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DeMint Offers Conservative Ideas to Improve America

October 11, 2019 by GregC

Listen to “DeMint Offers Conservative Ideas to Improve America” on Spreaker.

In the second half of our interview with Conservative Partnership Institute Chairman Jim DeMint, the former U.S. senator and co-author of “Conservative: What to Keep,” DeMint explains how conservatives want to help people who are struggling without making them dependent upon government.

He also walks us through a number of conservative policy ideas and innovations to improve our nation, including Education Savings Accounts and converting vehicles to run on natural gas.

Listen to the full podcast as DeMint also tells Greg Corombos why there isn’t much appetite for policy innovation in Congress these days and how people can come together around possible policy solutions in an era when the partisan divide seems wider than ever.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: conservative, DeMint, dependence, education, energy, gas, government, news

Tracking Your Tax Dollars

August 13, 2019 by GregC

Listen to “Tracking Your Tax Dollars” on Spreaker.

Over the first ten months of Fiscal Year 2019, the United States is running it’s largest deficit in history. Fiscal restraint was laughed out of Washington by both parties a long time ago, but what exactly is happening with your tax dollars?

OpentheBooks.com recently studied where nearly $170 billion from the Small Business Administration went over a five-year span.

In this podcast, OpentheBooks CEO Adam Andrzejewski details the questionable recipients of much of this money and how little of it went to mom and pop business owners struggling to survive.  But he also discusses one way in which the federal government is starting to crack down on spending.

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Filed Under: News & Politics Tagged With: businesses, deficits, government, news, SBA, spending

Public Option = Government-Run Health Care

July 17, 2019 by GregC

Listen to “Public Option = Government-Run Health Care” on Spreaker.

Former Vice President Joe Biden is once again staying very close to President Obama, this time billing his health care plan as Obamacare 2.0 and even promising once again that Americans who like their private health coverage can keep it.

The Obama-Biden administration repeated that promise over and over as part of the debate over the Affordable Care Act.  Due to the regulatory changes of the law, plans could not stay the same.  Americans were forced into more comprehensive plans and some carriers dropped their customers altogether.

As a result, Politifact named “If you like your plan, you can keep your plan” the Lie of the Year in 2013.

Biden is now positioning himself as a moderate in the Democratic field for 2020.  He says a Medicare for All approach that would abolish private insurance and leave the government in complete control is a bridge too far.  Instead he is pushing a public option – a government-run plan that would compete with private coverage.

“If you like your plan, your employer-based plan, you can keep it.  If in fact, you have private insurance, you can keep it,” said Biden on Monday.

But what Biden labels a moderate approach Galen Institute President Grace-Marie Turner sees as a mere stepping stone to government-run health care that kills private sector health coverage.

“The federal government has unlimited calls on taxpayer dollars.  It can write the rules that everybody has to comply with.  Private plans will not be able to compete, so people will inevitably lose their private plans simply because they will go under,” said Turner.

Listen to the full podcast to hear Turner explain in greater detail how a public option would ultimately force private insurers out of business, what approach she believes is far better than a public option or Medicare for All, and how Americans are approaching this critical debate.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: 2020, Biden, government, insurance, news, obama, option, public

One Way the Government Wastes $100 Billion

March 11, 2019 by GregC

Listen to “One Way the Government Wastes $100 Billion” on Spreaker.

The national debt just eclipsed $22 trillion, so wasting $100 billion per year seems small in comparison, but a government watchdog says federal agencies are wasting huge sums of money to ensure they keep getting even more.

It’s called “use it or lose it” spending.  Agencies get a certain amount of money allotted each year in federal spending, and as the fiscal year draws to a close, the spending tends to ramp up dramatically.

“The federal agency heads spend down their budgets this year so they get the same or more money appropriated by Congress for the next year,” said Adam Andrzejewski, founder and CEO at openthebooks.com.

In September 2018 alone, Andrzejewski reports that federal agencies shelled out nearly $100 billion.  Twenty percent of of the annual budget went towards this spending.

“In the last week, federal agencies spent $53 billion on contracts.  This was roughly one out of every ten dollars spent on the year was spent on this last week,” said Andrzejewski.

