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Saturday, January 5, 2008

The Tearing of the Conservative Fusion

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WASHINGTON -- Like Job after losing his camels and acquiring boils, the conservative movement is in distress. Mike Huckabee shreds the compact that has held the movement's two tendencies in sometimes uneasy equipoise. Social conservatives, many of whom share Huckabee's desire to "take back this nation for Christ," have collaborated with limited-government, market-oriented, capitalism-defending conservatives who want to take back the nation for James Madison. Under the doctrine that conservatives call "fusion," each faction has respected the other's agenda. Huckabee aggressively repudiates the Madisonians.

He and John Edwards, flaunting their histrionic humility in order to promote their curdled populism, hawked strikingly similar messages in Iowa, encouraging self-pity and economic hypochondria. Edwards and Huckabee lament a shrinking middle class. Well.

Economist Stephen Rose, defining the middle class as households with annual incomes between $30,000 and $100,000, says a smaller percentage of Americans are in that category than in 1979 -- because the percentage of Americans earning more than $100,000 has doubled from 12 to 24, while the percentage earning less than $30,000 is unchanged. "So," Rose says, "the entire 'decline' of the middle class came from people moving up the income ladder." Even as housing values declined in 2007, the net worth of households increased.

Huckabee told heavily subsidized Iowa -- Washington's ethanol enthusiasm has farm values and incomes soaring -- that Americans striving to rise are "pushed down every time they try by their own government." Edwards, synthetic candidate of theatrical bitterness on behalf of America's crushed, groaning majority, says the rich have an "iron-fisted grip" on democracy and a "stranglehold" on the economy. Strangely, these fists have imposed a tax code that makes the top 1 percent of earners pay 39 percent of all income tax revenues, the top 5 percent pay 60 percent, and the bottom 50 percent pay only 3 percent.

According to Edwards, the North Carolina of his youth resembled Chechnya today -- "I had to fight to survive. I mean really. Literally." Huckabee, a compound of Uriah Heep, Elmer Gantry and Richard Nixon, preens about his humble background: "In my family, 'summer' was never a verb." Nixon, who maundered about his parents' privations and wife's cloth coat, followed Lyndon Johnson, another miscast president whose festering resentments and status anxieties colored his conduct of office. Here we go again?

Huckabee fancies himself persecuted by the Republican "establishment," a creature already negligible by 1964, when it failed to stop Barry Goldwater's nomination. The establishment's voice, the New York Herald Tribune, expired in 1966. Huckabee says "only one explanation" fits his Iowa success "and it's not a human one. It's the same power that helped a little boy with two fish and five loaves feed a crowd of 5,000 people." God so loves Huckabee's politics that He worked a Midwest miracle on his behalf? Should someone so delusional control nuclear weapons?

Speaking of delusions, Edwards seems unaware that the world market sets the price of oil. He says a $100-a-barrel price is evidence of -- surging demand in India and China? unrest in Nigeria's oil fields? No, "corporate greed." That is Edwards' explanation of every unpleasantness. Mitt Romney's versatility of conviction, although it repelled Iowans, has been a modest makeover compared to Edwards' personality transplant. The sunny Southerner of 2004 has become the angry paladin of the suffering multitudes, to whom he shouts: "Treat these people the way they treat you!" Presumably he means treat "the rich" badly -- an odious exhortation to one portion of Americans, regarding another.

Although Huckabee and Edwards profess to loathe and vow to change Washington's culture, each would aggravate its toxicity. Each overflows with and wallows in the pugnacity of the self-righteous who discern contemptible motives behind all disagreements with them, and who therefore think opponents are enemies and differences are unsplittable.

The way to achieve Edwards' and Huckabee's populist goal of reducing the role of "special interests," meaning money, in government is to reduce the role of government in distributing money. But populists want to sharply increase that role by expanding the regulatory state's reach and enlarging its agenda of determining the distribution of wealth. Populists, who are slow learners, cannot comprehend this iron law: Concentrate power in Washington and you increase the power of interests whose representatives are concentrated there.

Barack Obama, who might be mercifully closing the Clinton parenthesis in presidential history, is refreshingly cerebral amid this recrudescence of the paranoid style in American politics. He is the un-Edwards and un-Huckabee -- an adult aiming to reform the real world rather than an adolescent fantasizing mock-heroic "fights" against fictitious villains in a left-wing cartoon version of this country.

