Tag Archives: FDR

Today in History for 22nd July 2013

Historical Events

1729 – Diamonds found in Minas Geras Brazil
1739 – Turks defeats Holy Roman Emp at Crocyka Yugoslavia and threaten Belgrade
1922 – Cards enter 1st place, marks 1st time both St Louis teams are on top
1933 – 1st solo flight round the world 7d 19hrs (Wiley Post)
1937 – Senate rejects FDR proposal to enlarge Supreme Court
1961 – WBNB TV channel 10 in Charlotte Amaile, VI (CBS) begins broadcasting

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1651 – Ferdinand Tobias Richter, composer
1923 – Lillian Ellison, American professional wrestler (d. 2007)
1930 – Marcia Henderson, Andover Mass, actress (Kathleen-Aldrich Family)
1943 – Kay Bailey Hutchison, U.S. Senator from Texas
1949 – Dianne Dailey, LPGA golfer
1979 – Yadel Martí, Cuban baseball player

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1497 – Francesco Botticini, Italian painter, dies at about 52
1870 – Josef Strauss, composer, dies at 42
1915 – Sir Sandford Fleming, Canadian engineer and inventor (b. 1827)
1929 – Bror Beckman, composer, dies at 63
2005 – Eugene Record American songwriter and singer (The Chi-Lites) (b. 1940)
2007 – Ulrich Mühe, German actor (b. 1953)

More Famous Deaths »

…read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

Today in History for 28th April 2013

Historical Events

1789 – Fletcher Christian leads Mutiny on HMS Bounty and Capt William Bligh
1934 – FDR signs Home Owners Loan Act
1959 – KPLR TV channel 11 in Saint Louis, MO (IND) begins broadcasting
1968 – Carol Mann wins LPGA Raleigh Ladies’ Golf Invitational
1983 – Bruins 4-Isles 1-Wales Conference Championship-Series tied 1-1
1986 – Chernobyl, USSR site of world’s worst nuclear power plant disaster

More Historical Events »

Famous Birthdays

1592 – George Villiers, 1st duke of Buckingham/English admiral
1750 – Paul Ignaz Kurzinger, composer
1908 – Oskar Schindler, Zwittau, Moravia, Austria-Hungary, Austrian businessman and subject of the novel Schindlerand#039;s Ark and the film Schindlerand#039;s List. (d. 1974)
1921 – Rowland Evans, White Marsh Pa, news reporter (CNN-Evans and Novak)
1960 – Jón Páll Sigmarsson, Icelandic strength athlete (d. 1993)
1971 – Simbi Khali, actress (Nina-Third Rock From the Sun)

More Famous Birthdays »

Famous Deaths

1109 – Hugo van Cluny, 6th abbott of Cluny/saint, dies
1498 – Henry Percy, 4th Earl of Northumberland, English politician
1843 – William Wallace, Scottish mathematician (rights of Wallace), dies
1881 – Robert W Ollinger, US warden/last victim of Billy the Kid, dies
1896 – Heinrich von Treitschke, German historian, dies
1944 – Frank Knox, U.S. Vice-Presidential candidate (b. 1874)

More Famous Deaths »

Source: FULL ARTICLE at HistoryOrb.Com – This Day in History

An Inexorable Slide To Tyranny

By Gene Daily

With the passage of the NDAA and his use of executive orders, Obama has managed to bring about an inexorable slide to tyranny. On March 16, 2012, he signed executive order 13603 about “National Defense Resources Preparedness.” This act provides Obama with the authority to control food, water, production, material, and labor of almost unimaginable proportions. This, of course, is not the first time it has been done. Like it has been said, “There is nothing new under the sun.”

In 1933, just shortly after his election, Franklin D. Roosevelt declared a state of emergency. His actions were covered by the NIRA (National Industrial Recovery Act), which essentially gave him the same scope of power that Obama now has. In his inaugural address in January 1933, Roosevelt said, “If we are to go forward, we must move as a trained and loyal army willing to sacrifice for the good of common discipline, because without such discipline no progress is made, no leadership becomes effective. We are, I know, ready and willing to submit our lives and property to such discipline, because it makes possible a leadership which aims at a larger good. This I propose to offer, pledging that the larger purposes will bind upon us all as a scared obligation and with a unity of duty hitherto evoked only in time of armed strife. With this pledge taken, I assume unhesitatingly the leadership of this great army of our people dedicated to a disciplined attack upon our common problems.”

