Legal marijuana is creating havoc in of Nevada. According to Hot Air.com, Nevada lawmakers recently legalized the drug, but the 47 licensed distributors in the state can’t keep up with demands since the law went into effect July 1st. The number of government restrictions combined with overwhelming demand has authorities scrambling. The restrictions are slowing the licensing process, meaning the government is losing tax revenue by over-regulation for something they just approved. Emergency action is scheduled for July 13th and aims to relax regulations in order to bring more distributors into the market. ~Sarah Schutte
Archives for July 2017
Missile Test Success
The U.S. successfully tested a Terminal High Altitude Area Defense, or T-H-A-A-D system Tuesday. According to Fox News, the test took place over Alaska and marks the 14th successful launch of this system. T-H-A-A-D systems are designed to intercept short and intermediate range missiles, and the process is described as “shooting down a bullet with another bullet”. This success comes on the heels of last week’s North Korean Intercontinental Ballistic Missile launch. Officials are pleased with the results of the test and the personnel conducting it. ~Sarah Schutte
ISIS In Crisis, Comey Memo Mayhem, Bernie Healthcare Hysteria
Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America welcome reports of ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi’s death and Jim offers some super helpful tips to anyone looking to take his place. They also address Fox and Friends’ retraction after they overstated the level of classified information that former FBI Director James Comey revealed in his memos. And they ridicule Sen. Bernie Sanders for his outrageous and hysterical claims that the GOP healthcare bill will result in thousands of deaths every year if it passes.
ISIS Defeat Spawns New Threats
The U.S. and other coalition partners are celebrating the defeat of ISIS in Mosul, but a prominent national security expert says the victory is actually jump starting the most dangerous part of the ISIS strategy and paving the way for Iranian domination of Iraq.
“The global Coalition fighting ISIS congratulates Prime Minister al-Abadi and the Iraqi Security Forces on their historic victory against a brutal and evil enemy,” stated Lt. Gen. Stephen J. Townsend, commanding general of Combined Joint Task Force – Operation Inherent Resolve.
“Make no mistake; this victory alone does not eliminate ISIS and there is still a tough fight ahead. But the loss of one of its twin capitals and a jewel of their so-called caliphate is a decisive blow,” he added.
On Monday, Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi went to Mosul to declare victory in the eight-month-long battle to take back Iraq’s second-largest city from the Sunni radicals. The win comes just three years after Iraqi forces humiliated themselves by throwing down their weapons and taking off their uniforms as ISIS advanced.
Retired U.S. Navy Captain Chuck Nash says U.S. involvement played a key role.
“The United States has been back in there. We’ve been training. I know some of the special forces people who have been over there and did a fantastic job. Now they’ve got some good, solid leadership in the junior officer and middle ranks and they’re still working on some of the senior ranks,” said Nash.
But as ISIS rapidly loses control of territory in Iraq and Syria, including control of the supposed capital of the caliphate, Nash says the West is about to see the evolution of the group that presents the most danger to us.
“It’s a big deal. That’s going to hurt their recruiting efforts somewhat, but what they’re doing is going into ISIS phase three,” said Nash.
He says the first phase was to build up up troops from the former Al Qaeda in Iraq into a large fighting force and the second phase was to expand the territory of the caliphate. Now that those gains are being quickly rolled back, Nash suspects we’ll see more of the latest strategy from ISIS.
“Phase three is, ‘What happens when we lose that ground? How do we reinvent ourselves?’ What’s happening is they’re sending hundreds of these foreign fighters back to their countries of origin and the countries of origin are taking them in. So they’re going to metastasize this,” said Nash.
As horrific as the ISIS control over parts of Iraq and Syria have been, Nash says we knew where to find them and kill them. He says this dispersion strategy makes the job of free societies a lot harder.
“At one point, it was a cancer but it was a tumor, it was observable. We could see it growing, but it was localized. Now as they lose and they go into phase three, that cancer is going to metastasize,” said Nash.
He says the means Islamic radicals are going back to their home counties and the leaders of those countries are rolling out the red carpet.
“Now they’re going to be among us and what are they going to do? The whole vehicle into crowds, the knifing attacks and all that, and it won’t take long until the bombs start going off either. This is a very dangerous phase, which is why these governments are near suicidal by allowing these people back into the countries,” said Nash.