By George Will
Townhall.com

Friday, January 4, 2008

Requirement about American flags is among new state laws

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Lee Herold of Rochester has thousands of flags crammed into his store on Second Street Southwest, with nations from Cuba to Sri Lanka represented.

Herold Flags also has a fair share of its best-selling flag, the U.S. flag, which a state law that started Jan. 1 requires must be made in the U.S.A. to be sold in Minnesota.

The law won't hurt Herold Flags because the American flags in stock are already manufactured in the U.S., Herold said.

At the same time, a provision governing novelties and other items featuring American flags was removed from the flag bill before it was passed. As a result, U.S. flag stickers in Herold's store that were made in Taiwan are not covered by the law.

It isn't clear how the flag law will be enforced.

Cont....

By Matt Russell
Post-Bulletin, Rochester MN

Wednesday, January 2, 2008

Huckabee Insists No Trick With Ad

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Republican presidential candidate Mike Huckabee insisted he wasn't trying to pull a fast one when he played a negative TV commercial for the media even as he promised not to air it for voters.

"It was not trying to be tricky; it was trying to be as honest as I could," the former Arkansas governor said Tuesday. "If I'd have really wanted to be tricky, I would have let the ad run three days and then say, 'No, I've had a change of mind."

Huckabee had called a news conference Monday to say he was going negative in Iowa, where he is in a tight race with Mitt Romney, and to play the ad that was going to hit the airwaves.

Instead, he said he had a last-minute change of heart and would not air it. Yet he played the ad anyway, prompting incredulous laughter from the media.

Reporters peppered him with questions about it on Tuesday.

"You know, at the time, I thought it was an important way to prove that we actually had it," he said of the ad. "Probably if I had it to do over again, I wouldn't have shown it. And you would have said 'Aww, show it, you don't really have one,' and then you would've beaten me up for not showing it.

"Either way I did it, somebody would have had some interpretation of whether it was right to show it," Huckabee said. "The one thing I don't have any regret about, I have no regret at all about pulling the ad.

"I know we did the right thing, and I have no regrets about trying to say 'Let's change the tone.' That was the right decision."

At that, supporters standing behind the crush of journalists applauded. Huckabee jokingly pretended it was the media clapping.

"Thank you, press, for clapping for me," he said. "You laughed at me yesterday; you clap for me today, yes."

Would it have made Huckabee look mean to have shown the media the ad anyway? "No, because I don't think many people will ever see it. I'm not sure that anybody will."

Told the ad was posted on a blog by Carl Cameron of Fox News, Huckabee asked, "Oh, is it? How did he get it?"

Iowa's caucuses, the first votes of the 2008 presidential nominating season, are Thursday. Polls showed Huckabee surging ahead of Romney last month, but Romney has narrowed the gap with negative ads about Huckabee's record of being more forgiving toward illegal immigrants, granting clemency to criminals and raising taxes. Huckabee has said the spots may have hurt him.

At the news conference, his campaign had placed signs that read, "Enough is Enough," a response to Romney's ads. The slogan remained on a campaign banner Tuesday in Cedar Falls, where Huckabee played the bass guitar and spoke to about 400 supporters at the Elks Lodge.

"It's still valid," Huckabee told reporters. "I said enough is enough of the negative campaigning. That's speaking to me as much as anybody else."

By LIBBY QUAID
Townhall.com

What Are the Top American-Made Cars?

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Cars.com's American-Made Index rates vehicles built and bought in the U.S. Factors include sales, where the car's parts are made and whether the car is assembled in the U.S. Models that have been discontinued are disqualified, as are those with a domestic-parts content rating below 75 percent.

Rank
Make/Model
U.S. Assembly Location

1.
Ford F-150*
Claycomo, Mo.;Dearborn, Mich.

2.
Chevrolet Cobalt
Lordstown, Ohio

3.
Chevrolet Silverado 1500*
Fort Wayne, Ind.;Pontiac, Mich.

4.
Toyota Tundra
Princeton, Ind.;San Antonio, Texas

5.
Pontiac G6
Orion, Mich.

6.
Toyota Sienna
Princeton, Ind.

7.
Ford Escape**
Claycomo, Mo.

8.
Chevrolet TrailBlazer
Moraine, Ohio

9.
Chevrolet Malibu
Kansas City, Kan.

10.
Ford Explorer/Sport Trac
Louisville, Ky.;St. Louis

Cars.com
 

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