll send you to Japan or Germany," Rubin remembers being told.
"But I could not just leave my unit for some 'safe' zone," Rubin said. "I was with these guys in basic training. Even though I wasn't a citizen yet, America was my country."
Rubin got what he wanted and headed for Korea -- to the good fortune of many Soldiers who served alongside him. "I'm beholden to him," said Cormier, who watched Rubin bend over backwards for his brothers in arms. Luck was also on Whalen's side, because he was herded to "Death Valley" alongside Rubin.
"I have to say this was the luckiest break of my life because he and I went up that valley together, and we were assigned to the same house," Whalen said. "I wouldn't be here today without him."
The same could be said of former Cpl. James E. Bourgeois, for whom Rubin cleaned wounds and bandages with boiled snow. "At one time my wounds got so infected he put maggots in them to prevent gangrene from setting in. This, I am sure, not only saved my left arm -- which I have full use of today -- but also my life," Bourgeois said.
When being admired for his courage, Rubin is quick to wave off praise. His acts had more to do with his vow to serve than with heroism, he said. "The real heroes are those who never came home. I was just lucky," Rubin said. "This Medal of Honor belongs to all prisoners of war, to all the heroes who died fighting in those wars."
And Rubin can't forget the Jews who died in vain, or the American Soldiers who made survivors of the rest. To them, he dedicated the best years of his life, becoming an American war hero -- a Soldier of uncommon bravery.

Additional News Stories
Korean War Veteran Receives the Medal of Honor- Defenselink
President Presents Medal of Honor to Corporal Tibor "Ted" Rubin - The White House
Jewish Vet Gets Medal of Honor 55 Years On - Washington Post

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Saturday, May 23, 2009

WINDOW INTO CRIMINAL STUPIDITY

As the following video documents, you don't have to be a genius to think like a criminal. It doesn't get a whole lot more entertaining than this one.


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Friday, May 22, 2009

FBI DIRECTOR MUELLER IS RIGHT: OBAMA IS FOOLISHLY WRONG

Time to wake up and smell the coffee. Outside of the typical far left Utopian, Americans must wake up to the reality that foreign jihadists do not belong in federal penitentiaries within our borders. The idea is beyond stupid.

We can start by admitting that life would be a lot tougher, not to mention far more dangerous, for such fanatical butchers in a federal pen. Life inside would be a nightmare compared to the luxuries they have at Club Gitmo. Only in that sense would one be tempted to think, just for a second, that putting these murderers in a Colorado super max would be what they deserve. But perish that thought. It is not worth the price to be paid.

FBI Director Robert Mueller's testimony before Congress this week was spot on in terms of what a foolish idea Mr. Obama has relative to farming Gitmo's worst of the worst out to a variety of American domestic locations.

Supporting his key point is the accompanying article regarding the four domestic terrorists arrested in New York this week. There is no need for supposition. We have current, first hand evidence as to the real outcomes.

The punks who were taken down in New York, as the article notes, became radical Islamists while doing time. They were influenced in that direction by other low-life's already in the can for criminal offenses.

It is counter intuitive to send dedicated, blood thirsty, anti-American, foreign jihadists into the mix with a variety of America ner'do wells, virtually none in the genius category, where they can recruit, propagandize and train an institution rife with hate filled losers.

Most jihadis are themselves brainwashed by their movement leadership who, it should always be noted, never do any of the fighting or sacrificing themselves. Which of course says a lot about those who are captured on the battlefield, faithfully following the instructions and plans of others who never voluntarily expose themselves to that kind of danger. In other words, the thugs in Gitmo are not the best and the brightest albeit they are tough and cunning killers dedicated to their cause with all their being.

Within the walls of our maximum security federal prisons, such jihadis would be in contact with their American soul mates, none of whom are guilty (according to their view) and many of whom are bitter about "the man" or "the unfair system" that put them behind the razor wire for years if not decades.

When such people with such huge chips on their shoulders encounter radical Islam, they will have found a force that "understands" their issues and is prepared to strike back at the society that put them there. That would be a powerful temptation, difficult to ignore.

Professor Barack Obama gets lost in ideological theory, as do most academics. He is a man of the left, of the Ivy League and of the ivory tower where self-appointed intellectuals engage in pursuits fully disconnected from the practical realities of everyday life in the real world. That might work on campus, but it represents the height of irresponsibility in the Oval Office.

Sending the world's most dangerous terrorists into domestic institutions that feature a captive and malleable audience is suicidal. It might be an interesting classroom intellectual exercise but it is a foolhardy plan if put into practice.


PATH TO RADICAL ISLAM BEGAN IN JAILS
By PERRY CHIARAMONTE, LORENA MONGELLI in Newburgh, NY and DOUGLAS MONTERO and LUKAS I. ALPERT in New York