Back in Iraq, it’s not just better trained Iraqi soldiers who are defeating ISIS. He says the best fighters are actually a combination of Iranian Quds forces and various Shia militias from the southern part of Iraq.
Nash says Iran and it’s satellites are not just fighting to uproot ISIS, but because Tehran has visions of dominating the region.
“The Iranians are looking to connect the Persian Iran, the Shia Iran, through Shia Iraq, through and into Syria and Lebanon where they have Hezbollah. They’re looking at what’s been termed the Shia crescent, that now covers an arc spanning from the east in Iran all the way westward to the Mediterranean,” said Nash.
Given the Shia domination of Iraq’s government, Nash suspects there will be little resistance in Baghdad to doing Iran’s bidding.
“When we deposed Saddam Hussein, that opened the door for the Iranians and now the Shia population vastly outnumbers the Kurds and the Sunnis. So it is a Shia country and it is a Shi’ite government and it is aligned with Iran,” said Nash.
However, Nash believes that Iraq can be convinced to take a different course, premised on the boundless economic potential of remaining fiercely independent.
On a trip to Iraq shortly after Hussein was deposed, Nash and others received a briefing on the economic possibilities resulting from Iraq’s location at the fertile crescent and their vast oil reserves.
“The reason is because of Mesopotamia. [The briefing officer] said, ‘This is the richest soil, the rainfall and the water from the Tigris and the Euphrates could be the breadbasket of southwest Asia and the Middle East. Add in oil, and all of a sudden you have a monster of an economy,” said Nash.
Nash says there’s an obvious foot in the door for the President Trump and our allies by showing a willingness to partner with Iraq in rebuilding Mosul and other cities devastated by ISIS.
“He needs to engage the Iraqi government and let them know when they come out of this that the United States is willing to trade and continue to work with Iraq to help them re-establish,” said Nash.
The DVA Cleans House
The Department of Veterans Affairs is starting a much-needed overhaul after scandals involving veteran wait times for care. According to Hot Air.com, serious reforms were enacted even before President Trump signed the V-A reform bill a few weeks ago. As a result, over 500 Affairs personnel were fired since the inauguration, and over 100 given disciplinary action. The names of those fired are not being released at this time. ~ Sarah Schutte
ISIS Mauled in Mosul, Comey’s Classified Memos, Donald Jr.’s Dumb Move
Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America celebrate the liberation of Mosul from ISIS control and the tightening of the noose around ISIS in Syria as well. They also discuss reports that former FBI Director James Comey’s memos on conversations with President Trump contain classified information. And they lightheartedly critique Donald Trump Jr.’s account of a fruitless meeting between top Trump campaign officials and a Russian lawyer who claimed to have dirt on Hillary Clinton but really wanted to talk about adoption policy.
‘Illinois Is Going in the Wrong Direction’
Illinois Democrats fended off their Republican colleagues and a governor’s veto to pass the state’s first budget in three years, including new income tax hikes, in an effort to ward off a fiscal crisis that conservative critics say was devoid of any effort to address the issues driving the problem.
On Thursday, the Illinois House of Representatives followed the lead of the state senate in overriding Republican Gov. Bruce Rauner’s veto of the $36 billion budget, including five billion dollars in new income taxes. The vote was 71-46.
Fifteen House Republicans went along with the Democratic plan on the initial vote. Ten voted to override Rauner’s veto.
Democrats are celebrating a political victory and claim they prevented the state’s bond rating from sinking to junk status with this legislation.
That fiscal peril catapulted the Illinois budget fight into a national news story about whether tax increases or difficult reforms are the proper path to sustained stability.
Conservatives say ignoring the state’s biggest problems will not make them go away.
“The trend over the last eight to ten years is that states recognize you cannot put these problems off,” said Illinois State Rep. Tom Morrison, who was first elected in 2010 and voted against the tax increase.
“You have to reform. You have to deal with your growing pension problem You have to make your state as friendly as possible to business, to private investment, so that you have a growing economy, so that you have more people working so that you increase your tax revenues via a growing economy,” said Morrison.
He says Illinois Democrats refuse to follow that path.
“Illinois is going in the wrong direction, in the sense that we are increasing taxes rather than making the state friendlier to taxpayers,” said Morrison.