Listen to the full podcast as Andrzejewski offers examples of how that taxpayer money was spent at the end of the year and what he thinks of President Trump’s budget blueprint that calls for a five percent spending cut in Fiscal Year 2020.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: government, spending, waste

Both Parties Ignoring Massive Debt & Waste

February 8, 2019 by GregC

Listen to “Both Parties Ignoring Massive Debt & Waste” on Spreaker.

President Trump never mentioned the national debt, the federal deficit. or wasteful spending in his State of the Union message, and Democrats also dodged the issues in their response.  A leading fiscal watchdog says that was a big mistake.

“I really think the president missed an opportunity here to take his own party to task on spending,” said Adam Andrzejewski, CEO and Founder of OpentheBooks.com.

Andrzejewski joined dozens of other conservative allies in taking out an ad in Tuesday’s Wall Street Journal, imploring Trump to address the issue.  The letter included many former lawmakers and public officials, including former House Speaker Newt Gingrich and former U.S. Attorney General Edwin Meese III.

The base of his party wants the president to hone the budget.  They want him to go after waste, fraud, corruption, and abuse,” said Andrzejewski.

Trump is hamstrung on the issue in multiple ways:  He refuses to reform entitlements and Democrats now control the U.S. House of Representatives.  Andrzejewski says the president is also facing stiff resistance within his own administration to his call for five percent spending cuts.

“We hear that the cabinet secretaries aren’t serious about the five percent cuts.  That’s the purpose of coming back to this topic to encourage the president to really make this a signature part of his administration,” said Andrzejewski.

Andrzejewski says Trump could also pressure Congress to cut way back on the $600 billion spent every year on grants.  Those grants include $1.4 to teach sex education to California prostitutes, and nearly a million dollars each for Cornell University to study where it hurts most to get stung by a bee and Harvard to breed pugilistic mice.

He also says taxpayers lost $136 billion on mistaken payments and that the average pay and benefits for a federal bureaucrat now exceeds $100,000.

Listen to the full podcast to hear Andrzejewski explain other bad habits in Washington that cost us money and how citizens must be the ones to demand better.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: debt, deficits, government, news, spending, waste

Green Deal or Con Job?

February 7, 2019 by GregC

Listen to “Green Deal or Con Job?” on Spreaker.

On Friday, supporters of the Green New Deal released details that one conservative analyst says is proof that the “green agenda” is not about the climate at all but rather a major push for a bigger and more powerful government.

“There’s some real tells in here. It’s not about the climate. There’s no assertion (about) what the temperature would be or that the temperature would be any lower.
”
“It’s in the name of climate change but there’s something immoral about imposing policies in the name of averting a catastrophe that you don’t claim – and no one claims – would actually impact the alleged looming catastrophe,” said Competitive Enterprise Institute Senior Fellow Christopher C. Horner.

The Green New Deal calls for government-guaranteed jobs and health care for everyone, and safety net for those unable and even those unable to work.

The plan also calls for the end to fossil fuels by 2030 the hope that air travel would also be unnecessary by then. Supporters says paying for it up front is not critical because of the economic transformation resulting from an economy based on renewable fuels.

Listen to the full podcast to hear Horner discuss whether renewables can bring about an economic boom and why he believes just laughing off this proposal would be a very mistake.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: climate, fossil fuels, government, Green New Deal, news

Sec. Zinke Exits with Mixed Record

January 4, 2019 by GregC

Listen to “Sec. Zinke Exits with Mixed Record” on Spreaker.

Ryan Zinke is officially out as Secretary of the Interior, and while President Trump looks for a successor, a conservative policy expert says Zinke’s tenure was marked by some excellent policies and a major missed opportunity.

“Overall, I’d give him about a C-plus.  It being a new year, let’s be generous – a B-minus,” said National Center for Public Policy Research Senior Fellow Bonner Cohen.

Cohen says he’s greatly disappointed that Zinke to change the government mindset on federal lands.

“Where I think he fell short is (that) Zinke is wedded to the whole idea of government ownership of land.  He opposes the transfer of these millions and millions and millions of acres of land, primarily in the west, either to the private sector or to the states in which those lands are located to dispose of and manage as they see fit,” said Cohen.

The government oversees more than 250 million acres of land, including 87 percent of Nevada and 63 percent of both Utah and Idaho.