In the same year, Adolf Hitler was appointed Chancellor of Germany. In many ways, Hitler and FDR faced similar problems with high unemployment, inflation, a lack of consumer confidence, a lack of industrial output, and a country in the depths of depression. Hitler also managed to unite his countrymen into one unified people under his total control, just as Roosevelt through executive order managed to command the entire nation’s economy. In Germany, this act was called “The Enabling Act”, another name but essentially the same function. For example, after the Enabling Act, Hitler declared public holidays for workers in all industries, while at the same time banning all workers’ unions.

Throughout much of the late 1920′s and into the late 1930′s, Mussolini in Italy enjoyed support and adulation from liberals and progressives in the USA. So great was his support that an image resembling him was contained within a sculpture representing Atlas in Rockefeller Plaza. He was being revered as having unified and put the labor force of Italy to work, creating a fast-growing Italian economy through collective means.

In January 2013, Obama in his second inaugural address said”But we have always understood that when times change, so must we; that fidelity to our founding principles requires new responses to new challenges; that preserving our individual freedoms ultimately requires collective action. For the American people can no more meet the demands of today’s world by acting alone than American soldiers could have met the forces of fascism or communism with muskets and

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

A Different USA

By Gene Daily

V12 Fiat 500

Over the course of the last few days, there have been many reports of teachers’ political bias in the classroom. Some may have had differing experiences than I; but in my youth, I experienced much the same from one teacher with a very different outcome.

What I am about to relate is a story from the 60′s, in a mountain mining town out west. Mining towns in American history have been known to be fairly rough towns, inhabited by men who were no strangers to drinks and fights. It was during a time in history when there was actually a written codified law stating that two men of roughly equal physical size and strength could mutually agree to combat; and as long as the peace of no other citizen was disturbed, their mutual combat was legal. This actually made for a rather peaceful society, as the worst thing you could be called in our town was a coward. So if you pushed something too far and were physically challenged to back it up and then refused to fight, you were labeled a coward and ignored or worse from that time on. I learned early, shall we say, to be a diplomatic conversationalist whenever possible. It is under these circumstances I relate the story.

During my sophomore year in high school, my history teacher was a huge supporter of Franklin D. Roosevelt. In fact, my family were even supporters of him. I, however, took exception to the teachers’ constant emphasis of the wonderful programs his administration had used to revive the US economy during the 30′s. Being an avid reader of history, I learned that some programs such as the WPA had actually been started in Germany before they were used in the USA. This had helped to restart the German economy after it had been hit so hard under the Weimar Republic years. I had also learned that during the building of the Rockefeller Center in New York City, a mural had been included showing Mussolini courageously leading his people forward. I questioned the closeness of the leaders of that time and their common approach to problems. I also noted the anti-Jewish sentiment here in the USA at the time and the turning away of large numbers of Jews entering the USA prior to and during the War.

This ignited the history teacher as a match to tinder. After reading my paper, he came toward me in a menacing manner. He began to berate me. I simply told him that the assignment had been to compare historical figures of our choice and to relate our feelings and questions regarding them. He exploded and ask me if I had paid any attention at all to his lectures regarding FDR and all the “good” he had done for the country. I, as softly as I could, explained that while I recognize all the adulation many people had for FDR, I did not regard him as perfect. He then went somewhat mad and began screaming insults

From: http://www.westernjournalism.com/a-different-usa/

3 Ways the Government Has Pulled the Economy's Strings

By Alex Planes, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

On this day in economic and business history…

Is the prestige really worth a place on the Dow Jones Industrial Average ? Let’s ask Pfizer , Verizon , and American International Group , which all joined the Dow on April 8, 2004. AIG shareholders are lucky to even have the chance to ask, as the insurance giant received the lion’s share of the 2008 and 2009 government bailouts during the financial crisis. That knowledge should prepare you for the sobering results of these companies’ Dow performance:

  • Dow nine-year return (2004 to 2013): 39%
  • Pfizer nine-year total return: 19%
  • Verizon nine-year total return: 130%
  • AIG total membership return (company was removed in September 2008): -93%

It was only after the Dow swapped AIG out in 2008 that Verizon began to outperform. Up until AIG‘s removal, the index and the telecom company were neck and neck with respective gains of 5% and 8%. However, the swap was not a total loss. Kodak, one of the removed components, would go bankrupt in early 2012. Still, it doesn’t speak well for the Dow’s track record of new additions in the last several decades. One has only to look back at one horrendously bad swap at the height of the dot-com bubble to see the wisdom in standing pat.