The tax hike comes in the form of a 32 percent increase in the state income tax, which now rises from 3.75 percent to 4.95 percent.
Even though Illinois has a flat rate for the state income tax as mandated by the state constitution, Morrison says the income tax rate is not as benign as it looks.
“A lot of people would say, ‘What’s the big deal in Illinois? You’ve got a flat tax. You’re still under five percent. That seems to be fairly reasonable,'” said Morrison.
“What that argument is excluding is the overall tax burden in Illinois. We’re only behind New Jersey in terms of property taxes. We also have a very, very significant sales tax,” he added.
“When you put all of those factors together, it is a very high tax burden, especially compared to our neighbors. The other things is we haven’t dealt with our unfunded pension liabilities. No real reform was done to those,” said Morrison.
Instead of figuring out a way to bring major programs like the pension and health insurance systems under control, Morrison says the state often burdens local governments with massive unfunded mandates, which translate into sky-high property taxes for residents.
Morrison says the failure to address the key drivers of government spending will leave the government scrambling for even more money before long.
“So with $130 billion-plus in unfunded pension liability, there’s going to have to be another tax increase to help cover that and/or cuts in services,” said Morrison.
The tax burden in Illinois has already triggered the exodus of some businesses. Morrison says it’s impossible to predict what higher income taxes will do to the business climate, but he’s confident they won’t help.
“There will be an increase in revenues in the short term. People can’t plan to move in 24 hours (since the tax increase was enacted). these things take time to roll out,” he said.
“Unless we address the underlying cost drivers, we’re really not going to get out of our situation. Even if tax rates go up, if your tax base shrinks, you could – over time – actually get less tax revenue,” said Morrison.
While Democrats tried to pin the state’s financial woes on a stubborn Gov. Rauner, Morrison says years of Democrats whistling past the financial graveyard led to the balance sheet nightmare of billions in deficits and unpaid bills.
“We had 12 years of total Democrat control, between Gov. Rod Blagojevich, and his successor, Gov. Pat Quinn, a supermajority of Democrat House members and Senate members and these problems have been growing and growing and growing,” said Morrison.
He says Democrats have shown zero interest in working with Rauner.
“Finally, a reformer, Republican Bruce Rauner gets elected and the Democrat-controlled legislature continued to just stand in the way of the reforms he needed to get done.
“They would not agree to compromises, so as this impasse has dragged on, unpaid bills continued to rise and the pressure points on social service providers, universities and K-12 schools came to this head,” said Morrison.
So what reforms would Morrison like to see? He used insurance as an example.
“One of the major issues in Illinois is our worker’s compensation insurance costs. We’re significantly higher than our Midwestern neighbors, so as a consequence it’s very difficult to operate a business in Illinois. If you’re heavy on labor, your costs are going to be significantly higher,” said Morrison.
He says even when Democrats address such issues they dance around the heart of the matter.
“About six years ago there was an attempt at reform but didn’t really deal with the driver of worker’s compensation costs, that is causation. Was the worker actually injured because of the job or were they injured during their off hours but then getting covered on the employer’s worker compensation plan?” said Morrison.
“Any attempts at reform that don’t include that (kind of ) reform aren’t really going to save businesses money,” he added.
Morrison believes Illinois is poised in many ways to see vigorous growth but he says the politicians need to let it happen.
“This state can thrive if we get our policy right. Illinois has so much going for it: the natural resources, the human resources, the diverse economy, the access to world markets, the Central Time Zone, fresh water. We’ve got so much going for it but the people are frustrated and upset because the policy has been so wrong,” said Morrison.
“I continue to fight for better policy that will make this state grow again. I think we can recover but not if we keep choosing policies like these,” he said.
‘Do What You Told the Voters You Were Going to Do’
Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell says it may not be possible to unite 50 Republicans on any health care overhaul and that the only action may be a collaboration with Democrats to adjust certain parts of the system, an evaluation that a leading House conservative finds unacceptable.
On Thursday, McConnell told a town hall-style event in Kentucky that political realities inside the Senate Republican Conference make it very difficult to find consensus.
“I’m in the position of a guy with a Rubik’s cube, trying to twist the dial in such a way to get at least 50 members of my conference who can agree to a version of repealing and replacing” said McConnell, according to NBC News. “That is a very timely subject that I’m grappling with as we speak.”