They were like a million other petty criminals -- until they embraced radical Islam behind bars, launching a terrifying march to a planned mass murder that ended only when authorities sabotaged their sinister plot.
"He was not born Muslim. He's an institutional Muslim," said Richard Williams, uncle of Onta Williams, one of the four Bronx terror suspects.
"He wasn't raised that way."
Richard Williams said that his 32-year-old nephew fell under the sway of dangerously radical Islamo-fascists while serving time on drug charges -- and that he became "brainwashed" after his mother died and his ex-wife fought him for custody of their child.
"They played on his weaknesses and what was going on with his family," Richard said. "He was brainwashed and manipulated in the system."
Authorities say Onta Williams fell in with his three alleged co-conspirators, James Cromitie, 45, David Williams, 28, and 37-year-old Laguerre Payen, at a Newburgh mosque, where they bonded when they discovered they were all ex-cons.
Relatives and friends of the other three men charged in the horrific plot to blow up two Bronx synagogues and shoot down an Air National Guard plane said the men never expressed any interest in terrorism. But they all quickly developed a deep interest in Islam in jail.
Williams' uncle -- who himself once served 10 years on a drug charge -- said he was familiar with prison converts to Islam.
"All the ones in the system are fake Muslims," he said. "Onta was raised in the church, like I was. His mother, his aunt and cousins, they all sang in the choir. He was a Baptist.
"We were against it," he said of his nephew's conversion. "The family was all against it."
When Cromitie -- a lifelong jailbird -- last got out of prison two years ago, he similarly told stunned relatives in The Bronx that he had converted to Islam.
He announced that his new name was Abdul Rahman and that he was now living in Newburgh.
"He told me that he was a Muslim and that didn't eat pork anymore, and I told him, 'Get out of here!' " said his surprised mother, Adela Cromitie. "Why would he do something like that? He was raised Episcopalian."
According to a criminal complaint, Cromitie told an FBI informant "that his parents lived in Afghanistan prior to his birth and that, because of his connection to Afghanistan, he was upset about the war there."
But Adela was shocked by that claim.
"I don't why he'd say that. We have no ties to the Middle East or anything like that," she said. "We are from the South, although he has some relatives in Barbados."
A Newburgh neighbor, who gave only her first name, Kristina, said Cromitie was "dedicated" to his faith, but never expressed any anti-American or anti-Semitic beliefs.
"He never showed any kind of anger," she said. "He was dedicated, but he never expressed it in a negative way."
Other relatives said he used to be a fun-loving guy who enjoyed singing and doing impersonations. But now that he has been caught up in a plot to kill, his family flat-out dismissed him.
"Right now, to me he's, like, the dumbest person on this Earth," said his sister, Wanda Walker.
David "Daoud" Williams had a Muslim father who had never been much a part of his life. But Williams re-embraced the religion after serving time in 2004 and 2005 for criminal possession of a weapon, and had appeared to be getting on the right track since then, living and working in Brooklyn.
"He wasn't a radical Muslim. He was raised that way. That's just the way he is," said David Williams' girlfriend, Cassandra McCoy. "He is just a beautiful person in-and-out."
Relatives said he had recently quit his job as a chef at the Boulder Creek Steakhouse at a mall in East New York and moved back to Newburgh to help care for his teenage brother, who was recently diagnosed with sarcoidosis, a debilitating lung disease.
He had been studying computer science at ASA College in Brooklyn.
"We know him as someone who was trying to get things together and trying to support his brother," said his aunt Aahkiyaah Cummings. "We don't know that part of him."
But she said that she had detected a change in recent weeks -- and that he acted strange when she gave him a hug in the parking lot of their housing complex about a week and a half ago.
"It was a coldness. It was an emptiness. It wasn't him. Something was not right," she said. "I asked my husband to talk to him because something was not right. He never got a chance to."
Onta Williams' uncle, Richard, said he recently sensed a change in his nephew, too -- after he began spending more time with his Muslim friends.
"I knew something was going to pop off. I would ask him if something was wrong, but he would never tell me about it," he said. "His whole mood had changed lately. His friends would come by to pick him up, and he would drop everything.
"He had always been a follower, not a leader," he added.
The fourth man, Laguerre Payan, was born in Haiti and had been living in a boarding house in Newburgh since being released from jail in 2005 after serving 1½ years for attempted assault. Suffering from mental illness, he took anti-psychosis drugs and medication for depression, authorities said.
Earlier this year, he began appearing at the Masjid al-Ikhlas mosque, where he told the assistant imam, Hamim Rashada, that he was fighting deportation and engaged in a custody battle.
"He had some serious psychological problems. He suffers from serious paranoia," Rashada said.
The imam said he once visited Payan at the boarding house and found his room in shocking disarray, with food rotting on the stove and a bottle of urine sitting next to the door.
He said he thought it strange that he saw Payan --who was penniless and living on food stamps and government assistance -- on more than one occasion with a brand-new cellphone still in its box.
"I asked him why, if he already had a phone, why he would need another, and he responded, 'I could use it for the minutes,' " Rashada said.
Authorities say the men had planned to use cellphones to detonate the bombs remotely.
Still, when Rashada once asked Payan what he thought about what was going on in Afghanistan, he didn't seem to have any opinion.
"He told me, 'I can't even get a job here. I don't concern myself with those things.' " Rashada recalled.
Although the suspects all met at the mosque, authorities have not indicated that they believe radicalism was being preached there or that anyone else there had any role in the plot.
The mosque's head imam, Salahuddin Mustafa Mohammad, an ex-con himself who has worked as an Islamic cleric at the Fishkill correctional facility, said he remembered seeing Cromitie around the mosque only a handful of times, and had no recollection of either Williams ever being there.
"They have no affiliation with this mosque. We don't teach that here. We teach respect to others. If a person has these thoughts, he is not a part of our community," he said.
Mohammad said members of the mosque had detected a man they believe was the government's informant, trying to get people to talk about jihad and radical Islam. The man would take people out for expensive meals to win them over, Mohammad said.
"Anyone with any smarts knew to stay away from this guy," he said. "These guys are not bright enough to conjure up something like this."

Additional reporting by Leonard Greene, Murray Weiss, Jeane MacIntosh, Austin Fenner and Kevin Fasick
lorena.mongelli@nypost.comHome
Copyright 2009 NYP Holdings, Inc

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