Pfizer, the “respectable” underperformer of the group, failed to impress the market despite three megamergers since the turn of the 21st century. However, the most recent merger — with fellow pharmaceutical giant Wyeth in 2009 — turned Pfizer’s fortunes around. Since that merger was announced, Pfizer’s return has trounced the Dow’s, 95% to 60%. Perhaps what the index needs is more time to prove the value of its choices over the companies that were replaced.

FDR’s grand plan
President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the Emergency Relief Appropriation Act into law on April 8, 1935. The cornerstone of this legislation was the ambitious Works Progress Administration, which superseded the Civil Works Administration that had done so much to build and rebuild the national infrastructure since its formation in late 1933. For its first year, the WPA was allocated nearly $5 billion, which at the time was almost 7% of GDP. Over the course of its existence, the WPA spent more than $13 billion. Wired‘s Tony Long writes on the opposition to, and outcome of, this massive project:

Roosevelt’s detractors, who spoke of “New Dealers” and “socialists” in the same breath, liked to characterize the WPA as a politically corrupt pork barrel where legions of layabouts leaned on their shovels while getting paid for it. But the project not only got about 8.5 million people off the dole, it yielded tangible results. During an eight-year run, WPA workers built or repaired 124,000 bridges, 650,000 miles of highway, 125,000 public buildings, 8,000 parks and 850 airfields.

More than $4 billion went to road improvement projects. More than $1 billion each went toward …read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Mellanox Technologies, Ltd. Schedules Release of First Quarter 2013 Financial Results and Conference

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Mellanox Technologies, Ltd. Schedules Release of First Quarter 2013 Financial Results and Conference Call for April 24, 2013

SUNNYVALE, Calif. & YOKNEAM, Israel–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Mellanox® Technologies, Ltd. (NAS: MLNX) (TASE: MLNX), a leading supplier of high-performance, end-to-end interconnect solutions for data center servers and storage systems, today announced that it will release financial results for its first quarter 2013 after the close of market on Wednesday, April 24, 2013.

Following the release, Mellanox will conduct a conference call at 2 p.m. Pacific Time (5 p.m. Eastern Time). To listen to the call, dial +1-785-424-1835 approximately ten minutes prior to the start time.

Mellanox will also conduct a conference call on Thursday, April 25, 2013, at 9 a.m. Israel Time to discuss the company’s first quarter 2013 financial results in Hebrew. To listen to the call, dial +972-3-9180609 approximately 10 minutes prior to the start of the call.

The Mellanox financial results conference call will be available via a live webcast on the investor relations section of the Mellanox website at http://ir.mellanox.com. Access the website 15 minutes prior to the start of the call to download and install any necessary audio software. An archived webcast replay will also be available on the Mellanox website.

Supporting Resources:

About Mellanox

Mellanox Technologies is a leading supplier of end-to-end InfiniBand and Ethernet interconnect solutions and services for servers and storage. Mellanox interconnect solutions increase data center efficiency by providing the highest throughput and lowest latency, delivering data faster to applications and unlocking system performance capability. Mellanox offers a choice of fast interconnect products: adapters, switches, software and silicon that accelerate application runtime and maximize business results for a wide range of markets including high performance computing, enterprise data centers, Web 2.0, cloud, storage and financial services. More information is available at www.mellanox.com.