“If Republicans are not able to agree among themselves, the crisis will still be there and we’ll have to figure out the way forward at that point,” added McConnell, who later said that could mean working with Democrats to provide options for Americans in the individual insurance marketplace but have no plans available where they live.
Rep. Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, who is also a co-founder of the House Freedom Caucus, says Republicans had an obvious path to avoiding this political mess.
“Sometimes we forget what our responsibilities are in Congress. Some are pretty basic. Do what you told the voters you were going to do. We were very clear over the last six years when we told the American people we were going to repeal Obamacare. That’s what we should have done. That’s what the Freedom Caucus proposed,” said Jordan.
Jordan wanted the same approach in the House but didn’t get it.
“I actually introduced that clean repeal, the same bill we voted on [in 2015] that we put on President’s Obama’s desk, we thought we should put it on President Trump’s desk and have a two-year phaseout where we had time to do the replacement. Unfortunately, that’s not the path that was chosen by our leadership,” said Jordan.
While congressional leaders insist Senate rules limit what legislation can pass with a simple majority of votes, Jordan says the passage of the 2015 repeal proves otherwise. On December 3, 2015, the Senate approved the Obamacare repeal by a vote of 52-47.
All current Republican senators who were in office then voted for the repeal, with the lone exception of Sen. Susan Collins, R-Maine.
As many as 14 Republicans have expressed opposition or reservations about the Senate bill, which McConnell pulled off the Senate schedule late last month. Some insist Congress must make good on vows to repeal and replace Obamacare and make sure that any legislation drives down the cost of premiums.
But moderates who are opposed to the measure are upset that there is not a greater role for government, as they demand more generous Medicaid expansion, Planned Parenthood funding, billions for opioid addition treatment or other priorities.
Despite the individual issues raised, Jordan says there’s a more discouraging fact behind the GOP’s inability to move this effort more smoothly.
“When you boil it all down, read Byron York’s column a few months back, where he said that the reason that Republicans aren’t doing a full repeal is because some Republicans don’t want to repeal Obamacare.
Jordan suggests that fact can be seen in how some GOP members are worried about limiting Medicaid expansion just 18 months after backing a much more conservative approach.
“That bill said Medicaid expansion goes away after two years. You don’t add to it. You don’t phase it out. It’s done. It’s a two-year wind down and the expansion part is no longer the law. That’s what we passed a year ago. Now we can’t do it, so that’s the frustrating thing for all of us,” said Jordan.
But all hope is not lost. Jordan says the Senate could be salvaged from a conservative perspective if lawmakers there embrace an amendment from Sens. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, and Mike Lee, R-Utah.
“The Cruz Amendment creates what we call freedom of choice or a consumer choice option, which would say as long as an insurance company provides one plan in each category that meets with all the Obamacare regulations, they could then also offer any other plan that consumers and patients also want,” said Jordan.
“That would be moving us back toward a market that would bring down premiums for so many families and just makes good common sense to me. If that amendment goes in, I think the bill is good and you would see conservatives support it on the House side. Let’s see if that amendment gets in the Senate bill,” said Jordan.
While some Republicans in Washington bemoan the complexity of the issue and the legislative process, Jordan says the business owners and families in his district see things very clearly.
“Traveling in our district, we hear from employers all the time. Even this morning they said, ‘Here’s what’s happened to our health care costs. These aren’t even people who are in the small group or the individual market. They’re in the large group market. They’re costs are going up too.
“They want changes. They know what Obamacare has done. They want changes there, they want changes in the tax code. They want us to do what we said. They want us to secure the border,” said Jordan.
“Let’s get after doing what we told them we were going to do. After all, that’s what our job is. We better get doing that and the sooner the better,” said Jordan.
U.S.-Russian Ceasefire in Syria
Movie Madness
After a rash of box-office bombs, Hollywood is blaming President Trump for their failures. According to Hot Air.com, filmmakers claim that Trump’s presidency is changing the political climate, and the type of comedy that used to sell is now falling flat. Comedies such as the recently released “The House” did poorly in theaters. Others however believe Hollywood is its own enemy, with a stream of continual story rehashing and sequels flooding the market. Critics say moviegoers are showing increased interest in more creative, non-sequel films. ~Sarah Schutte