“That puts enormous strains on local, rural communities because they have no tax base.  They can’t spend public funds on schools, infrastructure, roads, bridges because those funds have to come from private property taxes and there’s practically no private property in those places,” said Cohen.

But Cohen is thrilled with the results of Zinke’s efforts to boost domestic energy production.

“In keeping with President Trump’s policy of making the United States the world’s greatest energy producer, he opened up more areas on public lands for oil, gas, and coal exploration.

“This is excellent because it now means that the United States is the world’s largest producer of oil and natural gas.  We have overtaken Russia in natural gas production and we have overtaken both Russia and Saudi Arabia in oil production,” said Cohen.

Cohen is also generally pleased with Zinke for reining in the size of some huge swaths of land in the western U.S. known as national monuments.

“What was originally designed to protect sacred and cultural sites for Native Americans.  This simply became a political grab bag and an opportunity to go out and lock up more and more land.  The Trump administration cut this back,”Cohen.

Listen to the full podcast to hear more of Cohen’s assessment of the Zinke record and hear his list of people he considers excellent choices to lead the Department of the Interior going forward.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: government, Interior, land, news, Zinke

Are Students Led Astray by History Book Bias?

October 5, 2018 by GregC

Listen to “Are Students Led Astray by History Book Bias?” on Spreaker.

History textbooks for high school and college students increasingly show a bias that is impacting how teenagers and young adults view America and it’s role in the world, according to the Education and Research Institute.

ERI is sponsoring “The American History Book Project,” to point out and correct major factual errors and ideological bias in some of the most commonly used textbooks.  The first one in the cross hairs is “The American Pageant” by David M. Kennedy, Lizabeth Cohen, and Thomas A. Bailey.

ERI Chairman Daniel Oliver says “The American Pageant” is the first target because of how widely it is used, especially in high school advanced placement classes.

“So the best students are getting a very warped view of American history,” said Oliver.

And even when the details of history fade from memory, Oliver fears the bias in the textbooks lingers in the minds of students and informs their worldviews.

“They have a sense after reading textbooks like this that business is bad and government is good.  Government will protect you against greedy businessmen,” said Oliver.

Listen to the full podcast to hear what Oliver sees as the most egregious bias in “The American Pageant” and what he hopes to achieve by calling attention to the indoctrination he believes is going on in our schools.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: bias, business, government, Hiss, textbooks

Country Time vs. Big Government, Media in Bed with Leakers, Suicide Crisis

June 8, 2018 by GregC


After discussing the Washington Capitals ending a 26-year title drought in the nation’s capital, Jim Geraghty of National Review and Greg Corombos of Radio America applaud Country Time for vowing to pay the fines and permit fees for kids hassled by the government for running lemonade stands without business licenses.  They’re also disgusted as a 57-year-old married man with a high staff position for the Senate Intelligence Committee is charged with leaking classified information to two reporters, including his mistress, who was then 22-years-old.  And they note this week’s high profile suicides of Kate Spade and Anthony Bourdain as the suicide rate skyrockets in much of America, and they implore anyone struggling to go on to find help.  Finally, they close on another somber note as they process the news that conservative columnist and commentator Charles Krauthammer has only weeks to live.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: Bourdain, Country Time, government, Krauthammer, lemonade stands, National Review, permits, Three Martini Lunch, Watkins, Wolfe

Free Market Advocates Hail ‘Net Neutrality’ Repeal

December 14, 2017 by GregC

http://dateline.radioamerica.org/podcast/12-14-CUCCINELLI-BLOG.mp3

The Federal Communications Commission voted to reverse Obama-era ‘net neutrality’ regulations Thursday, cheering free market advocates and sparking fierce resistance from opponents who fear customers will be at the mercy of service providers.

The final vote, as expected, came along party lines.  Three GOP appointees voted for the change, while the two commissioners appointed by President Obama voted against it.

In recent weeks, critics of the reversal intensified their protests, claiming that reversing net neutrality would allow internet service providers to gouge consumers and force them into buying more of their products.  They also suggest removing government control increases the likelihood of fewer players in the industry.

However those verbal protests have escalated in ways that draw alarm, going so far as to publicize the names of FCC Chairman Ajit Pai’s children.  Thursday’s proceedings were briefly interrupted by a security scare.