Mellanox, BridgeX, ConnectX, CORE-Direct, InfiniBridge, InfiniHost, InfiniScale, PhyX, SwitchX, Virtual Protocol Interconnect and Voltaire are registered trademarks of …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

Mellanox FDR 56Gb/s InfiniBand Powers Stampede Supercomputer, Now Fully Deployed at Texas Advanced C

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

Filed under:

Mellanox FDR 56Gb/s InfiniBand Powers Stampede Supercomputer, Now Fully Deployed at Texas Advanced Computing Center

One of the most powerful supercomputing systems in the world, Stampede utilizes Mellanox FDR 56Gb/s InfiniBand to provide leading scalable performance

SUNNYVALE, Calif. & YOKNEAM, Israel–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Mellanox® Technologies, Ltd. (NAS: MLNX) (TASE: MLNX), a leading supplier of high-performance, end-to-end interconnect solutions for data center servers and storage systems, today announced that its end-to-end FDR 56Gb/s InfiniBand is now deployed and live in the Stampede supercomputer at the Texas Advanced Computing Center (TACC) at The University of Texas at Austin. Stampede is the most powerful supercomputing system in the National Science Foundation Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE), and one of the most powerful supercomputing systems in the world. TACC introduced Stampede to the public on March 27.

Stampede integrates thousands of individual Dell servers with Mellanox FDR 56Gb/s InfiniBand SwitchX based switches and ConnectX-3 adapter cards with PCI Express 3.0 to drive performance of nearly 10 petaflops.

“The InfiniBand network was easy to deploy and delivers incredible application performance on a consistent basis,” said Tommy Minyard, director of Advanced Computing Systems, TACC. “Utilizing Mellanox FDR 56Gb/s InfiniBand provides us with extremely scalable, high performance — a critical element as Stampede is designed to support hundreds of computationally- and data-intensive science applications from around the United States and the world.”

“Stampede is one of the highest profile supercomputers being deployed in 2013,” said Gilad Shainer, vice president of marketing at Mellanox Technologies. “Mellanox FDR 56Gb/s InfiniBand is differentiated by the low latency and accelerated speed which enables the fastest data delivery. With a system the size of Stampede, where scalability is of the greatest of importance, the role of InfiniBand is significant.”

Stampede supports national scientific research into weather forecasting, climate modeling, drug discovery and energy exploration and production.

Supporting Resources:

About Mellanox

…read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

The Most Incredible Surge in Dow History

By Alex Planes, The Motley Fool

Filed under:

On this day in economic and financial history…

The nationwide banking holiday declared by incoming President Franklin D. Roosevelt could have ended in disaster. The Dow Jones Industrial Average , already dawdling near its post-crash lows, might have fallen further once banks and exchanges reopened if the American public did not buy into FDR‘s optimistic proclamations of revival. Early results, however, were encouraging. Americans began to replenish their accounts on March 13, 1933, when the banks reopened. Two days later, on March 15, the investor class sent the clearest possible signal of approval for FDR‘s policies: The Dow skyrocketed 15.3% higher, the largest one-day gain in its history.

The New York Times reported an increase in aggregate market value of $3 billion on volume of 3 million shares. “Buying orders poured in from all parts of the country, and on several occasions the stock ticker fell two or three minutes behind.” There were so few sales orders that most stocks did not even receive any, except at a level up to 40% higher than their price just before Roosevelt declared the bank holiday. It was, in every sense, a buyer’s market — to such a degree that disbelieving exchange officials held back on completing some transactions until it became apparent that no sales orders would come.

Though the Dow had risen from a 1932 low, the surge in stock prices on March 15 signaled the beginning of a ferocious bull market, which grew into the third-largest in the Dow’s history before the market suffered another significant decline.

The gusher that couldn’t be stopped
A geyser of oil blasted into the sky in Kern County, Calif., on March 15, 1910. The Lakeview oil well, about 100 miles north of Los Angeles, had finally reached its target following months of unsuccessful drilling. Drilling had continued, even as it nearly bankrupted the company that began it and despite the order from Union Oil (which had purchased a controlling interest in the land) to cease operations. The great gusher destroyed its derrick as it blew up through 2,200 feet of earth. Oil rained down on the land for days, which dragged on into weeks, and then months.

By its first month of eruption, the Lakeview gusher already exceeded the total flow of the legendary Spindletop gusher, which had inaugurated the modern oil era nine years earlier. Months later, an estimated 50,000 barrels continued to pour out the vast oil reservoir beneath with each passing day. The Los Angeles Times cites the drilling foreman’s frantic efforts to control the gusher, and the seemingly interminable length of time it continued to spout afterwards:

“What we feared was an early rain,” recalled Charles “Dry Hole” Woods, confronted with too much of a good thing. “A flash flood could have spread our ocean of oil down over the valley below. So we went up into the …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

The Wall Street-Washington Revolving Door Is As American as Apple Pie

By Forbes Leadership Forum, Contributor

This article is by Gregory J. Wallance, a lawyer at the law firm of Kaye Scholer who after law school was in private practice as a litigator, served as a federal prosecutor, and then returned to private practice. He is author, most recently, of America’s Soul in the Balance:  The Holocaust, FDR’s State Department and the Moral Disgrace of an American Aristocracy. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Latest

Mellanox and DataDirect Networks to Host Webinar on Scalable Infrastructure Solutions for Increasing

By Business Wirevia The Motley Fool

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Mellanox and DataDirect Networks to Host Webinar on Scalable Infrastructure Solutions for Increasing Next-Gen Communications Provider ROI

SUNNYVALE, Calif. & YOKNEAM, Israel–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Mellanox® Technologies, Ltd. (NASDAQ: MLNX; TASE: MLNX), a leading supplier of high-performance, end-to-end interconnect solutions for data center servers and storage systems, today announced a live, interactive joint webinar with DataDirect Networks, a leading provider of high capacity scalable storage systems and processing solutions. The webinar will explore the challenges of building and running next-generation communications provider data centers and storage solutions for increasing infrastructure efficiency and manageability. Discussions will also spotlight product solutions and case studies for enabling new data services and optimizing infrastructures for flexible scaling and reduced total cost of ownership.

Title: Scalable Infrastructure Solutions for Improving Next-Generation Communications Provider ROI
Date: Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Time: 11:00am ET/ 8:00am PT
Register Today

Supporting Resources:

About Mellanox

Mellanox Technologies is a leading supplier of end-to-end InfiniBand and Ethernet interconnect solutions and services for servers and storage. Mellanox interconnect solutions increase data center efficiency by providing the highest throughput and lowest latency, delivering data faster to applications and unlocking system performance capability. Mellanox offers a choice of fast interconnect products: adapters, switches, software and silicon that accelerate application runtime and maximize business results for a wide range of markets including high performance computing, enterprise data centers, Web 2.0, cloud, storage and financial services. More information is available at www.mellanox.com.

Mellanox, BridgeX, ConnectX, CORE-Direct, InfiniBridge, InfiniHost, InfiniScale, MLNX-OS, PhyX, SwitchX, Virtual Protocol Interconnect and Voltaire are registered trademarks of Mellanox Technologies, Ltd. Connect-IB, CoolBox, FabricIT, Mellanox Federal Systems, Mellanox Software Defined Storage, MetroX, MetroDX, Mellanox Open Ethernet, Open Ethernet, ScalableHPC, Unbreakable-Link, UFM and Unified Fabric Manager are trademarks of Mellanox Technologies, Ltd. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.

Mellanox Technologies, Ltd.<br …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at DailyFinance

The Presidential Blame-Game

By Paul G. Kengor

President Clinton SC The Presidential Blame Game

Editor’s note: A longer version of this article first appeared at American Spectator.

February is the month of presidents. It includes Washington’s birthday, Lincoln’s birthday, Ronald Reagan’s birthday, and, of course, Presidents Day. Given that I teach and write about presidents, this time of year always prompts me to strange musings. This year is no exception, as I’m thinking about six particular presidents: Barack Obama, George W. Bush, FDR, Herbert Hoover, Bill Clinton, and Harry Truman. How could I possibly connect these six?

Bear with me—I’ll start and end with Obama.

Barack Obama, and particularly his re-election campaign, has achieved something quite dubious of a sitting president. Namely, he has managed to successfully blame nearly every woe of the last four years on his predecessor. Never mind that every economic indicator under Obama is not only worse than under George W. Bush, but far worse. Obama has presided over a steadily worsening economic disaster, one that is stacking up as one of the most dreadful economic records of any president in history. And yet, as he does, he passes the buck to his predecessor, blaming George W. Bush.

This is unbecoming of an American leader; it’s precisely what our presidents don’t do; they don’t treat each other like this, having much more respect for the job and those who have held it. There is a long-time gentlemen’s understanding, honored by nearly every president, that you don’t blame your predecessor for your problems.