After the vote, the mainstream media posted alarming headlines.  “End of the internet as we know it,” stated the headline at CNN.com.

On the CNN cable channel, the bottom of the screen read, “Party-line vote ends rules to keep internet open and fair.”  On Twitter, the Associated Press reported, “BREAKING: The FCC votes on party lines to undo sweeping Obama-era ‘net neutrality’ rules that guaranteed equal access to internet.”

But is that what happened?

“Those folks obviously don’t need to know what they’re talking about to put out what they call news,” said former Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli, who is now director of the Regulatory Action Center at FreedomWorks.

“What happened today is that the internet was returned today to the state of light regulation.  The word ‘light’ was used by Congress – you know the people who write the underlying laws for this stuff – way back in the nineties, that it had for its entire life until 2015,” said Cuccinelli.

Nonetheless, in recent weeks, critics of the reversal intensified their protests, going so far as to publicize the names of FCC Chairman Ajit Pai’s children.  Thursday’s proceedings were briefly interrupted by a security scare.

“Violence is acceptable to many on the left to achieve their political goals.  Let me say that again.  Violence is acceptable to many on the left to achieve their political goals.  Those goals always involve more government control and power,” said Cuccinelli.

For those fearful of what a reversal of net neutrality might mean, Cuccinelli offers a challenge.

“I would challenge any of the conspiracy theorists on the left to identify one thing that was impaired before 2015 that was suddenly fixed by those regulations or in the whole two years since then that is suddenly imperiled again.  The answer is they can’t.  What has been provided is certainty of the freedom of the internet again,” said Cuccinelli.

But while opponents of the reversal face that challenge, critics might fire back by asking how the internet supposedly got worse over the past two years, thus requiring such a move from the FCC.

Cuccinelli says internet service providers slowed down the expansion and upgrading of their networks long before 2015 in anticipation of net neutrality from the Obama administration.

“Investment in the internet began to drop.  We’re talking hundreds of billions of dollars.  The internet doesn’t just exist.  It has to be built and the government didn’t build it.  Private entities built it and it’s expensive to build.

“So what the Obama administration was trying to do was tell people who built pieces of the internet what they could and couldn’t do with their own property.  If that’s your option, are you as likely to build stuff if the government’s going to tell you what to do with it.  Of course not,” said Cuccinelli.

“We were freed from that with Chairman Pai’s proposed and now adopted freeing of the internet, the actual freeing of the internet from government.  Leftists believe freedom comes from government,” he added.

But what about the concerns that rolling back federal regulations will be bad news for consumers?  Cuccinelli says there are still plenty of provisions in the law to help any customers being gouged by their service providers.

“When consumers are preyed upon on the internet, the [Federal Trade Commission] is still there and state attorneys general – something I know about – are there to police fraud and that sort of behavior, whether it’s on the internet or not.  That opportunity still exists,” said Cuccinelli.

He also says there’s little reason to worry that competition among service providers will suffer.

“The ability to capture market share with no one else having any option to close in on you doesn’t exist anymore because of technology,” said Cuccinelli, who asserts that there is a much greater likelihood of competition eroding with the government picking winners and losers with respect to the internet.

Cuccinelli says if any regulations need to be added, they should not spring up from government bureaucrats.

“Let’s do it in the accountable body, the Congress, the one people vote for,” said Cuccinelli.  “Although I hope they end up right where they are now, that Congress looks at all this and decides we don’t want more regulation on the internet.  That has never worked,” said Cuccinelli.

With one side proclaiming freedom reigns on the internet and the other dreading the future with net neutrality kicked to the curb, Cuccinelli says reality will prove who is right.

“Thankfully, we’re going to have years of experience without this Obama-era regulation in place.  People are going to see productivity is going up, more access, more opportunity, more products available,” he said.

Cuccinelli says when it comes to opportunity, expecting progress through the federal government is a proven failure.

“More regulation from government has never expanded opportunity, freedom, or productivity in the marketplace.  There’s no reason to expect it to happen on the internet,” said Cuccinelli.

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Filed Under: News & Politics, Podcasts Tagged With: government, media, net neutrality, news, regulation

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