Nonetheless, George W. Bush has become Obama’s go-to scapegoat.

For the record, Obama is not completely alone in mastering this ignoble tactic. Franklin Delano Roosevelt, like Obama, conjured up various demons to advance his “progressive” agenda, with the rich atop his enemies list. But FDR also dumped on his Republican predecessor. He blamed everything on Herbert Hoover.

Notably, this really upset Hoover. Hoover was hurt deeply by FDR constantly trashing him, his record, and his policies. FDR did not treat Hoover the way we Americans expect our presidents to treat one another. Their relationship became toxic. FDR’s successor, Harry Truman, took notice. “Roosevelt couldn’t stand him,” said Truman of Hoover, “and he [Hoover] hated Roosevelt.”

Even sadder, FDR, like Obama, got away with this blame-game. FDR successfully pinned everything on Hoover in re-election upon re-election. As for Obama, a literal majority (60 percent, according to one exit poll) who voted for him in 2012 agreed with him that the terrible economy was totally Bush’s fault. They swallowed Obama’s Bush blame-game hook, line and sinker.

How do Harry Truman and Bill Clinton relate to this?

Truman and Clinton, like Obama and FDR, were, of course, both Democrats. Truman, however, was willing to put party aside to do what was right. He had character by the boatload. Truman saw how troubled Hoover was by FDR’s mistreatment. A good man, Truman did what he could to remedy the situation. (This is detailed nicely by Nancy Gibbs and Michael Duffy in their excellent new book: “The Presidents Club.”) He reached out to Hoover …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism

Bullets vs. Band-aids: Is Health Spending Crowding out Defense?

By Chris Conover

The president?s aggressive State of the Union message (as expected) amplified what some had called the most full-throated defense of liberalism since FDR. It?s certainly not news that the president heavily prefers entitlement spending over defense spending. But in light of his proposed reductions in defense spending and sharp increase in health spending under Obamacare, I was curious to see just how much he?s tipping the scales in favor of health spending relative to his predecessors. To answer this question, I grabbed the most recent available numbers from the Office of Management and Budget. …read more
Source: FULL ARTICLE at Forbes Health

Fireside Hangout: Cecilia Munoz Joins a Conversation on Immigration Reform

By lsmullen

On Thursday, learn more about President Obama’s vision for a 21st century immigration system as the White House hosts the next in an ongoing series of conversations with administration officials on Google+. Starting at 1:00 p.m. ET on January 31, Cecilia Munoz, the Director of the White House Domestic Policy Council, will join the latest “Fireside Hangout“– a 21st century take on FDR’s famous radio addresses – to talk about immigration reform.

The conversation will be moderated by Jose Antonio Vargas, journalist and founder of Define American, and Ms. Munoz will discuss the President’s proposal for comprehensive immigration reform with participants, which will include America Ferrera, Co-chair of Voto Latino's I'm Ready for Immigration Reform campaign and Jim Wallis, President and CEO of Sojourners. You can watch the hangout live on WhiteHouse.gov, or tune in to the White House’s Google+ page on Thursday, January 31 at 1:00 p.m. ET.

Earlier today, the President traveled to Las Vegas, Nevada to speak about the need for a fair and effective immigration system that lives up to our heritage as a nation of laws and a nation of immigrants. The President’s proposal for immigration reform has four parts. First, continue to strengthen our borders. Second, crack down on companies that hire undocumented workers. Third, hold undocumented immigrants accountable before they can earn their citizenship; this means requiring undocumented workers to pay their taxes and a penalty, move to the back of the line, learn English, and pass background checks. Fourth, streamline the legal immigration system for families, workers, and employers.

Don’t forget to tune-in on Thursday, January 31 at 1:00 p.m. ET on WhiteHouse.gov, or on the White House’s Google+ page. In the weeks and months ahead we’ll continue to host hangouts with key members of the President’s Cabinet on a range of second term priorities. Follow us on Google+ for updates from the Administration and opportunities to participate in upcoming online engagement events.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House

Fireside Hangouts: Vice President Biden Joins a Conversation on Reducing Gun Violence

By <a href="/author-detail/45">Kori Schulman</a>

This week, the White House will continue a series of conversations with top administration officials on Google+. On Thursday, January 24 at 1:45 p.m. ET, Vice President Biden will join the latest “Fireside Hangout” – a 21st century take on FDR’s famous radio addresses – to talk about reducing gun violence.

On January 16, President Obama and Vice President Biden released a plan to help protect our children and our communities by reducing gun violence. The plan outlines specific, common-sense steps we can take right now to help keep guns out of the wrong hands, ban assault weapons and high-capacity magazines, make our schools safer, and increase access to mental health services. Learn more about the plan here.

During the hangout hosted by Google and moderated by Hari Sreenivasan from PBS NewsHour, Vice President Biden will discuss the White House policy recommendations on reducing gun violence. Google+ users from the around the country will join the discussion, including Guy Kawasaki and Phil DeFranco. If you have a question, you can suggest it by writing it on the participants’ on Google+ pages. Watch the hangout with Vice President Biden live on WhiteHouse.gov, or tune in to the White House's Google+ page or YouTube channel.

We'll continue to host hangouts with key members of the President’s cabinet on a range of second term priorities. Follow us on Google+ for updates from the Administration and opportunities to participate in upcoming hangouts.

read more

Source: FULL ARTICLE at The White House

Take My Liberty And Give Me Money

By Bruce Karlson

Thomas Jefferson SC Take My Liberty and Give me Money

“I, however, place economy among the first and most important republican virtues, and public debt as the greatest of the dangers to be feared.”

“The two enemies of the people are criminals and government, so let us tie the second down with the chains of the Constitution so the second will not become the legalized version of the first.”

Thomas Jefferson

Even liberals are prone to being effusive about the intellect and perspicacity of Thomas Jefferson. That is, until they actually look at the results of that intellect, other than the magnificent but necessarily broad Declaration of Independence. JFK, when reasonably sober and taking a break from his non-stop sexual predation, once opined to his dinner guests that this was as intelligent a group as has ever been in this room, except when Thomas Jefferson dined alone. He was, of course, pretending to be erudite and witty, perhaps achieving the latter.

In any event, reading the Jefferson quotes above, even those “educated” in government schools must admit that he and the Founders feared an overbearing central government. Given that the federal government has and requires the powers enumerated in the Constitution, most of our trouble stems from “emergency” or other lamely-excused deviations and expansions therefrom. It started with Dishonest Abe, who found it convenient to ignore Supreme Court rulings, borrow enormous sums of money for his war, throw inconvenient individuals in jail for impure thoughts, and was fine-tuned by FDR. FDR discovered how easy it was to buy votes with tax dollars; he never stopped, and his war opened the floodgates. Not for nothing did Bismarck opine that “War is the health of the state.” Here is a small but significant point about Lincoln’s war: Prior to it, one referred to these United States; after, the United States. States’ rights never recovered; nor is there much hope they will.

Had we remained vigilant about the enumerated powers of our Constitution, none of the problems that now threaten our nation would exist. We would have fought no undeclared wars, created no welfare state, or have any national debt. Hard to imagine, but true.

By example, the disgraceful pandering and nakedly political theater accompanying hurricane Sandy’s leavings in NY/NJ should make us all ill. Why a cab driver’s children in Omaha or a factory worker’s child in Topeka should pay to bail them out is the unasked question…construed to be rude, one imagines. Obama/Christie/Cuomo et al. simply posture and whine about Republican lack of compassion, and the money spigot opens.

Every problem we have in this country is a function of bloated central government and the unctuous tyrants and tyrant wannabes that inhabit it. There would be no lobbyists in DC, and most politicians would leave after a term or two, probably bored and eager to get back to work, absent the aggregation of power and money in DC. Since, however, the aforementioned and their sycophants are there to make or implement all manner of laws that may benefit one industry or company at the expense of others. Ergo, every major industry or group feels as though it needs a presence.

The true horror is that since the bills will be borne by our children as opposed to being paid currently, the voting public chooses to avert its collective eyes. That will go on until there is a catastrophe (Weimar Germany, anyone?), then Obama et al. will blame it on George Bush and begin plans to suspend the Constitution.

We voted for more of him and more of it, but our children and grandchildren will bear the burden. It is truly disgraceful; parents used to leave assets to their children. Now they leave their debts.

Source: FULL ARTICLE at Western Journalism